Cheese and wine

Technology now helps you pair cheese & wine. Picture: pursuitist.com

Technology now helps you pair cheese & wine. Picture: pursuitist.com

Published Jan 18, 2017

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For anyone who often finds themselves encountering one of the more middle class dilemmas: What wine should I pair my cheese with?’, fear no more for there is an app to solve your queries.

Technology now helps you pair cheese & wine. Picture: pursuitist.com Gary Bader and his team at the University of Toronto are the scientists behind www.wineandcheesemap.com. The app and website allows you to search for either your desired wine or cheese and a list of possible suggestions will appear. You can also filter your choices by cheese type (soft, hard etc) and the country it originates from.

Badar works on biological network analysis and pathway information at the Canadian university so his expertise is more computing than cheese. He says  it was his wife who had the ‘aha moment’ of using the software he had created as a source for cheese and wine lovers alike.

“My wife, Shawna, and I were interested to learn about cheese so we found a book called ‘Cheese: A Connoisseur's Guide to the World's Best’ by Max McCalman, which describes many cheeses and includes information about which cheeses taste similar to which other cheeses and which wines pair with which cheeses,” he told The Independent. “Shawna had the ‘aha’ moment that all the cheese and wine connections could be put together into a wine and cheese network that we could use to discover new cheeses, wines and how they pair up.”

Badar’s says the response to the app has been “overwhelmingly positive” and hopes to expand it to include beer and cheese and champagne and cheese combinations.

A cheese novice, he has actually discovered some new cheeses himself through using the app (“blue d’auvergne- a mild French, blue cheese that is great with crackers”) as well as determining his new favourite cheese and wine pairings.

“Syrah or Red Bordeaux with a really nice Cheddar, California Zinfandel with Zamorano and Chardonnay with Beaufort,” he suggests.

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