INSIGHT Magazine February 2014 | Page 13

you’re pairing it with. Make sure to taste both items before the night. With food, the general rule is that the darker the chocolate, the darker the wine. So, reds are ideal for dark chocolate. If pairing with white wine, look for fruity and intense varieties, to match the eclectic mix of bitter and sweetness, fruitiness, sometimes nuttiness, and occasional acidity to be found in chocolate. • White chocolate: Match with Sherry, Muscat, a fruity Chardonnay, or a Moscata d’Asti. These wines will pick up on the buttery, fatty tones of what isn’t always considered to be a “real” chocolate. For those who don’t mind a risk, a contrasting wine heavy in tannins might just work to cut through the fattiness of white chocolate. • Milk chocolate: Try Merlot, Pinot Noir, Riesling, Muscat, and dessert wines. Be careful of the higher sugar levels in milk chocolate, as these may cancel out any fruitiness in dry red wines, leaving them tasting bitter. INSIGHT • Dark chocolate (50% to 70%): Pair this with more robust wines, such as Cabernet Sauvignon, Zinfandel, Pinot Noir, and Port. A chianti can match well with chocolate around 65 percent cocoa content. • Bittersweet chocolate (70% to 100%) This chocolate type enters the bitter range with deep intensity. Chocolate gourmands adore this range of taste, so the wine should live up to it. Good choices include Bordeaux, Beaujolais, Shiraz, Orange Muscat, Port, Malbec, and Zinfandel. • Try champagne or sparkling wine with all chocolate types. It is a variety that compliments many flavors. Many fortified dessert wines work well across the chocolate spectrum as well. ✤ February 2014 13