Wine with Antipasti UK: The Complete Pairing Guide for Every Italian Spread
If you've ever laid out a beautiful antipasti board and wondered which bottle to reach for, you're not alone. Wine with antipasti in the UK has become one of the most searched food-and-wine questions — and with good reason. A well-chosen wine transforms a good antipasti spread into something genuinely special. From prosciutto and salami to marinated olives, burrata, and grilled vegetables, the sheer variety of flavours on an antipasti board means the right pour can make or break the experience.
In this guide, we'll walk you through the best wines to match every antipasti style, why certain grapes work better than others, and how BulkyWay's Iberian cases give you the best value for entertaining at home — with free UK delivery on orders over £60.
Why Antipasti Pairing is Unique
Antipasti — literally "before the meal" in Italian — covers an enormous range of flavours and textures. A single board might include:
- Salty, fatty cured meats (prosciutto, salami, nduja, coppa)
- Briny elements (olives, capers, anchovies, pickled peppers)
- Rich, creamy cheeses (burrata, mozzarella, taleggio)
- Acidic components (sun-dried tomatoes, marinated artichokes)
- Starchy carbs (ciabatta, grissini, focaccia)
- Fried or roasted items (arancini, fritto misto, roasted garlic)
This complexity means a single pairing rule won't work. Instead, you want a wine with enough acidity and fruit to handle the salt and fat, enough body to stand up to robust flavours, yet not so tannic or oaky that it overwhelms the delicate elements. Medium-bodied reds and aromatic, acidic whites tick all these boxes — which is why Portuguese and Iberian wines excel here.
Best Red Wines with Antipasti
Porta 6 Red PET — The Everyday Entertainer
BulkyWay's Porta 6 Red PET is one of Portugal's best-loved wines for good reason. This Lisboa blend of Aragonez, Castelão, and Touriga Nacional delivers ripe berry fruit, a touch of spice, and soft tannins that make it brilliant with cured meats. The fruit-forward character handles the saltiness of prosciutto and salami without competing, while its gentle structure complements olives and hard cheeses.
The PET (plastic) bottle format is also ideal for outdoor entertaining — no broken glass on your garden table, and lighter to carry to a picnic or barbecue. At the price point of a BulkyWay 6-bottle case, it's the most cost-effective way to serve everyone at a summer gathering.
Best with: Prosciutto, salami, Parma ham, manchego, Spanish chorizo, grilled aubergine
Painted Cat Red — Expressive and Versatile
The Painted Cat Red from Lisboa brings more aromatic intensity to the table. Medium-bodied with notes of blackberry, violet, and a hint of warm spice, it's particularly good alongside nduja and more boldly flavoured cured meats. Its fresh acidity keeps it lively next to briny olives and sun-dried tomatoes, preventing the palate from becoming fatigued across a long grazing session.
Best with: Nduja, coppa, roasted peppers, bruschetta with tomato, marinated mushrooms
Camelias Merlot — Crowd-Pleasing Softness
If you're hosting a mixed crowd with varying wine preferences, a smooth Merlot is always a safe bet. Camelias Merlot offers plummy, approachable fruit with minimal tannin — it won't clash with delicate elements like fresh mozzarella or burrata, yet has enough weight to accompany fatty bresaola and cured pancetta.
Best with: Bresaola, light salami, mozzarella, roasted garlic, soft cheeses
Best White Wines with Antipasti
Camelias Sauvignon Blanc — The Classic White Choice
For white-forward antipasti boards — think prosciutto with melon, mozzarella caprese, seafood antipasti, or boards laden with fresh vegetables — Camelias Sauvignon Blanc is outstanding. With vibrant citrus, fresh herb notes, and zippy acidity, it cuts through oily elements and refreshes the palate between bites of rich cheese or salty ham.
Portuguese Sauvignon Blanc tends to be crisper and more mineral-driven than its New World counterparts, making it particularly food-friendly. It's especially brilliant paired with seafood antipasti — prawns, smoked salmon, anchovy crostini — where a heavier red would simply overwhelm.
Best with: Prosciutto e melone, caprese salad, smoked salmon, anchovy crostini, grilled courgette, ricotta crostini
Painted Cat Sauvignon Blanc — Herbal and Aromatic
The Painted Cat Sauvignon Blanc leans into more aromatic, tropical territory while retaining excellent acidity. It's a brilliant pairing for boards that mix fresh and pickled elements — think artichoke hearts, green olives, pickled peppers — where the wine's herbal character echoes the briny, acidic flavours on the board.
Best with: Artichoke antipasti, pickled vegetables, herb-marinated feta, light charcuterie
Porta 6 White PET — Reliable All-Rounder
Porta 6 White PET is a fresh, unoaked white that works brilliantly as a crowd-pleasing option when you're catering for a large group and can't curate individual pairings. Its clean, citrus-driven profile won't offend anything on the board, and the PET bottle format means you can serve it chilled outdoors without worry.
Best with: Lighter antipasti boards, seafood platters, fresh cheeses, crostini
The Antipasti Board Builder's Guide to Wine
Rather than thinking about wine pairing element-by-element, it helps to categorise your board and choose accordingly:
The Classic Italian Board
Prosciutto, salami, mozzarella, sun-dried tomatoes, olives, ciabatta
Wine choice: Porta 6 Red PET or Camelias Sauvignon Blanc. The red handles the cured meats beautifully; the white is perfect for the cheese and vegetables. If serving both, you'll cover every preference in the room.
The Spanish-Influenced Board
Chorizo, Iberian ham, manchego, Padrón peppers, marcona almonds, breadsticks
Wine choice: Painted Cat Red or Camelias Cabernet Sauvignon. The richer, spicier character of these wines complements the more intense, smoky flavours of Spanish charcuterie. For more on this style, see our guide on wine with chorizo.
The Seafood Antipasti Board
Smoked salmon, king prawns, anchovy bruschetta, tuna pâté, lemon wedges
Wine choice: Camelias Sauvignon Blanc or Painted Cat Sauvignon Blanc. The acidity and citrus notes are ideal for cutting through the richness of smoked and cured fish. Read our full guide to wine with fish for more inspiration.
The Vegetarian Antipasti Board
Grilled vegetables, roasted peppers, marinated artichokes, burrata, pesto bruschetta, mushroom crostini
Wine choice: Porta 6 White or Painted Cat Sauvignon Blanc. Crisp, aromatic whites lift earthy, herbal vegetable flavours. See also our guide to wine with vegetarian food.
The Grazing Table (Mixed Feast)
Everything — a mix of all the above, served over several hours
Wine choice: Buy by the case and serve a red and a white. The Mixed Red & White Wine Case from BulkyWay is ideal for exactly this scenario — six bottles covering all bases, with free UK delivery over £60.
Temperature and Serving Tips
Temperature matters more with antipasti than with most food situations, because you're typically eating over an extended period and the wines need to stay enjoyable throughout.
- Light reds: Serve at 14–16°C — slightly cooler than room temperature. Porta 6 Red and Painted Cat Red both benefit from a 20-minute stint in the fridge on a warm day.
- Whites: Serve at 8–10°C. Don't over-chill — too cold and you'll lose the aromatics that make Sauvignon Blanc such a great food wine.
- PET bottles: BulkyWay's PET bottles chill faster than glass, so budget less time in the fridge — around 45 minutes from room temperature.
Glassware for Antipasti Gatherings
For casual entertaining, it's tempting to use smaller glasses to avoid breakages during parties. However, white wines particularly benefit from a decent-sized glass — the aromas are part of the pairing experience. Bistro-style stemless glasses are a good compromise: sturdy, dishwasher-safe, and still large enough to let the wine breathe.
For reds, a standard Bordeaux-style glass works well across all the BulkyWay red range — the wider bowl helps soften tannins and lets the fruit aromatics develop.
How Much Wine for an Antipasti Party?
Planning quantities is one of the most common questions when hosting. As a general rule:
- Pre-dinner nibbles (1 hour): Half a bottle per person
- Extended grazing (2–3 hours): One bottle per person
- Full evening antipasti feast: One to one and a half bottles per person
For six guests over an afternoon: a case of 6 bottles is a comfortable minimum. For a full evening party, two cases — one red, one white — gives you flexibility and the confidence that you won't run dry. BulkyWay's free delivery on orders over £60 makes ordering two cases simultaneously the economical choice.
Why Iberian Wines Excel with Antipasti
You might wonder why we keep recommending Portuguese and Iberian wines for antipasti when the cuisine is Italian. The answer lies in the Mediterranean DNA shared by both wine cultures. Portuguese wines from the Lisboa and Setúbal regions — where Porta 6 and Painted Cat originate — share the same sun-baked, mineral character as Italian wines from Tuscany and Lazio. The grape varieties are different, but the structural philosophy is the same: high natural acidity, moderate alcohol, and fruit-forward profiles built for food.
In practical terms, this means Iberian wines handle the salt, fat, and acid of antipasti just as well as classic Italian pairings — and often at significantly better value, especially when buying by the case through BulkyWay.
For context on how these wines perform across the broader Italian food canon, see our guides on wine with Italian food and wine with charcuterie.
Seasonal Antipasti and Wine Pairings
Spring and Summer Boards
As the weather warms, lighter, fresher antipasti tend to dominate — think crudités, light seafood, fresh mozzarella, and summery salads. Crisp whites and lighter reds come into their own. Camelias Sauvignon Blanc and Porta 6 White PET are the go-to choices from late April through September.
Autumn and Winter Boards
Cooler months invite heartier antipasti — roasted root vegetables, harder aged cheeses, robust charcuterie, warm arancini. Here, a more structured red like Painted Cat Red or Camelias Merlot provides the warmth and body the season calls for.
Where to Buy Wine for Antipasti in the UK
For entertaining at home, the most cost-effective approach is to buy by the case. BulkyWay specialises in exactly this: curated Iberian wine cases delivered free across the UK (orders over £60). With cases starting at 6 bottles, you can mix styles — a case of red and a case of white — and have everything you need for an extended antipasti feast without supermarket mark-ups.
Key advantages of buying through BulkyWay:
- Free UK delivery over £60 — no hidden costs
- PET bottle options — lighter, shatterproof, and eco-friendlier for outdoor entertaining
- Consistent Iberian quality — wines built for food, not for shelf appeal
- Case pricing — better value than buying individual bottles at retail
Browse the full BulkyWay range and build your perfect antipasti wine selection at bulkyway.co.uk.
Quick Reference: BulkyWay Wines for Antipasti
- Best red for cured meats: Porta 6 Red PET
- Best red for bold boards: Painted Cat Red
- Best white for seafood antipasti: Camelias Sauvignon Blanc
- Best white all-rounder: Porta 6 White PET
- Best for large gatherings: Mixed Red & White Wine Case
Frequently Asked Questions
What wine goes best with antipasti?
Light to medium-bodied reds such as Portuguese Lisboa blends and Italian-style reds pair beautifully with antipasti boards. For white-heavy boards featuring mozzarella and prosciutto, a crisp Sauvignon Blanc or Verdejo works brilliantly. The key is balance — the wine should complement, not overpower, the varied flavours on the board.
Can you drink red wine with an antipasti platter?
Absolutely. A medium-bodied red with soft tannins — like Porta 6 Red or Painted Cat Red — works wonderfully with cured meats, olives, and sun-dried tomatoes. Avoid very tannic heavyweight reds, which can clash with lighter elements like fresh cheese and seafood.
What white wine pairs well with antipasti?
Crisp, aromatic whites are ideal. Camelias Sauvignon Blanc from Portugal offers vibrant citrus and herb notes that cut through oily antipasti beautifully. Verdejo and unoaked whites also work well — anything with good acidity to refresh the palate between bites.
Is Prosecco good with antipasti?
Prosecco is a classic match — its bubbles and light sweetness complement salty cured meats and fried antipasti elements perfectly. However, a still Sauvignon Blanc or light red from the BulkyWay range can be more versatile across a wider spread and better value when buying by the case.
How many bottles of wine do I need for an antipasti party?
For a relaxed antipasti gathering of six guests, plan for one to two cases (6–12 bottles). BulkyWay's 6-bottle cases with free delivery over £60 make it easy to mix reds and whites — buy a case of Porta 6 Red and a case of Camelias Sauvignon Blanc for the perfect spread pairing.
What wine goes with prosciutto?
Prosciutto pairs beautifully with both light reds and crisp whites. A Pinot Noir-style or light Lisboa red complements the sweet, silky fat of the ham without overpowering it. Alternatively, a dry Sauvignon Blanc cuts through the saltiness with refreshing acidity.