Wine With Paella UK: The Best Bottles to Match Every Style
Paella is one of those dishes that demands a proper glass of wine alongside it. Whether you're cooking a classic seafood paella on a sunny Sunday, a rich chicken and chorizo version for a crowd, or a veggie-friendly saffron rice, the right wine turns a great meal into a proper occasion. This guide covers the best wine with paella UK options — from crisp whites that lift the seafood, to medium-bodied reds that hold their own against smoky meat — including some brilliant Portuguese and Iberian bottles you can order by the case.
Why Paella and Wine Are a Natural Match
Paella is a dish built on layers: the socarrat (the crispy rice at the bottom), the saffron base, the protein — whether that's prawns, mussels, rabbit, chicken, or simply vegetables — and the sofrito of onion, tomato and garlic underneath it all. That depth of flavour creates an interesting challenge when choosing wine.
The golden rule is matching the dominant ingredient rather than the dish as a whole. Seafood paella calls for something with acidity and freshness; meat-based versions can handle a bit of tannin and body; mixed paellas benefit from a versatile, food-friendly style. The good news is that Portuguese and Iberian wines, grown in a climate very similar to Valencia's, tend to be natural partners for paella — they're built for this kind of food.
Best White Wine With Seafood Paella UK
Seafood paella is the most famous version — prawns, mussels, squid and clams piled high over saffron rice. You want a wine that echoes the brininess of the sea without drowning out the saffron or the socarrat's toasty notes.
Camelias Sauvignon Blanc
The Camelias Sauvignon Blanc is one of the best wines you can pour with seafood paella in the UK. From the Setúbal peninsula in Portugal, it delivers citrus zest, green herb and a clean mineral finish that cuts right through the richness of shellfish. The acidity is bright without being sharp — exactly what you need when the rice is soaking up all that prawn-infused stock.
At 6 bottles per case with free delivery over £60, it's an easy choice when you're cooking paella for a group.
Porta 6 White PET
The Porta 6 White PET is a versatile, crowd-pleasing white from the Lisboa region. Aromas of stone fruit and citrus, medium body, clean finish. It works beautifully with lighter seafood dishes and is a solid all-rounder if you're serving a mixed crowd where not everyone wants the same thing. The PET bottle also means no broken glass at outdoor gatherings — a real bonus when you're cooking paella in the garden.
Vinha Mor Vinho Verde
For something a little different, a chilled Vinho Verde is a surprise hit with seafood paella. The natural spritz, low alcohol and zippy acidity work like a palate cleanser between bites. Lovely for warm weather paella sessions.
Best Rosé Wine With Paella UK
Rosé is one of the most versatile wines with paella, and often the most popular choice when the table is mixed — half the guests want red, half want white, and rosé sits happily in the middle.
Porta 6 Rosé
The Porta 6 Rosé is a proper Iberian rosé — not the pale, barely-there style but something with real colour, red fruit and a touch of structure. Think strawberry, watermelon, a hint of spice on the finish. It pairs brilliantly with mixed paellas where you've got both seafood and chicken, and it holds up well chilled even as the afternoon warms up.
If you're hosting a paella party in summer, a case of Porta 6 Rosé is one of the smartest moves you can make.
Best Red Wine With Chicken and Chorizo Paella UK
Meat-based paellas — chicken and rabbit paella Valenciana, or the UK-favourite chicken and chorizo version — have more richness and smoke. Here you want a red with enough body to match the chorizo but enough freshness not to overwhelm the rice.
Porta 6 Red PET
The Porta 6 Red PET is the benchmark for affordable, food-friendly Portuguese red wine. A blend of Aragonez, Castelão and Touriga Nacional from the Lisboa region, it delivers soft plum fruit, a hint of spice and enough structure to stand up to smoky chorizo without being heavy. Medium-bodied, approachable, and genuinely delicious with meat-based paellas.
The PET bottle is a practical bonus — no corkscrew needed, it travels to the garden or beach easily, and it's fully recyclable. This is the go-to bottle for paella evenings.
Painted Cat Red
The Painted Cat Red offers a step up in richness — riper fruit, a touch more tannin, and a finish that lingers. It's a particularly good match for the socarrat — that caramelised, slightly bitter crust at the bottom of the pan that proper paella is all about. Pour a glass, scrape the socarrat, repeat.
Canto X Red
For a bolder choice, the Canto X Red brings more concentration and depth. Dark fruit, earthy notes, firm but integrated tannins. Best with paellas that have had a long, slow cook and where the flavours have really developed. Also excellent if you're including rabbit in the mix — the game-y richness of rabbit loves a wine with this kind of character.
Wine With Mixed Paella and Vegetarian Paella UK
Mixed paellas — combining seafood, chicken and sometimes vegetables — are the most common version in UK home cooking. Vegetarian paellas built around roasted peppers, artichokes, courgette and butter beans are increasingly popular too.
For these, the most reliable approach is choosing a medium-bodied wine with good acidity and no aggressive tannins — something that won't fight any one ingredient but lifts the whole dish.
- Porta 6 White PET — works for vegetable-forward paellas, especially those with a citrus-dressed salad alongside
- Porta 6 Rosé — the ultimate mixed-paella wine; handles everything on the table
- Camelias Sauvignon Blanc — for veggie paellas with artichoke or asparagus, where you want something with herbal brightness
- Porta 6 Red PET — if the mixed paella is meat-heavy, this is the reliable red choice
How Much Wine Do You Need for a Paella Party?
If you're cooking paella for a group, planning your wine in advance saves a lot of stress. As a rough guide:
- 6 guests: 2 bottles (roughly 1 glass each for aperitif + 1–2 with food)
- 8 guests: 2–3 bottles
- 12 guests: 4 bottles
- Paella party (15–20 guests): 6–8 bottles — one or two full cases
Buying by the case from BulkyWay unlocks free delivery over £60 and saves you the last-minute supermarket run. A mixed red and white case is a particularly smart move for paella parties where guests have different preferences.
Regional Iberian Wines and Paella: The Natural Connection
There's a reason Portuguese and Spanish wines work so well with paella — they come from the same peninsula, they're grown in similar conditions (hot summers, poor soils, strong Atlantic or Mediterranean influence), and they're built for the kind of food that Iberian cooking produces.
The grapes in Porta 6, Painted Cat and Camelias have been developing alongside dishes like paella, bacalhau, cataplana and arroz de pato for centuries. That's not marketing copy — it's why the pairings work at a deep, almost instinctive level. When you pour a glass of Lisboa red with a proper paella, the wine and the food seem to agree with each other in a way that's hard to replicate with, say, a New World Shiraz or a heavy Burgundy.
Serving Tips: Temperature, Glasses and Timing
A few practical notes for getting the most from your wine with paella:
- White and rosé: serve at 8–10°C. Take from the fridge about 10 minutes before serving — straight from the fridge is usually too cold
- Reds: serve at 14–16°C. Porta 6 Red and Painted Cat Red are best slightly cool — especially in summer. A brief spell in the fridge (20 minutes) makes a noticeable difference
- Glasses: a medium-sized universal wine glass works for everything. You don't need specialist glassware for paella wines
- Timing: open reds about 15–20 minutes before the paella is ready. The brief contact with air softens the tannins and brings out the fruit
- Quantity: paella is a long lunch dish — people tend to drink more over a leisurely paella than a quick mid-week dinner. Plan accordingly
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best wine with seafood paella?
A crisp, aromatic white wine with good acidity is ideal for seafood paella. Camelias Sauvignon Blanc and Porta 6 White PET are both excellent choices. If you prefer rosé, Porta 6 Rosé works brilliantly too — the red fruit and freshness complement prawns, mussels and squid very well.
Can you drink red wine with paella?
Yes — especially with meat-based paellas. Chicken and chorizo paella pairs well with a medium-bodied red like Porta 6 Red PET. Avoid very heavy, tannic reds for seafood paella as they can overwhelm delicate shellfish flavours.
What Spanish or Portuguese wine goes with paella?
Portuguese wines from the Lisboa region (Porta 6 Red, Porta 6 White, Painted Cat Red) are outstanding with paella — they share the same Iberian culinary culture. Rioja whites and rosados from Spain are also classic pairings if you want to stay on theme.
Is rosé a good choice for paella?
Rosé is arguably the most versatile paella wine. It bridges the gap between white and red, handling both seafood and meat components. A structured Portuguese rosé like Porta 6 Rosé is particularly well suited to mixed paellas and paella parties where guests have different wine preferences.
How much wine should I buy for a paella party?
Budget roughly one bottle per two guests as a baseline, more if it's a long, leisurely lunch. A case of 6 bottles (from BulkyWay, with free delivery over £60) typically covers 12–15 glasses — enough for 6 guests with a generous pour each. For larger paella parties, a mixed red and white case covers both bases without overcomplicating things.
Where can I buy wine by the case in the UK with free delivery?
BulkyWay ships cases of 6 bottles across the UK, with free delivery on orders over £60. All wines are sourced from Portugal and Spain and arrive in eco-friendly PET or glass bottles depending on the range.