Wine Board: A forum for wine lovers, experts and beginners. Post wine reviews, comments and share
HOW TO POST | click here for today’s activity topics | profile | register | preferences | FAQ | BLOG

Wine Board: a wine forum, wine encyclopedia, wine news, learn about wineLearn about wine, wine education, wine knowledge, A to Z about wineLastest wine news, wine news feed, wine events, winery reportsWine encyclopedia, wine terms, wine terminology, wine dictionarySearch our wine board to find the information you are looking for. Perhaps we’ve covered it!



UBBFriend: Email This Page to Someone!
  wines.com WineBoard
  Wine/Food Affinities
  wines for mexican food dinner

Post New Topic  Post A Reply

next newest topic | next oldest topic
Author Topic:   wines for mexican food dinner
winston
New Member

Posts: 1
From: Ardmore, Ok. US
Registered: Sep 2000

posted 09-20-2000 10:20     Click Here to See the Profile for winston     Edit/Delete Message
Help! Help! Help!
Having beef fajitas , chicken and spinach enchiladas, jalapeno muffins. Help! They want wine with dinner. Red and White. Any suggestions?

[This message has been edited by winston (edited 09-20-2000).]

Innkeeper
Moderator

Posts: 9733
From: Middleton, NH, USA
Registered: Nov 99

posted 09-20-2000 11:48     Click Here to See the Profile for Innkeeper     Edit/Delete Message
Hi Winston and welcome to the Wine Board. Had huge success bringing a Portugese Dao to a Mexican Food affair recently. Specifically it was Caves Velhas Dao, regular (not reserve) bottling. If you can find it in your neck of the woods, it runs around $6.00 per bottle. That should be bearable.

Jackie
Administrator

Posts: 589
From: Castro Valley, CA USA
Registered: Dec 98

posted 09-21-2000 11:57     Click Here to See the Profile for Jackie     Edit/Delete Message
Winston,

Check out this thread about Wines with Fajitas. I think you'll find several good tips here, so you'll have some choices depending on what's available in your area, what your personal preferences are, etc.

Just type (or copy and paste) this into the address bar at the top of your browser.

wines.com/ubb2/Forum2/HTML/000015.html

Jackie

Bucko
Moderator

Posts: 4758
From: Washington State
Registered: Jan 99

posted 09-21-2000 12:21     Click Here to See the Profile for Bucko     Edit/Delete Message
Ardmore, Lake Texoma and crappie country.

Just a decent, cheap sparkling wine like Korbel is my choice.

Bucko

mrdutton
Member

Posts: 1899
From: Virginia Beach, Va, USA
Registered: Dec 1999

posted 09-21-2000 15:56     Click Here to See the Profile for mrdutton     Edit/Delete Message
This is a road well traveled is it not!?!

Why not drink what the Mexican's drink with their food? Beer or Tequila would not be out of order for such a meal.

Grapes are grown in Mexico, but very few of them ever become just wine. The grapes are grown and harvested for the production of brandy.

If it must be wine, then I think IK's and Bucko's suggestions are good. I'd also suggest a Spanish Rioja.

winoweenie
Member

Posts: 11382
From: phoenix, az
Registered: Jan 99

posted 09-21-2000 16:28     Click Here to See the Profile for winoweenie     Edit/Delete Message
Hi there Winston. I still find when I don`t fire with Dos Equis or Corona, I still use our Zinfandels to placate the chilies. In Rocky Pointe we normally do the Beer-Barrell Polka. winoweenie. Met your cousin Salem in Norf Carolina ceeverral yars back. You are really gettin off the beaton psth with mexican food there in ASrdmore. I was born in Shawnee, raised in Tulser, went to O.U. and lived in Ok. City till I worked off my bondage.WW

[This message has been edited by winoweenie (edited 09-21-2000).]

foodie
Member

Posts: 5970
From: Hammondsport, NY, USA
Registered: Feb 99

posted 09-24-2000 09:29     Click Here to See the Profile for foodie     Edit/Delete Message
It is beer for me too, but never Corona; I find that stuff insipidly sweet, even with that piece of lime on the side of the glass. Mexico's Dos Equis, Philippines' San Miguel, and a variety of other good lagers will do nicely.

[This message has been edited by foodie (edited 09-24-2000).]

Botafogo
Member

Posts: 1108
From: Santa Monica, Ca
Registered: Jan 99

posted 09-27-2000 19:16     Click Here to See the Profile for Botafogo     Edit/Delete Message
Two roads of attack here: A really good, spicy, DRY Rose like a Cerasuolo Montepulciano d'Abbruzo or Rosato di Cannanao from Sardegna or, if you opt for beer, get something malty like a Malzbier or French Biere de Garde St. Amant.

enjoy, Roberto

All times are ET

next newest topic | next oldest topic

Administrative Options: Close Topic | Archive/Move | Delete Topic

Post New Topic   Post A Reply

wine exclusive offers, wine bargains, buy wine wholesale, latest wine dealspersonalized wines, custom wine gifts, packagingWine Board: A forum for wine lovers, experts and beginners. Post wine reviews, comments and sharewine clubs, organic wine club, texas wine club, california wine club, wine memberships