In recent years wine has become the de facto drink at the dinner table. But it wasn’t always that way.
For centuries it was beer that was the preferred tipple at the table, proudly served with food way back, in fact, before the discovery that grapes could be transformed into wine.
In many countries a man’s worth was measured by the quality of the beer he poured at his table. In northern Europe, where beer was more popular than in the warmer grape-producing regions, wine was something to be sneered at and looked down upon.
But even here wine’s reputation as the perfect partner to food began to grow. Society’s great and good hailed wine’s extraordinary ability to complement the very finest of foods, the media got caught up in the whole story and beer’s illustrious past was quickly forgotten and it found itself hastily relegated from fine dining restaurants to fast food joints.
There’s no doubt the wine industry in recent decades has done a remarkable job of associating their wares with quality cuisine. Take the mantra “red wine with meat and white wine with fish”. It’s ingrained in your mind too isn’t it? Even though you’ve probably no idea how it got there. It’s been repeated so many times that it’s now become a widely accepted truth, like bad things coming in threes and the grass always being greener on the other side.
Conversely the beer industry in recent years has, by its own admission, done a pretty lousy job of telling us any different, preferring to spend its marketing millions on targeting loutish young male sports fans rather than foodies.
In all but a scant few countries beer has become the drink equivalent of sliced bread – universally available and utterly forgettable. It is now commonly chugged from cans while watching the big match and downed in burp-inducing quantities with pizzas and other fast food.
Beer has taken on the role of your ugly best mate. You like to spend time with beer and have fun when you’re with your other friends and their ugly best mates but you would never take him home and show him off to your parents or invite him to a dinner party.
No, no. That’s when you bring your friend wine along. Wine makes you look good you see, more sophisticated, more refined, more grown-up.
The truth is our brains have been ‘wine-washed’. We stopped questioning a long time ago whether wine actually deserved to be served with every course. We’ve just accepted that it must be right because everyone else is doing it.
However right now there are some new whispers going around the dinner table. People are starting to talk ever more loudly about a new generation of beers with characters and flavours that many wines are finding hard to match. Beer, it seems, is on everyone’s lips these days.
Coming tomorrow…..
Things get worse before they get better but beer finally starts to makes a comeback at the dinner table.






