LA Times Food Section -- February 2, 2005 Viewing the LA Times website, www.latimes.com requires registration. You can log on with username "egulleteer" and password "lafood". Some content is in the premium section, called calendarlive.com, which requires an additional fee, but you can see the calendarlive stories below free, for one week.Revolution in a glass / by Jordan Mackay; Leslie Brenner
Welcome to Spain's new revolution! Not the culinary one with Ferran Adrià et al., but the revolution that can be found in the vineyards of Spain. The 3rd annual Madrid-Fusión conference featured wine for its first time. Spain's attempt to hit the top end of the market resulted in high-quality wines that “caught many tasters by surprise at Madrid-Fusión, generating lots of buzz.” Four emerging regions of Spain are highlighted:
Toro region, Spain's biggest, boldest reds from the Tinta de Toro grape, a local clone of Tempranillo;
Rueda region, dry white table wines from the Verdejo grape, similiar to Sauvignon Blanc;
Bierzo region, red wines from the Mencia grape with more finesse than power and acidity over tannin;
Jumilla region, red wines from the Monastreil (or Mourvèdre) grape, with great density and power.
This article is followed by: A tasting full of discoveries / by Leslie Brenner
Twenty-four wines from Rueda, Bierzo, Toro and Jumilla were sampled. Listed are the ones considered “best value” by the tasting panel: 2003 Basa Blanco (Rueda); 2003 Casa de la Ermita (Jumilla White); 1999 Bajoz Crianza (Toro). Five of the six wines from Bierzo were strongly recommended. And the surprise winner of the tasting: 2001 Caño (Toro).
Pass the chicken and tackle the pie / by the Times staff writers
“Here's a Super Bowl game plan sure to score big with both Patriot and Eagle fans.” Includes four recipes: Coleslaw with buttermilk dressing; Black bean, tropical fruits and queso fresco salsa; American fried chicken; California Key lime pie.
A ruby glow in winter / by Susan LaTempa
Sweet blood oranges used to be cultivated only in the Mediterranean. But now, they're grown in California, roughly from January to April or May. Includes four blood orange recipes: Argula with blood orange vinaigrette; Blood orange marmalade; Blood orange white sangria; Blood Orange Blossom.
An island cuisine with worldly ways / by Barbara Hansen
Asian Noodles, located in the south section of downtown Chinatown, is not a Chinese restaurant. It's Filipino, or as it calls itself, “Manila fusion.” Owner Philip Ma “descended from the Ma Mon Luk family, which, according to a story on the menu, brought pasta from Canton, China, to the Philippines in 1920.” The cafe serves traditional Filipino dishes like
adobo,
kare-kare, and grilled meats like
inihaw na baboy. More Chinese-styled items includes
siopao (steamed buns), Shanghai egg rolls, and seafood-noodle combinations. “Servings are generous, prices low: This is great food to linger over when chatting with friends, just right for the young, casual crowd that frequents the room at night.”
Bastide's troops march on / by Leslee Komaiko
The “Bastide diaspora” , where have these former employees gone? Here's the lowdown: Former general manager Donato Poto is teaming up with former Water Grill chef Michael Cimarusti to open a seafood restaurant called Providence this spring in the old Patina space on Melrose. Former sous-chef Kevin M. Meehan is now executive chef at Citrine, with former
chef de partie Jeremy Strubel as Meehan's sous-chef and former assistant sommelier Drew Langley as new wine director. Ex-sommelier Christophe Rolland traveled north to San Rafael to become North American representative for Leroy. Ex-pastry cook Mario Ortiz is pastry chef at Geisha House in Hollywood and ex-pastry chef Koa Duncan has several options. Is that enough?
Darkly compelling / by David Shaw
David Shaw and Mort Rosenblum “had dinner at Spago -- to catch up, to talk about his chocolate book and to sample the chocolate desserts of Sherry Yard.” Rosenblum's newest book, “Chocolate: A Bittersweet Saga of Dark and Light” details the history and mystery of chocolate. In considering writing a book about cheese, Rosenblum instantly refuses, saying, “There aren't really any cheese wars. Nothing like Hershey's versus Mars or Amedei versus Valrhona. I like blood in my books.” The candy war between Hershey and Mars are on several pages in Chapter 5. Rosenblum details the Amedei versus Valrhona battle: Alessio Tessieri wanted to use Valrhona chocolate in a family business selling ingredients to bakers in Italy. The family was told “that they did not think Italians were ready for their products, and they were not sure we could do them justice. Right then and there, it was war.” Enter Sherry Yard and a high-spirited, high-level chocolate talk ensued. “Then it's, showtime. Yard sends out five chocolate desserts, each more delicious and more beautiful than the next.”
There's a thread to
Mort Rosenblum's New Chocolate Book.
Tastes from Venice / by S. Irene Virbila
L'Ombretta in Santa Barbara is given a 2½* rating. This is not really a restaurant, but a Venetian wine bar to
bere un'ombra or
ombretta, or literally, to drink a “shadow,” a small glass of wine together. While A.O.C. is the closest thing in Los Angeles, “that's really Mediterranean, not Venetian.” L'Ombretta serves a selection of
cichetti, the Venetian equivalent to tapas. Owner Andrea Gros is also the designer, the builder, the chef, and the wine buyer. He refuses to dumb down the Northern Italian list of dishes. Santa Barbara's L'Ombretta is as close to a true Venetian wine bar as you're likely to get in California.
WINE OF THE WEEK / by S. Irene Virbila
2001 Emilio Moro Ribera de Duero: Ribera de Duero, Spain; about $25; ripe and full-bodied; goes with roasted and braised meats. It “expresses the
terroir in its deep red color, voluptuous texture and firm structure.”
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Calendarlive Stories
All the Modernist trappings / by S. Irene Virbila
Critic's notebook on Beechwood in Venice. It “takes over Menemsha's spot, and nothing is the same.” Beechwood, runned by Brooke Williamson and her partner Nick Roberts, has a Modernist bent, with a large, sprawling bar and stylish outdoor patio. They serve American classics with a twist: steamed Prince Edward Island mussels in a lemon grass broth, pasta with New Zealand cockles, balsamic-roasted market vegetables, duck leg confit, a pulled beef short rib pot pie, and steak accompanied by a Cabrales butter.
I'll eat at the bar / by Leslee Komaiko
“Sometimes you don't feel like a full-on restaurant dinner. Or you just want to nosh. Fortunately, a number of spots around town offer special bar menus.” Includes these five locations: Central on Sunset; Gardens on Glendon in Westwood; Windows Lounge in Beverly Hills; Mixville Bar at Edendale Grill in Silver Lake; Table 8 on Melrose.