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Wine Blog

Beer Vs Wine - The Tussle For The Table

by Anto Coates

On Tuesday night I attended the BrewNZ Beervana dinner, billed as ‘Beer vs Wine: the Tussle for the Table’ in true Don King style. Wine writer John Saker and American brewer Sam Calagione were the ring announcers for wine and beer respectively, with Saker firing his erudition barbs at Calagione’s impenetrable barrier of humour and psyched-ness.

To say that the crowd at the Beervana dinner was slightly partisan is like saying Tiger Woods was slightly promiscuous. There was a heavy bias towards beer and some tables kept it in check rather better than others. Personally, I was intrigued to see how the beers would fare against the wine with food, as I’ve always thought beer is better suited to hot days, salty snacks and spicy ethnic food than to the delicate flavours and textures of fine dining. But preconceived notions aside, I was in a good chair, sitting next to brewer and judge Graeme Mahy who, as luck would have it, had a hand in the first beer of the night, the Moa Original.

The Moa vied with the Allan Scott Les Joues Rouges Methode for the affections of the first course, a duck liver parfait with toasted gingerbread, served with corned beef, red coleslaw and mustard club sandwiches and cheddar and caraway jumbo straws (which had to have been a nod to the beer, but came across more like a red herring). This match came complete with sibling rivalry as Josh Scott, brewer for Moa and former winemaker for Allan Scott, baited his sister Victoria, the marketing manager for Allan Scott Wines. The Allan Scott lived up to its name and was left red-cheeked as our table voted against it 8-6 (average points out of 10, not votes). For the record I scored the fight 6-5 to the wine: I thought the hoppy bitterness of the Moa was overwhelming, a common theme for me throughout the night, and I found the Les Joues Rouge’s acidity and bubbles cut through the fattiness of the duck liver in a more civilised fashion, though only a good not a great match. But democracy is a fickle mistress and I sighed and conceded in the spirit of the evening. Beer (and brother Josh) eventually emerged victorious as the votes of the room were tallied.

Seeing the second course, my eyes lit up as I sensed a certain victory for the wine: scampi tails with roasted garlic aioli and crispy chorizo, served with spent grain loaves with extra virgin olive oil. Surely the rich yet delicate Ata Rangi Lismore Pinot Gris 09 would be a far better match than the cloudy Tuatara Bavarian Hefe! Indeed I thought it was—the delicate rose blossom florals and 11 grams RS gave support and complexity to the simple flavours—but again the beer won the popular vote. Our table voted for the wine, scoring the match 8-4 in its favour, agreeing that the beer had to get a fail mark. The only redeeming feature I could see for the beer was its beautiful quenching quality for the oversalted spent loaf (which was made from spent Tuatara Pilsner grains), but I’m not sure an overenthusiastic salting should really count as a positive. By that rationale, blowing would be a good match for a hot soup.

The third course was what I would call a safe wine match – pork and pinot. Ruth Pretty presented a delicious confit of crisp pork belly with white beans, rainbow chard and prunes, and the Dux Brewing company presented their Hereford Bitter to duke it out with the Mt Difficulty Pinot Noir 08. Most at our table agreed that the wine had the edge pre-food, with summer ripe plums, black cherries and lilac florals, but results with the food were less conclusive. Some of the beer lovers reported excessive tannins when combined with the fatty pork belly and felt that the wine was not as good with the food as on its own. I personally found the pork accentuated the concentration of the wine, but did have the effect of thinning it out a little bit. Perhaps the richness of the dish might have required something with a little more body, or more acid like a Gewurztraminer. I called this a fair match and gave it 7 out of 10 to the Hereford Bitter’s 5. The table was less sure and scored it a draw at 6-all. Finally the wine appeared to be making some gains, taking the win overall for course 3.

The fourth course I anticipated would be a tight tussle. If there was one item on the menu that just might call for a beer it was the steak, kidney and Hopwired IPA pie with minted pea purée and syrah syrup. The Hopwired beer was naturally chosen to pair and is renowned for its brutal hop character. Tony Bish, whose Sacred Hill Halo Syrah was up against it, said it was "so hoppy it should be called Bugs Bunny.” If there is one rule of food pairing it is to match the weights of the dish and the drink, and I felt the beer and the wine actually bracketed the pie, the syrah just lacking a touch of concentration and length (Deerstalkers would have been spot on) and the Hopwired bludgeoning the palate into submission with its persistent hoppy finish. I scored it 7-all as both were pleasant enough but didn’t quite achieve harmony. The table called it 6-5 in favour of wine, and the room concurred, making it 2-all after 4 courses.

Next up was the Martinborough Vineyard Pinot Noir 2008, a great wine from a great vintage, fresh off winning a major international award, though the echoing acoustics and my table’s lack of proximity prevented me from hearing what it was. The poor soul up against it was the Monteith’s Doppelbock Winter Ale, trying to tame the Cervena® venison rack marinated in apple syrup, Tamari soy sauce and sesame oil with Shiitake mushrooms, olive oil enriched jus, kumara and manuka honey mash and parsnip crisp. Wow. What a mouthful, and it certainly was too – for me the food and wine match of the night. The Shiitake mushroom, sesame and soy base sauce brought out the truffle/mushroom characters that mark a pinot of this quality, while the sweet manuka honey mash made the red cherry fruit dance. I gave it 9 out of 10 while the poor old Monteith’s fared less well with a 4 out of 10, though it did improve with the food, it was just hopelessly overmatched. The table didn’t see it quite as skewed as I did, marking it 7-5 in favour of the Martinborough Pinot. The room concurred and the wine had its nose in front 3-2 with 1 round to go.

The final course was always going to be beer’s most difficult assignment, as no one has ever heard of a dessert beer (well at least I haven’t). But in the same way you send in your best slugger when the pressure’s on at the bottom of the ninth inning, beer wheeled out Superbrewer Richard Emerson and his Emerson’s Weizenbock to go up against sticky specialist P

The Products...
Moa Methode 750Ml
Method Traditional Pilsner. A hoppy lager with a unique yeast character and a fruity gras...
$14.20 0750 MLS
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ALLAN SCOTT LES JOUES ROUGES (ROSE) NV
Allan Scott Les Joues Rouges (Rose) Nv
A true Methode Traditionelle, this Sparkling Rosé is made from 100% ...
$26.25 750 MLS
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TUATARA PILSNER 330ML SINGLE
Tuatara Pilsner 330Ml Single
A hybrid New Zealand / Czech style Pilsner. Brewed with a Czech yeast, ...
$3.35 330 MLS
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TUATARA HEFE 330ML SINGLE
Tuatara Hefe 330Ml Single
A multi award winning German style wheat beer. Pouring a light gold with a fu...
$3.35 330 MLS
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