Archive for the ‘Wines’ Category

Up From The Country Club

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007

When the “salesperson” at LeNell’s suggested Four Roses - I laughed - Four Roses was the bottom shelf bourbon of the country club circuit - bread and butter - would never touch it - let alone go all the way to Brooklyn to buy a bottle -

When I went to their annual bourbon tasting last week - they suggested it again - but added a bit of the story
- enhanced herein via the internet - i.e. - Seagrams pulled it from the
US market - sold it in Europe - made it the #1 brand in Japan - Kirin
bought the company in ‘02 - reinstating domestic distribution - after
45 years - introducing two new products - Small Batch and Single Barrel
- i.e. - I bought ($41) a bottle of the Single Barrel -

The wife was in disbelief when she saw me pour the first drink -
nice - smooth - a tad hot @ 100 proof - or as they list it - 50% alcohol - indeed - a very good premium bourbon -

Filled a flash with Four Roses for Sunday’s football game - we
sipped before going through the turnstiles and the mandatory NFL
pat-down - it was a blind taste test -

Again - smooth - good reaction - “liked it” - but when the brand was revealed - “Four Roses ???” - “You’ve got to be kidding” -

Bottom
line - Kirin et al has a long road to go with it reintroduction of a
quality product bearing a stale almost negative legacy -

Original post by hb Herr

Quickie

Monday, October 1st, 2007

Wandered into a local shop - Saturday tasting -

West County Cider - Redfield - very mild - 5.3% alc - they are pushing this hard cider as an alternative for the Thanksgiving table - too light for my palette - hard cider is supposed to be a kicker - this ain’t - would be nice on a warm summer night - for the guest who wants a "spritzer" -

Ch Haut Villet - lives up to St. Emillion - earthy - dry - mid $20 - good - not great - OK in price range

Le Carre Du Prieur - very light - looking to be served  in place of Beaujolais - my immediate prejudice flared - but softened as the fruit came through - actually quite nice - might pick up a few bottles -

 

Original post by hb Herr

Tasting Quickie

Monday, October 1st, 2007

Wandered into a local shop - Saturday tasting -

West County Cider - Redfield - very mild - 5.3% alc - they are pushing this hard cider as an alternative for the Thanksgiving table - too light for my palette - hard cider is supposed to be a kicker - this ain′t - would be nice on a warm summer night - for the guest who wants a "spritzer" -

Ch Haut Villet - lives up to St. Emillion - earthy - dry - mid $20 - good - not great - OK in price range

Le Carre Du Prieur - very light - looking to be served&nbsp in place of Beaujolais - my immediate prejudice flared - but softened as the fruit came through - actually quite nice - might pick up a few bottles -

 

Original post by hb Herr

Luke

Sunday, September 30th, 2007

There’s a big billboard - right pass the Super Dome – Lüke- A John Besh
Restaurant
– 10 foot high letters – my cynical New York knee jerk – Tourist Trap !! -  but - John Besh ?? - he’s the  &quotIT&quot chef of New Orleans
– a James Beard Award winner – what’s going on –

Two days
later – exploring New Orleans by car – cigar smoking – radio playing - NPR’s All Thing
Considered – they interview John T Edge – a Mississippi
food writer who i’ve read and written of before - and -  Brett Anderson – the food
critic for the Time Picayune – NOLA –

&quotWhat’s new ??&quot… &quotWhat’s hot ??&quot - the correspondent asked - amidst the responses – &quotLüke&quot

Checked online – reviews from May when LUKE opened – table service "disjointed" enough to destroy the best meal – even as other reviews cited
the food and flavors – ran it by the Concierge – “everything has been
fixed” – drove uptown to Tulane for wife and daughter  - debate – agreement – go
for it –

Only regret – we almost canceled – i.e. – what a meal !!!!

Its a very "un" New Orleans restaurant - bistro - while at the same time - absolutely in the right place - the hot App menu lists an Onion tart - immediately bringing forth an image of Andre Soltner - late of Lutece - as the absolute standard bearer - every other onion tart being judged against his perfectionist’s rendition - well this one is as far from Lutece as Chef John Besh could take it -

A nine by twelve inch wooden cutting plank - atop which was a seemly free form mass of melted cheese with the faint outlines of cut marks across its surface - beneath - sweet sauteed onions - atop a super thin free form crust made chewy as it takes up the excess moisture - the flavors - the textures - all in perfect balance - you want to cancel the other apps you had been stupid enough to order -

And then rest of the food began to arrive -

Roasted oysters with wild mushrooms, bacon and aioli - good but I kept stealing pieces of my wife’s onion tart -

Warm bittersweet plantation goat cheese salad, heirloom tomatoes, country ham and croutons - consumed in absolute silences - as she tuned out the world to enjoy -
12.00

Seafood gumbo á la Creole - had to try - ordered a cup - way too much food - but the taste was shared by all - smiles by all - worth going the distance

Jumbo Louisiana shrimp “en cocotte” with Anson Mills cream white corn grits and Jacobs andouille - what was tasted was amazing - but this dish fell into - too much to eat - packed it up at the end of supper - trucking it home to the hotel mini bar - which prompted "movement" of mini bar items - picked up by infrared sensors - triggering a charge which had to be corrected on the final hotel bill - still - it was a great midnight snack -

Jagerschnitzel mit spätzle - paneéd veal cutlets with chanterelle and oyster mushrooms - jumbo lump crabmeat - one of the most extraordinary dishes I have ever eaten - totally out of character with NOLA - adding the crabmeat was an act of pure decadence while bringing it all back to New Orleans - i.e. - somehow it all worked - a boneless cutlet - pounded thin until it covered the entire plate - breaded - fried - server atop spätzle with the mushrooms - crowned with a large mound of lump crabmeat - eat slow - savor each combined bite - flavors - it captured my full attention - who cared what anyone else was eating - or offering as tastes - this dish had the mojo -

Ravioli of local crabmeat - simmered with garlic, cream, lemon and fresh herbs - my daughter insisted on my tasting - i indulged - wow !!! - she′s not a foodie - but flavors like this can prompt immediate conversion - interesting sidebar - in the hotel elevator later that night - someone asked where we had dinner - "Lüke" I offered - "did you try the ravioli" my fellow passenger asked - a smile was all the response necessary -

Dessert was a slight let down - Bread pudding - like a ballerina in the New York City Ballet - a star on any other stage - but at this venue - merely a member of the corps -

We were in town 4 days - three nights - ate seven &quotNew Orleans&quot meals - this was hands down - the best - can′t wait to go back -

Enjoy -

By the by - wine for the night was  - Dr. Loosen Berkastler Lay Riesling Kabinett 2005 - a perfect contrasting compliment for the right flavors of the night - light - flavorful - nice acid - crisp - a touch of spritz - allowing one to simultaneously clear and enhance the pallet - perfect choice - moderate price -

Oh yes - officially the onion tart is - Flamenküchethin Alsatian onion tarte with bacon, caraway and Emmenthaler cheese -

Lüke
333 St Charles
New Orleans, LA 70130
504.378.2840

Original post by hb Herr

BarVespa

Friday, September 21st, 2007

100 wines by the glass - cheese bar - salumeria - panini bar - olive bar - Balthazar bread -

Just opened - two half blocks south of parent Vespa - 1609 Second Avenue btwn 83rd & 84th - 

Original post by hb Herr

Vineyards Are Forever

Wednesday, September 19th, 2007

Wightman Cellars -&nbsp Tri Leopard Vineyards - Cabernet Sauvignon - 1996 - served at the Thursday tasting - an absolute home run - rich - balanced - on varietal - i.e. - everyone was able to figure out it was a Napa Cab - fragarant and engaging aroma - rich taste - dark color - but when I did my pre-tasting research - practically came up blank - even the phone number I found on the web - had been re-assigned to someone who answered - they’re no longer here and we don’t know where they went -

I somehow envision vineyards like artwork - vintages llke individual works - come and go - are good and not so good - occassionally downright bad - but the body of work - the vineyard itself - is forever -

Original post by hb Herr

Its Back

Saturday, September 15th, 2007

Copain’s - L’automne - 2006 -

Wrote about this magnificent - affordable -  Pinot - a year ago - Find It Buy It -

This year is equally great - rich - fruit forward - 13.5 % alc. - smooth - tasting more mature than the label indicates -

Best of all - it appears to be available  - in NYC - Chambers Street Wine - Acker Merrall (West 72nd) - Westside Wine (83rd & Columbus) -

Original post by hb Herr

L’automne Is Back

Saturday, September 15th, 2007

Copain’s - L′automne - 2006 -

Wrote about this magnificent - affordable -&nbsp Pinot - a year ago - Find It Buy It -

This year is equally great - rich - fruit forward - 13.5 % alc. - smooth - tasting more mature than the label indicates -

Best of all - it appears to be available  - in NYC - Chambers Street Wine - Acker Merrall (West 72nd) - Westside Wine (83rd & Columbus) -

Original post by hb Herr

Pinot Paradise

Friday, September 14th, 2007

LA via Beverly Hills - escaped the “compound” for a ride up the PCH - over Malibu Canyon - 101 North - zig - zag - Wades Wines -

Last visited this shop in 2002 - Pinot paradise - plus Cab - Chardonnay - even a touch of France -

Big web presence - but there is nothing like being on-site - particularly with Wade - himself - to do the hand sell -

Got exactly what I was looking to experience - expert guidance to great wines from low production vineyards - unavailable in NYC - worth the trip -

Stay tuned for tasting reports -

Original post by hb Herr

Who Better To Know

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007

Wonderful article on Winery_Times - The Experiences of an Old Wine Tour Limo Driver - entitled - Tony Coturri:Integrity, Honesty, Responsibility and Experience - nice stuff about a vintner who is true to his values - with a product that shows just that -

Enjoy -

Original post by hb Herr