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Home » wine pairing » A New Greek Wine with Tzatziki Dip

A New Greek Wine with Tzatziki Dip

Published: Jan 14, 2023 · Modified: Jan 15, 2023 by Cooking Chat · This post may contain affiliate links

Today we try a new Greek wine with tzatziki dip, part of the Wine Pairing Weekend event, “New Year, New to You Grape!” theme hosted by Culinary Camilla. We love trying new wines, and enjoy tzatziki dip regularly, so this was a fun project!

tzatziki dip on a blue plate with pita chips and kalamata olives, served with a Greek white wine.
Jump to:
  • Finding a new wine to try
  • Greek inspired recipes
  • Tzatziki dip
  • Wine pairing
  • More about the wine
  • More interesting grapes

Finding a new wine to try

For many years, I was a loyal customer of a local wine shop called Pairings Wine & Food. They had a challenge inviting people to track the various wine grape varietals we tried via the store, with incentives for reaching a “century club, documenting the trying of 100 varietals.

I like a goal, especially involving wine! I quickly hit 100, then doubled that figure within another year or two. Getting from 200 to 300 definitely was slower going. When thinking about a new wine I could try for today’s event, I thought Greece would be a good source for finding a new to me grape.

Greek wine tends to come from native varietals. You don’t see a lot of Greek wine at shops here in the Boston area, so I only have tried a limited range of what the longstanding wine producing country offers.

Berman’s Fine Wines is a local shop that carries a number of Greek wines. I hopped onto the Greek section of their website, and cross-checked the varietals in the wines they had available against my sheet that tracks the wines I’ve tried. Out of the selection available, I found exactly one wine that would quality as new to me–a white wine made from the Kydonitsa grape.

Now, what to pair with this Greek wine?

Greek inspired recipes

Now, I wouldn’t claim to be a maker of traditional Greek recipes, but I do often cook dishes flavored by ingredients popular in Greek cooking, such as feta cheese, olives and tomatoes. Combine that with a Greek approach featuring simple, fresh ingredients, and we cook up some tasty Greek inspired recipes here!

Some examples of our Greek flavored cooking include:

  • Greek Spaghetti Recipe and Wine Pairing
  • Greek Turkey Spinach Skillet recipe
    Greek Style Ground Turkey Skillet with Spinach
  • grilled tilapia topped with tomatoes and olives, with a lemon on the side.
    Grilled Tilapia with Tomatoes, Olives and Greek Wine Pairing
  • Greek Lamb Stew and Wine Pairing.
    Greek Lamb Stew and Wine Pairing #winePW

Having now tasted the Kydonitsa wine, I am think it could work well paired with the Greek Spaghetti or the grilled tilapia. Those are easy recipes, but we had something even simpler in mind.

Tzatziki dip

While it is fairly easy to make, tzatziki dip is something I regularly grab at the store to snack on before cooking dinner.

What is tzatziki dip?

Tzatziki dip, also referred to as a sauce, is a staple Greek food. The main ingredients are Greek yogurt, garlic, and cucumbers. I love the tangy, garlicky flavor!

We typically serve tzatziki dip along with pita chips. But it is used in many ways in Greek cuisine. You’ll find it in gyros, served with meatballs, and much more.

tzatziki dip with dill on top, served with pita chips on around the bowl of dip. Photo shot from above.
Homemade tzatziki dip from Riri’s Greek Eats

I did make tzatziki dip once in a cooking class, and it is pretty easy. I need to do it at home soon. If you are wanting to make your own, Riri’s Greek Eats has a recipe for tzatziki dip along with some good tips for making it delicious!

Wine pairing

Ok, time to talk more about today’s wine and how it paired with the tzatziki dip!

We picked up a bottle of 2020 Monemvasia Kydonitsa ($15, 13% ABV) from Berman’s (Lexington, MA). This white wine is a pale straw color in the glass, with a light floral nose.

a small pour of Greek white wine in a glass tilted to the side, in order to observe the color. A wine bottle with horizontal stripes on the label in the background.
Observing Kydonitsa white wine in the class.

On the palate, the Kidonitsa has peach fruit, notes of almond, and some acidity. The body is on the light side of medium. A pleasing mouthfeel, and medium finish.

As anticipated, the Kydonitsa is very good paired with the tzatziki dip! The wine’s acidity and floral notes enhanced the fresh qualities of the dip, and cleansed the palate after those garlicky bites.

tzatziki dip on a blue plate with pita chips and kalamata olives, with a Greek white wine in the background.
Kydonitsa white wine paired with a tzatziki dip plate

Oh yes, and we did put a few kalamata olives on the plate along with the tzatziki dip. That was a good call! Perusing maps of the Greek wine regions, I noted the town kalamata is pretty close to the winery we are featuring.

Roditis and Moschofilero are two other Greek white wines you might try paired with the tzatziki dip if you can’t find Kydonitsa. I haven’t test the pairing – yet! – but from my tasting notes of those wines, they seem promising.

More about the wine

Kydonitsa (also spelled Kidonitsa) is consistently described as an old, rare grape variety found in Greece. “Kidoni” means quince in Greek, and the varietal is described as having quince notes. Have to confess I didn’t pick that up, but that’s not a tasting term I throw out very often.

The Monemvasia winery takes its name from the Southern Peloponnese wine region in which it is located. Monemvasia is a small town in Laconia, a rocky outcrop connected to the mainland by a small bridge. The soil is mostly rocky and dry clay.

Kydonitsa may be somewhat obscure, but the region does have a more well known grape associated with it. The full name of the area gives it away — Monemvasia Malvasia. This Greek area is said to be the birthplace of the white wine, Malvasia. I’ve typically had dry Malvasia from Italy; but historically in this part of Greece it’s produced as a sweet white wine.

So today we have tried a new wine grape, and definitely learned a new fact or two about Greek wine!

More interesting grapes

Check out these articles from my Wine Pairing Weekend colleagues for more interesting, off the beaten path grapes that they tried for this event.

  • 2 Organic Red Sparklers: In 2023, Check Out These New-to-US-Wines from Italy’s Cantina de Frignano by Wine Predator…Gwendolyn Alley
  • 2019 Palazzo Tronconi ‘Fregellae’ + Cicchetti by ENOFYLZ Wine Blog
  • A Little-Cultivated Sicilian Grape Along with a Perennial Favorite – Polpette al Forno by Culinary Cam
  • A New Varietal for a New Year by A Day in the Life on the Farm
  • Mushroom Polenta and a Vin Rouge with Native Grapes by My Full Wine Glass
  • Sparkling Vernaccia Nera from Le Marche – An Exciting Discovery by Avvinare
  • Stuffed Portuguese Peppers and an the Arinto Grape by Our Good Life
« Easy Air Fryer Salmon
Episode 21: Teaching Plant-Based Cooking Techniques »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. MARTIN D REDMOND

    January 14, 2023 at 12:27 pm

    You many have found an even more obscure grape than I did David! Bravo on the wine pick and the pairing!

    Reply
  2. Linda Whipple, CSW

    January 14, 2023 at 12:58 pm

    What a lovely, light pairing! Seems like quite a few native grapes show floral notes. Adds to their distinctiveness. Now I’ll be looking for both the Kydonitsa grape and the tzatziki dip.

    Reply
  3. Camilla M Mann

    January 14, 2023 at 2:29 pm

    You have found yet another grape that I haven’t heard of! Bravo. I love the description and would love to be able to track down a bottle I think it would have gone well with the Slovenian celery soup that I made last night, too. Thanks for joining in the fun and for starting this group all those years ago.

    Reply
  4. Wendy Klik

    January 14, 2023 at 7:02 pm

    I enjoyed learning about this grape during our chat today.

    Reply
  5. Susannah Gold

    January 16, 2023 at 8:17 pm

    David – You post was so fun and I love that you picked a Greek Wine. I too have not tried many of their indigenous varietals such as the one that you tasted. I also love your dip and flexibility with older posts, changes to recipes, and general adaptable recipes. I can’t make to wait some of your recipes. Also super fun that you mentioned the birthplace of Malvasia. I have written often of that location but never knew some of the items that you noted. Cheers to you, Susannah

    Reply
  6. Lori

    February 08, 2023 at 11:59 am

    Sounds right up my alley!

    Reply

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Hi there! I'm David. I love creating tasty, (mostly) healthy recipes, finding great wine pairings, and sharing good food with family and friends. learn more about me!

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