A guide to cooking with wine

If you need an excuse to crack open a bottle of pinot, read on – here’s how to incorporate more wine on your plate.

Chef Pouring Wine On Pan In Restaurant Kitchen

Source: Getty Images

There’s something decidedly romantic about cooking with wine. Evocative of Italian enjoyed al fresco, or humming a Spanish melodìa over an aromatic stovetop – a technique so synonymous with the Mediterranean is surely worth a try.  

Adding wine to your cooking has the potential to impart mouth-watering flavour and enhance a favourite recipe, or conversely to spoil a delicious dish if poured too generously or at the wrong time. Consider these tips before you start splashing with abandon so that no wine ­– or worse, your dinner – is wasted.

Red or white?

A rule of thumb: use the type of wine you’d serve with the dish. Think a dash of crisp, white pinot grigio with , or a full-bodied cab sav with .  If a recipe simply calls for ‘red’ or ‘white’, reach for a medium-dry to dry (i.e. not sweet) wine – pinot noir for red and pinot grigio for white. Full-bodied red wine means a cabernet sauvignon, while merlot and shiraz fit the bill for a medium-bodied red.
If the recipe includes a pour of something white and dry, you could go with chardonnay, sauvignon blanc or Riesling. Need something fruity? Grab a bottle of gewürztraminer or viognier. Sparkling means champagne or prosecco. Cinch!

Fortified wine can be a little trickier as it varies widely. , , sherry and port can all used with finesse in a range of dishes, however not interchangeably – proceed with caution though and the payoff will be well worth it.

Quality over quantity

An easy guide to follow: if you wouldn’t drink it, don’t use it in your cooking. Simple, non? Cheap wine generally has a high salt content which can ruin a good dish. And avoid at all costs wine labelled ‘cooking wine’. 

That said, there’s no need to spend $50 on a bottle of white to use in your – there are plenty of more affordable options around. If the recipe calls for a cup and the price is right, why not grab two bottles and enjoy a glass while you cook, or with guests over dinner?

Does alcohol burn off during cooking?

Yes, the majority will burn off. On average, after 15 minutes of cooking the alcohol content is still at around 40 per cent, however a slow cooked stew might only have around 5 percent after two hours in the oven.
Wine generally contains a lower alcohol percentage than other spirits, and when you consider dividing up a dish into several portions it becomes quite nominal per person. If it’s still a concern, or when cooking for young children, try unsweetened fruit juice or low-salt stock.

Tips:

  • If a recipe calls for white wine and you don’t want to open an entire bottle, a trick is to use dry vermouth as a substitute. A bottle of dry vermouth will last in the fridge for several months and works a treat for .
  • Balance is key – wine contains acids, sugars and tannins, so to maintain balance in a dish you should first consider ingredients that may clash or overdo any one component. For example, lemon juice and vinegar are both very acidic, so cut back on these to make space for the acid in the wine. 
 

Lead image via Getty Images.

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4 min read
Published 16 March 2017 9:18am
Updated 12 June 2017 12:57pm
By Samantha van Egmond


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