Easter Sunday is in three days.
If you are planning a roast lamb, today is the day to think about what goes in the glass alongside it. Not because wine is the point of Easter, but because the right bottle — opened at the right temperature, poured at the right moment — makes the meal feel considered rather than assembled. And this particular pairing is one that has been making sense at spring tables for a very long time.
Roast lamb and Burgundy Pinot Noir. Here is why it works, what to buy, and exactly how to serve it.
Why This Pairing Works
The tannin and fat relationship. Lamb is moderately fatty — not as rich as beef, not as lean as veal. It needs a wine with enough structure to cut through the fat and refresh the palate, but not so much tannin that it fights the meat. Pinot Noir’s fine, silky tannins are exactly right. They do the work without the aggression.
The acidity and richness balance. Burgundy Pinot Noir’s high acidity — a defining characteristic of the grape and the region — functions as a natural counterpoint to the richness of the roast. Each sip refreshes the palate and makes the next bite of lamb taste more vivid.
The earthiness affinity. Good Burgundy Pinot Noir has an earthy, savoury quality — what becomes forest floor and mushroom in aged examples. Lamb, particularly when roasted with rosemary, garlic, and thyme, has a similar savoury depth. The wine and the meat find each other in that register.
The weight is right. Pinot Noir is medium-bodied. Roast lamb is medium-weighted as a protein. A full-bodied Cabernet Sauvignon can overwhelm lamb’s relative delicacy. Pinot Noir sits in the right relationship with the meat — substantial enough to hold its own, restrained enough not to dominate.
How to Prepare the Lamb
Simple preparations work best with Burgundy Pinot Noir. The wine is doing nuanced work and does not benefit from competing with heavy sauces or very bold spicing.
Rack of lamb. More elegant, quicker cooking, appropriate for a smaller table. A herb crust — parsley, thyme, mustard — works beautifully. The Chambolle-Musigny floral character in a good Pinot Noir complements the herb crust particularly well.

Roast Lamb Loin Chops
Ingredients
- 8 lamb loin chops 1–1½ inches thick
- 2 tbsp olive oil
- 4 cloves garlic lightly crushed
- 1 tbsp fresh rosemary finely chopped
- 1 tbsp fresh thyme leaves
- Zest of 1 lemon
- 1 to 1½ tsp kosher salt
- 1 tsp freshly ground black pepper
Instructions
Prep & Season
- In a bowl, combine:
- Olive oil
- Garlic
- Rosemary
- Thyme
- Lemon zest
- Salt & pepper
- Rub evenly over the lamb chops.
- Let sit at room temperature for 20–30 minutes.
Preheat
- Preheat oven to 400°F (205°C)
- Heat a heavy skillet (cast iron preferred) over medium-high heat
Sear the Lamb
- Add chops to hot pan
- Sear 2–3 minutes per side until a deep golden crust forms
Finish in Oven
- Transfer skillet to oven
- Roast for 5–8 minutes
- Target doneness:
- Medium-rare: 130–135°F (54–57°C)
- Medium: 135–140°F (57–60°C)
Rest
- Remove from oven
- Rest 5–10 minutes before serving
Notes
🔥 Pro Tips (Simple but critical)
- Pat lamb dry before searing → better crust
- Don’t overcrowd the pan → you want sear, not steam
- Use fresh herbs only → dried will flatten the dish
- Slice against the grain if serving carved → better texture
🍷 Why This Works with Burgundy Pinot Noir
This stripped-down version is actually ideal:- Lamb’s natural richness → complements Pinot’s acidity
- Rosemary & thyme → echo earthy, herbal Burgundy notes
- Garlic (lightly used) → adds depth without dominating
- Lemon zest → lifts the dish and highlights the wine’s brightness
Leg of lamb, bone-in, roasted. The classic. Stud with garlic, coat with rosemary and olive oil, roast to a pink centre. The herbs — rosemary especially — have an herbal quality that resonates with Pinot Noir’s subtle vegetal notes. Rest thoroughly before carving.
Slow-roasted shoulder. More forgiving, more rustic, extraordinary depth of flavour from long cooking. This richness calls for a slightly more structured Pinot Noir — a Mercurey or a Nuits-Saint-Georges rather than a lighter Givry.
Accompaniments that work: Roasted root vegetables, white beans, spring peas, flageolet beans (the classic French accompaniment to lamb), gratin dauphinois. Spring herbs throughout.
Avoid: Very heavily spiced preparations (North African-style with a lot of warm spice), mint sauce in large quantities, or very acidic sauces. These will work against the wine’s delicate character.
What to Buy — Today
For most Easter tables, a Mercurey or Givry in the $25–40 range is exactly right. These are honest Burgundy Pinot Noirs with enough character to be interesting and enough approachability to be drunk young, tonight, without ceremony. A village-level Côte de Nuits — Nuits-Saint-Georges, Chambolle-Musigny — at $45–70 is worth the investment if the occasion calls for something more considered.
What to avoid: very young Côte de Nuits Premier Cru or Grand Cru wines that need time to open. If you have access to something aged five to ten years, that is a different and wonderful conversation. If you are buying new, stay with Chalonnaise or village-level Côte de Nuits.
How to Serve It
Serve at 60–65°F — slightly below room temperature in most homes. Burgundy Pinot Noir served too warm becomes flat and loses its defining freshness; served too cold, the fruit closes and the tannins seem harsh. Fifteen minutes in the refrigerator from a normal room temperature is usually sufficient.
Decant for thirty minutes. Even a young, accessible Mercurey opens significantly with air — the fruit becomes more expressive, the earthiness more apparent, the texture smoother. A simple decanter or even a jug will do.
Open a second bottle without guilt. Pinot Noir at the Easter table is meant to be poured generously.
From everyone at the Food Wine and Flavor table: joyeuses Pâques. Happy Easter.
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Coming next week: the Rhône Valley. A completely different world from Burgundy — bigger, warmer, more dramatic. The amazing and affordable wines the French buy and enjoy. We spent four days in Châteauneuf-du-Pape and drove the full valley. That story begins Sunday.
Continue Exploring
If this resonated, you might also enjoy:
Burgundy Pinot Noir: The Red Side of the Greatest Wine Region on Earth
Pinot Noir: The Grape That Demands Respect
Burgundy: The Region That Changes How You Think About Wine
Post Created: Apr 2, 2026




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