What to pour with Indian food

The last ten years of Australian dining have been quietly shaped by Indian food. Indian takeaway has replaced Chinese takeaway in most Australian households. Butter chicken has become the lasagne of the suburbs. A proper biryani shows up at Saturday dinner parties next to a roast chicken and no one blinks.

And yet we are still pouring the wrong things.

The automatic Australian reaction to Indian food is to grab a lager, which is fine, or a Shiraz, which is a tragedy. Red wine and curry is mostly a fight. The tannin clashes with the cream, the alcohol amplifies the chilli, and the whole thing ends up tasting metallic. Try it tonight and trust me the next day when you promise never to do it again.

The correct answers are a gin and tonic, an off-dry Riesling, or a cold Indian lager. None of them are fancy. All of them are right. Here is why.

The drinks that go with this food

Forget the Shiraz. Indian food wants botanicals, bubbles, or off-dry acid. These three are the working backbone of any Indian dinner at home.

The food on the table

Our Indian-leaning recipe shelf is still being built. Butter chicken is live; Thai green curry is close enough in the flavour map to pour the same drinks next to it.

The single best Indian dinner in the F&D library

Menu

  • Poppadoms with three chutneys: mint yoghurt, tamarind, and hot lime pickle.
  • Butter chicken as the headline.
  • A yellow dal tadka on the side, for balance.
  • Basmati rice, charred naan, salted raita with cucumber and mint.
  • Sliced red onion and green chilli on the table for the keen.
  • Mango kulfi or cardamom ice cream for dessert.

Drinks plan

  • Welcome drink: G&T with a fat wedge of lime in a balloon glass.
  • With dinner: more G&Ts, plus a bottle of Pewsey Vale Eden Valley Riesling for the wine drinkers.
  • A six-pack of Kingfisher in the fridge for the beer drinkers.
  • Non-drinkers: salted lassi, mango lassi, or cold jal jeera over ice.
  • Finish: a hot chai for anyone staying long enough.

The bottles worth buying

Gin and tonic is the Indian-food pairing that refuses to be dethroned. Here’s the shelf we trust.

The Australian connection

Indian food arrived in Australia early (there were curries on the goldfields in the 1850s) and we have been uneven about honouring it ever since. The good news is the current generation of Indian restaurants in Melbourne and Sydney (Enter Via Laundry, Don’s, Manjit’s, the Indian bistro boom in Surry Hills) is pushing the pairing conversation forward. Sommeliers are putting Riesling and Grüner on wine lists next to curry. Bars are making better G&Ts. We are catching up.

At home, the move is simple: G&T before, Riesling or Kingfisher with, and a cup of chai at the end. You don’t need a wine matching app. You need gin, lime, and good tonic. And the butter chicken on the stove.