Match of the week

Roast duck and Bull's Blood

Roast duck and Bull's Blood

My match of the week this week was a toss-up between roast duck and Egri Bikavér (aka Bull's Blood) and Chateau Musar and game pie but I've plumped for the former, which I tasted at Soho's legendary Gay Hussar, as the more unusual pairing.

Not having tasted Hungarian wine for a while I'm somewhat embarrassed to admit I hadn't realised Egri Bikavér was Bull’s Blood. Egri Korona Borhas is the producer (I hope I've got that right, at least).

According to Wikipedia which has a surprisingly comprehensive entry on the wine it is generally based on Kekfrankos these days though that wasn’t clear from the producer’s website. It's a well-structured oak-aged red not dissimilar to a traditional minor Bordeaux in style. The duck tasted as if it had been confit'd (and possibly deep-fried) and was served with red cabbage, potatoes and apples.

Of course roast duck goes with practically any medium-bodied red - you could equally well pair it with Bordeaux, Burgundy, Rioja or an Italian red like Barbera or Barolo but this was a sound terroir-based match which worked very well.

You can read more about Egri Bikavr on this Bull’s Blood website - it even has its own Facebook page!

Smoked, caramelised salmon with Disznókö Tokaji 6 puttonyos 1993

Smoked, caramelised salmon with Disznókö Tokaji 6 puttonyos 1993

This week’s match is not mine but fellow wine writer Margaret Rand’s who also writes for Decanter. She recently went to Hungary at the invitation of AXA Millésimes who ownes the Tokaji producer Disznókö - as well as Château Suiduiraut - for what must be the most extraordinary wine dinner ever conceived: a Chinese meal, paired with sweet wine cooked by two Bordeaux-based chefs Tommy and Andy Shan of Au Bonheur du Palais, (which happens to be AXA proprietor Christian Seely’s favourite restaurant in the city).

Subscribers can read Margaret’s full account of the experience tomorrow including the Shans’ highly unusual philosophy of food and wine pairing but here’s what for her was the highlight of the meal.

The dish was described as smoked salmon in red pepper oil - ”not smoked salmon in the Scottish sense” explains Rand, but “a cube of salmon that had been smoked and caramelised on one side” The wine, being categorised as 6 puttonyos was the second sweetest in the Disznókö range (puttonyos are the baskets or hods of botrytised grape paste that are added to the base wine) and came from an exceptional vintage. Already 15 years old it had gone beyond the stage of mere sweetness to gain an extraordinary complexity evoking, according to Disznókö's own tasting notes, dried apricots, plum, dates and spice. Flavours that you can actually imagine working with salmon.

According to Rand the match was ‘sensationally good’ a perfect marriage with the ‘soft, melting’ texture of the salmon. “It was the star of the evening:- adventurous, imaginative and spot-on”

I suspect it took great skill to bring it off and may well be a case of ‘don’t try this at home’ but it does make one think differently about the roles that sweet wines might play beyond the dessert course. For more come back tomorrow . . .

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