I’m publishing this on the day before Thanksgiving in the
USA, while millions of shoppers are dealing with the dual nightmares of jammed
stores and the challenge of selecting a wine for tomorrow’s feast. We Americans do this every year, so one might
think it wouldn’t pose much of a challenge.
But it just ain’t so, as you can tell from the panicked expressions on
the faces of shoppers in grocery stores and wine shops if you venture out
today. Vast numbers of Americans cook
big meals for big groups only once each year and buy wine only
occasionally. So, if you’re dealing with
a daunting challenge today, you might as well make it pay off for many other
meals after you get through tomorrow.
Selecting wine for a typical Thanksgiving meal is in fact a
challenge—even for wine experts who also cook elaborate meals regularly. This is true for reasons I’ll explain
below. But the good news is: The same wines that can overcome the
challenge of Thanksgiving will also succeed on a regular basis with chicken—which
is now the most popular meat in the USA, to the tune of 8 billion chickens and
per person consumption of 100 pounds per year.
No kidding.
Both white and red wines can work well for Thanksgiving as
well as all those weeknight chicken dinners, but the key to success is
selecting wines that are not too pushy in flavor and that are moderate in
weight and texture. There are reasons
why this is true, and it is worth your while to consider them—given that the
payoff can continue for long after the holiday.
For starters, let’s address the causes of the widespread panic
among wine buyers for Thanksgiving. We
drink a lot of wine in the USA (more than any other nation), but that’s mostly
because we’re prosperous, which has nothing to do with being practiced.
Of course, being prosperous is an excellent reason for giving thanks on
Thanksgiving, but most of us have very little practical experience in pairing
wines and foods.
Accordingly, modesty is appropriate for most of us, but when pressured to
choose from among 100,000 available wines for a big occasion like Thanksgiving,
modest can quickly turn to intimidation--or downright paralysis.
To make matters worse, the array of dishes involved in a classic Thanksgiving
dinner set us up for failure when we’re picking a wine. Indeed, almost any wine
you can imagine is going to run afoul of something on the
table. Acidic wines that work with the cranberries then seem thin when
hitting a rich stuffing or shrill when tried with sweet potatoes. Rich,
ripe wines that hold their own against the stuffing then come off as fat and
oafish when meeting white turkey meat (or those damned cranberries).
Even if you just forget about the side dishes and focus on the turkey when
considering wine selection, you are still not out of the woods. The guest
who only wants white breast meat has a pretty subtle (even austere) dish, and
would best be served a white wine--and a pretty light, simple one at
that. By contrast, those who love dark leg meat well slathered with gravy
are sorely in need of a red wine--and a fairly gutsy one to boot.
Tempting though it might be, ditching the turkey or substantially altering the
meal isn't an option in most homes. Aunt Minnie would burst into tears
right there at the table if deprived of her traditional trimmings, and Uncle
Otto would make a scene if he didn't get his drumstick, so we’re
cornered. Something’s gotta give, and it probably can’t be the
food.
So, what’s the solution? Here’s my key principle for securing an
excellent outcome on the Big Day: If you really want a
successful match, keep the wine simple.
One of the most robust findings to emerge for me from 25 years of professional
tasting and restaurant consulting is this: Complex wines are at their
best with simple foods, but complex foods are best matched by simple
wines.
A great old bottle of Bordeaux is at its best with roast beef or pot roast or
simple leg of lamb, just as a simple preparation of duck or veal will let a
great bottle of Burgundy or Barolo show all of its many dimensions. By
the same token, the wines that really shine across a meal with lots of complex
(even clashing) elements like Thanksgiving are usually ones that are balanced
and restrained: Neither too sweet, nor tannic, nor acidic, nor woody, nor
heavy, nor light.
If there’s nothing jarring about a wine, it is vastly less likely to prove
jarring when paired with any particular food. By extension, the best way
to navigate your way across the Thanksgiving table minefield is to play your
shot right down the middle.
What does this mean in practical terms? Nothing more complicated than
choosing wines made from certain grapes and sourced from particular places in
the world that routinely show the perfect profile of balance and moderation in
terms of flavor, structure and style to work with Thanksgiving dinner.
I’m about to provide my list of top performers in this
profile, but here’s another benefit that flows from what follows: If you are an average American destined to
eat one hundred pounds of chicken next year, I trust that you are going to try
to find lots of different ways to prepare it—which is a very good idea since
there’s another hundred pounds of chicken awaiting you for 2025. If you aren’t a sommelier or a wine expert,
you’re going to need a list of wines that can work well with all the different
preparations for all those chickens. And
guess what? This means your ongoing chicken
habit poses the same challenge as tomorrow’s feast.
With that in mind, here’s my list:
Whites:
Garnacha Blanca / Grenache Blanc from Spain’s Catalonia, France’s Rhône, or
California
Soave from Italy’s Veneto
Moschofilero or Roditis from Greece
Pinot Bianco from Alto Adige or Friuli in Italy, or Pinot Blanc from Alsace,
Germany or Austria
Pinot Gris from Oregon (but not Alsace—routinely too sweet from there)
Chenin Blanc (a.k.a. “Steen”) from South Africa; incredible quality even at low
prices
Verdelho from Australia or, much easier to find from there, Dry Riesling, which
is terrific
Grüner Veltliner from Austria
Explicitly “Un-Oaked” Chardonnay from almost anywhere
Reds:
Nero d’Avola from Sicily
Garnacha from Aragón’s Spanish regions of Campo de Borja,
Carińena or Calatayud
Montepulciano from Italy’s Abruzzo
Cinsault from South Africa
Dolcetto or Dogliani (a Dolcetto specialty zone) from
Piedmont in Italy
Agiorghitiko from Greece
Zweigelt from Austria
Schiava or Vernatsch from Alto Adige (same grape in Italian
or German language)
Pinot Noir from California, Oregon, New Zealand or Germany
All 15 of these wines will perform very well at your Thanksgiving table, and
all 15 could be purchased for less than $20. Indeed, given the fact that
a typical Thanksgiving meal involves a lot of variation in flavors and
textures, relatively simple wines tend to perform especially well, so you’d be
well advised to purchase reasonably priced examples of these wines. That
will minimize the chances that you’ll get an oaky rendition. This is
especially true of Pinot Noir: Spending more than $20 or $25 will indeed usually
get you a better bottle of Pinot in overall terms, but it will usually bring
more oak into play and net you a rendition that is actually less well suited to
immediate consumption with Thanksgiving dinner.
So there you have it…a relatively long list of virtually foolproof selections
that combine the virtues of high performance and low cost. These will suit
the tastes of some guests more than others at Thanksgiving dinner, but they
will almost certainly taste pretty good to everyone with everything on the
table. That is no small accomplishment,
and it is one that will also pay dividends for all those chicken dinners in
your future!