What to pour with Mexican food

There are three great truths about Mexican food and drink in Australia. First: we still haven’t built enough good Mexican restaurants outside of Sydney’s Inner West and a six-block radius of Gertrude Street in Fitzroy. Second: we keep serving Corona with our tacos, which is a fine beer but not the point. Third: nothing, and I mean nothing, goes with tacos, carnitas, ceviche and proper fresh salsa better than tequila.

This is the reason Food & Drinks exists. The best pairing conversation in the Australian kitchen right now is about Mexican food, because it’s rich in char, salt, citrus, chilli and pork fat, which is the exact set of things a well-made tequila cocktail was designed to cut through.

Here is the short version. Pour a margarita. If the margarita is finished, pour another margarita. If you want to sound clever, order a Paloma. If you want to sound like you know what you are doing, drink mezcal. If you want a wine, drink a Grenache. If you want a beer, drink a Mexican lager, cold, with a wedge of lime jammed in the neck. That’s the whole post.

But if you want the long version, here it is.

Why tequila is the answer

Tequila is distilled from the blue agave, a spiky cousin of the pineapple that grows in the hot dirt of Jalisco and doesn’t particularly want to be there. The spirit that comes out of it is bright, vegetal, citrus-tinged, slightly peppery. Good tequila is smooth. Bad tequila is the reason you don’t want to drink tequila.

Critically, tequila pairs with Mexican food the way a screwdriver pairs with a flat-head screw. It’s not an accident. The acidic lime in a margarita cuts through the fat of slow-cooked pork. The salt rim primes your palate for the next bite of taco. The citrus in a Paloma echoes the citrus in the salsa. Tequila was literally shaped by the same climate, geography, and meals as the food it now sits beside.

The cocktails that go with this food

Tequila forward, citrus-heavy, salt-friendly. These are the three pours we’d walk into any Mexican dinner with.

The food on the table

Our Mexican-leaning recipes built for these drinks. More dishes landing every week.

The single best Mexican dinner in the F&D library

Menu

  • Chips, fresh salsa, a bowl of guacamole.
  • Pork carnitas tacos with pickled red onion, coriander and queso fresco.
  • A second platter: grilled snapper with charred corn salsa, or charred vegetables.
  • A sharp green salad with lime and chilli.
  • Churros with hot chocolate sauce, or very cold coconut ice cream.

Drinks plan

  • Welcome drink: Margarita made to order, salt-rimmed glasses chilled in the freezer.
  • With dinner: more Margaritas, or switch to Paloma after the second round.
  • Wine drinkers: a bottle of McLaren Vale Grenache for the table.
  • Beer drinkers: a cold Mexican lager with a wedge of lime.
  • Finish: a small pour of good mezcal for anyone staying.

The bottles worth buying

Six bottles we’d pour at any Mexican table, from margarita-maker to the shot before pudding.

The Australian connection

Tequila and Australian food culture have been building a relationship quietly for about 10 years now. There are proper mezcalerías in Melbourne (Mamasita, Fonda if you count the early days, and half the bars on Gertrude St). There’s an Australian agave distillery in Byron Bay making “ag-vay” spirit from local blue agave. The Mexican-Australian pairing isn’t borrowed any more, it’s Australian in its own right. It belongs at your Sunday barbecue, your Tuesday tacos night, and your Friday dinner party.

If you only take one thing from this page: next time you cook Mexican, do not reach for the cabernet. Reach for the tequila. Everything clicks into place.