Sparkling wine - oysters - hip-hop Sparkling wine and oysters are usually a very classic pairing. Sparkling wine's sweet liquid like early spring flowers and bubbles as smooth as beads complement the sweet and tender taste of oysters, which can bring the most refreshing taste bud excitement. Street dance is composed of various combinations of walking, running, and jumping, and is formed through a coherent combination of flexion, extension, rotation, circling, swinging, and wave-shaped twisting of the head, neck, shoulders, upper limbs, and trunk joints. The reason why sparkling wine and hip-hop are paired together is because the most attractive thing about hip-hop is that it brings a passionate feeling with the vitality of the whole body, and the rising bubbles of sparkling wine will also give people a sense of vitality. . Sparkling wine, especially champagne, is known as the "water of victory". The enthusiasm when the champion celebrates with champagne is definitely comparable to hip-hop dancing. 3. Sherry – Tapas – Flamenco Sherry is known as Spain’s national drink. Tapas is the collective name for Spanish appetizers. In Spanish, "Tapa" means "lid". When it is turned into the plural, it has become a popular delicacy around the world. It is said that when the first Spaniards gathered in a tavern and were too busy chatting to drink, flies often fell into the sherry on the side. The solution the shop came up with was to provide a small plate to cover the wine glass and serve it. Serve some olives and bread. Unexpectedly, this move was very popular, so sherry and tapas have always been a classic pairing. Now, for the Spaniards, Tapas not only means food, it is also a way of life. Imagine that every weekend, Spaniards invite their friends to order a few glasses of wine and a lot of tapas. What a free and easy life! Flamenco is a three-in-one Spanish art of singing, dancing and guitar music. Like sherry and tapas, it also represents a generous, fanatical, unrestrained and unrestrained lifestyle. When I heard the name of sherry for the first time, I felt that it should be a gentle and charming woman. But after tasting it, I felt that it has the same spirit and strong personality as flamenco, just like a Spanish girl with an unrestrained personality. Sherry, tapas and flamenco are all produced in Spain, and they all have the characteristics of being wild and unrestrained.
Is there any reason not to dance some flamenco after a glass of sherry and a plate of tapas?
Why?