Session 16
Pairing by principle (wine)
Session 16 · Block E — Pairing

Pairing by
principle (wine)

The same weight-matching logic from the wine and chocolate courses, applied to cheese — plus the one wine pairing everyone gets wrong.

Duration
40 min
You’ll need
A soft cheese, a hard cheese, and whatever wine is open
Objective
Pair cheese and wine by principle, not folklore
Reading

The pairing map

Click through to see why each wine style works — or doesn’t:

Reading · 2

The classic myth-bust

What people assume

  • "Red wine and cheese" is a safe default
  • Bold cheese needs bold wine
  • Any cheese board pairs with any bottle

What actually happens

  • Dry tannic reds often clash with soft, pungent, or high-acid cheeses
  • Bold, pungent cheeses often want sweetness or carbonation, not more tannin
  • Sparkling and sweet wines are the most versatile cheese partners, not big reds
The rule to actually remember

If you only take one thing from this session: sparkling and sweet wines pair with more cheese, more reliably, than big red wines do. The "red wine and cheese" pairing is mostly a myth built on convenience, not on how tannin actually interacts with fat, salt, and pungency.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. Why does sparkling wine work well with rich, bloomy-rind cheese?
  2. What is the reliable wine pairing for blue cheese?
  3. When does dry tannic red wine actually work well?
  4. State the core pairing principle in one sentence.
  5. Why is "red wine and cheese" often a weaker default than people assume?
Session 17 · Block E — Pairing

Beer, cider
& spirits

Wine isn’t always the right answer. Beer and cider often have an easier time with cheese’s full range of intensity than wine does.

Duration
40 min
You’ll need
A beer or cider, and a washed-rind or alpine cheese
Objective
Explain why non-wine pairings often outperform wine
Reading

Why beer and cider work so well

Click through:

The traditional logic

Historically, cheese and beer or cider come from the same farmhouse traditions — alpine cheese and cider, Belgian washed rinds and Belgian ales. These aren’t novelty pairings; they predate most modern wine-and-cheese conventions.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. Why does beer handle a wider range of cheese intensity than wine often can?
  2. What is cider’s traditional cheese pairing category?
  3. Why do washed rinds pair naturally with beer?
  4. When do spirits work well with cheese?
  5. What historical point does the farmhouse tradition make about beer/cider pairing?
Session 18 · Block E — Pairing

The cheese
board

Turn everything into a composition discipline: how to build a board that actually teaches, instead of just decorating a table.

Duration
40 min
You’ll need
3–5 cheeses and a few accompaniments
Objective
Compose a board using flight logic
Reading

Composing like a flight, not a display

A good board is Session 4’s comparative flight, served socially.

  1. Choose for range, not repetition

    Vary milk, moisture, and rind type — a fresh, a bloomy, a firm, and a blue covers most of the course in one sitting.

  2. Arrange mild to intense

    Guests should be able to move left to right (or clockwise) from gentle to assertive, same logic as any tasting flight.

  3. Serve at room temperature, cut fresh

    Pull cheese out 30–45 minutes ahead; cut just before serving rather than hours in advance.

  4. Add sweetness somewhere

    Honey, fig jam, or dried fruit gives every cheese on the board a safe pairing partner, especially the blue.

The board is the final exam for Sessions 1–17

Reading a board well means applying the tasting method, the style knowledge, and the pairing logic from every prior session at once — which is exactly why it sits right before the course’s final consolidation.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. In what order should a board be arranged?
  2. Why choose for range instead of repetition?
  3. Why serve cheese at room temperature, cut fresh?
  4. What accompaniment gives nearly every cheese a safe pairing?
  5. Why is board composition a good test of the whole course?