Food Pairing

  (Last Update:2019.01.31)

Wine Pairing: Hunter Valley Semillon x Miso Mackerel

This was a truly lovely pairing. We had a feeling it would work, but with miso and the oily mackerel it could have been a challenge. Hunter Valley Semillon seems to be one of those wines that “wine people” in the know loves, but that struggles to get a wider audience. Never mind, it’s great stuff and is a brilliant companion with fish and East Asian flavours – it doesn’t always have to be Riesling….we promise.

Today’s Wine Pairing: Hunter Valley Semillon x Miso Mackerel

Semillon’s home is in France, and Bordeaux specifically, but it has found a unique expression in Hunter Valley, just north of Sydney, Australia. Here the grapes are picked quite early to avoid late-Summer rains, and the resulting wines are typically low in alcohol (often 11% or below).

Australian_wine_zones2

Image by Froggydarb at English Wikipedia
*Wine zones of Australia. Hunter Valley is the dark green near the east coast.

While they don’t have a huge amount of complexity when young, with a little bit of age these wines blossom into real aromatic beauties: fleshy, ripe citrus fruits with plenty of zippy acidity and a nice hint of toasted almonds. These wines are often aged at the estate for a good few years before release. In the case of our Mount Pleasant ‘Elizabeth’ Semillon 2009, it had been ten years in fact. And it was a real cracker!

VINUM-mackerel-miso

The acidity was the ideal foil for the oily mackerel and would be an absolutely spot-on partner for any fish or seafood for that matter. And as for the miso component: no problem! The roast almond flavours and fleshy, creamy texture on the palate were great with the sweet-but-earthy miso. And with only 11% alcohol, it was a perfect mid-week wine. What’s not to like? Our advice: seek out some Hunter Valley Semillon. Now!

Pickup post

  1. What grows together goes together
  2. Basic Pairing Tips (Part 2)
  3. White wine with meat
  4. At what temperature should I serve my wi…
  5. What is a good pairing?

Related post

  1. Food Pairing

    Wine Pairing: Viognier x Chicken tagine

    Moroccan food, and tagine stews in …

  2. Food Pairing

    Wine Pairing: Txakoli/Fino x Nanbanzuke/Escabeche

    Vinegar is not usually a good partn…

  3. Food Pairing

    Wine Pairing: Pflaz Riesling x Soßklopse

    What on earth is a Soßklopse?! Well…

  4. Food Pairing

    Wine Pairing: Vinho Verde x Grilled sardines

    Summer. Sea. Sardines. BBQ. Crisp w…

Recent post

Archives

  1. Food Pairing

    Wine Pairing: Pacherenc du Vic-Bihl Sec …
  2. Food Pairing

    Wine Pairing: Barolo x Pheasant/Mushroom…
  3. Food Pairing

    Wine Pairing: Wine x Charcuterie
  4. Food Pairing

    Wine Pairing: Jumilla Monastrell x Xinji…
  5. Food Pairing

    Wine Pairing: Fiano di Avellino x Japane…
PAGE TOP