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Posted

No, no. Thank you for stopping by. :smile:

Before getting into the nitty-gritty of your post, I'd like to request a favor. Please report back on the 1985 Margaux. I have one of these, and I'm curious to see how it's doing.

The Bordeaux wines you've picked should go well with your beef course provided the truffle sauce isn't too perfumed and overpowering. For the non-meat eating uncle, a roasted root vegetable and mushroom ragout seems like it would go nicely.

For those earlier dishes, I like bubbles or riesling with the squid, Coca-Cola with the risotto (okay, a joke, but artichokes are tough on wine pairing). And I don't like pairing wine with soup.

I'm sure others will add to this.

We cannot employ the mind to advantage when we are filled with excessive food and drink - Cicero

Posted

With the squid: Agree with bubbly or riesling, Alsace Pinot Gris might be nice as well.

With the artichoke risotto: Vouvray, perhaps, depending on the cheese level, wouldn't go Vouvray if you're using a lot of Parmesan, would probably look more towards a nice soft Pinot Noir. So, almost all artchoke flavor in the risotto, Vouvray, more cheese, Pinot Noir.

With the tomato bisque: Beaujolais, the 2003 vintage is great, there are a lot of really good ones in the stores now. I also think beaujolais might go well with the artichoke risotto.

Meat and mushroom sounds good for the bordeaux, please let us know how they are.

An additional nice thing for a vegetarian with big red wine is some good swiss Raclette cheese which is served melted and bubbling with crusty bread, roasted red potatoes, and gherkins.

Have fun, wish Grandma a happy birtday for us.

Posted

Hey Guys, thanks for the replies...

Brad: Will do, we are planning this dinner in late Feb, so there is still some time to wait, but I will get back to you with comments regarding the Margaux promptly.

Good point on the truffel sauce, what I am thinking to make it not too strong, is to just do a nice pan jus reduction after searing the steak, and maybe add either some truffle shavings (if i can get some) or some oil, which I haev, near the end.

I was thinking a nice reisling with the soup actually, possibly that can extend to the squid course as well...

DT: You make some good points...I cant recall for certainty, however, I dont believe we will use parm with the Artichoke risotto, if we do use cheese, it will probably a pecorino, and maybe some scamotza (SP)

As well, I forgot to mention, but you remind me, we will definetly be having a cheese course near the end...so I have got that covered :)

Thanks for the wishes

I will let you know how things go...keep those ideas coming!

Cheers,

-Justin

Posted

I'd suggest dry New World Riesling or Sauvignon Blanc to go with the squid. Something with good vibrant acidity e.g. Australian Clare Valley, or New Zealand Marlborough. These would probably be OK with the soup also. From the US, I've liked 'Dr. L', Loosen's collaboration to produce Washington Riesling.

Old world suggestion- go for sherry! Top quality fino or amontillado are cheap compared to regular table wines, and would serve as a nice appetizer that would work very well with the squid and probably ok with soup.

  • 2 months later...
Posted (edited)

A couple of food and wine loving friends have back-to-back birthdays coming up and I've begun thinking about their joint B-day dinner. Always on the lookout for something unusual and seasonally appropriate, I'd had my eye on a recipe in Paula Wolfert's latest tome, The Slow Mediterranean Kitchen: a large chunk of skinless salmon filet slow-poached in garlic- and thyme-infused olive oil and accompanied by a salad of arugula, fresh mint, cucumber and raw rhubarb (!) dressed with a few drops of lemon juice. Last night I prepared the dish as a trial run and was pleased with the results: the salmon was moist and mellow, subtly flavoured and not at all oily while the salad was its perfect foil, cool, acid bright and lovely to look at.

From the outset, I knew the dish was going to present a wine-matching challenge. What could handle the salmon's richness, which is only amplifed by the preparation; the subtle Mediterranean flavours of the olive oil and garlic; the herby green flavours of the rocket and mint; and the acidic bite of the rhubarb and lemon? My first thought was something from the southern Rhone—a white Côtes-du-Rhône for the trial run and a Châteauneuf-du-Pape for the Big Night. I also briefly flirted with the idea of a white from Spain (e.g. albarino) or Italy (e.g. pinot grigio), a rosé and a white or pink sparkler.

In the end, I allowed myself to be swayed by the top wine guy at my neighbourhood SAQ outlet, who suggested Jaboulet's 2001 Mule Blanche Crozes-Hermitage, a marsanne-rousanne blend. Not a bad wine but not a particularly good match with the salmon. The fish made the wine seem bitter, the salad's acid made it seem fat and heavy. The only bright note was the wine's surprising synergy with the mint.

So, back to the drawing board. I'm now leaning toward a sauvignon-heavy, oak-light Graves/Pessac-Léognan. (It'd be great if it worked, because the reds I'm considering for the main course include Gruaud-Larose and Pichon-Lalande.) And looking over my wine list, a probably too young '93 Corton-Charlemagne from Bonneau de Martray catches my eye. But I'm certainly open to suggestions. Got any?

Edited by carswell (log)
Posted

Of the wines you mentioned I would select the Corton.

Reading about the poached salmon I immediately thought of SavBlanc. Cakebread perhaps. Also there has got to be a SavBlanc from New Zealand that wouldn't punch you with too much citrus. Alas I cannot suggest one.

The menu sounds great----the salad especially. Cheers.

Posted

Appears you're headed much higher-end that this but I think a serious pink -- Domaine Tempier or some other Bandol or Cote de Nimes -- would make a swell paring. Talk about classic Mediterranean flavor.

I'm thinking that the Corton Charlemagne is a little too dressy for the recipe though, I'm sure, a lovely sip in its own right. I think of Med cooking as a little more "open collar" than that.

Maybe if we cross our fingers Paula will pop in her own suggestion.

I'm on the pavement

Thinking about the government.

Posted

I'd go with a Blush like Busboy already mentiond.

OR

A Pinot Gris/Grigio.

A White Burgundy from the Macon.

Pinot Blanc/Bianco

I can be reached via email chefzadi AT gmail DOT com

Dean of Culinary Arts

Ecole de Cuisine: Culinary School Los Angeles

http://ecolecuisine.com

Posted

An Alsace Pinot Gris (or even a red Pinot d'Alsace) from 2003.

Enough fullness to match the salmon...

or a Mosel Spatlese (say Zeltinger Sonnenuhr Riesling) 1996

Posted (edited)

My bet for this one is Mumm's Napa rosé sparkler - $30 and change at the SAQ. Bubbles are perfect for the bday celebration, and the wine has been a perfect match for salmon and crab cakes on a bed of frisée with mint-parsley-coriader tabouleh. Almost like what you plan to serve with it.

If you can find it, Geoff Merril's grenache rosé would also be excellent and a steal at under $20. I would also try Terre Rouge's viognier-marsanne blend, a little pricey at $34 but sure to please.

I also find that it helps to chill the wine to a slightly lower temperature than is recommended, it helps cut through the fattiness of the fish.

Edited by ademello (log)
Posted

I remember I served a Paz Senorans Albarino - from Rias Baixas (Galicia, Spain) with the salmon.

“C’est dans les vieux pots, qu’on fait la bonne soupe!”, or ‘it is in old pots that good soup is made’.

Posted
A couple of food and wine loving friends have back-to-back birthdays coming up and I've begun thinking about their joint B-day dinner. Always on the lookout for something unusual and seasonally appropriate, I'd had my eye on a recipe in Paula Wolfert's latest tome, The Slow Mediterranean Kitchen: a large chunk of skinless salmon filet slow-poached in garlic- and thyme-infused olive oil and accompanied by a salad of arugula, fresh mint, cucumber and raw rhubarb (!) dressed with a few drops of lemon juice. Last night I prepared the dish as a trial run and was pleased with the results: the salmon was moist and mellow, subtly flavoured and not at all oily while the salad was its perfect foil, cool, acid bright and lovely to look at.

From the outset, I knew the dish was going to present a wine-matching challenge. What could handle the salmon's richness, which is only amplifed by the preparation; the subtle Mediterranean flavours of the olive oil and garlic; the herby green flavours of the rocket and mint; and the acidic bite of the rhubarb and lemon? My first thought was something from the southern Rhone—a white Côtes-du-Rhône for the trial run and a Châteauneuf-du-Pape for the Big Night. I also briefly flirted with the idea of a white from Spain (e.g. albarino) or Italy (e.g. pinot grigio), a rosé and a white or pink sparkler.

In the end, I allowed myself to be swayed by the top wine guy at my neighbourhood SAQ outlet, who suggested Jaboulet's 2001 Mule Blanche Crozes-Hermitage, a marsanne-rousanne blend. Not a bad wine but not a particularly good match with the salmon. The fish made the wine seem bitter, the salad's acid made it seem fat and heavy. The only bright note was the wine's surprising synergy with the mint.

So, back to the drawing board. I'm now leaning toward a sauvignon-heavy, oak-light Graves/Pessac-Léognan. (It'd be great if it worked, because the reds I'm considering for the main course include Gruaud-Larose and Pichon-Lalande.) And looking over my wine list, a probably too young '93 Corton-Charlemagne from Bonneau de Martray catches my eye. But I'm certainly open to suggestions. Got any?

Personally, I would stay away from the Corton: at a minimum it would be an overmatch, at worst you might encounter the same problem you had with the Jaboulet. I like the rose suggestion, maybe a Tavel, but I like the NZ Sauvignon Blanc even better - in fact, I like it *because* of the citrus acidity: it will pick up the acidity of the salad, and it will cut nicely through the fatty richness of the salmon. As would the Riesling, come to think of it, but somehow I thing the slightly grassy flavor profile of the SB would be a better match. Here in Pennsylvania I've been getting Kim Crawford's 2003. I don't know what's available in your neck of the woods.

Posted
I remember  I served a Paz Senorans Albarino - from Rias Baixas (Galicia, Spain) with the salmon.

Excellent choice. I don't know much about Spanish wines. But Albarino remind me of Condrieu in France’s northern Rhône Valley made from the Viognier varietal. They both have peach and floral bouquets

I can be reached via email chefzadi AT gmail DOT com

Dean of Culinary Arts

Ecole de Cuisine: Culinary School Los Angeles

http://ecolecuisine.com

Posted
Personally, I would stay away from the Corton: at a minimum it would be an overmatch, at worst you might encounter the same problem you had with the Jaboulet. I like the rose suggestion, maybe a Tavel, but I like the NZ Sauvignon Blanc even better - in fact, I like it *because* of the citrus acidity: it will pick up the acidity of the salad, and it will cut nicely through the fatty richness of the salmon. As would the Riesling, come to think of it, but somehow I thing the slightly grassy flavor profile of the SB would be a better match. Here in Pennsylvania I've been getting Kim Crawford's 2003. I don't know what's available in your neck of the woods.

Kim Crawford is not available in Quebec; it is in Alberta, Ontario and BC (where there are cases of it because no one knows what it is). The best we can match for now is the Oyster Bay.

A top-end Sancerre if we're going along the lines of a crisp Sauvignon Blanc?

Posted
Kim Crawford is not available in Quebec.

No longer true. It's a recent arrival and not widely distributed for the time being. (Except for the Rockland and Verdun outlets, all the inventory on the island is in deepest, darkest East End. Go figure.) But it's there. Surf on over to www.saq.com and enter product code 10327701. C$16.95 a bottle vs. C$19.95 in Ontario, too (!).

Posted

i'll toss in another non-bubbly option (though a nice bubby would certainly work): gruner veltliner, though i'm blanking on a good one right now.

i think you need a big mineral component to match the arugula, cucumber, mint and infused olive oil, acid (and citrus) to match the lemon, and something bright enough to cut the fat of the salmon. the SBs mentioned would all do the trick quite well, but i think you may want some additional minerality and herb notes, and for whatever reason i translate that to gruner. the albarino seems like it might work for similar reasons, and so would Chablis.

i'd stay away from anything with too many non-citrus fruit notes. with so many herbs in the recipe, too many peach or tropical notes might be jarring. but that's just me ...

Posted
i'll toss in another non-bubbly option (though a nice bubby would certainly work): gruner veltliner, though i'm blanking on a good one right now.

i think you need a big mineral component to match the arugula, cucumber, mint and infused olive oil, acid (and citrus) to match the lemon, and something bright enough to cut the fat of the salmon. the SBs mentioned would all do the trick quite well, but i think you may want some additional minerality and herb notes, and for whatever reason i translate that to gruner.  the albarino seems like it might work for similar reasons, and so would Chablis.

i'd stay away from anything with too many non-citrus fruit notes.  with so many herbs in the recipe, too many peach or tropical notes might be jarring. but that's just me ...

Great suggestion! For a good discussion of Austrian wine, wine regions, varieties, and some excellent growers, you could do worse than to look over Terry Theise's catalogs at this link. In addition to being packed with great information, they're beautifully written and fun to read.

A number of people have mentioned sauvignon blanc, but no one has suggested Styrian sauvignon blanc. You might seriously consider a Styrian SB with the dish. Even if you don't do that, take an opportunity to taste one. Theise's 2001 Austria catalog (available at link above) has a good short discussion of Styria and of one of the top producers (Polz). It also has Theise's tasting notes of a number of vintage 2000 Polz wines.

In any case, please let us know what you try and how it works.

Take care,

Jim

Jim Jones

London, England

Never teach a pig to sing. It only wastes your time and frustrates the pig.

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted (edited)

:biggrin:

Birthday dinner for ten Sat at my house...

Cantaloupe boats with fruit salad and yogurt drizzle

Oyster stew in Boule Bread bowls

Salmon in puff pastry and Beef Tenderloin in Rock Salt

(Surf and turf)

Macaroni and cheese, using the recipes on E-Gulet and Martha Stewart

Black Beans with Mango, served room temperature

Dessert is tropical stuffed wontons over Creme Anglaise

and a birthday cake with double devon cream for the British B-day girl..

Please, what are we drinking...

Budget is never to exceed $20.00 per bottle as they drink quantity

and I see no need to go higher than that...

Thanks :unsure:

Edited by AK@Spicehouse (log)
Posted

Cantaloupe boats with fruit salad and yogurt drizzle:

1. Vouvray

2. New Zealand Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc

Oyster stew in Boule Bread bowls:

To me, oyster stew is a classic chardonnay dish

Salmon in puff pastry and Beef Tenderloin in Rock Salt

(Surf and turf)

Macaroni and cheese, using the recipes on E-Gulet and Martha Stewart

Black Beans with Mango, served room temperature:

A combination of flavors like this, I'd go with Pinot Noir

Dessert is tropical stuffed wontons over Creme Anglaise

and a birthday cake with double devon cream for the British B-day girl:

I wouldn't try to pair wine with this, I'd go with coffee (preferably Irish!)

Consult your local wine merchant as to the best options in your price range. Good stuff can be had for $20 or under with all the above suggestions.

Posted

:raz: THANKS !!! Will bring with me Sat AM and get all you suggested.. Sounds great....

Cantaloupe boats with fruit salad and yogurt drizzle:

1.  Vouvray

2.  New Zealand Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc

Oyster stew in Boule Bread bowls:

To me, oyster stew is a classic chardonnay dish

Salmon in puff pastry and Beef Tenderloin in Rock Salt

(Surf and turf)

Macaroni and cheese, using the recipes on E-Gulet and Martha Stewart

Black Beans with Mango, served room temperature:

A combination of flavors like this, I'd go with Pinot Noir

Dessert is tropical stuffed wontons over Creme Anglaise

and a birthday cake with double devon cream for the British B-day girl:

I wouldn't try to pair wine with this, I'd go with coffee (preferably Irish!)

Consult your local wine merchant as to the best options in your price range.  Good stuff can be had for $20 or under with all the above suggestions.

Posted

Great suggestions.

Another option for the oyster stew would be Muscadet -- I really love the combination and you can pick up an excellent bottle for very little $$.

Posted

A fairly full Alsace Pinot Gris 2003 for the first two courses.

I'd agree Pinot Noir or Merlot for the main course, but maybe try a Chilean or an Australian one

Desert maybe a late harvest Gewurztraminer

Posted

I am not saying you did not receive some nice pairing suggestions, but the most important thing is to serve what YOU like. Everyone has a different palate. I would not serve anything at a dinner party without first trying it, and second actually enjoying the wine.

I would go to the wine store today and buy several of the wines you are thinking of serving, pull the corks, and serve what you like...it's your party.

Ed McAniff

A Taster's Journey

Posted

:biggrin: My tastes run into LaTour, Rotschild and the Paulliac families. Cant afford to keep up with it, gas prices killing my wine budget. Good thoughts though...

I am not saying you did not receive some nice pairing suggestions, but the most important thing is to serve what YOU like. Everyone has a different palate. I would not serve anything at a dinner party without first trying it, and second actually enjoying the wine.

I would go to the wine store today and buy several of the wines you are thinking of serving, pull the corks, and serve what you like...it's your party.

  • 2 months later...
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