Data-driven wine advice from SommelierX
Wine with beef: let the flavour guide you, not the colour. The presence of beef and butter makes this dish outspoken, and a wine has to answer that statement. That is why we first translate beef into a Wine DNA profile and match it against our entire wine database. The result below is a focused selection where you can see exactly why each wine fits. Plus a handful of tips to serve the combination perfectly at home.
The Wine DNA of beef shows a clear profile: Savoury and spice are the strongest flavour axes. Our algorithm translates this flavour balance into wines whose own DNA axes — acidity, tannin, body, fruit and spice — complement the dish rather than overpower it. The higher an axis below, the more that taste defines the dish and the more precisely the wine selection responds to it.
Flavour profile (0-5)
Bordeaux blend from Bordeaux, France: the layered complexity adds extra reading layers and the full body stands up to the intensity on the plate, a logical match for the savoury depth of beef.
Cabernet Franc from Tuscany, Italy: the layered complexity adds extra reading layers and the fresh acidity keeps every bite lively, a logical match for the savoury depth of beef.
Bordeaux blend from Bordeaux, France: the layered complexity adds extra reading layers and the warm alcohol carries the richer flavours, a logical match for the savoury depth of beef.
Bordeaux blend from Bordeaux, France: the full body stands up to the intensity on the plate and the layered complexity adds extra reading layers, a logical match for the savoury depth of beef.
Bordeaux blend from Bordeaux, France: the full body stands up to the intensity on the plate and the layered complexity adds extra reading layers, a logical match for the savoury depth of beef.
What ties this selection together: the savoury depth of beef leads, and every recommended wine answers that flavour axis in its own way — one with structure, another with fruit or freshness. So you do not get a single "correct" bottle, but a range that all start from the same flavour principle. Choose by colour, price or occasion; the match with the dish is reasoned in every case.
With beef, firm tannins reinforce the meaty flavour; choose a wine that scores high on tannin and body.
A short resting time for the meat keeps the juices in — which makes the tannic wine even more pleasant.
Do not serve white wine with beef too cold — around 10-12°C the aromas show best.
Based on the Wine DNA, Margaux Grand Cru Classé from Bordeaux, France scores as the best match with beef, with a pairing score of 91. That is because the wine aligns with the savoury depth that characterises this dish.
Yes. Margaux Grand Cru Classé (Bordeaux, France) is a strong red choice; its structure follows the intensity of beef.
Bordeaux blend tops our list for beef, precisely because the grape profile measurably matches the dish's flavour balance.
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