Cheese & Wine
Cheese and wine - a classic culinary delight! Contrary to popular belief, it is more often the white wines than the red wines that really complete the enjoyment. In any case, you are guaranteed to find numerous suitable companions to all cheese variations among the many excellent German wines.
Facts
-
20.68kg
is the per capita consumption of cheese in Germany
-
4
most popular varieties: Gouda, Emmental, Camembert and cream cheese
-
2%
market share accounted for by purely plant-based cheese
A few basic considerations should be made when choosing wine to accompany cheese: For example, cheese and wine from the same region often go well together due to the same climatic and geographical conditions. When it comes to the interplay of flavours, cheese and wine should be roughly equally strong or mild. The more mature the cheese is, the richer and fuller-flavoured the wine is recommended. Cheese with a delicate flavour, on the other hand, goes well with a
subtle, delicate wine.
Sour, salty or very flavourful cheeses require a sweet wine as a counterbalance, i.e. noble wines such as Trockenbeerenauslese or ice wines. Wines emphasising acidity, on the other hand, are well suited to creamy cheeses, while they often make firmer cheeses appear bitter. The harder the cheese, the more tannins the wine can tolerate.
Which wine goes best with which type of cheese?
Slightly spicy white wines with a subtle acidity, such as a semi-dry Riesling, harmonise well with mildly spicy soft cheese with white mould, such as Brie or Camembert. Red wines with less tannin, such as a Pinot Noir, Black Riesling or Trollinger, are also suitable, as is a Burgundy sparkling wine.
A Gewürztraminer is an ideal partner for a red mould wine. A fresh Pinot Gris or fruity to full-bodied red wines such as a Pinot Noir can also be served with it. The very spicy cheese can also be softened with sweeter bouquet wines such as a muscatel.
Blue mould cheese contains a strong acidity because fat is broken down into glycerine, among other things. As the sweetness cancels each other out in terms of flavour, a balance must be achieved between cheese and wine. The acidity-sweetness interplay of high-quality sweet to noble Rieslings such as Spätlesen, Auslesen or ice wines offers an interesting flavour experience.
A young, fruity, berry Pinot Noir pairs well with mild sliced cheeses such as young Gouda, Edam cheese or buttered cheese, as does a dry Silvaner with a delicate herbaceous flavour or a creamy Pinot Gris.
More crispy cheeses such as medium-aged Gouda, young mountain cheese, Appenzeller or Gruyère go very well with a fruity, dry red wine such as Trollinger, Merlot or Dornfelder. As a white wine, a fine tart Riesling or a traditional Gutedel (Chasselas) is recommended.
Dry but fruity white wines such as a very young Pinot Blanc or lighter red wines with a low alcohol content, such as a Trollinger, are suitable for a young, mild hard cheese, Allgäuer Emmentaler or Bergkäse. A full-bodied Pinot Gris or Chardonnay is ideal with a more mature hard cheese, which is stronger and spicier, or a strong, intense red wine.
Mild-flavoured goat and sheep cheeses are ideal with young, light white wines such as fruity Silvaner or Pinot Blanc, but a sparkling, fresh rosé can also be used here. Not too heavy noble wines also harmonise here.
Milk-accentuated fresh wines harmonise best with low-acid, fruit-accentuated white wines with a subtle residue, such as a sweet to sweet Müller-Thurgau or a light Silvaner.
Which wine goes well with tart, salty or very flavourful cheese?
Sweet wines, Trockenbeerenauslese or ice wines provide a nice counterbalance to strong and flavoursome cheeses.
Varietals
More recipe ideas
in a bacon coating Lamb
in a bacon coating
- 4 Stück Lammlachse à 150 g
- 4 Scheiben Bacon
- 0,1 Liter Wein
- 0,3 Liter Gemüsebrühe
- 1 kleine Schalotte
- 20 Gramm Butter
- 4 EL Olivenöl
- je 2 Zweige Thymian, Rosmarin, Salbei
- nach Geschmack Salz & Pfeffer
Season the lamb salmon with pepper and massage 2 tbsp of olive oil into the meat. Finely chop the thyme, rosemary and sage and season the meat in the herbs. Marinate in the fridge for a few hours.
<p
<p>Wrap the meat with the bacon slices and sear on all sides in the remaining olive oil. Continue to cook for approx. 4 minutes on each side over a low heat (the cooking time depends on the thickness of the lamb loin - it is best to do a pressure test). Then wrap in aluminium foil and leave to rest in the oven at 80 °C – so they remain juicy and slightly pink on the inside.
This goes well with Bärlauch risotto.
- Dornfelder (trocken)
with apples and nuts Tarte flambée
with apples and nuts
- 250 Gramm Weizen- oder Dinkelmehl
- 150 Gramm Crème fraîche
- 150 Gramm körniger Frischkäse
- 2 säuerliche Äpfel
- 1 - 2 Zwiebeln
- 30 Gramm Walnüsse oder Haselnüsse
- 15 Gramm Hefe
- 1 EL Zucker
- 2 EL Olivenöl
- 2 Zweige frischer Thymian
- Nach Bedarf Salz & Pfeffer
- 200 ml warmes Wasser
For the yeast dough, sieve the flour into a bowl and make a well in it. Dissolve the yeast in a little warm water and pour into the well. Cover the bowl with a cloth and leave to rise for 10 minutes. Then knead the pre-dough with the dough hook of a hand mixer and gradually work in the warm water, the oil and a teaspoon of salt. Leave the kneaded dough to rise until it has doubled in volume (approx. half an hour, in a warm place).
Cut the onions into wedges. Roughly chop the nuts. Core the apples, cut into slices (the thicker the apple slices, the juicier the tarte flambée) and sprinkle with the sugar.
<p
<p>After resting, divide the dough and roll out each half on a baking tray lined with baking paper. Preheat the oven to 220 °C (top and bottom heat)
Spread the crème fraîche evenly over the tarte flambée and top with the apple slices and onion wedges. Spread the fresh cheese on top and sprinkle with the walnuts. Sprinkle with a little salt and pepper.
Bake on the lowest shelf for 12-15 minutes and sprinkle with the fresh thyme before serving.
- Riesling (halbtrocken & feinherb)
- Riesling (lieblich)
with wild duck breast, porcini mushrooms and glazed chestnuts Herb salad
with wild duck breast, porcini mushrooms and glazed chestnuts
- 150 Gramm Wildkräuter
- 4 EL Olivenöl
- 2 EL Balsamessig
- 8 Stück Wildentenbrüste (a 100g)
- 2 EL Sonnenblumenöl
- 4 EL Honig
- 1 EL Thymian
- 200 Gramm Steinpilze
- 20 gekochte Maronen
- 100 ml Apfelsaft
- 2 El Zucker
- nach Belieben Salz & Pfeffer
Clean, wash and pat dry the wild herbs. Marinate with olive oil and balsamic vinegar and season with salt and pepper.
Preheat the oven to 220°C top and bottom heat. Season the wild duck breasts with salt and pepper, sear on the meat side in a pan with sunflower oil and cook in the preheated oven for about 8 minutes on the skin side. Remove the duck breast, brush the skin side with honey and thyme and roast for another 2 minutes on a high heat until crispy.
Clean the porcini mushrooms and cut into slices. Fry in a pan in oil on both sides, remove and keep warm. Caramelise the sugar in the pan, deglaze with the apple juice and simmer until the caramel has dissolved. Add the chestnuts and add a little more apple juice if necessary.
- Pinot Blanc (trocken)
- Gutedel (trocken)
with blueberries Banana and parsley waffles
with blueberries
- 25 Gramm glatte Petersilie
- 200 ml Milch
- 2 Eier Größe L
- 70 Gramm Zucker
- 1 Päckchen Vanillezucker
- 100 ml Öl
- 75 Gramm Naturjoghurt
- nach Belieben Butterschmalz oder Pfannenfett
- 300 ml Sahne
- 1 halbe Vanilleschote
- 2,5 EL Puderzucker
- 500 Gramm Blaubeeren
- 100 ml weißer Traubensaft
- 250 Gramm Mehl
- 1 TL Backpulver
- 200 Gramm überreife Bananen
- eine Prise Meersalz
Dough:
Mix the flour, 1 pinch of salt and baking powder in a bowl and set aside.
Blend the bananas and parsley with 100 ml milk to a fine puree. Put to one side.
Separate the eggs. Mix the egg yolks with 20 g sugar, vanilla sugar, oil and banana puree until smooth. Stir in the flour mixture, milk and yoghurt with a whisk.
Beat the egg whites with 1 pinch of salt and the remaining sugar until stiff. Fold the beaten egg whites into the batter.
Topping:
Whip the cream with the seeds from the vanilla pod and 1.5 tbsp icing sugar until creamy (not too stiff!). Leave to cool.
Heat a large pan, lightly caramelise 1 tbsp of icing sugar, add the blueberries and toss briefly, deglaze with the grape juice and allow to reduce briefly.
Preheat the waffle iron and melt the clarified butter. Brush the waffle iron with a little clarified butter, ladle in the batter in batches and bake until golden brown. Serve with the topping.
- Scheurebe (süß & edelsüß)
- Silvaner (süß & edelsüß)
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