keith157 wrote:Couldn't agree more, however my palate has never had the opportunity to receive a proper education. There are three types of everything, food, wine, beer etc. Those I like, those I don't and those I haven't tried. My normal (boring?) choice would be a red over a white with Merlot being , as I've been told, an available cop-out.
Wine, like everything, is a matter of taste. But that's on its own - matched with food it becomesa little more factual (though there are no absolutes).
Whether you like corn flakes or marmite for breakfast is up to you. Putting marmite and sugar on corn flakes...well, someone might like it, but it becomes far less about personal taste.
Some food-wine matches will be 'wrong' in that either you won't be able to taste the food because of the wine, or the wine will be overpowered by the food. This is the sort of 'wrong' you can sometimes put up with.
But sometimes there's a taste clash which is simply wrong, and will probably be so for almost everyone. Fortunately (and I hope this is where we might get some great ideas on this thread) there are some combinations which are bloody fantastic.
Food cooked on barbecues aren't just one taste, but it's true that there are quite a few similarities. Your choice of merlot is excellent for most red meat dishes, and a good quality chilean merlot is a joy to behold.
With 'traditional' barbecue dishes (dare I say 'competition barbecue' dishes), most barbecue sauces are an absolute swine (pardon the pun), because the sweetness you get in most of them strips the fruit out of most dry whites and most reds. Meanwhile, most of us don't like medium-dry or sweet whites unless its with a desert or some cheese.
Best bet is a powerful pinot noir, a zinfandel, or a beaujolais-villages, though you won't taste too much of the wine.
Anything smoked adds to the difficulties. Any red clashes quite horribly with most smoked meats, and there aren't a lot of whites that go well, either. Best bet is a oaked chardonnay, particularly with chicken.
So anything that's (a) pork, (b) sweet barbecue sauce, and (c) smoke is a nightmare. Beaujolais-villages is the only real option, and even then you're just getting something that avoids clahes, ratger than a food-wine pairing that enhances the flavour of both. Your best bet is to either compromise your wine choice and enjoy the food, or compromise the flavourings in the food if you want to enjoy the wine.
Going back to your merlot - if you enjoy traditional barbecued food, and you want to really enjoy that and aren't too bothered about the wine tasting brIlliant, then a £5 bottle of supermarket Chilean Merlot may well be your best option.
Steve W