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Mark Sommelier

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Posts posted by Mark Sommelier

  1. Anything with chicken legs and/or thighs.  They have been cheap forever.  I think I am reaping the rewards of the current trend to boneless, skinless chicken breasts!

    The absolutely easisest and cheapest recipe is this:

    Package of chicken drumsticks

    26 oz. Bottle of spaghetti sauce

    Put in a saucepan, pour the sauce over the chicken, cover

    Bake 1 hour.

    Voilá!

    Rice on the side.

  2. 25 years ago, I worked with a guy who was the most pompous, unethical creep sommelier. I learned all the things you should never do to a customer from him. For that I thank him. I go out of my way to be approachable and personable. Its a good tactic, and it works.

    Mark? Ohmygosh! Is that you?

    :raz::laugh::raz::laugh:

    Yes, I think so.

  3. 25 years ago, I worked with a guy who was the most pompous, unethical creep sommelier. I learned all the things you should never do to a customer from him. For that I thank him. I go out of my way to be approachable and personable. Its a good tactic, and it works.

  4. More and more common these days is the little deal called the "close-out list". Larger wine/liquor/beer distributors these days are run by accountants. Products are not allowed to sit in the warehouse for longer than 6 months. This leads to dumping wine at crazy prices just to move it. I saw a close-out list last year that started with various Chilean and Argentine wines at 25¢ a bottle! Last week I purchased several cases of Latricieres-Chambertin 2000 Vincent Girardin for $27 a bottle - a 66% discount from the price the previous month. Grand Cru red Burgundy, fer chissake! I also bought 5 cases of Domaine Bouchard Corton-Charlemagne for an amazing $28.75. I'm considering pouring it by the glass.

  5. if you happen to work within metro/walking/working distance of johnny's in dupont (disclaimer: i did work there so i'm naturally biased) ann cashion's gumbo will chase old man, ascetic winter back to his gelid icy cave, plus you will have a tum-tum full of spice. and if you go for the happiest of hours (5-6) it will be THREE dollars. yes THREE dollars. you heard me.

    i was happy to experience this very gumbo along with some excellent fried oysters, remoulade and pickled veggies at johnny's one day for lunch not too long ago.

    it was my first time there, and i have thought about it quite a bit since then...especially the oysters.

    To this day, when I walk in there, they fire a double order of fried oysters for me, before I even sit down! Those oysters rock.

  6. Plese check this out:

    Fortessa has just taken over the distribution of Schott-Zwiesel glasses in the US. Please ask your local guy to show you the Diva and the Top Ten lines. The glasses are stunning and they are extra sturdy. These are the Tritan glasses. The 28 oz. Bordeaux glass is under $5 wholesale.

  7. It's an orangey label on the Veuve but it dosn't say anything else.

    In the business it is known as "Agent Orange" because it is ubiquitous. Cliquot is owned by LVMH. If you don't know what that is, please Google it. The Yellow Label being sold today is very different from that of 10-15 years ago. At the same price point, look for these: Pierre Peters, Pierre Moncuit, H. Billiot, Bollinger, Henriot. Bollinger Grande Annee 1996 would be my choice for a splurge.

    Edited to add: Cliquot produces several million cases of Champagne yearly. The brands that I named produce under 10,000 cases except Bollinger.

  8. Edited to say that I realize the sommelier at Citronelle and the chef at Ray's The Steaks seem like they would be more than happy to spend time with any nameless restaurant patrons who simply ask for a moment during a slow spot. But really, how likely is that?

    It is my job to spend time with the patrons of my restaurant, slow or busy. The answer to your question: very likely. :smile:

  9. Interesting comment this, on several levels. 

    In addition to local food discussion, show me another "food website" Mark that also has anything remotely like the eGCI or any special feature in print or online with the depth and originality of our Alinea project subforum

    Steve,

    Perhaps I should amend my quote to say this: This is why most chefs I know don't pay attention to what is said on eGullet or other food/restaurant websites with anonymous posters.

  10. Trend Spotting

    When angry restaurant owners lash out against one of their best friends (Todd Kliman), this is symptomatic of a larger problem.

    And there's a reason for this:  for too long, here on eGullet, and also on Tom's chats, people have unfairly complained about a napkin being folded wrong in an otherwise great meal, and have damaged the morale of professionals whose only intent was to please them.

    Here's the buzz that I'm getting from restaurant owners all over town:  'want to be taken seriously?  Sign your real name to your negative comments, or shut up.'  Why?  Because it seems that one negative comment in a posting - no matter how relatively insignificant - has more effect on the psyche of a restaurant professional than twenty pages of positive postings from fifty people.  I'm not sure why this is, but I am sure that people who anonymously "go negative" should be aware of this, and use the power of the internet wisely.

    Regards,

    Don Rockwell.

    But, Rocks. It wouldn't be the internet if people couldn't post anonymously. On the internet, everyone can be a critic. This is why most chefs I know don't care about eGullet and the other food websites like it. The cartoon that started it all

    Mark Slater

  11. This year has been the worst I can remember for fruit flies in Washington. At virtually every restaurant I've eaten this summer they were a constant presence, some places worse than others. We do everything we can to control this problem including bleaching all the drains, installing bait traps and fogging.

  12. Following Rocks' post is difficult. I went to Eve tonight, for the first time, with him. It was superlative. 2 dishes are must haves: OOO (oysters, onions, Osetra) . This was lightly poached oysters in classic Soubise (creamed onions) with caviar. The pork belly was sensational. Richly flavored and savory. Mr. Armstrong and Mr. Thrasher took very good care of us. Hats off to them.

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