Brew for Cue, Wine for Swine, and Booze Too
"I only like two kinds of men, domestic and imported." Mae West
A meal of barbecue begs for libation to wash it down, and a meal without barbecue and a drink is called breakfast.
The key in selecting the right drink to accompany
barbecue is to focus on your choice of sauce because barbecue sauces are
so aggressive and tend to dominate the flavor profile.
Likewise, a strong drink can easily overwhelm the
subtlety of well made food. I was once the wine critic of the Washington
Post and the Chicago Tribune, so I have no problem matching wine with
food, and, although I love a wide range of beer and spirits, I am by no
means an expert. So I have called in rfeinforcements. I asked Jonas
Halpren of DrinkOfTheWeek.com for tips on spirits and cocktails and Marty Nachel, author of Beer Across America, Beer for Dummies, and Homebrewing for Dummies for brew recommendations.
For more on the subject, click here for websites that have good buying guides for wine, beer, and spirits.
For hot sauces
Matching drinks with hot spicey capsaicin laden food is very difficult. The best thing for putting out a capsaicin
fire is lipids. Fats. A drink with fats? Milk. The next best thing to
put out the fire is sweetness. The traditional choices are sweet tea, lemonade, or soft drinks, like Coke or Dr. Pepper. In any case, go low alcohol. It only flames the fire.
Brew. If the sauce is hot,
reach for a beer that has a noticeable sweetness and does not have a
lot of hops and its attendant bitterness. That's often a standard boring
old American lager. Nachel says to "Try a Munich helles, a
Marzenbier/Oktoberfest, a Vienna style beer, or an English brown ale. If
you appreciate dark beers, give bock, doppelbock, or Belgian dubbel a
look."
Wine. You want a chilled
wine with low alcohol, light body, and a hint of sweetness, say 2 to 4%,
to help cool the fire. Try a rose, blush, a New York Riesling, or a
German Kabinett. German red wines are hard to find but work great with
these sauces because they are fresh and fruity and have that hint of
sweetness. Champagne is a good choice.
Spirits. Halpren says
"Keep the booze to a minimum and think dairy. The fat in dairy is
absolutely the best way to neutralize the capsaicin from hot peppers. I
love Kahlua Milkshakes, Pink Squirrels, Grasshoppers, and Brandy
Alexanders. It isn't often that I get to recommend them with food.
Yet, here they work. Acid also works, so break out those drinks with
Champagne and citrus. Orange is especially good with hot sauces, so try
a Fuzzy Navel or a Harvey Wallbanger."
For sweet sauces
Brew. Go dry and hopsy. Nachel says "Consider an English Extra Special Bitter (ESB), German Schwarzbier (black beer), or an Altbier."
Wine. There are two paths
to follow: (1) Go for something dry with bubbles such as French
Champagne, dry American sparkling wines, or Spanish Cava, or (2) go for a
big red such as a zinfandel or syrah from California or a Shiraz from
Australia (shiraz and syrah are two names for the same grape).
Spirits. Halpren says
"Drink a cocktail that has acidity that cuts the sweetness (lime or
lemon juice, ginger beer) or is refreshing (seltzer water, lemonade). I
recommend cocktails like Mojitos, Mint Juleps, the Lynchburg Lemonade (substitute any whisky, it's delicious), a Collins drink (Tom, John and Ivan all work), or a Daisy. Also, my Mom's Summertime Slush is a must, and you can make it non-alcoholic."
For hot and sweet sauces
Brew. According to Nachel,
"You need the malty sweetness to offset the heat, yet you want
something drier to balance the sweetness. A good Czech Pilsner or a
Dortmunder will do the job."
Wine. Try sweet sparkling
wines like Asti Spumante. Now all you wine snobs out there: Yes, I said
Asti. Try it and quit sending me hate mail. You're why I left the wine
biz."
Spirits. Go for a good brown whiskey on the rocks with a splash of water.
For vinegary sauces
Brew. Try something with some sweetness like a Belgian ale.
Wine. Riesling,
gewurztraminer are good choices to soften the tartness. As above, I like
Asti or other moscato based wines with vinegarry sauces. Try a Kir
Royale, which is a blend of sparkling wine with creme de cassis.
Spirits. Halpren says
"Vinegar is an acid and doesn't play well with others. It likes more
acid. Try ginger beer based cocktails like the Dark & Stormy and the Floradora Cocktail. The vinegar will accentuate the drink without overwhelming it. The Hemingway Daiquiri
is another great pick. It's not the blended, sweet drink that you think
it is. This is a citrus explosion of lime and grapefruit with rum and
maraschino liqueur (also not what you are thinking). Champagne based
cocktails work well with vinegar-based sauces as well."
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