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Harvesting grapes from a vineyard in Lebanon.
Harvesting grapes from a vineyard in Lebanon. Photograph: Alamy
Harvesting grapes from a vineyard in Lebanon. Photograph: Alamy

How to pick the right wine for a Middle Eastern feast

This article is more than 5 years old

The region’s food is a great complement to wine, especially all that red-wine friendly grilled spiced meat

However you define the Middle East geographically, we’re not talking about a dominant wine culture compared with the likes of France or Spain. True, Lebanon and Turkey have historic wine-growing traditions, but not Egypt, Jordan or other Arab states. Yet the food we think of as being Middle Eastern is a great complement to wine, subtly spiced and including a fair amount of red wine-friendly grilled meat.

Lebanon is one of the prime hunting grounds. As a former French protectorate, the grapes it grows – syrah, grenache and cinsault, along with, surprisingly for such a warm climate, a fair bit of cabernet sauvignon – are similar to those in the south of France, so the same varieties grown elsewhere will also work with Lebanese food; and made as rosé as well as red. If you’ve run down summer stocks, head to Waitrose and pick up a couple of bottles of Rosé de Balthazar (12.7%), from near Carcassonne, for £6.99, a good couple of quid less than most Provence rosés.

For such a hot country, Turkish wine is also fascinating, with surprisingly bright, zesty whites (look out for narince) and some appealingly brambly, indigenous reds, albeit with possibly unfamiliar names such as boğazkere, öküzgözü and kalecik karası.

Then there’s Georgia, which doesn’t really see itself as part of the region, but its wines go brilliantly with Middle Eastern dishes. Look out for amber wines made out of rikatsiteli and kisi, and reds from saperavi. (Oddbins has one, along with the amber winebelow.)

And nearby Greece may not be in the Middle East, either, but its food is very similar. Any wine that goes with a selection of mezedes will work with meze such as falafel and baba ganoush. Again, there are intriguing whites – you may have heard of the crisp, citrussy assyrtiko – and exotically dark, smoky reds such as agiorgitiko and xinomavro.

Frustratingly, although these wines offer a rewarding departure from the well-trodden path of better-known varieties such as sauvignon blanc and malbec, few supermarkets and high-street retailers stock them in any quantity, if at all, and they’re often made in such tiny amounts that they tend to be pricey.

But you can easily substitute more affordable wines from other areas of the Mediterranean such as southern France, Spain and southern Italy. A good côtes du rhône, such as the rather delicious Vaison la Romaine 2017, just listed by Majestic (£8.99 on the mix-six deal), will do the job admirably.

Four bottles to go with Middle Eastern food

Thymiopoulos Malagouzia 2017 £10 Marks & Spencer, 12%

Fresh, lemony, Greek white to enjoy with meze

Domaine des Tourelles Rouge 2014 £9.50 Priory Wine, £12.50 Talking Wines, Cirencester, 14%

Vibrant Lebanese blend of cabernet, syrah and cinsault. Good with a grill

Vita Vinea Kisi Amber 2016 £22 Oddbins, 13%

Wild, but fascinating Georgian amber wine for the adventurously inclined. Great with aubergine

Domodo Negroamaro 2017 £7.99 Majestic (on the mix-six deal), 12%

Dark, dense, brambly red from Puglia. Ideal with lamb

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