By Tim Morgan, Senior Sommelier & Contributing Editor
The ocean gives us an astonishing diversity of flavours — delicate, briny, rich, smoky, sweet, iodine-sharp — and yet we reduce all of it to a single instruction: white wine with fish.
It’s like saying “wear clothes when you go outside.” Technically correct. Functionally useless.
A raw oyster and a grilled swordfish steak have almost nothing in common. A plate of sashimi and a bowl of bouillabaisse are different planets. Matching wine to seafood requires the same careful attention to texture, preparation, and flavour intensity that we apply to meat — perhaps more, because the margin for error is smaller.
Here is the framework.
The Science: Why White Wine Usually Works
There is a real chemical reason behind the “white with fish” guideline, and it involves a single element: iron.
Red wines contain significantly more iron than white wines. When iron meets the oils in fish (particularly the omega-3 fatty acids), it produces a metallic, fishy aftertaste that is deeply unpleasant. The more iron in the wine (more tannin = more iron), and the more oil in the fish, the worse the clash.
This is why:
- Cabernet Sauvignon + salmon = metallic disaster
- Chablis + sole = pristine harmony
But this doesn’t mean red wine never works with seafood. It means you need to choose reds with low tannin and low iron — Pinot Noir, Gamay, certain light Mediterranean reds — and pair them with preparations where the metallic clash is minimised.
By Seafood Type
🦪 Raw Shellfish & Oysters
Oysters, clams (raw), sea urchin, ceviche
Character: Briny, mineral, clean, iodine, cold, delicate.
These are the ocean’s purest expression. The wines must be equally pure.
| Wine Match | Why It Works |
|---|---|
| Muscadet (Sur Lie) | The classic. Saline, lean, bone-dry, with a yeasty richness from lees ageing that complements the oyster’s creaminess. The greatest €8 wine pairing on earth. |
| Chablis (Petit Chablis or Village) | Mineral, flinty, unoaked Chardonnay from Kimmeridgian limestone — which is literally ancient seabed. The geological poetry of oysters + Chablis is unmatched. |
| Champagne (Blanc de Blancs) | Bubbles + brine + acidity. The luxury pairing. Non-vintage is fine. |
| Albariño (Rías Baixas) | Saline, citric, with a seaside minerality. Spanish oysters demand Spanish wine. |
| Picpoul de Pinet | Languedoc’s seaside white — lean, citrusy, made for the oyster beds of the Étang de Thau. |
Avoid: Oaky Chardonnay. Aromatic whites (Gewürztraminer, Viognier). Any red wine. Anything sweet.
The perfect bite: A Gillardeau No. 3, just opened, still cold from the ice, with a squeeze of lemon and a sip of Chablis Premier Cru Montée de Tonnerre. Close your eyes. You’re standing on the Normandy coast.
🦐 Crustaceans
Lobster, crab, prawns/shrimp, langoustines, scampi
Character: Sweet, rich, delicate, buttery (especially when cooked in butter), umami.
Crustaceans are richer and sweeter than white fish. They need wines with more body, texture, and generosity.
| Preparation | Wine Match | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Lobster, simply steamed | Meursault, Puligny-Montrachet | Rich Chardonnay for rich shellfish. The butter in the wine meets the sweetness of the lobster. Heaven. |
| Lobster thermidor | Aged Champagne (Vintage, Krug) | Cream sauce + lobster + cheese topping = you need the acidity and depth of serious Champagne |
| Grilled prawns, garlic butter | Vermentino, Greco di Tufo, white Rhône | Mediterranean preparation = Mediterranean whites |
| Langoustines, raw or barely cooked | Chablis Grand Cru, fine Riesling | Delicate, pristine — treat them like oysters with more flesh |
| Crab salad | Sauvignon Blanc (Sancerre), dry Riesling | Fresh, zesty, herbal — mirrors the salad’s lightness |
| Soft-shell crab, fried | Champagne, Franciacorta | Fried + bubbles = one of the great laws of pairing |
| Lobster roll | Chenin Blanc (dry), Grüner Veltliner | Casual format = casual but excellent whites |
The perfect bite: Half a steamed Brittany lobster, drawn butter on the side, with a glass of Meursault Premier Cru Charmes. One of the ten greatest food-and-wine experiences in the world.
🐟 White Fish (Lean)
Sole, turbot, branzino/sea bass, halibut, cod, hake, John Dory, bream
Character: Delicate, clean, mild, flaky. The protein recedes — preparation and sauce dominate.
| Preparation | Wine Match | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Sole meunière | White Burgundy (Chassagne, Puligny) | Brown butter + lemon + delicate fish = Chardonnay’s greatest moment |
| Grilled branzino, olive oil & lemon | Vermentino, Fiano, Assyrtiko | Mediterranean fish, Mediterranean wine. Salt, citrus, oil. |
| Fish and chips | Champagne (Krug Grande Cuvée) | Yes, really. The acidity and bubbles cut the batter and oil. Krug themselves endorse this pairing. It’s brilliant. |
| Turbot, roasted | Grand Cru white Burgundy, aged Riesling | Turbot is the king of fish. It deserves the king of wines. |
| Cod, poached | Muscadet, Picpoul, Vinho Verde | Simple, clean preparation = simple, clean wine |
| Baked sea bream, herbs | Soave, Gavi, Verdicchio | Italian instinct. Light, mineral, herbal. |
🐟 Rich / Oily Fish
Salmon, tuna, mackerel, sardines, swordfish, trout
Character: Richer, more flavourful, oilier. These fish can handle more wine intensity — including, occasionally, light reds.
| Preparation | Wine Match | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Salmon, pan-seared | Pinot Noir (Burgundy, Oregon) | The classic crossover. Salmon’s richness and pink flesh meet Pinot’s red fruit and silky texture. Beautiful. |
| Salmon, grilled | Dry rosé (Provence, Navarra) | Smoky, charred salmon + dry rosé = summer perfection |
| Tuna steak, rare | Light red (Beaujolais Cru, Etna Rosso) | Treat rare tuna like rare beef — light, fresh reds work. |
| Mackerel, grilled | Albariño, Vinho Verde, Txakolina | Oily, pungent fish needs sharp, acidic, seaside whites |
| Sardines, charcoal-grilled | Vinho Verde, Muscadet | The Portuguese beach pairing. Perfect and elemental. |
| Swordfish, grilled | White Rhône (Châteauneuf Blanc), Viognier | Meaty fish = richer white wine |
| Smoked salmon | Champagne (Brut), dry Riesling | Smoke + salt + fat → acidity + bubbles |
The perfect bite: Wild Scottish salmon, skin-on, seared in a hot pan until the skin shatters, served with nothing but lemon and cracked pepper, with a glass of Volnay Premier Cru. Pink fish, pink wine, perfect symmetry.
🦑 Cephalopods & Molluscs (Cooked)
Octopus, squid, clams (cooked), mussels, scallops
| Preparation | Wine Match | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Grilled octopus | Assyrtiko (Santorini), Nerello Mascalese (light red) | Smoky, chewy, Mediterranean — volcanic wine for volcanic preparation |
| Calamari fritti | Prosecco, Cava, sparkling | Fried = bubbles. Always. |
| Clams, white wine sauce | The same white wine you cooked them in | Mirror the sauce. Vermentino, Falanghina, Muscadet. |
| Moules-frites | Belgian ale or dry white (Muscadet, Picpoul) | The Bruges classic. Or go French with acid-driven whites. |
| Seared scallops | Champagne, white Burgundy (Meursault) | Sweet, caramelised scallops + rich, toasty wine = extraordinary |
| Pulpo a la gallega | Albariño, Godello, Mencía (light) | Galician dish, Galician wine. Paprika + olive oil + boiled octopus. |
🍣 Sushi & Sashimi
The ultimate test of wine and seafood pairing.
| Type | Wine Match | Why |
|---|---|---|
| White fish sashimi | Chablis, Champagne Blanc de Blancs | Pure, mineral, razor-sharp. Anything more would be too much. |
| Tuna sashimi | Light Pinot Noir (Burgundy village), dry rosé | Rich, meaty fish — can handle gentle reds |
| Salmon sashimi | Dry Riesling (Alsace), Grüner Veltliner | Slight sweetness in the fish meets the wine’s acidity |
| Uni (sea urchin) | Champagne (aged), Sherry (Fino/Manzanilla) | Umami + brine + creaminess = you need either bubbles or oxidative complexity |
| Mixed omakase | Champagne (NV Brut) | The safest, most versatile choice for an entire sushi meal |
Sommelier tip: Soy sauce is the hidden difficulty with sushi pairing. Its salt and umami amplify tannin and make many wines taste bitter. Use soy sparingly when pairing with wine, or ask for ponzu instead.
The perfect sip: A pristine piece of hirame (flounder) sashimi, dipped lightly in ponzu, followed by Champagne Blanc de Blancs. This is minimalism perfected — two pure things, meeting in silence.
The Red Wine Exceptions
Red wine does work with seafood in these specific cases:
| Red Wine | Seafood | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Pinot Noir | Salmon, tuna, seared scallops | Low tannin, high acidity, red fruit |
| Gamay (Beaujolais) | Tuna tartare, grilled sardines | Chilled, light, fruity — treats fish gently |
| Etna Rosso (Nerello Mascalese) | Grilled octopus, swordfish | Volcanic, mineral, light-bodied |
| Mencía | Pulpo, grilled fish | Light, fresh, Atlantic character |
| Trousseau / Poulsard (Jura) | Smoked fish, eel | Oxidative, light, earthy — unusual but compelling |
The rule within the rule: If you’re going to use red wine with seafood, choose reds that behave like whites — low tannin, high acidity, light body. And avoid any fish with high omega-3 content unless the wine is extremely low in iron.
Tim Morgan is a London-based sommelier and wine writer.












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