Varied Wines w/multicourse dinner (menu)

originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Turkey can indeed be flavored and some of us make great efforts in cooking to keep the breasts tender. But it is what it is.

I don't eat the sweet stuff, but it's there.

Tradition does not require that all traditional dishes be served; just that most of the food is drawn from that palette.

At my house, no sweet potatoes are served and, per Rahsaan, when I make the cranberry sauce I go light on the sugar (and heavy on the Cointreau). Add a heritage-breed bird and pumpkin pie, and then it's fine to offer a salad with Green Goddess.

So, Beaujolais and a fuller cuvee of Muscadet work nicely. Red Rhone isn't a bad choice, either.
 
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Turkey can indeed be flavored and some of us make great efforts in cooking to keep the breasts tender. But it is what it is.

I don't eat the sweet stuff, but it's there.

Tradition does not require that all traditional dishes be served; just that most of the food is drawn from that palette.

At my house, no sweet potatoes are served and, per Rahsaan, when I make the cranberry sauce I go light on the sugar (and heavy on the Cointreau). Add a heritage-breed bird and pumpkin pie, and then it's fine to offer a salad with Green Goddess.

So, Beaujolais and a fuller cuvee of Muscadet work nicely. Red Rhone isn't a bad choice, either.

My preferred Thanksgiving wine has been the 1997 Pinon Cuvée Tradition, though I'm down to my last bottle. I'll probably stick with Pinon going forward, though, as I love the versatility of a sec-tendre Vouvray (or a nice Kabinett), and I think Chenin works better with the Thanksgiving palette than Riesling.
 
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