There’s something civilized about quiche and rosé for brunch. It feels French. It feels elegant. And when you pair Ham and Cheese Quiche with Rosé d’Anjou, it feels like you’ve unlocked a pairing secret that should have been obvious all along.
This isn’t just a good pairing—it’s a teaching moment about why certain wines work with certain foods and how understanding the “why” makes you better at choosing wine for any meal.
Why This Pairing Works
- The Richness Match Quiche is inherently rich—eggs, cream, cheese, butter in the crust. That richness needs a wine with enough body to stand up to it, but enough acidity to cut through it. Rosé d’Anjou does both.
The slight sweetness balances the saltiness of the ham and cheese, while the bright acidity keeps your palate refreshed with every bite.
- The Flavor Bridge Ham brings savory, slightly sweet, smoky notes. Rosé d’Anjou’s strawberry and raspberry flavors create a fruit-and-smoke bridge that elevates both the wine and the food.
Cheese (especially Gruyère or Swiss) adds nutty, creamy, umami notes. The wine’s acidity cuts through the fat, preventing palate fatigue.
- The Weight Balance Quiche is substantial but not heavy. Rosé d’Anjou has more body than typical rosé but isn’t as full as red wine. They match each other’s weight perfectly—neither overpowers the other.
- The Temperature Harmony Both quiche and Rosé d’Anjou are best served slightly cool (not cold, not room temperature). This creates a harmonious mouthfeel where everything feels balanced.

Ham and Cheese Quiche
Equipment
- Pie Plate
- Pastry Brush
Ingredients
- 1 pre-made pie crust or make your own if you're ambitious
- 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
- 1 cup diced ham about 6 oz
- 1 1/2 cups shredded Colby Jack cheese
- 5 large eggs
- 3/4 cup heavy cream
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 teaspoon black pepper
- 1/4 cup diced shallots or green onions normally use this
- 1 T chopped chives snow storm so I substutited this
Instructions
- Thaw pie crust for 15 minutes or follow directions on package
- Preheat oven to 375°F. Place pie crust in a 9-inch pie dish or tart pan. Prick the bottom with a fork.
- Par-bake the crust: Line with parchment and fill with pie weights (or dried beans). I use a special silicone mat. Bake 10 minutes.
- Remove weights. Brush Dijon mustard on the bottom of the crust and bake 5 more minutes until lightly golden. Let cool slightly.
- Sauté the shallots: In a small pan, melt butter and sauté shallots until soft, about 3 minutes. Let cool.
- Make the custard: In a large bowl, whisk together eggs, cream, milk, salt, pepper, until smooth.
- Assemble: Spread half the cheese on the bottom of the crust. Add ham and sautéed shallots. Pour custard over everything. Top with remaining cheese.
- Bake: 35-40 minutes, until the center is just set (it will jiggle slightly but not be liquid). A knife inserted in the center should come out clean.
- Cool: Let quiche rest 10-15 minutes before slicing. This allows the custard to set properly.
- Serve: Slice into wedges and serve warm or at room temperature.
Notes
Nutrition
The Pairing in Practice
Step 1: Chill your Rosé d’Anjou to 45-50°F (about 45 minutes in the fridge).
Step 2: Serve quiche warm or at room temperature—not piping hot, which would overwhelm the wine.
Step 3: Pour the wine and take a sip before your first bite of quiche. Notice the strawberry, raspberry, slight sweetness.
Step 4: Take a bite of quiche—get some ham, cheese, and custard in one forkful.
Step 5: Take another sip of wine. Notice how the acidity cuts through the richness, how the fruit complements the savory ham, how the slight sweetness balances the salt.
This is what good pairing feels like—neither the food nor the wine dominates. They elevate each other.
What Actually Matters
This pairing teaches you a fundamental principle: match weight and contrast texture.
Quiche is rich and creamy → Wine needs acidity to cut through it Ham is salty → Wine needs slight sweetness to balance it Cheese is fatty → Wine needs brightness to refresh the palate
Once you understand this principle, you can apply it to any pairing. Rich pasta dish? Look for high-acid wine. Spicy curry? Look for slight sweetness. Grilled steak? Look for tannins to match the protein.
You don’t need to memorize pairing charts. You just need to understand the “why.”
Other Uses for This Quiche
This recipe is incredibly versatile:
- Breakfast: Reheat a slice with coffee
- Lunch: Serve with a green salad
- Dinner: Pair with roasted vegetables
- Brunch party: Make two quiches, serve with fruit salad and mimosas
And the wine? Try it with:
- Other egg dishes (frittata, omelet, eggs Benedict)
- Smoked salmon and cream cheese
- Spinach and feta pastries
- Thai takeout (seriously—try it with pad thai)
The Bottom Line
Ham and Cheese Quiche with Rosé d’Anjou isn’t just a nice pairing—it’s a lesson in how wine and food work together. The richness, the acidity, the slight sweetness, the weight—all of it creates harmony on the plate and in the glass.
Make this quiche this weekend. Open a bottle of Rosé d’Anjou (it costs less than $18). Invite some friends over for brunch. And experience what good pairing actually feels like.
Post Created: Feb 5, 2026







0 Comments