Tannin
What Does ‘Coarse’ Mean in Wine? (and what to pair it with)
Best food pairings for wines described as “Coarse”
Definition
Rough-grained tannin — sandy or chunky rather than fine. May resolve; often less pleasant young.
What does this mean for pairing?
Tannic grip relaxes when the plate brings real protein and fat—think charred ribeye, braised lamb shank, or cave-aged cheddar—because polyphenols bind lipid instead of drying the gums. Wines such as Cabernet Sauvignon, Barolo, or structured Syrah are built for that trade: the meal softens the wine while structure counters richness. Without that buffer, the same bottle reads hard-edged.
Context
May resolve; often less pleasant young.
What foods pair with this profile?
Wines that often show this
Many wines can show this note depending on vintage and winemaking — use the engine to narrow by dish.
Pairing suggestions
Protein and fat soften tannin — red meats, hard cheese, and mushroom dishes are natural partners.
Open the pairing engine to match this structure to your ingredients.