Wine and food pairing with recipes of Mi Sao

Find the best food and wine pairings with a recipe of Mi Sao. The ingredients in this recipe are usually salt, pepper, onion, garlic, oil, carrot, meat, zucchini, parsley, cabbage, red pepper, soy sauce, chives, ginger, chicken breast, pork, rose shrimp, black mushroom, noodles.

The best appellations to pair with a recipe of Mi Sao

The wines that pair with a recipe of Mi Sao

About Vegetarian

Vegetarian dishes exclude all animal flesh in their composition. Most often you will find vegetarian pasta dishes, risotto or omelettes. While keeping a maximum of flavour you will also find stuffed vegetables of vegetarian mince.

Food and Wine Pairing News

Verona to be home to Italy’s largest wine museum and visitor centre

Known to wine enthusiasts for one of the world’s best known annual wine fairs, Vinitaly, Verona is about to host a poli-functional wine museum and visitor centre that promises to rival similar enterprises in Bordeaux and Porto. The Museo del Vino (MuVin) project was officially unveiled at Vinitaly earlier this month, with the endorsement of Italian tourism minister Massimo Garavaglia, Roberta Garibaldi of Italy’s national tourism agency, and Prof Diego Begalli, director of the department of busi ...

AXA Millésime appoints new technical director of Pichon Baron

Montégut, who is already technical director of the Premier Cru Classé estate Château Suduiraut in Sauternes, will replace Jean-René Matignon who last year announced his intention to step down after more than 30 years in the role. He will formally take on his new responsibilities from the end of April when Matignon retires. Having worked together with Montégut since his arrival at Suduiraut in 2004, Christian Seely, MD of owner AXA Millésimes, said that during this time, Montégut had been respons ...

The power of music: How Brahms might make your wine taste better

There’s a reason why heavily-applied perfume ranks highly on most wine lovers’ list of pet peeves. It overpowers your senses, conceals aromas and distorts your perception of a wine. In professional tastings and wine exams the wearing of perfume is banned, if not thoroughly frowned upon. You just don’t do it. What then, if we applied the same logic to music, controlling the sounds we hear, or don’t hear, while tasting wine? There’s no doubt that a chaotic environment can clog your synapses, makin ...