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Food & Wine

5 Ways to Pair Wine With Grilled Chicken

Kristin Donnelly
2 min read

Consider the sauce and preparation technique when selecting the best wine to serve with chicken.

<p>Caitlin Bensel / Food Styling by Margaret Monroe Dickey / Prop Styling by Claire Spollen</p>

Caitlin Bensel / Food Styling by Margaret Monroe Dickey / Prop Styling by Claire Spollen

When choosing wine to go with grilled chicken, you want to consider the sauce or the marinade in order to pick the best pairing. Here are five approaches to take this summer when choosing wines to serve with grilled chicken depending on its accompaniment.

Photo by Caitlin Bensel / Food Styling by Margaret Monroe Dickey / Prop Styling by Claire Spollen
Photo by Caitlin Bensel / Food Styling by Margaret Monroe Dickey / Prop Styling by Claire Spollen

Simple marinade: Simply seasoned grilled chicken is one of the most versatile foods and pairs well with a range of wines. (Have a special bottle you want to open? Make grilled chicken!) Because of the char and smoky flavors that infuse the meat, you can go for wines that have seen some new oak, including Chardonnays and some California Pinot Noirs. If the chicken is rubbed with lots of herbs — like rosemary and thyme — rosé or lightly chilled, juicy Spanish Garnacha is a good bet.

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Get the Recipe: Grilled Chicken Breasts with Lemon and Thyme

Barbecue sauce: If your chicken is brushed with a sticky barbecue sauce, go for fruity, low-tannin reds, like Zinfandel or Primitivo (Italy’s version of Zinfandel). These wines have deep berry flavors and an almost sweet fruit quality that’s great with these sauces. If you tend to lean toward white wines, try a California rosé, which also tends to have ripe, almost sweet fruit but enough body for this style of chicken.

Get the Recipe: Big Bob Gibson's Chicken with White Barbecue Sauce

Mustardy: Some barbecue sauces have lots of mustard, which can make the chicken better with whites or light reds. If the sauce is sweet, try an off-dry German or Oregon Riesling. (Sweet sauces tend to like sweet or very fruity wines.) If the sauce is tangier, try dry Austrian Riesling or zingy unoaked French Chardonnay from places like the Macon. A red option? Lightly chilled Beaujolais.

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Get the Recipe: Grilled Chicken Thighs with Maple-Mustard Marinade

Spicy marinade: If your marinade includes chiles, you can’t go wrong with serving a slightly off-dry Riesling. The heat of the marinade will make the wine taste less sweet. Bonus: Rieslings tend to be low in alcohol, making them easy to drink on a hot summer day.

Get the Recipe: Grilled Chicken with Coconut Rice and Chile-Lime Sauce

Yogurt marinade: These rich, spiced Indian and Middle Eastern-style marinades give grilled chicken a great browned crust. That crust is especially good with full-bodied white wines, like California Chardonnay. If you want to go for something more unusual, look for Chenin Blanc (from places like Vouvray and Savennières in France) as well as Gewürztraminer or Pinot Gris.

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Get the Recipe: Yogurt-Marinated Grilled Chicken

Kristin Donnelly is a former Food & Wine editor and author of the forthcoming The Modern Potluck (Clarkson Potter, 2016). She is also the cofounder of Stewart & Claire, an all-natural line of lip balms made in Brooklyn.

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