THE nation is boozing its way through lockdown, with sales of alcohol up by a third.
It is no surprise that after a long day of work, home-schooling children and housework, many of us want to relax with a glass of wine and easy-to-cook dinner.
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The good news is that even beans on toast can have its flavours enhanced when paired with the right wine.
Here, online wine expert Helena Nicklin picks the perfect plonk to sip with your simple suppers with all bottles under a tenner.
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THIS refreshing white wine has bags of ripe, juicy flavour.
Pinot Gris is the best grape for this and will offer the most fruit on the palate.
My choice to quaff is this stunner from New Zealand.
It will balance the mild spice nicely, but is punchy enough to avoid being completely overpowered by the taste of curry sauce.
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CHICKEN just loves the Chardonnay grape, even more so when the meat has been fried.
You need bold, tropical notes and a splash of crisp citrus to pep up your fried foul and make the batter sing.
This great-value and delightfully balanced Australian Chardonnay is full bodied and crisp.
It matches perfectly with a bucket of wings.
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JUICY, soft and red, a classic bottle of Merlot originating from a country with lots of sun is the perfect match for baked beans.
This one has aromas of blackberries, strawberries and raspberries.
Its luscious, velvety tones are exactly what you need to offset the texture of crunchy toast and the slightly sweet flavour of your classic tinned topping.
Beanz meanz Merlot.
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CAN'T be bothered to cook and ended up grabbing a bowl of cereal on the sofa instead? Weve all done it.
With mild-flavoured, non-sugary cereals such as cornflakes or Rice Krispies, its best to glug something white, dry and weighty, preferably with earthy flavours.
This powerful French white with Grenache blanc and Marsanne grapes is ideal.
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ARGENTINIAN Malbec is a perfect partner for robust, beefy dishes.
It is smooth, silky and sophisticated, but it is also bold and ballsy with ripe blueberry fruit and milk- chocolate notes thanks to its high-altitude vineyard plots.
This bargain bottle of red will give real boom to your bolognese.
It is exactly what you want when you have made the effort to cook.
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SWEET desserts ideally need to be paired with sweet wines, or whatever is in your glass will end up tasting unpleasantly metallic.
This Australian dessert wine is great value and could be a pud in itself with its golden colour and gloriously honeyed apricot notes.
Its intense, syrupy flavours go perfectly with any classic fruit and custard combos. Cheers.
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HOT spice can be tricky to match with wine but the Italians have come up with the answer here.
This Sicilian red is made in a special style called appassimento, which uses partly dried grapes.
This gives it more body and tang with some oaky notes to prevent it tasting too dry, but also provides ripe cherry sweetness.
A perfect foil for chewy dough, creamy cheese and sizzling pepperoni toppings.
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RAISE a glass of fizz as you dip a chip into your yolk. Bubbles are a great match for fried foods but avoid prosecco, itll be too sweet.
This cava is an affordable Spanish option made just like champagne but with different, local grapes.
Its cool, crisp, slightly sharper bubbles will cut through any grease to freshen everything up on your palate, and its savoury, toasty notes will stand up well to salty, eggy flavours.
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A COMFORTING dish like this needs an equally comforting white wine.
The southern Italian Fiano white grape is easy-drinking, inexpensive and full of character. The orange, passionfruit and lemon notes in this bottle match well with salty cheese like cheddar, and will bring some refreshing zing to help counteract starchy carbs.
Exactly what you need with your jacket spud.
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Whether youre tucking into pizza or egg & chips we reveal perfect wine pairings for your isolation diet - The Sun