Pages

Monday 18 April 2011

When Good Neighbours Become Good Friends

Almost everyone loves a good wine and cheese session. And yet sometimes you wonder whether you got it right. Was it great? Was it what you were hoping for? Rarely.

Unlike matching wine with a dish; neither the wine nor the cheese can be adjusted to make the perfect match. And I mean perfect, not close, not pretty good - I mean perfect. Fine dining perfect.

So now we get complicated, because there is no way that you are going to open every bottle in the cellar to find that match that is cheese heaven. A good place to start is to look at traditional regions that have been pairing their cheese and wine together for what would appear to be the dawn of time. Usually white mould cheeses like the Ile-de-France Brie are matched with bubbles from the neighbouring Champagne for that perfect match. English Apple Ciders with musty, cloth wrapped Cheddars usually do the trick too.

Lincet Delice de Bourgogne
Saturday was the day to do a bit of wine and cheese matching with the gang at McWilliams Mt Pleasant in the Hunter Valley and we dragged out a range of bubbles from Europe to try with a fun triple cream; the Lincet Delice de Bourgogne. The bubbles to go up against it were Serafini & Vidotto Prosecco, Champagne Taitinger and Soleil Cremant de Bourgogne.

Lincet Delice is not your typical Aussie triple cream full of butter and fat on the pallet. Delice is made tall and maturation is slow. The result is that the edges soften with creamy notes and the centre stays firm, with bright acidity to find the balance. If you wait for the cheese to soften all the way to the centre, you are going to get disappointed. In the time it takes to fully mature, the rind will be funky and full of ammonia and bitterness. The best tip is to look for fully white mould and not wrapped in plastic because this will add to sweating and the mould will keep making the ammonia.

The cheese I bought for the tasting was cut off a fresh wheel so it was in perfect condition for matching with bubbles. McWilliams are the importers of Champagne Taittinger so these guys are huge Champagne fiends and no complaints from me. The desire to hook into the cheese and champagne was high on the agenda, but disappointment quickly sunk in. The tight acid structure of the Champagne just drew out ammonia from the mould rind and what a clash. Harsh astringent bitterness.

The Prosecco did the same thing. Big tight acid structures did nothing for the creamy triple cream. Now the tasting crew had looked at the bubbles first and of course the Champagne Taittinger had got some deep and adoring love, with the Soliel Cremant lagging at the end of the favoured list. Easy drinking for sure, with a dense foam but no way was it going to match food, especially a creamy triple cream. This is where good neighbours became good friends...

Soliel Cremant a 50% Chardonnay 50% Pinot Noir comes from a number of Burgundy regions including Auxerre, which is also the home of Fromagerie Lincet. It doesn't take long reading Lincet's web page to see how much they love the cheese and wine match http://www.fromagerie-lincet.net/an/index.asp .

Did it match? Well yeah! The light acid pallet of the Cremant drew out the creaminess of the Delice with no arguments on the tongue anywhere to be found. The green apple hints of the Cremant lifted to balance. Delicous and satisfying, the McWilliams crew didn't want to go back to work - mission accomplished.

Let me know what your favourite wine and cheese match. Always happy to do a test run.

No comments: