A concise guide to wine pairing for a private dinner at home
Six principles our head sommelier follows when planning a six-course wine pairing for guests in their own home. None of them hinge on price.
Begin with the room, not the menu
The setting sets the pace. A glass-walled terrace on a summer evening calls for different wines than a candlelit dining room in February. Decide which atmosphere you are hosting before you draft a list.
Two whites are generally sufficient
One bright, one rich. A Chablis and a barrel-aged Chardonnay; a Riesling and a White Burgundy; a Verdicchio and a fuller Italian. The two-white approach carries a dinner from amuse-bouche to fish course without ever feeling repetitive.
Purchase one bottle more than you expect
Servings almost always run a little longer than the arithmetic suggests. We bring one spare bottle of every wine to a private dinner, every time, without exception, and the guest never sees it unless we need it.
Decant the reds you are uncertain about
A reluctant young red transforms with thirty minutes of air. A delicate older red collapses with twenty. When in doubt, decant the young one and leave the old one alone.
Serve smaller than you imagine
A 100 ml pour is generous for a paired dinner. Pour smaller, top up more often, and your guests will remember the wines they actually drank.
Finish sweeter than you began
Even if your dessert is bitter chocolate or a cheese board, the last glass should draw the evening towards sweet. A late-harvest Riesling, a Sauternes, a Tokaji — the choice matters less than the direction.
Written by the Palacemeadowstay editorial team. Last updated 2026-07-13.
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