Food & Wine Pairings

What goes with what — and why.

Search from either side of the table. Tell us the dish you're cooking and we'll find the bottle — or tell us the bottle and we'll find the dish.

The Three Levers

Why Pairings Work

Every great match is built on one of three ideas — sometimes all three at once. Once you can name the lever, you can predict the pairing.

Acidity cuts fat

High-acid wines refresh fatty, rich, or creamy foods by clearing the palate between bites.

Aged wine bridges to slow-cooked food through texture

A well-aged wine and a slow-braised dish pair through shared textural complexity — savory, earthy, and developed flavors on both sides.

Avoid tannin with raw or delicate fish

Tannin reacts with iron compounds in fish to produce a metallic, fishy aftertaste that spoils both.

Featured Pairing

What you'll get back

Every search returns a recommended match, the structural reasoning, and the pairings to avoid.

Famous Bad Pairing

Cabernet Sauvignon vs. Chocolate Cake

It sounds romantic. It tastes like chewing on a tea bag.

Tannin Cabernet's tannin is already grippy. Dark chocolate adds its own. Stack them and both feel drying.
Reach for Ruby or Tawny Port, Banyuls, or a late-harvest Zinfandel. Sweetness needs to meet sweetness.
Still Stuck?

Just ask Scott.

Got a weird ingredient, a half-finished bottle, or a dinner-party puzzle? Scott has read every pairing in this database and a lot more — and he'll explain his reasoning.

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