The Ultimate Guide to Pairing the Best Wines with Thanksgiving and Native Day Feasts

Michael Perman • October 1, 2024

Choosing the Best Wines for Thanksgiving and Native Day Meals

Welcome to the autumn season of delicious gatherings! Thanksgiving and Native Day meals can be the ultimate blend of joy, nostalgia, and the occasional “Why is Uncle Bob talking about aliens again?” These special holidays call for wines that not only taste amazing but bring a sense of harmony and cheer to the table. A great wine can be the perfect conversation starter or the soothing balm when you’ve heard one too many political debates from across the turkey. The ideal wines can help friends and family gather and share stories on common ground.

As a Sommelier, my mission is to help you find wines that enhance the flavors of your holiday feast, making every bite and sip an experience to savor. So, let’s take a playful journey through the wines that will pair beautifully with all the complex flavors, from smoked turkey, cedar planked salmon, Bison pot roast with hominy, glazed hams, wild rice, vindaloo, piccata to pumpkin anything, cranberry anything AND - your traditional dishes. Your banquet calls for a variety of wine styles or wines that pair across a spectrum of foods and preferences. 

Thus, I am delighted to share my 2024 best wines that pair beautifully with Thanksgiving and Native Day meals. All of these wines are available for pre-order purchase with delivery happening during the third week of November, directly from C'EST WHAT Wines

Sparkling Options

Nothing says “holiday celebration” like the pop of sparkling wine. Start off with two options that cover a range from simply delightful to rich, complex, and elegant.

Faire La Fete (have a party!) Crémant de Limoux  might still be one of the least appreciated wine categories in France. Limoux, which is in Southern France not far from the Spanish Border, has been making sparkling wine since 1531, when Benedictine monks in a nearby abbey wrote down the first known recipe for bubbly. In fact, Dom Perignon picks up a few tricks in from Limoux. 

Faire La Fete is remarkably well-balanced, smooth, and fresh. Made from 65% Chardonnay, 20% Chenin Blanc, and 15% Pinot Noir, the wine is pressed from whole clusters. It’s then aged in neutral barrels and finally conditioned for 15 months  en tirage , with the traditional method allowing the mousse to fully develop in the bottle. Lively and full-bodied, as it reaches the mouth, it releases a taste of toasted brioche, fresh raspberries, crisp pears with a hint of honeysuckle. This is a perfectly reasonable way to start your gathering. https://fairelafetewines.com/

For an even more special celebration, Henri Goutorbe 2015 Grand Cru Millesime Champagne is a world-class wine made in the town of Ay, in the heart of Champagne, France with 75% Pinot Noir and 25% Chardonnay.  Bright golden yellow, silver reflections, delicate mousse. Hints of butter cookie with white flowers in the background, fresh mango and pear notes, delicately nutty. Juicy, elegant, white apple fruit, fresh structure, mineral-lemon, raspberry, salty touch, good persistence, a multi-faceted food companion. https://www.champagne-henri-goutorbe.com/en/

White Wine Options

I love white wines that are aromatic, well-balanced and soothing in ways that elevate the overall culinary experience from layers of intriguing flavors.

Domino IV Still Life 2022 Viognier is my favorite go-with-everything white wine for holidays and if you love aromatic wines, then you will love the Viognier.  Viognier grapes are classically grown in Northern Rhone, but Oregon is producing fabulous and unique versions, and Dominio IV has created a medium- body Viognier with flavor notes of fresh peaches, white flowers, nectarines, lemon meringue,and orange zest. Your Viognier will pair well with the classics: sweet potatoes with marshmallows, green bean casserole, shepherds-pie, bread pudding, and just the crispy garden salad a la your recipe. https://www.dominiowines.com/

As we enter into pairing for richer dishes, I LOVE Milton Opua Chardonnay  from Gisborn, New Zealand on the North Island. The Opua is an is a perfectly balanced wine with a golden glow. You will enjoy floral aromas of orange and white blossom together with honeyed notes and nutty acorns, white peach, apple, quince, and spice. Fresh yet slightly butter-soft with balanced complexity. Some flinty minerality and subtle oak as well. Milton is certified organic and biodynamic. 

Spy Valley Sauvignon Blanc  from Marlborough New Zealand, offers bright acidity and classic flavor notes of passion fruit, guava, kiwi, gooseberries, fresh-cut grass, and citrus flavors that complement creamy textures and fattier foods. This wine awakens your senses and pairs well with fattier foods, especially those rich casserole and potato dishes but also seafood dishes for non-meat eaters. https://spyvalleywine.co.nz/

For Red wines, I recommend providing options that cover the range of intensity, body and tannins that red wines offer making them great collaborators with roasted meats and rich sauces, especially if there are Autumn mushrooms or chestnuts on the table. 

Stoller’s Estate Helen’s 2019 Pinot. 

Pinot Noir from Oregon is a classic choice for holiday means, especially in Oregon. With hundreds of Pinots from which to choose, I love the delicate and ethereal notes from Stoller’s Estate Helen’s 2019 Pinot. You will enjoy the elegant nose of heady floral, baking spice, and red fruit, which gives way to secondary notes of earth and black raspberry. The palate is layered and vibrant, which carries red fruit flavors and a ferrous minerality through a long finish. Earthy undertones that perfectly match the turkey’s savory, herb-stuffed meat, light tannin, and subtle oak will not overwhelm the bird, but they’ll enhance every bite. Helen’s Pinot is made primarily from the Wädenswil clone of Pinot Noir. https://www.stollerfamilyestate.com/

Le Pich Cab

Some folks like their wines BIG - bold, full bodied and complex. Julien Fayard’s Le Pich delivers the power, the finesse, the outright gratification that you expect from a Cabernet twice the price. Fayard’s winemaking philosophy follows the lessons he learned during his time working at Château Lafite-Rothschild and Château Smith Haut Lafitte: attention and restraint. The aromas are an olfactory festival with vibrant and dark red and blue fruit accented with violets, lilacs, and hints of cocoa and graphite. The palate is lush, with plenty of boysenberry, graphite, and fresh spice carried on well-structured tannins. A plush and expressive Cabernet showing varietal purity, richness, and elegance. This is a main course wine, unless of course you pair with chocolate cake! https://www.lepichwines.com/

Dominio IV Imagination Blend

When you land on the property at Domino IV you realize you are on a farm - like the kind that grow things. Since the 1840’s this old farm has seen its soils grow apples and pears, then change to Italian plums and walnuts, and again change to cherries and hazelnuts. These days you can still find them all growing in small groves alongside the humble and mysterious grapevine. What we see on the surface hides the complexities that they deliver to your glass. Winemaker Patrick Reuter has brought together two fabulous grapes that are atypical of Oregon - Rhone Syrah and Spanish Tempranillo ro create their Spellbound wine in the Imagination Series. The result is a wine showing notes of raspberry jam, plum, fresh herbs and baking spices, moderate tannins, medium body and  velvety soft, plush texture that truly dazzles on this fresh, fruit-filled, imaginative masterpiece. https://www.dominiowines.com/

Feudo Montoni Perricone Northern Sicily is home to beautifully complex and dark grapes that offer rich flavor tiers without huge tannins. Feudo Montoni is a truly an artisan winery everything moves in the direction of listening to  Nature  . She commands. A stern and good Mother, she always creates perfect conditions of balance that only if supported and followed can be the prelude to great products. In the vineyard, the ancient operations have been repeated for centuries by hand, in the same way. In the cellar, the wines are touched as little as possible, trying to exploit the forces of Nature. Fully organic. Ruby red color with light purple reflections. Notes of plum, blueberries and black pepper mixed with strong aromas of cocoa and licorice. Fresh, soft and round on the palate with tannins typical of the grape variety, well-smoothed and long-lasting. This is wine to drink slowly and enable the magic of Sicily to be revealed. https://www.feudomontoni.it/vini/en/

I am thrilled to share my 2024 best picks wines that pair beautifully with Thanksgiving and Native Day meals. Any and all of these wines plus a few more are perfect for the upcoming holiday feasts. You can purchase them directly at C'EST WHAT Wines Available for pre-order purchase with delivery happening during the third week of November.

Remember, the right wine makes every story a little sweeter.  C'EST WHAT? Wines

Cheers!

By michael January 28, 2025
Roaming Leads to Beauty I roamed through a stunning morning down a beautiful road west of Salem, Oregon, winding past modern housing developments before giving way to the charm of history. Around the corner from the Spring Valley Community Center, which was originally a school for the farm children of Zena—still standing proudly since 1907—past a llama farm and a mile or so beyond the esteemed Lingua Franca Winery in the Eola-Amity AVA, lies Seven Springs Vineyard. Here, approximately 80 acres of rolling hills are composed of volcanic basalt, fertile Jory clay, and something intangible yet unmistakable: love for the terroir. Seven Springs Seven Springs was first established as wine country in the early 1980s by the MacDonald family and is now stewarded by Evening Land Vineyards, which is a sibling of Rajat Paar’s Domaine de la Cote in the Santa Rita Hills AVA near Lompoc, creating world-class Pinot Noir. There, the vineyards flourish in terroir blanketed in marine sedimentary soils, ancient diatomaceous shale beds, deeper layers of clay and coastal fogs. With biodynamic practices, Evening Land nurtures Pinot Noir, Gamay, and Chardonnay grapes on this ethereal property, cloistered from the hum and buzz of the outside world. The Harp and the Accord Seven Springs’ connection to the land mirrors the Eola-Amity Hills’ rich tapestry of history and natural phenomena. The hills around Seven Springs loop and dip, alternately shielding or welcoming the winds from the Oregon Coast Range. These breezes stream through the Van Duzer Corridor, one of Oregon’s newest AVA. The region of Eola draws its name from the Aeolian harp, a mystical instrument that sings harmonic tunes simply by being touched by the wind, its strings vibrating in invisible waves of sound. Amity, meanwhile, owes its name to an amicable resolution between two rival communities in the 1840s, resulting in the establishment of a shared school. The Kalapuya Tribe once cultivated this land, growing camas and wapato—plants with culinary and medicinal significance that echo the harmony of this terroir. Evening Land captures this sense of harmony, history, and natural music, producing wines that are quiet yet eloquent. These wines whisper aromas and flavors shaped by the intricate and evolving terroir of the Eola-Amity Hills AVA, tended by my host and head winemaker John Faulkner. The Meaning of Terroir-Driven Wine Evening Land proudly embraces the philosophy of “terroir-driven” wine. This commitment is no surprise, given that Rajat Parr is one of the world’s most esteemed winemakers. He applies his culinary finesse to the unique terroir of the main property, Domaine de la Côte in the Santa Rita Hills AVA. At Seven Springs, winemaker John Faulkner delves deeper into this concept. He explores the possibility that the vineyard’s 80 acres may harbor up to 100 variations of soil, each subtly influencing the character of the grapes. His pursuit of precision aligns with biodynamic principles, seeking to refine both farming and winemaking. Microclimate and Electromagnetic Geology Enter Pedro Parra, a.k.a. Dr. Terroir, a Chilean consultant revered for his groundbreaking work in geology-driven viticulture within Burgundy. While most focus on soil composition, Parra looks deeper—literally—to the rocks beneath, believing that geology is the key to understanding a wine’s texture and mouthfeel. Parra employs advanced techniques like electromagnetic scanners—tools more commonly used in mining—to map the soil’s electrical conductivity. This reveals the clay content, which often predicts wine’s fruit density and plushness. Additionally, he digs trenches across vineyards, inspecting the rock layers and evaluating their impact. Harder rocks, for instance, yield wines that are linear and austere, while decomposed rocks lead to rounder, more generous wines. Evening Land Flight At Seven Springs, John and his team are excavating nearly 100 trenches, unveiling the complex geological tapestry of sand, clay, iron, and volcanic rocks. These revelations promise an evolution in both vineyard care and winemaking artistry, the fruits of which may fully reveal themselves decades from now A Flight of Pinot Noir John graciously guided me through a flight of Evening Land’s Pinot Noirs: Seven Springs, La Source, and Summum. He likened their complexity to language: Seven Springs, straightforward in English; La Source, elevated in French; and Summum, the pinnacle, Latin—both elusive and profound. Seven Springs and La Source Seven Springs feels like an old friend: approachable, generous, and with an air of simplicity that belies its sophistication. Its aromas are earthy and vivid, with Oregon Waldoberry leading the way, interwoven with red plum and the soft crinkle of autumn leaves. On the palate, it bursts with bright acidity balanced against fine-grained tannins, finishing with a touch of spice reminiscent of star anise. La Source, by contrast, is a poetic sibling. Its elegance lies in its restraint, offering a nose of dried roses, ripe black cherries, and delicate hints of forest floor. The palate is more layered, with flavors unfolding in waves—bramble, Olallieberry tartness, and a soft yet persistent minerality. The structure is precise, with a polished texture that feels akin to lace. Together, the two wines are sultry and playful, exuding a sense of joy that feels especially resonant in winter. If these two wines were music, they would echo Lindsey Stirling: lush orchestrations, soaring melodies, intricate craftsmanship, bowing technique, and use of vibrato, some that inspire the awe of a motion picture soundtrack. The Summum Experience The 2022 Summum Pinot Noir, poured via Coravin on-site, felt enigmatic to me at first. The wine’s whispers were subdued but hinted at something extraordinary. That’s partly because of my naïveté and lack of experience. At home, I opened the bottle fully, allowing it to evolve overnight. By morning, the whispers became melodies, revealing a bouquet of farmers market raspberries, violets, autumn leaves, and Earl Grey bergamot. On the palate, it was symphonic, with bay leaves, dusty lavender, smoked sea salt, and freshly bloomed roses creating a meditative harmony. Aged for nine months in Ermitage barrique, which is a unique French Oak barrel, perhaps produced by a cooperage such as Tonnellerie https://tonnellerie-ermitage.com/en/group/ (that place is worthy of another story), known for its custom-crafted, French barrels with lighter toasting levels, often used to mature wines while highlighting their fruit character, which is exactly what Summun exudes for me, light and ethereal notes of vanilla and clove. I love when wines are incomparable but, for me, there’s an irresistible temptation to compare, so there’s a reference point in memory. For me, the Summun feels like Vosne-Romanee, perhaps Domaine Jean Grivot Vosne Romanee 1er cru "Les Beaux Monts, which is a tiny vineyard producing Pinot Noir with similar character but at a significant price premium. With Gratitude The older I get, the more I want to learn. I trust the 2022 Summun will also prosper with age. left Evening Land grateful for insights, more enlightened, my senses awakened to the intricate links between terroir, aroma, flavor, and music. I am excited to share the wines in a formal tasting with my clients who will be new to Evening Land. Enya’s lyrics from her song “Evening Falls” resonate with the wines of Evening Land—anchored in a sense of place yet transcending time and space “Even though I leave, Will I go on believing, that this time is real Am I lost in this feeling? Like a child passing through Never knowing the reason I am home, I know the way. I am home, feeling oh, so far away” But home, like the wines of Evening Land, is a place that exists both here and far away. For an unforgettable journey into the wines of Evening Land and other amazing wines for wine- tasting events in Lake Oswego and Portland, guided by sensory storytelling and a sommelier’s touch, contact Michael Perman at C’EST WHAT? Wine and Sensory. www.cestwhatwine.com michael@cestwhat.org For an unforgettable journey into the wines of Evening Land and other amazing wines for wine- tasting events
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