
In just two years as the sommelier and wine director at New York's world-renowned Le Bernardin restaurant, 37-year-old
Aldo Sohm has become a wine world heavyweight, having been recognized as "
Best Sommelier in the World" in 2008 and earlier this month for "Best Wine Service" at the James Beard
Awards. Trained in his native Austria, Sohm came to the United States to improve on his then "dumpy" English so he could better compete at wine competitions. We caught up with Sohm this morning to chat about the unwritten rule of pairing fish with white wine, which vino goes well with grilled salmon and that other reason why he now lives in America.
How did you become a sommelier?Ever since I was little I had a thing of smelling food and wines. At first I didn't really like wine when I entered the industry. This was [when I was ] 16 or 17. People in the restaurant would ask me what you could recommend and I didn't know and thought this was embarrassing. [Then] I went on a wine trip with my father -- he invited me. I was 20 and I saw it, and it was kind of interesting and just went from there.
You said you moved to the United States to improve your English, but I get the sense there was another reason?Austrians love to complain. I hate to complain so I figured it is easier to change a country than to change myself.
More about pairing rules -- and how to break them -- after the jump.