Western Living Magazine
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From smoky syrah to crunchy pet-nat, these three bottles are ready for spicy ribs, grilled dinners and peak patio season
By summer, people start talking about “barbecue wines,” which always puzzles me, as you can put pretty much anything on a barbecue. So, pairing wines to your barbecue meal is pretty ingredient dependant. Take these amazing ribs—spicy, a little saucy, fairly bold flavours. In times past, the rote choice would have been a fruit forward, low-tannin wine like zinfandel or Aussie shiraz, but, to be honest, I’ve never loved those particular unions of big food and big wine. A dancer can be more powerful than a linebacker in the right circumstance.
If you want to go bigger, then how about this entry-level bottling of syrah and grenache from the legendary winemaker Jean-Louis Chave? (His Hermitage is available for $462, if you’d prefer.) It has ample dark fruit like a zin would have, but also some nice smoky and peppery notes that would play well with the chili crisp and the sweeter honey notes. It packs a quiet wallop at 15 percent, too, so be careful throwing back too many at the cookout.
READ MORE: Recipe: Chili Crisp Honey Ribs from Jannell Lo’s “My Best Friend Is Gluten-Free”
So many people still associate Beaujolais with light and fruity, but bottles from one of the area’s 10 Cru-designated areas frequently have the acidity and heft to stand up to all comers. This bottle benefits from a bit of age—a bonus at this price—so it’s showing nice subtle earthiness and a licorice-tinged finish.
Natural wine, often overflowing with personality, can be tricky to pair, but when you take a bottle like this quirky light red sparkler made with the hybrid grape Leon Millet, it has the acidity, juiciness and crunchy red-fruit power to cut through most grilled offerings—but it’s still friendly enough to sip as an aperitif.
Neal McLennan is the wine and spirits editor for Vancouver and Western Living magazines, where he susses out the wonderful (and occasionally weird) options for imbibing across Western Canada.
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