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French onion soup: wine pairings our virtual sommelier suggests to your guests

French onion soup: wine pairings our virtual sommelier suggests to your guests

French onion soup demands a precise wine pairing — most menus leave it blank

French onion soup — slow-caramelised onions, rich stock, crusty crouton, and a blanket of melted Gruyère — is one of the most flavour-intense dishes in the brasserie and bistro repertoire. Its caramelised sweetness, umami depth, and cheese richness create a pairing challenge that generic wine list recommendations cannot resolve. Most venues leave no pairing suggestion at all, missing a sale on one of their most recognisable dishes. Winevizer's virtual sommelier builds the logic into your digital wine list, so the right recommendation reaches every table without any server input.

The 5 wine pairings our AI recommends for French onion soup

  • Sauvignon Blanc (Loire Valley) — Fruity acidity and a clean finish balance the sweetness of the caramelised onion and cut through the richness of the cheese. A versatile recommendation that works across the range of preparations, from a light summer version to a full winter bowl. Strong by-the-glass potential.
  • Unoaked Chardonnay (Burgundy or Chablis) — Fresh aromatics and subtle minerality complement the creamy, melted cheese element. Its dry, clean finish refreshes the palate between rich spoonfuls. A reliable mid-range recommendation with broad guest appeal.
  • Pinot Gris (Alsace) — Pear and honey notes engage the caramelised onion directly; its slight spice and textured body match the soup's richness. A distinctive recommendation that adds depth to your pairing programme and positions your wine list as knowledgeable.
  • Beaujolais (Villages or Cru) — Light, fresh, and cherry-forward. For guests who prefer red, Beaujolais avoids the tannin clash that heavier reds create with the soup's bitterness and sweetness. Effective served at a slightly lower temperature. A practical red recommendation for tables committed to red wine.
  • Côtes du Rhône blanc — Citrus and floral aromatics with a textured body that matches the dish's complexity. A regional choice that adds character to the recommendation and differentiates from the obvious Chardonnay or Sauvignon path.

Why this pairing is profitable

French onion soup is a classic brasserie and bistro dish with strong guest recognition — which means the pairing recommendation carries credibility when it references the dish by name. When you digitize your wine list with Winevizer, the recommendation appears on the guest-facing interface linked directly to the dish selection. For brasseries and French bistro concepts, this creates a seamless, on-brand pairing experience that reinforces the restaurant's culinary identity and converts at a higher rate than a generic white wine suggestion.

The operational impact

Starter soup dishes see wine attachment rates of 12–18% when a pairing prompt is active, compared to near zero without one. For a brasserie running 50 French onion soup covers per week across lunch and dinner, a 15% attachment rate at €8 per glass generates meaningful incremental weekly revenue on a dish that previously generated no wine sales. Staff confidence in recommending wine for soups — historically a gap area — improves once the recommendation is embedded.

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