Tannin

What Does ‘Tannic’ Mean in Wine? (and what to pair it with)

Best food pairings for wines described as “Tannic”

Definition

High tannin load overall — drying, sometimes bitter edge depending on ripeness and oak. Steak and lamb are classic foils for tannic reds.

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

Steak and lamb are classic foils for tannic reds.

What foods pair with this profile?

Wines that often show this

  • Cabernet Sauvignon

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.

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