How to use I feel like
Solution 1:
Yes, you can say
1) I feel like having wine and tapas.
2) I feel like going for wine and tapas.
3) I feel like wine and tapas.
The third sentence uses an understood gerund, whether it's eating or having, etc. after feel like.
Garner's Modern English Usage
explains that using feel like before a food is "perfectly grammatical" and "not at all substandard". That the object of like is the understood (i.e., elided) gerund eating and that the object of eating is the food substance.
Cambridge Dictionary
feel like something
to have a desire to do or have something:
I feel like Chinese food.
Word Reference
If you feel like something, it can also mean that you want to have it or to do it.
I feel like pizza for dinner.
See also the dialog at ESL Fast:
A: Let's go out to eat.
B: That sounds like fun.
A: Where do you want to go?
B: Let me think a minute.
A: I feel like Chinese.
B: That sounds delicious.