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Best Wines with Pizza & Burgers

Delicious toppings turn pizza and burgers into the perfect wine food. Get our top matches

written by Sara Schneider
1 /6 Photo by Thomas J. Story

Build a burger perfect for sparkling wines

Kick off our tour of fast-food wine pairings with a good burger and a sparkling wine made mostly from Pinot Noir. Use ground chuck—its generous fat content loves bubbles; then pile on Pinot-friendly toppings:

  • Brioche buns Good sparklers counter the richness of eggy, buttery bread.
  • Avocados Hard on most grapes, avocados have few wine friends. Sparklers make them work.
  • Applewood-smoked bacon High-acid sparklers are a natural for salty foods. Add smoke to the food, and you link to the earthy side of the wine.
  • Caramelized sweet onions Put a little char on “melted onions,” and the sweet fruit in the wine will pop.
  • Sautéed mushrooms Mushrooms are a Pinot’s best friend.
  • Gruyère cheese Its nuttiness pulls out the earthy lees-iness of a Pinot sparkler.
  • Herbed horseradish mayonnaise Chase the sinus-clearing root with bubbles, and all the herbs and lemon in the sauce will team up with the herbal, citrus side of the wine.
2 /6 Photo by Thomas J. Story

Burger-friendly sparkling wines

Gruet Blanc de Noirs (New Mexico; $14). Dancing with wild strawberries, bright cherries, and creamy citrus, with a puckery edge of grapefruit and intriguing herbs.

Gloria Ferrer Blanc de Noirs (Carneros; $20). A little dark and loamy under red fruit spiked with zesty citrus.

Iron Horse “Wedding Cuvée” 2006 (Green Valley of Russian River Valley; $38). An effervescent mix of green apple, grapefruit, and tart red fruit—even hints of cranberry—softened by pear and a gentle yeastiness.

3 /6 Photo by Thomas J. Story

Best pizza for red wine blends

Red Rhône blends are getting a healthy splash of Grenache these days, along with Syrah, Mourvèdre, and cousins. We built a pizza to match: a thin crust topped with red sauce and gourmet salumi. Top it with:

  • Marinara sauce Sweet but acidic tomatoes need a fruity, high-acid wine, like juicy Grenache.
  • Caramelized sweet onions Char pulls out the smokiness in Rhône grapes. Grown here instead of France, they offer a fruitiness that handles the sweet onions.
  • Provolone Most cheeses are a little tough on red wines, but provolone goes easy, contrasting nicely with the brightness of the wine.
  • Roasted red peppers Sweet and vegetal at once, peppers match both the fruit and the common herbal, underbrush-like character of Rhône blends.
  • Sopressata Spicy cured meat calls for a fleshy, peppery red; Syrah delivers the former, Grenache the latter.
4 /6 Photo by Thomas J. Story

Pizza-friendly red wines

“Sinister Hand” 2008 by Owen Roe (Columbia Valley; $24). A complex, dark-fruited wine with layers of mocha, tobacco, and underbrush.

Bonny Doon Vineyard “Le Cigare Volant” 2005 (California; $32). Brooding and dark-souled; black pepper, olive, tobacco, and earth underlie black cherry, mocha, and red licorice.

Jorian Hill “Beespoke” 2007 (Santa Ynez Valley; $40). Elegant, with juicy black cherry flavors, a grind of black pepper, and hints of violets.

5 /6 Photo by Thomas J. Story

Best pizza for white wine blends

In current white-wine trends, Sauvignon Blanc is dating Semillon (the white Bordeaux blend). For a pie that complements, make it with tangy cheese and greens. Top it with:

  • Ricotta Tangy cheese calls for a high-acid white (Sauvignon Blanc) with enough sweet fruit (Semillon) to seem tangy itself.
  • Broccoli rabe Grassy, herbal Sauvignon Blanc is always a great choice for greens.
  • Caramelized leeks More vegetal than onions yet sweet from caramel­ization, leeks almost mimic this wine blend.
  • Fontina cheese Crisp white wine’s affinity to cheese clinches this pizza pairing.
6 /6 Photo by Thomas J. Story

Pizza-friendly white wines

Chateau St. Jean Fumé Blanc 2008 (Sonoma County; $13). Bright citrus carries melon, pear, and honeysuckle, with a bit of stoniness.

L’Ecole No 41 “Luminesce” 2008 Estate Seven Hills Vineyard (Walla Walla Valley; $19). A full-bodied, spicy wine that mixes vibrant limestone and grapefruit with pear, melon, and tropical notes.

Duckhorn Vineyards Sauvignon Blanc 2008 (Napa Valley; $27). Fresh with lemongrass, green apple, and a gamut of citrus and rich with white nectarine and pear flavors.