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Posted at 08:10 AM in Art, Current Affairs, Weblogs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Ready, gang?
Here’s my annual summary of the year’s best wine experiences. Not just wines, but best wine experiences.
Often we open great wines, which score high marks for what’s in the bottle; but a great wine experience has as much to do with the person with whom you are enjoying the wine, or the setting, as the wine itself.
My Best Wine Experiences, in chronological order for the year:
The first wine experience of the year to grab me by the lapels occurred upon opening a 1970 Unfiltered Robert Mondavi Winery Cabernet. The wine was made in Bob Mondavi’s forth year of production and it was the first year in which estate grapes were crushed.
My old friend Harry Grant, from Los Angeles, brought the wine to Napa Valley to celebrate our 41st anniversary – of having met at the Thorn Tree restaurant in Nairobi, Kenya. The year we met was 1970 – the same vintage as this Mondavi Cab. Harry and I bonded as youthful travelers in search of the inconsequential, and we spent a year on extended safari, traveling all through southern Africa.
From left to right; Harry Grant, from LA, who gave me the ’70 Mondavi Cab, and Rob Fanucci, my winery partner at Charter Oak, with whom we drank the wine. Not seen: Ken Miller, another friend, also present at the dinner.
I took the Mondavi Cab to dinner for a winemaker’s night out; we invited Rob Fanucci, my partner and winemaker at Charter Oak winery and another good friend, Ken Miller. We dined at Cindy’s Backstreet Kitchen, in St. Helena, enjoying some of the best burgers of the year, which perfectly complemented the rich and elegant ‘70 Mondavi Cab.
The wine was pleasing and sweet upon pouring, not what I expected from a 41-year-old wine. As the wine rested in the glass, it gained body, weight and a silken texture; 20 minutes later, the wine was better than it had been upon pouring.
Initial flavors: cedar, tea, soy and ripe, older red fruit. Everything became more accentuated as the wine sat in the glass. A remarkable dowager wine, still strutting its stuff. 93 points.
Best Wine Night of the Year
This has never happened to me in 35+ years of drinking and rating wines; the serendipity of opening four bottles of wine – two whites and two reds – and finding each of them a perfect 100-point wine experience. That’s a 400-point night!
The setting: Rutherford friends Liz and Dave Berry came for dinner on a beautiful August night; Among the gems we pulled from our respective cellars were two sublime white Burgundies and two exquisite, perfect and perfectly aged Chateauneufs-du-Pape.
2005 Patrick Javillier Corton-Charlemagne, Grand Cru.
2006 Marius Delarche Corton-Charlemagne Reserve
White Burgundies don’t get better than this. The peculiar thing is that I have opened many bottles of these two wines and due to bottle variation, have never had what I would call an “Aha!” moment. How strange then (and how wonderful!), to open BOTH these wines and find them exhibiting 100-point perfection. Extremely elegant, beautifully textured, sublimely pleasing.
1998 Domaine de la Mordoree Chateauneuf-du-Pape
Wowie. Over time, I have opened bottles of this wine, to which I ascribed 98 and even 99 points, but not ever 100. This particular bottle, however, commands a perfect score. Close your eyes and it could be a sublime Vosne Romanee; it has balance, finesse, elegance, hints of garrigue, and a plush, lingering finish.
2000 Domaine de la Vieille Julienne
My last bottle of this exceptional wine. A perfect bottle, showing saddle sweat, leather, earth, and a myriad of ripe fruit flavors. The wine ends with a long, delicious finish. If I thought eternity were this sweet and alluring, I might consider signing up for the package.
Even after several hours in a decanter, this wine had tons of life left in it – behaving like a well-trained ultra-marathoner who dances into the 50-mile marker, with tons of reserve to get to the finish line at mile marker 130.
Let’s Not Forget the Italians!
It was a great year for whites. We found this extremely delicious, extremely rare white from Jermann while traveling in Capri in September. Very little of this wine is exported to the US, but I recently found it on the menu in our ‘hood – and even by the glass! – at Alex’s Italian Restaurant, in Rutherford, here in Napa Valley.
I knew Silvio Jermann when I lived in Toronto, Canada. In the late 70s, he said he was moving to Fruili, Italy, to start producing wines. We patted him on the back and wished him well.
Don’t think we needed to wish Silvio luck; the guy’s super-talented and makes some of the very best whites in all of Italy. Today, his family farms close to 250 acres of grapes.
There isn’t anything Jermann makes that I wouldn’t score in the mid-90s, including his sensational Ribolla Gialla, which he labels “Vinnae.”
This wine is filled with fresh, tropical flavors, hints of mango skin and sports lush tropical scents. Fully dry and fully delicious, too. A 93-pointer for sure. Hints of Riesling and Tocai Friulano in the blend add to the richness and character.
I loved this wine so much that before leaving Capri, where we discovered it, I hunted down the last three retail bottles on the island and schlepped them home.
May your New Year be filled with fun, good health, and many wonderful wine experiences.
Posted at 10:22 AM in Current Affairs, Food and Drink, Napa Valley General, Wine | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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The world’s most popular fruit – the banana – has a new, tasty fan club.
Food entrepreneur Courtney Dougherty is launching a line of fully baked, ready-to-eat-out-of-the-jar, banana desserts that will have you smiling at their intense banana-based flavors.
Rather appropriately, the dessert line is called Bananappeal. Everything Courtney makes is all-natural, preservative-free and as she uses no hydrogenated oils, all her desserts are trans fat-free.
Courtney has produced four varieties of Cheesecake in a Jar:
Bananas Foster
Banana Gingersnap
Banana Tiramisu
Banana Strawberry
The Tiramisu and Strawberry cheesecakes are gluten-free.
She has also produced four varieties of Frosted Cake in a Jar:
Banana Chocolate Fudge
Banana Peanut Butter
Banana Salted Caramel
Banana Toasted Coconut
The Banana Peanut Butter Frosted Cake
If you can stop at one jar in a sitting, you either have Absolute Will Power, or you may be comatose; in which case, see a doctor.
Courtney’s Bananappeal desserts are so good that Williams-Sonoma may put her mixed four-packs in its late winter/early spring catalogue.
The frosted cakes are available in both an 8-oz. (1-2 servings) and a 4-oz. (single serving) size, while the cheesecakes are available only in a 4-oz. size.
At present, you can order these sensational, fully baked, ready-to-eat desserts from Courtney’s website, www.bananapppeal.com.
Pricing:
The 4-pack, 4-oz. frosted cakes are $29.95
The 4-pack, 8-oz. frosted cakes are $39.95
The 4-pack, 4-oz. cheesecakes are $29.95
The 4-pack, 4-oz. gluten-free cheesecakes are $34.95
Full disclosure
I was introduced to 27-year-old-Courtney 16 months ago by Napa Valley wine friends who asked if I could help her refine a culinary concept.
(I have been a product development consultant to the food industry for 35 years and have brought to market many of the products in your kitchen cupboard – mostly the healthier ones.)
I offered to coach Courtney at no charge, thinking this was an ideal way to give something back to the food industry, which has been good to me.
I was particularly eager to help Courtney for four reasons:
1. Bananas are on my own list of food-favorites.
2. I was captivated by Courtney’s bright, spirited entrepreneurial approach to business.
3. I enjoy mentoring bright, young people.
4. I respected Courtney’s credentials and experience. She graduated twice – once from Cornell University's School of Hotel Administration, and then she graduated from the Culinary Institute of America at Greystone, in Napa Valley, with a baking and pastry certificate.
Courtney has great experience, having worked with the best and at the best; she has been executive assistant to Tyler Florence, famed chef and Food Network personality; she was a respected concierge at Napa Valley’s Auberge du Soleil; she helped launch three restaurants in the Bay-area and has been a pastry chef at two top-tier American restaurants, Tru, in Chicago, and Eleven Madison Park, in New York. (I know, I know… after all this experience you’d expect Courtney to be 75!)
After a lot of backing and forthing across the country, Courtney longed to return to the Bay-area to explore her banana passion.
Bananas, grown in more than 107 countries, are universally available, but until Courtney came along, no one thought of producing a line of banana-based desserts. And even more specifically, no one thought of baking them INSIDE a glass jar – so that for convenience, and sheer pleasure, the consumer can spoon Courtney’s fully baked confection out of the reusable, or recyclable, jar.
What’s more, we discovered as we worked together that the glass jars are a superb barrier against spoilage.
Even though there are no preservatives in Bananappeal desserts, and everything is all-natural, the shelf-life of these desserts, kept refrigerated, can be measured in weeks, not days.
(For the record: I have NO commercial interest, or investment, in Courtney’s business; I only guided and coached her, at no charge, to help her get her product line ready to launch.)
About the Fantastic Packaging
Courtney’s original desserts, I felt, required original packaging. So I suggested that Courtney contact Jenn White Topliff, my daughter, to see if she could develop something special for “Court,” as she is known.
Jenn is a Bay-area graphic designer with many years of professional experience, having designed compelling packages for many big-name clients. (Check out her work at www.13creative.com)
Jenn and I have often worked together as a dad ‘n daughter team, Jenn producing imaginative packages for clients for whom I have fixed, developed, or improved products.
I figured Jenn and Courtney, who are look-alikes, would develop a great friendship as well as great packaging. Dad was right on both counts.
I am proud of Jenn’s highly original packaging, which plays on a 50’s theme – a time when mom made these kind of desserts for her family.
Courtney and Jenn ham it up – but there is NO ham in Courtney’s frosted cakes!
Good going Courtney and Jenn! I didn’t think that this story should go un-applauded on the napaman site just because I had a minor hand in directing Courtney or teaming her up with Jenn.
Update: To commence commercial production, Courtney has just left the Bay-area, relocating in Denver, CO, where she will produce all her banana-based, jarred desserts.
Good luck, Court – to keep up with demand… and to get through the cold Colorado winter! The Bay-area’s loss is definitely Denver’s gain.
Posted at 11:02 AM in Current Affairs, Food and Drink, Napa Valley General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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My hero, Shawn Askinosie. He used to be a feared, and fearless, criminal defense lawyer; now is he a fearless chocolate maker, feared by century-old chocolate manufacturers whose quality he has eclipsed.
Long-time readers of napaman.com are probably aware of my vocal, even exuberant, support of Shawn Askinosie, who makes single-origin chocolate bars, or tablets, in his Willy Wonka-like factory in Springfield, MO.
Shawn buys cacao beans directly from farmers who nurture their plants in the Philippines, Tanzania, Mexico, Ecuador and Honduras; this ensures quality but, more importantly to Shawn, this ensures that ALL the money he pays for these organic beans goes to the farmers. Nothing is siphoned off by middlemen, or negociants.
I met Shawn four years ago and immediately fell in love with his chocolate, his work ethic and his story and proclaimed his chocolate “the best tasting in America. Maybe the world.”
Fresh back from Europe a few weeks ago, where I tasted many great chocolates, I haven’t changed my tune. Askinosie is still at the top of the heap.
For one thing, Askinosie is the only chocolate-maker I know who does NOT add vanilla, or vanillin, to flavor his chocolate; he may also be the only producer who does NOT add lecithin, an industry-used emulsifier, which other chocolate-makers add to give their chocolate a satiny, smooth texture.
Shawn doesn’t need to rely on chemistry to achieve greatness. His careful sourcing and his tedious attention to detail at the manufacturing level means he doesn’t have to add lecithin.
For this holiday season, Shawn has gone into cahoots with two of his favorite food suppliers to create two new dark chocolate tablets. He calls these CollarBARation Bars, because he has made them in a collaborative fashion. What works for him, also works for his pals.
CollaBARation Bar #1: Dark Milk Chocolate + Black Licorice
This is the most original chocolate bar I have eaten in a decade. AND I LOVE IT.
Shawn partnered with his Scandinavian distributor Martin Jörgensen. (Yes, Askinosie chocolates are a HUGE hit in Scandinavia! I guess they must find something to temper the taste of reindeer pate.)
As Martin owns a licorice factory called Lakritsfabriken, in Ramlösa, Sweden, Shawn has added Martin’s premium organic licorice (it’s gluten-free!) to his own ethereal dark milk chocolate, made with cacao beans from Davao, Philippines.
I am swooning from the taste of this new creation; the sensual melt of chocolate reveals tiny nibs of delicious, salty licorice, which slowly dissolve on the tongue.
A tweak of fleur de sel sea salt in the bar increases the length of the finish.
There are also tiny anise seeds in the bar, a sort of flavor booster to augment the licorice-ness.
This is one of those food experiences where the sum of the ingredients is 1 + 1 + 1 = 5. So maybe it turns out that Shawn’s not so hot at math, but he sure is one helluva chocolate-maker.
The bar is now available on the Askinosie website (www.askinosie.com) and, if you are reading this column in Sweden, you will find it at the Lakritsfabriken licorice factory in Ramlösa.
The 3-oz (85 g) bar is $10.
But wait, there’s more!
CollaBARation™ #2: Dark Chocolate + Coffee
If you are a coffee geek and have been to Los Angeles or Chicago, you doubtless know about one of America’s greatest coffees – Intelligentsia.
As Shawn has such a high regard for the purity and flavor of this coffee firm’s roasts, he has teamed up to make a CollaBARation Bar that is a mixture of dark chocolate from single-origin, organic, Davao, Philippines cacao and organic, single-origin coffee from La Perla de Oaxaca, Mexico.
Talk about intensity of flavor! Here is chocolate from the dark side, so dark, in fact, that it makes Darth Vader look like an albino. Here we have dark chocolate infused with darkly roasted, Mexican coffee.
This somewhat gritty bar has the texture of canvas. It is so intense and dark that if it were a weather system, you’d be preparing for a black funneled tornado.
The press release says to look for “creamy caramel and a crisp citrus acidity.” I don’t share this sentiment and didn’t detect any of these flavors. But I’d still encourage you to get this bar if you need a caffeine, or theobromine, hit and if you love dark chocolate and dark coffee.
Available at www.askinosie.com and Intelligentsia stores in LA and Chicago.
The 3-oz (85 g) bar is $10.
Posted at 11:02 PM in Chocolate, Current Affairs, Food and Drink | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Two weeks ago, I waxed poetic about traveling in Italy with my favorite new WIFI gadget, Tep Wireless, which I rented for about $10 a day.
It permitted me to connect up to five WIFI-enabled devices (iPad, iPhone, laptop, etc.) no matter where I went, as it converts a wireless phone signal, which is virtually omnipresent, into a useful WIFI signal.
Go here to see the original story:
http://www.napaman.com/napamancom/2011/10/my-favorite-new-tech-tool-a-must-have-for-european-travelers.html
Now, just today, Tep announces that the same rental service is available in the US, in Australia, and in Hong Kong.
This is how all my Canadian friends should travel in the US -- with a rented Tep Wireless device. It sure beats the high cost of hotel WIFI and means you can use your Canadian-based phones (or your European-based phones for folks visiting from Eruropa...) here in the US for unlimited data (not voice -- data) for about $10 a day.
Sure beats the high cost of data roaming or of usurious hotel WIFI fees.
Nice going, Tep!
For additional information, go to www.tepwireless.com
Posted at 05:49 PM in Current Affairs, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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An old friend from my Toronto days, Josh Josephson, breezed through Napa Valley a few weeks ago.
I was out of town, so I asked Josh, who fancies himself a fulltime restaurant critic, when he isn’t researching neurosurgical drug matters, to send me a list of where he ate, what he ate, and what he liked while in Napa Valley.
The guy ate at all the places listed below in TWO days, took all these photos, and posted all these comments on his own site, http://cookbookstoreblog.blogspot.com/2011/09/napa-restaurants-french-laundry-tra.html
I append Josh’s review in full. It is unedited and does not necessarily carry my full endorsement or agreement. But this guy pretty much knows what he’s talking about; for one thing, Josh has a serious passion for food, cooking and cuisine, In fact, he opened, with Alison Fryer and Barbara Caffery, Canada’s first cookbook store. Called "The Cookbook Store," in Toronto, it's still running strong 30 years later.
As well as being an optometrist actively involved with research. Josh is chairman of the Standards Council of Canada, Ophthalmic Committees (spectacle lens, contact lens, contact lens care, product standards, etc.). He is Canada's sole voting representative at all ISO meetings.
Most recently, working with a research neurosurgeon, Josh founded a pharmaceutical company that has developed a stroke drug, which prevents complications from a stroke; at present, it is in FDA clinical trials.
All the while, Josh still owns and operates Josephson Opticians, Canada's first high fashion optical chain, established in 1935, by his dad, David, who outfitted me with my earliest glasses.
Anyway, have a look at where Josh ate in Napa Valley, and what he had to say about each course. It’s like a condensed visual Zagat trip through the entire valley.
One more thing: those aren't misspellings below. Those are quaint Canadian spellings: "flavour, colour, etc." Hey, Blame it on Canada!
The French Laundry, Yountville, California
Cornet filled with salmon tartar, red onion, creme fraiche.
Medjule date puree, chopped roasted cashew and cilantro in advance of the carrot soup to be poured.
The carrot puree soup with a touch of peanut butter in the puree. The sublime sweetness of the carrot puree went so well with the sweet date flavour. I do not eat mellons. The carrot soup was the chef's menu substitution.
My friend's choice of compressed summer melons with crystallized ginger, lemon verbena and garden mint.
Salted and sweet butter for the bread. The butters were redolent of field flavours.
Jardiniere de legumes d'ete with Australian black truffle coulis. A marvellous, memory provoking range of bright flavours and textures.
The presentation of the gazpacho ingredients before an emulsion of tomato essence is poured: toybox tomatoes, cucumber, garlic, cilantro and Manni extra virgin olive oil sorbet.
The gazpacho complete. Certainly one of the best gazpachos that I have enjoyed, with a bright tomato flavour complemented by the Manni oil sorbet.
My friend's choice of chawanmushi, dungeness crab, current tomatoes, bonito, tosaka seaweed and strips of nori.
Salad of black mission figs with petite onions, Piedmont hazelnuts, arugula, and smoked soubise. The figs added a heavenly dimension to this dish and worked well with smokey flavour of the soubise.
Degustation de pommes de terres, fingerling potatoes, red radish, petite lettuces and Australian black truffle. This was a sensational dish of earthy, complementary flavours.
Cranberry bean agnolotti with brentwood corn, filet beans and bean blossoms awaiting the bouillon.
The mangalitsa ham bouillon is added. Fabulous contrasting flavours from the bouillon and the perfectly cooked, delicate pasta of the cranberry bean filled agnolotti.

My friend ordered the hand cut farfalle with hen-of-the-woods mushrooms, eggplant, Spanish capers, meyer lemon, pine nuts and parmesan "nuage". He felt that the pasta was not cooked adequately, left the pasta over and ate the rest.
"Burrata" consisting of "pain de campagne" croutons, baby squash, Greek basil and charred padron pepper vinaigrette. Again, wonderful layers of flavours that worked so well together with the nicely contrastng textures.
Persian lime sorbet with mascarpone "panna cotta", graham cracker and toasted marshmallows. After this great dessert I was so satisfied and yet there was more!
Dark chocolate "marquise", malt "anglaise", raison puree, cocoa "financiere" and muscovado sugar ice cream.
My friend's selection.
Fabulous mignardises with various fillings.
"Coffee and donuts!" A coffee, chocolate pudding like consistency on the bottom layer with a thick rich milk foam on the top, accompanied by chocolate coated macadamias and the best "timbits" (for you Tim Horton people) you have ever tasted, sugar dusted crispy skinned dough balls with a soft interior...addictive!
Another crisp and well flavoured hit, the rosemary pizzetta with roasted head of garlic, cambozola cheese and Dickson Ranch "Regina" olive oil. The pizzas at Tra Vigne were the very best that I tasted in the Napa region.
The best wood oven roasted padron peppers I experienced in Napa and almost every resto offered some version of these peppers! Perfectly cooked, tossed with Napa's taggiasca olive oil, pleasantly crispy skinned and not over oily. The gold standard for me.
A perfectly rendered rigatoni alla carbonara made with guanciale bacon, onions, organic eggs, cracked pepper and parmesan. This was a very rich tasting dish for which the critical elements were the richness of the egg and the properly reduced sauce.
Our wine of the night. Pardon the side view as I tried to rotate the image: A fabulous Whitehall Lane Reserve vintage 2003.
The rare steak, served with crispy skinned, roasted potatoes and perfectly sauteed spinach with olive oil and chopped garlic. This steak was as good as the best bistecca fiorentina I have ever enjoyed in Florence. Great flavour, texture and juiciness. A "beef boys" ranking of 8/8 1/2/ 8 1/2 (all out of 10).
Our wine, a very good example of regionally made pinot noir, Red Dog Vineyard's Ancien vintage 2007.
Blood sausage, caramelize apple on mashed potatoes. I love blood sausage and with the caramelized apples and mash, this well executed dish, with it's sweet earthy flavours, smooth but coarse texture, really hit the spot.
Leek and melted goat cheese tart. A melt in the mouth, intensely leek flavoured, thin crispy crusted delight. A perfect tart.
Bone marrow, sauce bordelais. Remarkable quality marrow, not too fatty/oily, perfectly cooked to be somewhat firm in texture. Wonderful flavour.
Pied de cochon, lightly breaded, deep fried, crispy skinned, perfectly spiced and accompanied by a whole grain mustard sauce and tasty, crispy frites.
Lemon meringue tart with a shortbread crust, accompanied by a lemon orange sauce !! Just look at this mile high piece of indulgent pleasure! It tasted as good as it looked.
Armagnac soaked prunes over rich vanilla ice cream. These liquor soaked prunes were as good as I have enjoyed anywhere.
Brentwood sweet corn, grape tomatoes and Blue Lake beans. This was a bland dish with no distinguishing element. The corn was sweet but not sweet enough.
These padrano peppers were strangely textured, rather oily and almost slimy. The aioli was spicy and had a nice creamy texture.
This was a good salad with Marin Roots mustard greens. roasted eggplant, Jimmy Nardello peppers, a slow cooked Tully Dolci egg and pecorino sardo. A very tasty salad with intriguing flavours. The wonderful tasting egg was perfectly cooked but did not seem a great complement for this dish.
Bucatini alla carbonara with pancetta, Tulli Dolci egg, coarsely ground black pepper and pecorino romano. The pasta was perfectly cooked and the black pepper a very good accent for the rich addition of the Tulli Dolci egg. However, the sauce was slightly too salty.
Wild nettle fidei pasta with wood oven roasted san marzano tomatoes, eggplant, Jimmy Nardello peppers and pesto Genovese. Again, the pasta was perfectly cooked and most of the flavours of this dish were good, especially the strong eggplant flavour. However, the dish may be too complicated with too many things happening. The pesto flavour component was a bit too salty and perhaps a bit overwhelming.
Perfectly cooked donuts had very good flavour and good texture with a crispy skin. The mascarpone sauce was a good tasty complement.
The burger arrived perfectly medium rare, as ordered. It was juicy, but too much of that juiciness was the fatty component. The fries were crispy and ok.
In the meantime, I enjoyed the artichoke grilled over a wood fire. The artichokes had been basted with garlic butter loaded with finely chopped garlic and served with an extraneous sauce resembling remoulade, which after tasting, I ignored. This dish was one of my 2 favourite dishes in the 2 meals at the Grill.
While I was waiting for my beef, I had oak grilled pork ribs which were sided with the house made BBQ sauce. The ribs were a bit too "fall off the bone" done, but they were tasty from the wood smoke. They arrived with very good crispy french fries and a very good, creamy dressed slaw made with chopped parsley and chopped cabbage
My Second serving of roast beef arrived. Remarkably, not to my liking, again: medium to medium rare, on the medium side. The beef was on the tough side and a bit dry tasting too! Clearly my server is no judge of what degrees of doneness should look like....and he should be as he is the quality controller of what is put in front of guests. The beef in this restaurant was a sincere disappointment. On the beef tasting scale we have established among our serious amateurs and professionals (the "beef boys") I would give it a rating of 53/4 /4 /4 (taste, texture and juiciness, on a scale out of 10). The horseradish sauce was not particularly enjoyable and the "au jus" a watery stock that a good piece of beef would make completely redundant. The potatoes were as I described before, for me, the only edible food on the plate!
Lightly breaded, crispy, very tasty onion rings were accompanied by a nice house made ketchup. They are great when they are fresh and hot.
The dungeness crab cakes were good but the salad dressing for the greens was really very enjoyable, a raspberry, canola oil, vinegar molasses vinaigrette. I have never had canola oil taste so good.
This was my half of the fabulous Don Watson lamb burger which arrived perfectly cooked as ordered, medium rare to rare, and what a great burger, my favourite item ordered. The burger was very juicy and had a light smokey flavour. The bun was also perfect, a crispy skin with a soft interior that did not fall apart as one ate the burger. Arugula and sliced onion were added to the burger. The fries were crispy and tasty but were over salted and frankly inedible.
I had high expectations of the wood smoke oven cooked Sonoma duck. Unfortunately, the smoke flavour was overly strong. I suspect that apple wood or pecan wood was not used but would have been preferable. The meat was a bit too dry. The duck was accompanied by local beans, grilled sweet potatoes and mustard fruits.
Dessert was a terrific, intensely flavoured plum orange sorbet and pleasingly not too sweet. There was a very nice lingering after taste, an experience often lost in the quality of most restaurant sorbets.
The best dish of the night was the lovely, crusted, savory onion tart, which contained caramelized onion with rosemary, applewood smoked bacon and goat cheese. Frisee lettuce and sliced cherry tomato were on the side.
The main was a tamarind and chipotle glazed portion of buffalo short ribs accompanied by a ginger and scallion risotto, and baby bok choy.
The patacones also looked so enticing, fried, crispy crusted plaintain tarts one filled with chopped avocado and chicken breast salad, another with spiced beans, chopped raw onion, chopped cilantro and chopped tomato and the third with shredded pork, avocado and chopped tomato. Despite the fact that by this time I was stuffed, I enjoyed finishing them all!
Posted at 07:00 AM in Current Affairs, Food and Drink, Napa Valley General, Napa Valley Musings, Restaurants, Wine | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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My iPhone was tireless and my Tep tool was wireless
Every time that I have previously gone to Europe, I have had to turn off my iPhone and keep it on Airplane mode for the duration of my travels.
Otherwise, I could run up a roaming data bill of $2,000 for a two-week vacation, as many irritated AT&T customers report they have unwittingly done.
But now there’s a new service in Europe that let’s you connect to the Internet for data wherever you go, for however long you want, and it’s not expensive.
Tep Wireless is a British-based data service that rents a pocket-sized Wifi device for between $8 and $10 a day, depending on which country, or countries, you are visiting.
You turn on the playing-card-sized Tep device and it picks up a wireless phone signal in the country in which you are traveling; it then converts this signal to Wifi for up to five of your own devices (cell phone, iPad, tablet, laptop), permitting you to surf the web and send emails to your heart's content. There are no additional roaming fees, and no fear of returning to America to face a $2,000 roaming data charge.
What you get in the Tep Wireless kit they courier to you: An electrical charger, a car charger (an optional fee) and the Wifi device itself.
Remember, this is for data transmission only and not voice, but you can always get voice for free by using Skype on your Tep device.
Tep Wireless has even taken a page out of Netflix; they courier you the device (along with a wall charger and an additional car charger, if requested) just prior to your international departure and provide a free, postage-paid, return mailer.
No hassles, nothing to take back to a store, no late fees, and no nonsense.
Me using my iPhone in Italy last week – thanks to Tep (data only); I checked the stock market daily, called up Google maps repeatedly to get un-lost and located some tremendous, off-road restaurants, thanks to Tep.
One more positive note: the cost of Wifi in Italian hotels has gotten expensive; in one Rome hotel, the posted rate was 15 Euros ($20) per day per device. For two travelers each with a cell phone and maybe an iPad or laptop, between them, this could easily run up to three devices x $20 each per day = $60 a day to have Wifi at the hotel only.
By contrast, I took my Tep Wireless device every where I went – even in remote outback areas -- and only paid a total of $10 a day, which enabled me to hook up as many as five devices for the one flat daily fee. That’s a substantial savings and a whole lot more coverage in Wifi-speke. Thanks, Tep!
Interested in learning more? Go to www.tepwireless.com
Posted at 08:56 AM in Current Affairs, Napa Valley Musings, Travel | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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In the 1980s, as restaurant critic for the third largest newspaper in North America, I visited France with my wife, Carol.
Me, documenting dishes and wines at dinner
Upon arriving in Lyons, we had lunch at an intimate restaurant called Chez Lea, where the chicken, napped with a raspberry beurre blanc, was possibly the best chicken dish we'd ever had; it was so ethereal, in fact, that we made reservations upon finishing lunch, at 3 pm, to return again at 8 pm, the very same evening, to order the very same menu again.
We returned five hours later, sat down to eat the identical three-course meal but not one of the dishes was as good as it had been at lunch.
Throughout our parallel careers in food (Carol is an extremely meticulous food editor) we have, on occasion, tried to repeat certain restaurant dining experiences, but alas, the second time is just never as good as the first time. We must be slow learners as we keep trying.
Last week we were in Rome, trying to repeat certain food experiences, which we’d had last fall in top-tier restaurants, and not one of them pulled its weight in consistency.
The worst experience was at Dal Bolognese, a Bologna-style restaurant where we dined twice last year. In fact, dinners here had been so memorable that they became the inspiration for a Bolognese birthday dinner, which Carol asked Nash Cognetti, exec chef at Tra Vigne, in St. Helena, to recreate in January.
Some of Fall’s best ingredients in the Italian kitchen
We returned to Dal Bolognese last week for dinner, hoping to re-experience our memorable meal moments. Our expectations were way out of line.
The tortellini in brodo, Carol's favorite dish in the world, was insipid. "Uninspired" is a nice way of saying "it had no taste.
The broth, which should have kvelled of rich, slow-cooked, country chicken, was totally under-salted, and lacked any chicken-flavor.
In fact, the broth had the taste and texture of -- how do you say this in Italian? -- acqua. The hand-made tortellini were dense, leathery, undercooked, and had as much flavor as the wool tassels on a Scottish bagpiper's sporran.
For the next course, we split an order of tagliatelle with a Bolognese sauce. The house signature dish. The version last week was less than stellar and nothing as we remembered it. The pasta was undercooked, even for home-made pasta; it tasted of raw, uncooked flour. The meat sauce was over-salted, even before one added grated Parmesan cheese.
But the worst was yet to come.
Salsa verde and Cremona-style mustard.
We ordered the 30 Euro ($40) plate of bollito misto, a normally delicious melange of boiled meats and fowl, served with what should have been an outstanding salsa verde and a racy Cremona mustard (candied fruits in a zippy, sweet syrup, tweaked with a hot mustard finish).
Just before our bollito misto was served, the lights in the restaurant went out. And stayed out for the duration of our dinner.
One eerily glowing emergency light glowed across the entire dining room, casting a ghostly white shadow across tables, but little of this light reached ours.
I would not have been surprised if Patrick Swayze, from the movie Ghost, and from his own deathly afterlife, brought us the bill. The place had that kind of ghoulish pall.
The restaurant’s bollito misto when the lights are on.
In the dark shadows, it was impossible to discern what we were eating. Certainly not from sight. But alas, also not from taste; all the boiled meats -- tongue, beef, chicken -- tasted the same and pretty much had the same texture.
The meal ending took another twist; as the kitchen was dark, the chef couldn't prepare anything else, so we couldn't order dessert.
Here’s one other thing they couldn’t prepare: the bill. They couldn't get the VISA machine to work, as all equipment and phone lines, were dead.
I suggested that they write down my credit card number and put the charge through the next day. They said they couldn't do this.
Instead, the host suggested we return the next day to pay, incurring another $30 round-trip taxi charge – on us.
What should have been a Happy Face meal, turned out to be a scary face meal.
At this point, the waiter came over to our table and said in a friendly, and understanding way, "Don't worry. You don't have to pay. Ees not your problemo." My kind of waiter.
It turns out that Thomas Wolfe was right, particularly in the vernacular of restaurants; you really can't go home again. I think we’ve finally learned.
Posted at 06:48 AM in Food and Drink, Restaurants, Travel | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Often, readers ask, “who drew that cool dude?” referring to the iconic character in the upper left-hand corner of this site, who represents me, Napaman, a guy who writes about wine (and food) on the internet.
The answer is: Toronto artist Gary Taxali.
I saw this particular image in an international edition of Time magazine four years ago. I LOVED the image and knew that I wanted it for my soon-to-launch website, napaman.com; it perfectly portrayed, in a light-hearted way, what this site is all about.
I contacted Time, got the illustrator’s name and flew to Toronto to meet Gary. We negotiated a price for his original art and we subsequently became good friends.
Gary is a still-young, highly talented artist/illustrator. There’s almost no week that goes by without seeing one of his images illustrate a story in the New York Times, Business Week, Esquire, GQ, Rolling Stone, or Time.
Or I see his work on a wine label, or on a wind-up toy in a museum gift shop. The guy is everywhere.
And now, Gary has just published two books, compendia of his magazine illustrations and there are no repetitions in the two books – if you like his work, you need to consider buying both. That’s what I just did.
Gary has a weird, wonderful and warped way of expressing life in shades that resemble a vintage comic book; there is an underlying commentary on sex, life, and consumer behavior, and if you study his work, you will see that many of his characters return, time and again, as foils to make another social commentary.
Here’s what’s new:
I Love You, OK? Hardcover, 144 pages, featuring 120 works. This book, exquisitely printed in Italy, measures 6 x 7.5 inches and has text in English, German and French. Forewords by Aimee Mann and Shepard Fairey. $25 CDN (plus shipping) and each copy is signed.
Mono Taxali. Hardcover, 304 pages, featuring 175 works. This gorgeously printed book measures 6 x 7 x 2 inches (very thick book!). It features four-color printing on laid paper with special varnishes. Forewords by Seymour Chwast, Steve Heller, Charles Hively and Ferruccio Giromini. $65 CDN (plus shipping) and each copy is signed.
The books are available on Gary’s website. To order, or learn more, go to www.taxalionline.com.
Posted at 12:29 PM in Art, Weblogs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Two things can be said about Cindy Pawlcyn:
Nearly 800 guests took up Cindy’s invitation and attended the pre-opening bash of her newest restaurant, Brassica, in St. Helena, last night.
Napaman was present but the crowd was so dense that it was impossible to raise a camera to get any meaningful shots. Hence the skimpy visual coverage.
The name Brassica, of course, is ironic as it is Latin for the family of plants known as mustards. And it is Cindy, who for 28 years, has been the gale force behind Mustards Grill, which has been one of the valley’s best restaurants for this entire stretch of time. And still is.
Brassica is located in the space, which we all knew and loved as Go Fish, also a Cindy operation. But the sushi bar and seafood-driven menu ran their course; it’s thought that visitors to our valley want heartier fare to go with their killer Cabs. But we sure had some tasty dishes at Go Fish. May she R.I.P.
Brassica’s menu leans on the zestier fare of the GMR – Greater Mediterranean Region; on the menu, I note the use of za’atar to flavor eggplant fries, and the introduction of lamb kebabs, Greek cheeses, and middle eastern tabouli.
Appetizers were offered last night but servers couldn’t keep up with the size of the crowd. A proper commentary on the food will follow in the weeks ahead in this space. Keep a-lookin’.
Brassica 12
On the wine side, Brassica introduces a new concept called Brassica 12. The restaurant will highlight a dozen different, small-production Napa Valley winemakers who don’t have tasting rooms. Their hard-to-find wines will be showcased by the glass and bottle, and the selection will rotate.
Guests will be able buy individual bottles for home consumption, or buy a Brassica 12 12-pack (that’s NOT a typo! That’s a Brassica 12 12-pack!) for take-out.
Brassica, 641 Main St., St. Helena. 707-963-0700. Reservations suggested.
Posted at 08:36 AM in Current Affairs, Food and Drink, Napa Valley General, Restaurants | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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