A Lover's Guide to Wine

How to build your valentine vocabulary―and jump-start your evening


Aromatic, flamboyant Albariño
Aphrodite had her tools―apples, pomegranates, and a mythical girdle that, legend has it, made her irresistible to men. We reject the girdle in favor of a glass of wine with seductive edibles. A half-dozen oysters, a few almonds, some spicy chiles, and a racy bottle of Western white.
Have a Latin fling
Get cozy with the West's new wave of flamboyantly aromatic, thoroughly romantic Latin grapes. Don't be surprised if you fall in love―especially when you pair them with these aphrodisiac foods.


Almond cake and late-harvest wine
Almonds in ancient Arabian baking might have fueled The Thousand
and One Nights, but we'll settle for just one night and just one pastry: an Italian Almond Cake from Pacific Sourdough company on the Oregon coast ($25; almondcake.com)
Pair it with a wine that, as food editor Margo True says, "puts both arms around the cake"―Beringer's honeyed "Nightingale," a 2005 late-harvest Semillon-Sauvignon Blanc blend (Napa Valley; $40, 375 ml.). A less expensive alternative: Quady "Essensia" Orange Muscat 2007 (California; $13.75, 375 ml.).


Toast with a sparkling ros

Alex Farnum
Alex Farnum
Alex Farnum
Alex Farnum
Thomas J. Story
Thomas J. Story

éand caviar
Go for the classic combo, or venture into something a little more unusual.
Here's our guide:

Perfect sparkling rosé pairings


Barbecued oysters 3 ways
All seafood has aphrodisiac credentials by right of sharing a birthplace with Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love, who was famously born beneath the waves. But oysters have earned the sexiest reputation of all.
The good news for San Francisco Bay Area folks is that the Hog Island Oyster Co.'s new location in Napa's Oxbow Public Market (hogislandoysters.com) is serving the bivalves hot off the grill.
View the recipes: Barbecued oysters 3 ways


Bottled seduction
This is no wine to sip politely. Gulp it, pour it over yourself, surrender sense to it.
The only one of its kind in the world, Tablas Creek Vineyard's 2005 "Vin de Paille Sacrérouge" (Paso Robles; $45, 375 ml.) is made from 100 percent Mourvèdre grapes.
They were spread out on straw to dry for several weeks, concentrating all their dark cherry, plum, fig, and chocolate flavors in a precious little bit of juice (a method traditional in the Mediterranean for making white dessert wine).
Then the grapes were stomped by foot. How sensual is that?

More from Sunset:
29 shockingly perfect pairings
The sexiest food-and-wine pairing

Alex Farnum
Alex Farnum
Jeffery Cross
Jeffery Cross