What's the difference of cooking with red and white wine?!


Question:

What's the difference of cooking with red and white wine?


I often use red wine for deglazing and such and I love the taste, but there are some cream sauces I am interested in that call for white wine...I am not a wine drinker...so what is the difference? Is it just the color or does white taste different in cooking? Lighter? What?


Answers: There is definately a flavor difference. Also, red wine would make a cream sauce pink, which isn't very appetizing.

The biggest difference in red versus white wine is in how long they leave the grape skins in the juice during fermentation. The 'dry' flavor comes from the grape skins, not the flesh. To make red wine, they leave the skins in longer which adds the color and flavor into the wine. White wine tends to be lighter and sweeter, though that's not always the case.

In cooking with wine for the non- wine drinker, it's best to use what the recipe calls for. Do not, however, use 'cooking wine'. It has salt added to it, which will throw off the flavor balance of the recipe. I believe Sutter Home has single-serving bottles of wine that work well for cooking when you don't want to open a whole bottle just for 1/2 a cup. hi melissa.

I usually use red wine for meat meals and white wine for fish meals.

Hoping i helped u. bye cute Mostly the color. If I'm making a creamy sauce I'll add white wine. Dark sauce, red wine.
As long as nobody whines!
.



The consumer Foods information on foodaq.com is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for any medical conditions.
The answer content post by the user, if contains the copyright content please contact us, we will immediately remove it.
Copyright © 2007 FoodAQ - Terms of Use - Contact us - Privacy Policy

Food's Q&A Resources