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    Holiday Wine Secrets

    Bring the wine: Six great choices that complement your holiday meal

    Jessica Dupuy
    Jessica Dupuy
    Nov 27, 2013 | 9:32 am

    Thanksgiving is often one of the hardest meals for pairing wine simply because of the vast array of flavors served across the buffet table. Christmas is a close second, though at least you're not confined to turkey. But with a few pairing secrets under your belt, you can easily master the holiday wine dilemma.

    When selecting white wine, it’s a good rule of thumb to pick something with good acidity and a dry finish. If you serve wine that has been aged in oak for a while or has too much residual sugar, it will appear flabby on the palate and nondescript alongside your meal.

    In other words, avoid the buttery, over-oaked California Chardonnays. Butter is best left served with Grandma’s warm yeast rolls, not in a wine glass. Instead, go for a white that’s been aged in stainless steel or that has seen only a kiss of oak in its production process.

    When selecting white wine, pick something with good acidity and a dry finish. For red wines, go with something that doesn’t overpower the meal.

    Another good tip is to pick something with good aromatics. Holiday meals often feature a lot of competing aromas at the table. To help offset the sensory confusion, choose something that gives your nose a fresh “reset” every time you take a sip. Something with fresh florals, bright citrus or subtle fruit should do the trick.

    For red wines, it’s always a bit more challenging to find something that pleases everyone but also bridges the many flavors served during the feast. Just as with white wines, it’s a good idea to go with something that doesn’t overpower the meal.

    For Thanksgiving turkey, that often means opting for a lighter grape such as Pinot Noir. For Christmas hams and roasts, a bigger grape or blend will do, but try to find something with good acidity, complexity and not too much oak, which can erode the depth of flavor in the fruit and transform an otherwise sparkling holiday meal into a lackluster one.

    To help guide you, here are a few wines that may fit the bill. Because Thanksgiving Day is just around the corner, this list is narrowed to American wines in honor of the nation’s most celebrated traditions.

    Grace Lane Yakima Riesling (Washington), Whole Foods ($10)
    Riesling often gets a bad rap for being too sweet and unapproachable. But this wine from Washington isn't your average Blue Nun sugar bomb.

    With notes of white tea, ripe white peaches, lemon zest and honeysuckle, this wine has nice, full body balanced with bright acidity and minerality. Its crisp, dry finish will change your mind about Riesling. Serve as an alternative to Chardonnay and win over friends and family as well.

    Jordan Winery Chardonnay 2011 (California), Spec’s ($26)
    Not all Chardonnays have been beaten over the head with oak. In fact, a lot of producers now respect the natural characteristics of the grape and give it the royal treatment. For those with a great affinity for Chardonnay, this is one that should please everyone.

    It delivers on the broad, full body people love from a good Chard but with only a touch of oak; you find a restrained hint of creaminess to complement a nice, crisp finish. With notes of green apple, bright citrus and stone fruit, it's a perfect accompaniment to a turkey dinner.

    McPherson Cellars Roussanne 2012 (Texas), Spec’s ($14)
    A shining star among white wine grapes in Texas, Roussanne originally hails from the Rhone Valley of France and is known for notes of lemon, white tea and jasmine. The McPherson Roussanne is an excellent example of these characteristics, offering a medium body with crisp minerality and zippy acidity — a perfect food wine that should bring smiles around the table.

    Stoller Family Estate JV Pinot Noir 2010 (Oregon), Spec’s ($20)
    An excellent Thanksgiving choice, Pinot Noir is the great equalizer when pairing things like poultry (or fish) with red wine. This Stoller Pinot Noir has a beautiful balance of delicacy and complexity, offering aromas of red raspberries, cherries and blueberries along with a warm earthiness and a hint of smoky graham crackers. An excellent example of balancing fruit with earthiness for new- and old-world character.

    Columbia Crest H3 Merlot 2010 (Washington), Costco ($15)
    It’s no secret Texans like their big red wines. If Pinot Noir just won’t do the trick, for your own red wine pleasure, try this Merlot on for size. It has a blend of raspberry, pepper and dusty road on the nose with hints of chocolate-covered cherry and plum preserves on the palate.

    It won’t exactly overpower a traditional turkey dinner, but it may steal the show. Also try serving it with Christmas beef tenderloin or roasted lamb.

    Pedernales Cellars GSM 2011 (Texas), Whole Foods ($26)
    Another great one with a little more backbone, this Texas production brings together the three great grapes of the French Rhone Valley: Grenache, Syrah and Mourvedre. Though Pedernales Cellars bank most of its red wine portfolio on Tempranillo, this GSM is an excellent match for food, particularly if you're serving a smoked turkey for Thanksgiving or any other smoked meat throughout the holiday season.

    With dark fruit, smoky tobacco and a touch of leather, this wine has great tannic structure but not too much to be overwhelming.

    McPherson Cellars Roussanne

    McPherson Cellars Roussanne holiday wines
    Photo courtesy of McPherson Cellars
    McPherson Cellars Roussanne
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    something for everyone

    New brewery pours into Houston with craft beer, cocktails, and homebrew

    Ralph Palmer
    Apr 10, 2026 | 12:29 pm
    Farmboy Brewing Company
    Photo by Ralph Palmer
    Farmboy Brewing Company is now open on N. Shepherd.

    The tides of craft breweries in Houston and across the country have shifted dramatically over the past five years, marked by closures and a clear softening of the once unstoppable boom, with names like True Anomaly, Elder Son, and Buffalo Bayou Brewing serving as recent reminders of how quickly the landscape can change. What is emerging in its place is a new phase that is far less rigid about labels and more focused on flexibility and meeting customers where they actually are.

    For Landon Weiershausen, that evolution is not guesswork. It's the entire business plan.

    After more than a decade running Farmboy Brew Shop and working across nearly every space of the beer supply chain, (hops to kegs to fruit) Weiershausen has stepped back into ownership with a new brewery. Farmboy Brewing Company (4816 N Shepherd Dr.) blends a taproom, full cocktail bar, and homebrew retail shop into a single, community-driven space. The location will be familiar to many craft beer fans, as it previously housed both North Shepherd Brewing and Astral Brewing.

    “It’s about giving people what they actually want when they walk in the door,” Weiershausen tells CultureMap.

    Weiershausen’s roots in Houston’s beer world stretch back to 2014, when he opened Farmboy Brew Shop, a go-to spot for local Oak Forest/Garden Oaks homebrewers looking for ingredients, gear, and advice. With the launch of Farmboy Brewing, that business still exists, but it’s now integrated into the new brewery.

    The move creates something unique in the world of Houston beer — a space where hobbyists, beer nerds, and casual drinkers can intersect. In the 9,000-square-foot space, customers can shop for grains and yeast then walk a few steps over and grab a pint or a cocktail.

    “The majority of people coming in for homebrew are also interested in drinking,” Weiershausen says. “Now they don’t have to choose.”

    Instead of fighting changes in the beverage industry, Weiershausen is leaning into diversification. His brewery operates with a mixed beverage license, allowing for a full cocktail program alongside beer, wine, non-alcoholic options, and THC-infused drinks. That last category, while politically contentious in Texas, represents what he sees as an undeniable shift in consumer behavior. Currently, Weiershausen is stocking a few verities of THC-infused offerings from Eureka Heights Brew Co.

    “There’s a huge market for it,” he says. “Whether people like it or not, customers are choosing those products over traditional alcoholic beverages."

    Rather than drawing lines between beer drinkers and everyone else, the goal is to make the space work for large groups that have diverse drink preferences.

    “If someone doesn’t drink beer, or doesn’t drink alcohol at all, we still want them to have options.”

    Despite the brewery name on the door, Weiershausen isn’t rushing his own beer to market. Instead, the tap list currently leans on guest kegs from local and regional breweries such as Great Heights, Spindletap, Saint Arnold, and Lone Pint. This decision is a deliberate move that buys time while new brewing equipment is installed and optimized. It’s a patient approach that prioritizes long-term quality over a fast rollout and reflects lessons learned from years inside the industry. In the meantime, the guest taps double as a nod to relationships that Weiershausen has built over many years.

    “A lot of these are people who took care of me over the years,” he says. “This is a way to return the favor.”

    Once the brewing program is rolled out in the next few weeks, expect the first batch of offering to include a West Coast IPA, Hazy IPA, Light Lager, and an American Wheat. The program itself will also be led by head brewer Steven Treleaven, formerly of Conroe’s B-52 Brewing.

    Weiershausen’s vision prioritizes education. The homebrew shop has always served as an entry point for teaching its customers more about beer, but the expanded space opens the door to something he describes as an “education escalator.” Plans include monthly workshops covering everything from brewing basics to off-flavor detection (a critical skill for anyone serious about improving their homebrew).

    Like most breweries, the space will feature familiar weekly staples including trivia nights, but Weiershausen is also looking to mix in less predictable programming. Think dance classes, themed events, and rotating concepts that go beyond the usual bingo-and-beer formula.

    On the food side, Weiershausen has chosen not to build an in-house kitchen. Instead, the brewery will host food trucks, including the return of fan-favorite El Alabrije, known for its Oaxacan-inspired menu.

    At its core, the concept reflects something bigger than one brewery. It’s a response to a changing market, a shifting customer base, and a city that’s never fit neatly into one category anyway. For Weiershausen, the path forward isn’t about choosing between beer, cocktails, or anything else. It’s about building a place where all of it works together.

    “We’re just trying to create something for the community,” he says. “Whatever that means for them.”

    ----

    Ralph Palmer is a co-owner of the Deckle and Hyde barbecue pop-up and a longtime craft beer enthusiast. Follow him on Instagram at eyefearnobeer.

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