LAZ wrote:I do like gewurztraminer with spicy foods; you might enjoy the pairing more if you look for Alsatian gewurz, which tends to be much more crisp and dry than the California varieties.
Viognier also holds its own against highly spiced food. I also like zinfindels when the spices are Mexican/Southwestern rather than Asian.
Actually, I enjoy Alsatian Gewurz and Riesling just fine and did not mean to imply otherwise, including with spicy (Asian mostly) foods - if I had been referring to these wines from elsewhere I would also have called them "sugary," since they tend to be made a bit sweetly everywhere except Alsace and Austria. One of the most memorable wine matchings of my life was an Alsatian Gewurz (don't remember whose) with a Rijstafel. Blissful stuff. It also can be interesting with some Indian foods, and of course Thai.
Not terribly fond of Viognier, no matter how much I have tried, though - somehow it always strikes me as blunt, without much finesse or fruit, like being hit in the palate.
Zinfandel with Mexican food is an interesting idea. Can you clarify what Mexican foods you like to match it with? Guisados, Moles, antojitos, or??? I have recently enjoyed matching Syrahs with stews and some of the soups, and certainly the grilled foods. I would think one might want a white (something crisp?) with a black or red mole - Topolobampo leans toward white riojas or rhones (which brings us back to Viognier). The only problem is that I am not too fond of the overly alcoholic, hot, Zinfandels and Syrahs from California. Somehow I manage to do a little better finding acceptable Syrahs, but have almost completely given up on the Zinfandels. Any specific producers you look for?
No, but I just read somewhere that Loire Valley reds are good too with spicy foods. I do not even think I've ever tried one (and I also heard that Chinon is the classic one to fool someone on on the, is it red or is it white blind test).
I have spent a fair amount of time around the Loire Valley - Mom lived at the north edge of the Loire and the southeastern corner of Normandy (near Dreux) for about 10 years. There are two things I really learned to love there - good Loire reds, and high quality Calvados. Just wonderful reds all over the place, mostly young, crisp, fresh Chinon, which I find comparable to Valpolicella or Beaujolais (not Nouveau), but also some big, age-worthy wines that could be had for a song. Can't find them anywhere else, though. Too bad that with Mom in the USA I no longer have a convenient excuse to go to Tours or Anjou.
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Feeling (south) loopy