Play matchmaker with your wines like a pro — Fish out of Wine

Play matchmaker with your wines like a pro

Wine and food pairing

You're at dinner. The server slides over the wine list. The list is the size of a small novel. You smile. Inside, you are spiraling.

Been there. Done that. Ordered whatever was second cheapest and pretended it was intentional.

Here's the thing though — wine pairing doesn't have to be complicated. It's basically just complimenting flavors. You're finding the right wine for the right dish, the same way you'd match up a top with a specific wash of jeans. Once you know the basics, you will be a pro every single time. Let's get into it.

Wine and food pairing

The meat situation

Let's start with the golden rule that has never steered anyone wrong: red wine with red meat, white wine with lighter meats. That's it. That's the rule. Tattoo it.

Red meat — steak, lamb, burgers, short ribs

Go bold and go red. A Cabernet Sauvignon is the classic for a reason — rich, full-bodied, and absolutely built to stand next to a good steak. If Cab feels like too much commitment, a Malbec is your more approachable option. Same confident energy, slightly easier to drink on a random Wednesday.

Cabernet Sauvignon
Best with · Steak, lamb, anything off the grill

Bold, rich, and unapologetic. Look for bottles from Napa Valley, Bordeaux, or Argentina. Your steak will thank you.

Malbec
Best with · Burgers, short ribs, BBQ

Soft, plummy, and deeply underrated. Argentina does this one best. Great for when you want a red that isn't trying to fight your food.

White meat — chicken, turkey, pork

Lighter meat, lighter wine. A Chardonnay (especially an unoaked one if you want to sound fancy) works beautifully here. If you want something a little crisper, a Pinot Grigio is your best friend — easy to drink, goes with almost everything, and never causes drama.

Chardonnay
Best with · Roast chicken, pork tenderloin, creamy sauces

The classic white. Buttery, smooth, and reliable. If the dish has a cream or butter sauce, this is your match. Non-negotiable.

Pinot Grigio
Best with · Grilled chicken, light pork dishes, anything herby

Crisp, clean, and crowd-pleasing. The friend who gets along with everyone at the table. You cannot go wrong here.

Pasta and wine

The pasta and veggie situation

This is where a lot of people get lost, but honestly? It's easier than meat. The key is matching the sauce, not the noodle.

Tomato-based pasta — marinara, arrabbiata, bolognese

Tomato is acidic, so you want a wine with good acidity to match it. Enter Chianti — an Italian red that was practically born to sit next to a bowl of pasta. It's earthy, a little tart, and makes you feel like you're eating in a little trattoria somewhere in Tuscany. A Sangiovese works here too if you want to get a little more specific.

Chianti
Best with · Pasta marinara, arrabbiata, pizza, bolognese

Earthy, acidic, and deeply Italian. If it has tomatoes, it needs Chianti.

Cream-based pasta — alfredo, carbonara, vodka sauce

Rich sauce needs a wine that can match it. A buttery Chardonnay is the classic call here — it mirrors the creaminess of the sauce without competing with it. If the dish has a white wine or lemon element (hello, piccata), a Pinot Grigio also works beautifully to keep things fresh and balanced.

Chardonnay
Best with · Alfredo, carbonara, vodka sauce, anything creamy

Buttery, smooth, and made for rich sauces. An unoaked Chardonnay keeps it lighter and fresher — worth asking for at a restaurant if you want to sound like you really know your stuff.

Vegetable-based dishes — roasted veggies, salads, veggie pasta

Light dishes love light wines. A Sauvignon Blanc is crisp and herbaceous — it basically has vegetables in its personality already. For roasted or earthy vegetables (mushrooms, beets, root veggies), a light Pinot Noir works beautifully without overpowering the dish.

Sauvignon Blanc
Best with · Salads, veggie pasta, grilled vegetables, goat cheese

Fresh, herbaceous, and bright. If your plate is full of greens, this is your match. New Zealand makes an excellent one.

Dessert and wine

The dessert situation

Dessert wine is one of the most misunderstood categories and honestly one of the most fun. The rule here is simple: your wine should be at least as sweet as your dessert — ideally a little sweeter. If your wine is drier than your dessert, it's going to taste bitter and flat. We don't want that.

Chocolate desserts — molten lava cake, chocolate mousse, brownies

Chocolate and red wine is a combination that sounds indulgent and absolutely is. A Port wine — specifically a Ruby Port — is rich, sweet, and almost chocolatey itself. It's the dessert equivalent of a power couple. A late harvest Zinfandel also works here if Port feels too intense.

Ruby Port
Best with · Dark chocolate, chocolate cake, chocolate mousse

Sweet, rich, and deeply satisfying. Portugal's most iconic export after those beautiful tiles. Serve slightly chilled for the best experience.

Fruit-based desserts — cheesecake, tarts, berries, pavlova

Lighter desserts love lighter sweet wines. A Moscato d'Asti is sweet, slightly fizzy, low in alcohol, and pairs beautifully with anything fruity or creamy. It's also the wine that makes people say "wait, I actually like wine" — which is always a win. A Riesling (late harvest) works wonderfully too, especially with anything citrusy.

Moscato d'Asti
Best with · Fruit tarts, cheesecake, fresh berries, pavlova

Sweet, lightly fizzy, and utterly delightful. Low alcohol, big personality. The dessert wine for people who say they don't like dessert wine.

Late Harvest Riesling
Best with · Lemon tart, peach desserts, anything with fruit

Honeyed, floral, and stunning with citrus or stone fruit desserts. Germany and New Zealand make excellent versions.

When the wine is dessert

Sometimes you look at the dessert menu and think — you know what, I'm good. I just want one more glass of something amazing. That's valid. That's actually a very sophisticated choice. Here are the wines that are so good they ARE the dessert.

Sauternes
Style · Sweet French white · Serve chilled

Honey, apricot, and pure luxury in a glass. This is the wine you order when you want people to think you spent a semester abroad in France. Rich, golden, and absolutely dessert on its own.

Ice Wine
Style · Sweet white · Canada & Germany

Made from grapes that were literally frozen on the vine — which sounds dramatic and is. Intensely sweet, intensely concentrated, and genuinely one of the most interesting wines you'll ever try. A small glass goes a long way.

Tawny Port
Style · Sweet fortified red · Portugal

Nutty, caramel-y, and warm. If Ruby Port is the bold younger sister, Tawny Port is the sophisticated older one who has her life together. Serve slightly chilled and sip slowly. You will not regret it.

The short version (for when you need it fast)

Red meat → bold red (Cab, Malbec). White meat → white wine (Chardonnay, Pinot Grigio). Tomato pasta → Italian red (Chianti). Cream pasta → buttery white (Chardonnay). Veggies → crisp white (Sauvignon Blanc). Chocolate dessert → Port. Fruit dessert → Moscato.

Screenshot that. Save it. Pull it up at dinner. You are now officially the most prepared person at the table and you did not have to go to culinary school to get there.

You are now officially the most prepared person at the table. You're welcome.

If you try any of these pairings, come find us on Instagram and let us know how it went. And if you discover a combination that shouldn't work but absolutely does — we definitely want to hear about that too. Find us at @fishoutofwine_ 🍷

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