Blog: Eating in Piedmont #food #wine #italy

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In a recent post on the wines of Piemonte I wrote: you will be hard pressed to eat better in Italy - in the world maybe - than in Piedmont. The typical dishes of the local osterias like vitello tonnato and agnolotti del plin have been honed to exacting precision over the centuries. Tajarin al sugo, for example, is really not open to interpretation--the point is to do it well!

Even bagna cauda, which seems nothing more than a simple relish tray, is a thing of profound culinary pleasure. On my first night here in Alba, I walked straight to the Ceretto-owned Osteria La Piola where I had hoped to satisfy my year-long craving for carne cruda, the Piemontese specialty of chopped raw veal. On this particular night, the restaurant was paying homage to bagna cauda, a dish that is normally taken at home among friends given its communal nature of dipping vegetables in a cauldron of hot oil and anchovy. Raviolo in brodo was promised at the end so I thought I could suffer through a platter of raw vegetables. Yet when I crunched into that last cardoon and the last piece of bread sopped up the last bit of oil--I wanted more!

Sunday was a day of snow in the Langhe. At least a foot had fallen by morning and all of my winery visits were postponed. Without wi-fi or even a magazine to read I ventured out onto the streets of Alba in search of an English language newspaper. What I found instead was a translated copy of Nonna Genia, the classic work of Luciano de Giacomi and Beppe Lodi on the cooking of the Langhe region. With a bottle of Barbera and a slice of bakery pizza I read the book cover to cover that afternoon before going back in the snow to find a plate of tajarin.

From Nona Genia:
"In the culinary world tradition is not accorded the same respect it enjoys in other arts. We have great museums proudly showcasing their masterpieces from every era of human endeavour, acclaimed orchestras performing classical music throughout the world and collectors avidly competing for old masters, thereby driving up their value.

But in the culinary world, value is placed not so much on tradition as on the new. Today's culinary culture has adopted the mentality of the fashion world, where "tradition" is almost an embarrassing word."

Blog: Mountain vines make fine #wine

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Yesterday morning I tweeted a photo from the peak of the Passo Tonale, a high mountain road connecting Alto Adige with Lombardia. Time was of the essence, a top-quality Valtellina producer awaited my presence, and I only had 10 minutes to spare according to the GPS.

But here at the peak I decided I had to take it all in and stop for a coffee and a streudel and a roadside chalet advertising their bar.Skiers were decked out in their gear, fortifying for the day with pastry, granola and coffee. I watched as the ski lifts across the street carried the days first passengers to the top.

The Alps are a place of breathtaking beauty and travelling these high mountain roads with their spectacular views are worth the trip alone. My day of tasting that laid ahead would be equally inspiring.

I left the chalet and after several kilometers of switchbacks, weaving through tiny villages that seem to barely cling to the rocks, the valley began to open up. That's when I first noticed the mindbogglingly vertical vineyards of the Valtellina.

Nebbiolo has been cultivated in Valtellina since ancient times. No one would build these now. This is truly viticulture on the edge--the kind of wines we like--and we're happy to be working with some of Valtellina's best wines in the very near future.

Stay tuned for more!

Blog: The Wines of the Northern Rhône #wine

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Images from previous visits to the Northern Rhône. 

Even in its most restrained interpretation, Condrieu gives such an exotic and tropical punch of New World aroma that one doubts—if just for a moment—that the wine in one’s glass is French. Viognier, the grape variety responsible for Condrieu’s honey and apricot aroma, also makes an unexpected appearance in the neighboring red wine appellation of Côte-Rôtie where it can be co-fermented with Syrah (the theory being it stabilizes red wine color!). These two grapes, along with Marsanne and Roussane (both white), make up the whole of the Northern Rhône’s plantings. 

I recently wrote a few words about the Northern  Rhône on our website. Click here and scroll down to read more about the wines of the Northern Rhône. 

 

Blog: Piedmont's Bounty #wine

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You will be hard-pressed to eat better in Italy—in the world, maybe—than in the region of Piedmont. Piedmont, meaning “foot of the mountain,” lies in the northwestern corner of Italy, bordering France to the west and Switzerland to the north. It is enclosed on three sides by the Apennines and the Alps, and the cuisine here reflects its Alpine climate and proximity to France. Although the costal tourist destination of Cinque Terre lies just an hour from Gavi, the cuisine of Piedmont is decidedly mountainous rather than Mediterranean. In a typical Piemontese osteria, butter, eggy pastas, rice, and red meat are cooked with such honed and loving skill that you might wish you’d eaten here instead of your last Michelin-starred experience. 

Such exalted cuisine requires equally glorious wine, and Piedmont produces more DOC/DOCG classified bottles than any other region in Italy. Barolo and Barbaresco are the best-known wines of Piedmont. These highly collectible and highly sought-after long-lived reds are the product of the calcareous strewn hills of the Langhe, and the grapes seem perfectly content in the environs of northeast Italy. Nebbiolo, named for the morning fog of the region called “la nebbia,” gives such a beguiling aroma and satisfying structure that its most avid admirers are the wine world’s most passionate fanatics. 

I recently wrote a few words about Piedmont on our website. Click here and scroll down to read more about all the diversity and pleasure that Piedmont has to offer. 

 

Blog: Of minerals and snow -- The mountain #wine of the Savoie

Raclette

Pictured above: Raclette!

One of the great differences between the wine-growing regions of the New World and those of Europe is that in Europe local wines play an essential role in everyday life. 

The humble red Schiava grape, for example, is an indispensable partner to Bolzano's bread dumplings flavored with speck, but its pale pink color and high acidity make it an unlikely candidate for "international" status. 

Lambrusco, the simple and frothy red wine from Emilia-Romagna, will never be taken seriously, and yet its specific purpose is to wash down rich plates of lasagna and Prosciutto di Parma, and the locals wouldn't have it any other way. 

The mountainous Savoie region in eastern France produces similarly overlooked but locally important wines. Overlooked but not unsold, that is. The Savoie is tiny and winegrowers in the region have no trouble selling most of their wine to thirsty tourists aprés-ski. But the Savoie's dry white wines are full of sap, minerals, flavors of pine nuts and orchard fruits, and I can't imagine having boiled potatoes and melted cheese or fresh boudin blanc without some. 

I recently wrote a few words about the Savoie on our website. Click here and scroll down to read more about all the diversity and pleasure that the Savoie has to offer. 

 

Blog: The Wines of the Loire Part Four >> Pays Nantais

Harbor-nantes

Pictured above: the harbor in Nantes. 

The Loire finally end its journey in the region of Nantes before it empties into the Atlantic. This coastal region features granite and gneiss soils on which the neutral-tasting Melon de Bourgogne produces bone dry, lemony, almost briny white wines that seem to pair magically well with the famous oysters of the region. The appellation of Muscadet Sèvre-et-Maineproduces the most intense and salty Melon wines of all, where they are frequently bottled directly off the fine lees for added richness.

I recently wrote a few words about the Loire on our website. Click here and scroll down to read more about all the diversity and pleasure that the Loire has to offer. 

The classics @wolfgangbuzz - Spago Beverly Hills

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Many thanks to chef and your two superstar sommeliers Christopher Miller and Maria Gomez. So good!

Chanterelle risotto and a pair of Pinots

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Homemade stock is a must and I had amassed quite a collection of chicken bones from Olivier's Butchery. Add some pancetta and you have yourself an ideal dish for Pinot Noir. Paired with 2009 Gros Frère et Sœur Vosne-Romanée and the 2008 Kaizen Silacci Vineyard Pinot Noir.

Olivier's Butchery (@frenchbutchery) Dogpatch, San Francisco

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We have a great new French butcher in San Francisco and it is dangerously close to our Potrero Hill warehouse. I say dangerously close because I'm addicted and our meat intake has increased dramatically. Olivier has a cooler full of amazing cuts and he will butcher to order if you call ahead. There's a spectacular looking aged slab of entrecôte which I've yet to get into. So far we've cooked up a delicious côte d'échine de porc, a deboned polet rôti and an aiguilllettte baronne that Olivier butchered for me on the spot.

Get over to the Dogpatch and see Olivier for some excellent meat!
www.oliviersbutchery.com

Knockout food and wine pairings @sonsdaughterssf last night!

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Sons-and-daughters-menu
http://www.sonsanddaughterssf.com/