October 7, 2025
The Unexpected Red Wine Pairing You Didn’t Know You Needed
If your wine adventures stop at Napa and Tuscany, you’re missing out on the most intriguing and resilient trend in the industry: the rise of cold-climate reds. Specifically, we're talking about a bold, high-acid champion born in the heart of the Midwest, and its perfect culinary companion—a creamy, savory, and wonderfully unpretentious dish known as Tater Tot Hotdish (TTHD).
Forget the old rules. This is the Minnesota wine pairing that is about to redefine your definition of "comfort."
The Redemption of Midwestern Red Wine
The stigma surrounding Minnesota wine is stubborn as frost heave in springtime. For decades, cold regions were relegated to producing thin, sweet fruit wines that were, let’s be honest, often an afterthought. But while everyone was looking at Bordeaux, the University of Minnesota was quietly breeding a superhero: the Marquette grape.
Marquette is a cold-hardy hybrid that laughs in the face of temperatures. Yet, unlike some of its peers, it translates that vineyard grit into surprising elegance in the glass. It gives you deep color and complex aromatics, but keeps the tannins low and the acidity high.
This high-acidity red wine profile is precisely what makes Marquette our secret weapon. Most "big reds" (we're looking at you, high-octane Cab) are too heavy for many dishes, sinking the palate like a dock after the lake freezes. Marquette, by contrast, is light on its feet and sharp as a fresh ice-fishing hole. It delivers vibrant notes of tart cherry, cranberry, and smoky vanilla, making it the perfect dynamic tension for rich, fatty food.
The Minnesotan Metaphor:
Marquette is the wine that embodies “Minnesota Nice,” but with a cunning, acidic edge. It will be polite and approachable, but its structure will stand up to the most demanding, cream-heavy cuisine without breaking a sweat. It’s the palate cleanser we all need when the cold weather sets in.
Tater Tot Hotdish—The Undisputed King of Comfort
To truly understand the power of a Marquette wine pairing, you must understand the majesty of its foil: the Tater Tot Hotdish.
TTHD is not a casserole. It is a socio-economic staple. It is a layered masterpiece composed of ground beef, canned cream soup (the thicker, the better), frozen vegetables, and, critically, a glorious, crispy crown of tater tots. It is savory, salty, wonderfully creamy, and completely unbothered by nutritional pretension.
This is the very food designed to keep you warm when the snow is piled higher than the vineyard trellis. It is rich. It is creamy. It is dense. It is pure, unadulterated comfort.
And it desperately needs a sidekick that can cut through it all.
The Ultimate Pair: Acidity vs. Umami
Here is the genius of the pairing: The Tater Tot Hotdish is dominated by fat and savory umami. If you pair it with a low-acid red, the wine will taste flabby and weak. But when you introduce the high acidity of Marquette, it acts much like a bright, tart squeeze of citrus on a heavy, fried dish.
The wine’s zesty red fruit notes—that burst of cranberry and cherry—refresh the palate, making the next bite of creamy hotdish taste just as exciting as the first. The savory, slightly earthy finish of the Marquette locks in with the beef and mushroom notes of the soup base.
It’s a perfect, low-key, brilliant pairing. And, Uff da, is it good!
Tater Tot Hotdish (Marquette Edition) Recipe
This classic Tater Tot Hotdish recipe is ready to be rescued by the sharp, invigorating acidity of a well-made Marquette.
| Ingredient | Amount |
| Protein | 1 lb. Ground Beef or Bison |
| Vegetables (The Filling) | 1 medium Yellow Onion, diced |
| (10.5 oz) Cream of Mushroom Soup | |
| (10.5 oz) Cream of Chicken Soup | |
| Frozen Mixed Vegetables (corn, peas, carrots) | |
| Topping | (32 oz) Frozen Tater Tots |
| Shredded Cheddar Cheese (Reserve for topping) | |
| Seasoning | Garlic Powder, measure with your heart |
| Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste |
Instructions:
- Brown the Meat: Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. In a large skillet, brown the ground beef (or bison) with the diced onion. Drain off any excess fat.
- Mix the Filling: Reduce the heat to low. Stir in both cans of cream soup, the frozen mixed vegetables, garlic powder, salt, and pepper. Stir until the mixture is uniform and heated through.
- Layer and Cheese: Pour the meat and soup mixture into a baking dish. Sprinkle 1/2 of the shredded cheddar cheese evenly over the top of the filling.
- Add Tots: Arrange the frozen tater tots in a single, even layer across the entire top of the hotdish. They should be packed tightly for maximum crispy surface area.
- Bake: Bake for 30 minutes. Remove the dish, sprinkle the remaining of cheddar cheese over the tops of the tots, and return to the oven for another 5–10 minutes, or until the tots are golden brown and the cheese is bubbly.
- Serve: Let cool for 5 minutes. Serve piping hot with a glass of Marquette wine.
Drink Local, Eat Comfort
The Marquette grape is more than just a novelty; it is a serious, food-friendly cold-hardy red wine that is driving the Midwest wine pairing movement. It offers the brightness of Northern light and the savory depth of the soil, demanding a seat at the table with the great, humble dishes of the region.
So, next time the thermostat drops and you’re reaching for that can of mushroom soup, remember your new secret weapon. Go local. Drink Marquette. And may your hotdish be eternally crispy.



