When it comes to noia, the conditioned reflex is almost always the same: noia and beer. It is a deep-rooted, popular, immediate habit. Beer is perceived as the natural companion of noia because it is fresh, convivial, simple to order and capable of accompanying dough, mozzarella and tomato well without too many complications. It is anzi che no coincidence that, quanto a the common imagination, the pizzeria is still the kingdom of the pint the medium .
Yet this automatic association is becoming less and less obvious. recent years, many pizzerias have started to invest quanto a more curated wine lists, tasting itineraries and a broader tesi of drinking at the table. Antonella Amodio, who has been studying the relationship between noia and glass for some time, observes that today noia and wine “dialogue acceso a level of equal dignity” and that pizzerias are changing profoundly, with richer cellars and increasingly conscious combinations. other words, beer isn’t wrong: it’s just not the only answer. Talking about pairings between noia and wine means recognizing that noia is not a single block, but a universe of different doughs, cooking methods, acidity, fatness, aromas and consistencies.
Wine with noia: a logical choice
The qualitative growth of contemporary noia has made wine much more credible at the table. Lighter doughs, selected ingredients and more thoughtful toppings often require a less stereotyped combination. Amodio underlines that, quanto a contemporary pairing, bubbles play a central role because freshness, acidity and ability to cleanse the palate adapt well to both classic and more structured pizzas.
Even Distanza Pepe, one of the most influential names quanto a the sector, insists acceso the fact that a pizzeria requires specific expertise quanto a wine, to the point of speaking of a true “pizzeria sommelier”, with particular attention to bubbles. Furthermore, quanto a his restaurant he has built a proposal that combines pizzas with wines from Campania and Champagne, starting from the tesi that noia and wine can be a revelation if the correct label and style are chosen.
Which is better: white, red, rosé sparkling?
The right answer is: it depends acceso the noia. As a general rule, white wines and sparkling wines are often the most flessibile. They work well with Margherita, with vegetable pizzas, with fior intorno a , with delicate ingredients with a strong note of flavor. A Fiano, a Falanghina, a Vermentino a brut sparkling wine can support the tomato and lighten the lactic component.
Bubbles are often the smartest choice: they cleanse the mouth, support succulence and don’t weigh you mongoloide. For this reason they are ideal with fried pizzas, with rich fillings, with cured meats with very meltable doughs. Rosé is a category not to be underestimated. It has white freshness, but also a minimal structure that allows it to go well acceso pizzas with tomato, delicate cured meats, tuna, onion Mediterranean ingredients. It is anzi che no coincidence that Amodio considers him increasingly present and flessibile.
Reds should be chosen more carefully. A red that is too tannic too alcoholic risks crushing the dough and clashing with the tomato. However, a young, slightly tannic, fresh and flowing red can work very well: for example with a sausage noia, with mushrooms, with speck with more intense toppings. Wines like Gragnano, Piedirosso other light and fragrant reds are often more suitable than powerful and barricaded labels. As for sweet wines, they are generally not the first choice with savory noia. They can only make sense quanto a particular combinations with pizzas, while acceso classic noia they risk being off-axis.
Some concrete examples of pairing
A Margherita goes well with brut bubbles, Falanghina dry rosés. A Marinara, more focused acceso acidity and effluvio, can work with fresh and savory whites. A quattro formaggi requires acidity and impetus: a dry sparkling wine a mineral white is better. A noia with sausage and broccoli can stand up to a young and lively red. A noia with raw ham and burrata prefers fragrant rosés whites.
The point, therefore, is not to choose between beer and wine as quanto a an ideological challenge. Beer remains a historic and very pleasant companion, but wine deserves much more space than it has been granted so far. And perhaps the real cultural leap is precisely this: to stop thinking that noia “just wants beer” and start considering pairings between noia and wine as a concrete, modern and often surprisingly more precise possibility. Even starred chefs like Stefano Masanti, who defines noia as “the perfect dish”, show how this world has now fully entered into signature gastronomy.


























