Bordeaux Médoc & rack of lamb
The classic Bordeaux pairing. Cabernet Sauvignon's tannin cuts through lamb fat; cassis-graphite-cedar aromatic profile matches rosemary-garlic preparation. Historic regional continuity in southwestern France.
The pairing
Bordeaux Médoc and rack of lamb is editorially the canonical pairing for serious Cabernet Sauvignon-led wines — a combination that demonstrates Bordeaux's structural elegance at full extension. The pairing's editorial logic operates on three levels. First, structural alignment: Bordeaux's substantial tannin (Cabernet Sauvignon dominates Left Bank blends, with Merlot softening) physically cuts through the lamb's fat content, refreshing the palate between bites. Second, aromatic complementarity: mature Bordeaux's cassis-cedar-tobacco-graphite-leather aromatic profile (developed over 10-25+ years of bottle aging) matches the rosemary-garlic-Dijon preparation register without overwhelming the lamb's distinctive gaminess. Third, geographic continuity: lamb from the salt-marsh (pré-salé) coastal regions of southwestern France was historically the same animal raised in the same region as the wine; the pairing developed as part of Bordeaux's integrated culinary culture rather than as an imposed combination. First Growth Bordeaux (Lafite, Latour, Margaux, Mouton) with serious Pauillac lamb is the canonical apex; Classified Growths from any commune with similarly serious preparation produce equivalent results. The pairing rewards bottle age — young Bordeaux's aggressive tannin can overwhelm; mature Bordeaux's integrated structure meets the dish at full strength.
Service guidance
Principal examples
- Château Margaux 2000 with rack of lamb Persillé
- Château Latour 1995 with roast leg of lamb
- Château Lafite Rothschild 1996 with seven-hour leg of lamb
Editorial notes
The pairing requires bottle age on the wine — young First Growth Bordeaux (under 10 years) lacks the integrated character that matches the dish's softness. Cellar serious Bordeaux 15+ years minimum before this pairing. Cheap Bordeaux + cheap lamb fails the pairing's editorial standards.