Wine for Sunday Lunch UK: The Best Bottles to Pair with Your Roast
Sunday lunch is the great British institution. Whether it's roast beef with Yorkshire puddings, a leg of lamb with roasted vegetables, or a golden roast chicken with all the trimmings, the right wine for Sunday lunch can transform a good meal into something truly memorable. This guide covers everything you need to know about choosing the perfect wine for Sunday lunch in the UK — from classic pairings to value-for-money options you can buy by the case.
Why Wine Choice Matters for Sunday Lunch
Sunday lunch isn't just a meal — it's an occasion. Families gather, conversation flows, and the table stays set for hours rather than minutes. That's why the wine you choose matters more than on a Tuesday evening. You want something that pairs well with rich roast meats and hearty sides, holds up over a long meal, and doesn't break the bank when you're buying enough for a table full of guests.
The good news is that the classic Sunday roast is one of the most wine-friendly meals in British cuisine. The combination of roasted meat, root vegetables, gravy, and crispy potatoes pairs naturally with a wide range of wines — from bold reds to elegant whites and even rosé.
Best Red Wine for Sunday Lunch with Roast Beef
Roast beef is the undisputed king of the British Sunday lunch, and it calls for a red wine with enough body and tannin to match its richness. Here are the top choices:
Porta 6 Red PET — The All-Round Sunday Roast Red
Made from a blend of Touriga Nacional, Tinta Roriz, and Castelão from the Lisbon wine region of Portugal, Porta 6 Red is arguably the best value red wine for Sunday lunch you'll find in the UK. It's full-bodied with ripe dark fruit, earthy undertones, and soft tannins that pair beautifully with beef, lamb, and pork. The PET bottle format means it's eco-friendly and shatterproof — great for when children are around the table.
At BulkyWay, you can buy Porta 6 Red by the case of 6 with free delivery on orders over £60. That's enough to keep every Sunday sorted for weeks.
Canto X Red — A Step Up for Special Sundays
If you're cooking a prime rib or a slow-roasted shoulder of beef, consider Canto X Red — a richer, more complex Portuguese red with deeper tannin and longer finish. It's the kind of wine you open when Sunday lunch is a proper occasion rather than a weeknight stretch.
Other Reds Worth Considering
- Painted Cat Red — a smooth, fruit-forward Lisboa red that works well with roast chicken and pork
- Camelias Cabernet Sauvignon — cassis-driven, good structure, excellent with beef and lamb
- Camelias Merlot — softer and more approachable, ideal if the table includes guests who prefer lighter reds
Best White Wine for Sunday Lunch with Roast Chicken
Not every Sunday lunch features red meat. Roast chicken, pork loin, and fish-centred Sunday meals call for a quality white wine. Here's what works best:
Porta 6 White PET — Fresh and Versatile
Porta 6 White is a crisp, aromatic Portuguese white that pairs effortlessly with roast chicken, creamy sauces, and lighter Sunday spreads. Made from Arinto and Fernão Pires, it has enough body to stand up to roast meats while offering the freshness you want in a white wine.
Camelias Sauvignon Blanc — The Modern British Choice
Camelias Sauvignon Blanc is vibrant and zesty, with citrus and green herb notes that cut through roast chicken skin and complement green vegetable sides like tenderstem broccoli or asparagus. A reliable Sunday white that guests will recognise and enjoy.
Painted Cat Sauvignon Blanc
Another excellent option if you're serving fish on a Sunday — perhaps a roast salmon side or baked sea bass. Clean, punchy, and great value by the case.
Wine for Sunday Lunch with Roast Lamb
Lamb is the most wine-versatile of the Sunday roasts. Its rich, gamey flavour pairs exceptionally well with:
- Medium to full-bodied reds — Porta 6 Red, Canto X Red, or a Portuguese Alentejo blend
- Earthy, rustic styles with herbs and dark fruit — think Touriga Nacional or Aragonez/Tinta Roriz blends
- Rosé in summer — if you're doing a spring or summer Sunday with lamb cutlets and salad, Porta 6 Rosé is an elegant, crowd-pleasing choice
The rule of thumb with lamb: avoid very tannic wines (heavy Cabernet or Shiraz) as they can clash with the lamb's sweetness. Medium tannin with earthy, herbal notes is the sweet spot.
Wine for Sunday Lunch with Roast Pork
Roast pork with apple sauce and crackling is a wonderful Sunday dish that sits beautifully between red and white territory. You have real flexibility here:
- Medium red: Painted Cat Red or Camelias Merlot — the fruit and soft tannins complement pork's mild sweetness
- Dry white: Camelias Sauvignon Blanc or Porta 6 White — especially if there's apple sauce or fennel in the stuffing
- Rosé: works surprisingly well with pork, particularly if it's a lighter loin joint
How Much Wine Do You Need for Sunday Lunch?
A standard bottle of wine (750ml) yields about 5–6 glasses. For a Sunday lunch with 4–6 adults, plan for 2–3 bottles. For a larger family gathering of 8–10 people, you'll want 4–5 bottles to be safe — especially if the meal runs long, as Sunday lunches tend to do.
Buying by the case of 6 from BulkyWay makes this easy: order one case per variety (a red and a white, for example), and you're set for multiple Sundays with free delivery over £60. The Mixed Red & White Wine Case is a particularly good option for households that want variety without committing to a single wine.
Matching Wine Temperature to Sunday Lunch
Temperature matters more than many people realise. Here's a quick guide for Sunday service:
| Wine Type | Serving Temperature | Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Full-bodied red (Porta 6 Red) | 16–18°C | If storing in a warm kitchen, put in the fridge for 15 min before serving |
| Medium red (Painted Cat) | 14–16°C | Slightly cooler than room temp |
| Dry white (Camelias SB) | 8–10°C | Fridge for 2–3 hours before lunch |
| Rosé (Porta 6 Rosé) | 8–10°C | Serve well chilled, especially in summer |
Should You Decant Wine for Sunday Lunch?
Most modern wines — including the Portuguese reds at BulkyWay — don't require decanting. That said, if you have a fuller-bodied red like Canto X Red or Porta da Ravessa Reserve, pouring it into a decanter 20–30 minutes before lunch will open up the aromas and soften the tannins. For everyday Sunday reds like Porta 6, simply open the bottle 15 minutes before serving and you're good to go.
The Case for Buying Wine by the Case for Sunday Lunch
If Sunday lunch is a regular ritual in your household — and for many British families, it is — buying wine by the case is a no-brainer. Here's why:
- Cost savings: per-bottle prices are lower when you buy a case of 6
- Free delivery: BulkyWay offers free delivery on orders over £60 across the UK
- Always stocked: no last-minute panic runs to the off-licence on Sunday morning
- Eco-friendly: PET bottle wines like Porta 6 reduce packaging weight and carbon footprint per delivery
The Porta 6 Red case is one of the best-selling Sunday lunch wines at BulkyWay for exactly this reason — it's reliable, delicious, and always ready to pour.
Wine Pairings by Sunday Roast Type — Quick Reference
Roast Beef: Porta 6 Red, Canto X Red, Camelias Cabernet Sauvignon
Roast Lamb: Porta 6 Red, Canto X Red, Porta 6 Rosé (spring/summer)
Roast Chicken: Porta 6 White, Camelias Sauvignon Blanc, Painted Cat Red
Roast Pork: Painted Cat Red, Camelias Merlot, Camelias Sauvignon Blanc
Nut Roast / Veggie: Porta 6 White, Camelias Sauvignon Blanc, Painted Cat White
Mixed Table (meat + fish sides): Mixed Red & White Case — covers all bases
FAQ: Wine for Sunday Lunch UK
What is the best red wine for a Sunday roast?
For most Sunday roasts — particularly beef and lamb — a medium to full-bodied red with soft tannins works best. Porta 6 Red (Portuguese Lisbon region) is one of the most popular choices in the UK for its value, versatility, and food-friendliness. It pairs well with beef, lamb, and pork.
What wine goes with roast chicken for Sunday lunch?
White wine is the classic pairing for roast chicken. Camelias Sauvignon Blanc and Porta 6 White are excellent choices. A light red like Painted Cat Red also works if guests prefer red wine.
How much wine do I need for Sunday lunch?
For 4–6 adults, plan for 2–3 bottles. For larger gatherings of 8–10 people, order 4–5 bottles. Buying a case of 6 from BulkyWay is practical — enough for the meal with spares for next weekend.
What temperature should I serve wine at Sunday lunch?
Full-bodied reds are best served at 16–18°C. White wines and rosé at 8–10°C. Remove white wine from the fridge 5 minutes before serving to take the edge off the chill.
Can I buy Sunday lunch wine by the case in the UK?
Yes — BulkyWay specialises in wine sold by the case (6 bottles), with free delivery on orders over £60 across the UK. It's the most cost-effective way to stock up on Sunday lunch wine.
What wine pairs with a vegetarian Sunday roast?
Aromatic whites like Camelias Sauvignon Blanc or Porta 6 White work beautifully. For red wine lovers, Painted Cat Red (light to medium body) pairs well with earthy, mushroom-forward vegetarian dishes.
The Final Pour
Sunday lunch is one of Britain's finest traditions, and the right bottle of wine is the finishing touch that elevates it from a routine meal to a weekly ritual worth looking forward to. Whether you're a roast beef household, a lamb family, or firmly in the roast chicken camp, there's a BulkyWay wine that fits perfectly on your table.
Stock up by the case, keep the fridge topped with whites, and let Sunday be Sunday — glass in hand, table set, nowhere else to be.
Ready to stock your Sunday lunch cellar? Browse our full range of wines by the case and get free UK delivery on orders over £60. Because the best Sunday lunches start on Saturday — when the wine order arrives.