Top Tables Named Top Tables

July 19, 2008

At the 19th Annual Vancouver Magazine Restaurant Awards held in mid April, a panel of 19 expert judges concurred to present West, Araxi, Blue Water Cafe, and CinCin with a combined total of 14 coveted industry awards before an audience of British Columbia’s leading restaurateurs, chefs, and food-service professionals.  For the fourth consecutive year, West won the Vancouver Restaurant of the Year award. Araxi won the gold award for Best Restaurant in Whistler, British Columbia, an honor bestowed by the Vancouver Playhouse International Wine Festival. Both West and Araxi have recipes in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining. Not to be outdone, Blue Water Cafe + Raw Bar won a gold for Best Seafood from the same group, while CinCin won its gold for Best Last Course.

Also announced during the ceremony were The Vancouver Playhouse International Wine Festival Wine List Awards, with Blue Water Cafe and West taking top honors in the newly introduced Platinum category, as one of only three restaurants overall who “raised the bar a level higher”. CinCin and Araxi were among a small, distinguished group adorned with the Gold designation.

Clark Named Newsmaker of the Year

July 18, 2008

A press release announced the exciting news that Robert Clark, Executive Chef of C Restaurant, NU Restaurant & Lounge, and Raincity Grill, was honored as “Newsmaker of the Year” in mid April at a reception hosted by Pacific/Prairie Restaurant News and the Canadian Association of Foodservice Professionals. Clark is the first individual to receive this prestigious award and is recognized not only for his culinary achievements and excellence, but also his leadership and dedication to sustainability. Robert has a wonderful recipe for Wild Salmon Gravlax Salad in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining.

Mapping Oregon

July 16, 2008

A press release bandied the arrival of the Oregon State American Viticultural Area Maps from The Map Store. “These maps, a first for the Oregon wine industry, provide topographical details of Oregon vineyards as well as pinpoint winery and tasting room locations,” the release states. “Technical in content but artfully illustrated, these map images are ideal for wine consumers and the wine trade.

 “These technologically advanced maps are an expression of fundamental improvements in both the way maps are constructed and depicted. Created using a new system developed by The Map Store, in which wine-industry vineyard, winery, and tasting room coordinates and outlines are submitted electronically and plotted by the Map Store staff, allows the wine industry to control exactly what is published.

 “Wine enthusiasts and members of the wine trade can customize maps for personal printing and use. The Map Store introduced new technology to print maps on demand, in smaller, less expensive quantities. This technology, combined with the ability for wineries and vineyards to update their information in real time at The Map Store, allows revised editions of the maps to be printed on a regular basis.

 

Oregon Wine-Touring Resources–Just in Time for Summer Travels!

July 13, 2008

Oregon now has 393 wineries and 16 winegrowing regions in the state. And it was through a press release that I learned about a great new resource to help plan your summer wine tour (of course, in addition to a copy of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining!). The release says, “Prompted by the continued growth of Oregon wine country as a travel destination, the Oregon Wine Board has created an online portal to access all of the tools necessary to plan a memorable trip.  The Oregon Wine Explorer(TM) is an invaluable online destination that makes it easy to plan a trip to Oregon wine country by providing a virtual tour with turn-by-turn directions of the state’s wine regions. The Wine Finder Tool, which links with the Explorer, allows Oregon wine enthusiasts the ability to search and order Oregon wines to enjoy at home.

 In addition, the Oregon Wine Board has partnered with eight regional wine organizations to create the new “Discover Oregon Wine Country” tool kit.  This comprehensive package includes an overview brochure of the state, plus regional maps with winery/vineyard listings, and provides visitors with everything needed to plan a discovery trip. 

 “Green-focused” travelers might want to consider picking up a hybrid rental at Enterprise Rent-a-Car locations around the state and at all major Oregon airports and heading out to wine country to check out the many Oregon wineries and vineyards that have adopted green building practices, sustainable winemaking and agriculture and pursued certification.  To learn more check out the Green Getaways package in the Portland-metro area, a partnership with the Oregon Wine Board and Travel Portland.

“Good Food” at Rover’s (as Always!)

July 11, 2008

Thierry Rautureau created this beautiful Baked Halibut with Morel Farro Risotto and Sorrel Sauce.

Rover’s ever-ebullient and über-generous chef and owner Thierry Rautureau threw a gala dinner to celebrate the debut of a “must-see” new documentary on sustainable agriculture entitled, “Good Food.” Filmmakers Mark Dworkin and Melissa Young were on hand, along with a handful of farmers, fishers, and ranchers who appeared in the movie, and the wines were all from local wineries we know and love such as Snoqualmie Vineyards 2007 Naked Gewürztraminer, DeLille Cellars 2005 “Doyenne” Syrah, and Ponzi Vineyards 2006 Pinot Noir.

It was a delight and an honor to watch Chef Thierry weave the producers’ fare into his French/Northwest cuisine in dishes such as Radish and Bamboo Shoot Salad with Dungeness Crab and White Sturgeon Caviar Dressing. This appetizer featured the radishes and fresh bamboo shoots from long-time Rockport, Washington, farmer Anne Schwartz.

Above please note the beautiful Baked Halibut with Morel Farro Risotto and Sorrel Sauce, which featured the farro (a highly nutritious and ancient grain) from Blue Bird Grain Farm in the Methow Valley and halibut from Seattle’s Wilson Fish.

Attendees went home with a DVD of “Good Food,” and I really enjoyed watching all 72 minutes of its heartfelt goodness, brimming with big stories of our region’s family farmers, their daily struggles interspersed with their long-term dreams.

NORTHWEST NOTES April 2008

April 1, 2008

NEWSY NOTES

Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining Update

With Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining successfully launched and selling well, I’m back to full-time writing, with a fresh book proposal in the works and a new writing gig for the Seattle Times Pacific Northwest magazine. About once a month, I’ll write the magazine’s weekly “Taste” column, focusing primarily on the Northwest wine and beverage scene, but also occasionally turning my attention to food and travel. First bylines will appear next month. On May 18, look for “Breathing Room,” in which I compare the new Eisch Breathable Glasses from Germany with Riedel glassware. On May 25, look for “Seductive Summer Sippers,” which highlights a dozen of my favorite summer wines.

Meanwhile, we enjoyed spotting a copy of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining in the window at the venerable Elliott Bay Book Company in Seattle’s Pioneer Square neighborhood. And a foodie friend reported seeing the book in the giftshop/bookstore at the Culinary Institute of America Greystone campus in the Napa Valley prominently featured in a tabletop display.

And on March 31, the Secret Ingredient Video Blog that I taped in January aired. I chose dried Northwest cherries as my “secret ingredient,” and demo-ed one of my favorite recipes from Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining: Wild King Salmon with Macerated Cherries and Smoked Almond Beurre Noisette, from Steelhead Diner in the Pike Place Market. The Vodcast is available on the Whole Foods Market Web site, YouTube, and iVillage. Here’s the link, as well as a photo from the shoot.

You can watch the Vodcast here.

This month, I’m really looking forward to Taste Washington, where I’ll do a booksigning on Saturday, April 5, from 11:15 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. during Education Day. www.tastewashington.org

And I’ll travel to the International Association of Culinary Professionals International Conference in New Orleans in April, where I’ll appear at the annual Cookbook Expo on Friday, April 18, from 2 p.m to 4 p.m. www.iacp.com

It’s never too early to mark your calendars for the ever-popular Platinum Dinner sponsored by Wine Press Northwest. We enjoyed the fifth annual dinner at the Columbia Tower Club (CTC) in February, where I debuted my Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining slide-show presentation. Next year’s Platinum, also hosted by the CTC, will be on Friday, January 30. Here’s a photo of Spencer and me with Seattle public relations maven Lori Randall at the fifth annual Platinum Dinner in February. www.winepressnw.com

Learn about Braiden’s upcoming appearances here.

To purchase a copy of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining, please go to your local bookseller or visit Amazon’s Web site, www.amazon.com

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Pike Place Market News

Chukar Cherries 20th Anniversary
Chukar Cherry Company, a family-run business that started in the Pike Place Market, is celebrating its 20th birthday. Fresh and unique Chukar-brand products, such as my favorite Pinot Noir and Cabernet Chocolate Cherries, have become signature food gifts for locals and visitors stopping by the Pike Place Market in Seattle or traveling inland to the company’s headquarters in Prosser, Washington. You’ll enjoy founder Pam Montgomery’s recipe for Hazelnut-Crusted Chicken in Cherry-Wine Sauce, which appears on page 74 of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining. www.chukar.com

Steelhead Diner in the News
The Market’s very own Kevin Davis, chef and co-owner of Steelhead Diner, was recently announced as a semifinalist for a 2008 James Beard Foundation Award in the category of Best Chef Northwest. Winners will be announced in early June, so stay tuned! www.steelheaddiner.com

Now that spring has officially sprung in the Market, why not pick up a copy of the Pike Place Market Cookbook or the Pike Place Public Market Seafood Cookbook for fresh recipe ideas from the Market’s leading farmers, fishmongers, restaurateurs, and chefs? Here’s a photo of our first salmon dinner of the season (enjoyed on March 22). I kept the preparation of the white salmon fillets, which hailed from southeast Alaska, simple by dusting them with Murray River sea salt (a light-of-flake, pale-pink sea salt from Australia) and Shichimi Togarashi (Japanese seven-spice blend) and grilling them on a stove-top grill. www.pikeplacemarket.org

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RESTO REVIEWS

Union
While wunderkind chef Ethan Stowell’s newer restaurants, Tavolàta and How to Cook a Wolf, capture most of the media buzz, a recent dinner at Union proved that Ethan’s flagship resto still shines supreme, with many menu items that easily trump those we sampled in New York City in December. I skipped over appetizers and went straight for the Pasta section of the menu, and wasn’t disappointed. Housemade chitarra was simply tossed with sweet sea urchin, chilies, and garlic. Like many of the dishes here, this combination of a few ingredients treated with respect in the kitchen rose above the sum of its simple parts. Potato Gnocchi turned creamy thanks to mascarpone cheese and extra flavorful thanks to a small forest full of black trumpet mushrooms. A beautiful rendition of Ocean Trout with Rice Beans, Manila Clams, and Speck (an herb-flavored cured ham from Italy) made for the most photogenic entrée we sampled, pictured below. www.unionseattle.com

TASTE Updates a Classic
A grilled cheese sandwich and a bowl of tomato soup instantly takes me back to childhood, when Mom mixed the Campbell’s Condensed variety with whole milk (gasp!) before slow-simmering. Next she stacked slices of plain white bread (yes, Wonder Bread!) with bright-orange Kraft Cheddar (yes—full-fat cheese!), broiled the sandwiches open-face style, and sprinkled them with granulated sugar (yes, white sugar!) before proudly serving it to my hungry little brother and me. TASTE Restaurant at the Seattle Art Museum goes Mom one better, serving up its sophisticated “griddled cheese” on potato bread and serving it alongside a bowl of “roasted tomato soup” at the bargain price of $8. www.tastesam.com

The Capital Grille is “Capital!”
Except for a long wait for our table in the bar during a busy holiday week, everything was “capital” at Seattle’s newest meat-lover’s mecca, the Capital Grille. While the Grille specializes in dry-aged steaks, I found much to love in the Chef’s Daily Seafood Feature—perfectly seared, medium-rare sea scallops surrounded by a citrus-rich reduction sauce and centered with a generous amount of shaved asparagus salad. It was the essence of spring on a plate, as shown in the photo below. The wine list is equally impressive, with more than 400 bottles, including 55 Washington-State reds and about 10 whites and almost a dozen Oregon Pinot Noirs. We enjoyed a bottle of Dusted Valley Old Vines 2006 Chardonnay ($50), a refreshingly unoaked version of the varietal, that paired equally well with both scallops and a VERY generous and perfectly roasted whole chicken. Ambience for the Seattle outpost of this East-Coast chain is club-like and masculine, with dark wood, Tiffany-style lamps, and leather booths and chairs. Everything seems to be a cut above competitors such as Morton’s or Ruth’s Chris, and certainly much better than The Daily Grill, located in the recently renovated Sheraton Seattle Hotel & Towers a few blocks away. www.thecapitalgrille.com

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SHORT TAKES

Dine Around Seattle Update
One of the joys of dining around Seattle in the months of March and November is taking advantage of the 30 for $30 (formerly known as the 25 for $25) program. With many options for a three-course meal at a reasonable price, it’s a great way to check out a new restaurant, or get reacquainted with an old favorite. In March, we stopped in at BOKA and The Oceanaire Seafood Room for dinner, and Barolo for lunch. Across the board, portion sizes were generous, offerings were inventive, and selections offered something for everyone, be they carnivores or vegetarians. Here’s a photo of the rich, satisfying, truffle-oil-drizzled Filetto di Maiale from Barolo—Pork Tenderloin with Sicilian Wine Reduction, Thyme, and Gorgonzola. www.dinearoundseattle.org

Tom Black Joins 35th Street Bistro
Long-time Seattle chef Tom Black has taken the reins in 35th Street Bistro in the Fremont neighborhood of Seattle. Chef Tom has a recipe for Arugula Salad with Lemongrass Vinaigrette and Goat Cheese in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining (page 39) and has cooked his way around the region at distinguished restaurants such as Fullers, Barking Frog, and Alderbrook Resort & Spa. www.35bistro.com

Oceanaire Revamps Lunch Menu
In a bid to attract more lunchtime traffic, the Oceanaire Seafood Room has added several new items to its menu. Among the new favorites are the Chicory Barbecue Pulled Pork Sandwiches, served with Chef Eric Donnelly’s Chicory Barbecue and Sweet Chili Slaw. Meanwhile, on the dinner menu, the U-10 Diver Scallops and Duck Confit entrée with flageolet beans, bacon, parsley, and saba (a sweet-tart syrup made from ripe grapes) offers the best of both earth and ocean, as shown in the photograph below. www.theoceanaire.com

Updated Abbey Road Farm B&B Opens for 2008 Season
Abbey Road Farm, which is featured in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining on page 142 with a recipe for Goat’s-Milk Cheesecake, opened for the 2008 season on March 1. The Willamette Valley bed-and-breakfast inn and 82-acre working goat farm is truly unique, for guests stay in luxurious guest suites converted from three working grain silos! Visitors can enjoy breakfasts in the original farmhouse kitchen, sip a glass of local wine around the outdoor fire pit, relax on the new deck overlooking vineyards and rolling hillsides, or visit the new AgriVino Wine Center. More adventuresome types can even try their hand at milking a friendly goat from the resident herd. www.abbeyroadfarm.com

Tilth Receives Top-10 Ranking
In late February, The New York Times announced that Tilth restaurant was among the top-10 best new restaurants across the country. Restaurant critic Frank Bruni extolled chef Maria Hines’ exacting approach to sourcing local foods and her deft hand at building complexity from simple, albeit exquisite, ingredients. Bruni used the word “inspired” to describe chef Hines, and we agreed after sampling her Croque Monsieur. Topped with a perfectly poached egg fresh from the nest, this deluxe version of the French ham-and-cheese sandwich appears on Tilth’s brunch menu. Don’t miss Maria’s lovely recipe for Golden Beet Carpaccio, which you’ll discover on page 20 of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining. www.tilthrestaurant.com

Martha Dines at C Restaurant
During a recent visit to Vancouver for a speaking engagement, the one-and-only Martha Stewart and three associates dined at C Restaurant, which I describe in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining as “simply one of the best restaurants in the world” (page 204). Martha and company sampled the new “Ethical Luxury Tasting Menu,” created by Chef de Cuisine Quang Dang. This menu featured Bamfield Pinto Abalone (C Restaurant is reportedly the only restaurant in the world to serve this product), Qualicum Beach Scallops, and Queen Charlotte Island Dungeness Crab, among other delightful, and sustainable, fare. www.crestaurant.com

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DISH OF THE MONTH

Zarzuela Shellfish Stew, a lovely, Mediterranean-inspired medley of Northwest shellfish (prawns, clams, mussels), finfish (salmon and halibut), and fingerling potatoes swimming in a tomato-y broth swirled with saffron aïoli, has been on the menu at Andaluca, in downtown Seattle’s Mayflower Park Hotel, since the restaurant’s early days. I return to it time and again when I want a warm, comforting bowl of yumminess. www.andaluca.com

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SUPER SIPS

Willamette Valley Vineyards Named Hottest Small Brand in 2007
Willamette Valley Vineyards has earned the coveted “Hottest Small Brand” of 2007 from Wine Business Monthly, the industry’s leading trade publication for wineries and growers. Cyril Penn, the Editor of Wine Business Monthly (WBM) wrote: “Willamette Valley Vineyards is one of those wineries demonstrating that you can increase quality while increasing production; the two aren’t mutually exclusive.” Each year, the publication selects the top-10 Hottest Small Brands of the Year. The criteria for being included on the list include, “wines that deliver value and execute their vision particularly well,” Penn noted. www.willamettevalleyvineyards.com

650-Acre Wallula Vineyard Purchased
In March, Allen Shoup, founder of Long Shadows Vintners, along with members of a small investor group, purchased the acclaimed Wallula Vineyard in the Horse Heaven Hills of Washington State from the Den Hoed family, which has farmed Washington wine grapes since 1978 and purchased the property in 1997. The purchase price was not disclosed, but it is believed to be the highest price ever paid for a contiguous vineyard in Washington State. www.longshadows.com

James Beard House Welcomes the Northwest
This month and next, the Northwest will be well represented at the venerable James Beard House in New York City. On April 28, Portland’s Andina restaurant will prepare a “Novo-Peruvian Dinner” for James Beard attendees. A special out-of-House event will take place in McMinnville, Oregon, on April 2, in conjunction with the Portland Indie Wine Festival Celebration. Next month, chef Bobby Moore of Barking Frog restaurant in Woodinville travels to the Beard House to present his Taste of Washington Wine Country dinner on May 29. Bobby has a wonderful recipe for Petite Lamb Burgers in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining (page 48), and I enjoyed doing a booksigning with him last fall, as shown below. www.jamesbeard.org

Top Table Restaurants Collect Top Honors
During the 30th annual Vancouver Playhouse International Wine Festival, Araxi, Blue Water Cafe, CinCin, and West each received a prestigious award in recognition of establishing one of the Festival’s top wine programs. Blue Water Cafe and West were among only three restaurants overall to receive the top honor of the inaugural Platinum Award. CinCin and Araxi are among a distinguished group of 17 restaurants adorned with the Gold designation. You’ll enjoy recipes from both Araxi (page 200) and West (page 202) in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining. www.toptable.ca

Walla Walla Wines Taste Great
In early March, Taste Walla Walla Seattle took place at McCaw Hall in Seattle Center. More than 400 consumers enjoyed wines from almost 60 Walla Walla Valley vintners. Call me crazy, but in this sea of legendary red wines and venerable wineries, I tasted only white wines and Rosés as research for my summer wines article. Among my favorites were the à Maurice Cellars 2006 Chardonnay (Columbia Valley), Dunham Cellars 2006 Four-Legged White (Columbia Valley), JLC Winery’s 2005 The Muse Rosé (Walla Walla Valley), and Sleight of Hand 2006 The Magician (Gewürztraminer) from the Columbia Valley. www.wwvwa.com

Vintners-in-the-Vineyard Dinner Series
On April 3, May 15, and June 5, the Willamette Valley’s Ponzi Vineyards will celebrate the vineyards, and the long-standing grape-growing partnerships behind them, with special four-course wine dinners prepared by Jason Stoller Smith, partner/chef of The Dundee Bistro. You’ll enjoy Chef Jason’s recipe for Tuscan Pork Ribs, which are found on page 150 in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining. www.ponziwines.com

WSU Offers “Vine to Wine” Workshop
On April 12 and 13, Washington State University Extension viticulturists and enologists, in collaboration with wine-industry professionals, are offering a two-day intensive workshop. The workshop is designed for anyone considering planting a new vineyard or establishing a winery. On day one of the workshop, participants learn how to start a vineyard. On the second day, Washington winemakers and wine educators address what to look for in grapes, the intricacies of fermentation, the science of red and white winemaking, designing your winery, what equipment to purchase and how to clean it, and the economics of establishing and running a winery. http://winegrapes.wsu.edu/workshop.html

NORTHWEST NOTES March 2008

March 1, 2008

NEWSY NOTES

Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining Update

Exciting news. Wine Enthusiast chose Coriander-Crusted Albacore Tuna with Spicy Buckwheat Noodle Salad as its March Recipe of the Month! The recipe, along with a four-color plate shot, appeared on page 17, and included a photo credit for the book’s talented photographer, Jackie Johnston.

On February 1, I debuted a slideshow presentation based on text and photos from Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining at the fifth annual Platinum Dinner. Sponsored by Wine Press Northwest (where I’ve been food-and-wine-pairing columnist for the past eight years!) the dinner took place at the venerable Columbia Tower Club. I also presented the show at Molbak’s garden center, the Bellevue Regional Library, and to the Seattle Chapter of Les Dames d’Escoffier.

On March 31, the Secret Ingredient Video Blog that I taped in January will air. Theme of the weekly-changing series of Vodcasts is a chef’s “secret ingredient,” and I chose dried Northwest cherries as my secret ingredient. I used the cherries to demo one of my favorite recipes from Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining: Wild King Salmon with Macerated Cherries and Smoked Almond Beurre Noisette, from Steelhead Diner in the Pike Place Market. The Vodcast is available on the Whole Foods Market Web site, YouTube, and iVillage. I’ll post the actual link in next month’s edition of Northwest Notes. Here I am on set prepping the recipe (photo below).

While I don’t have any appearances scheduled in March, I’m really looking forward to Taste Washington (April 5 and 6), where I’ll do a booksigning or two, and the International Association of Culinary Professionals International Conference in New Orleans in mid-April, where I will appear at the annual Cookbook Expo.

With the book successfully launched, I’m back to writing, with a fresh book proposal in the works, and a new writing gig for the Seattle Times Pacific Northwest magazine. About once a month, I’ll write the magazine’s weekly Taste column, focusing primarily on the Northwest beverage scene (wine, beer, hard cider, etc.), but also occasionally turning my attention to food and travel. First bylines will appear in May.

To purchase a copy of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining, please go to your local bookseller or visit Amazon’s Web site, www.amazon.com

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Pike Place Market News

March signals the start of spring in the Market, and nothing epitomizes this more than Daffodil Day. On Thursday, March 20, look for dozens of Market employees around downtown and in surrounding neighborhoods passing out 30,000 bright yellow daffodils to wish shoppers and pedestrians a “Happy Spring!”

Other Market-related activities are picking up as well. The fourth annual Care for the Market luncheon, which benefits the Market’s four human-service agencies, will take place on March 6 at the Paramount Theatre. Beloved Seattle celebrity chef, cookbook author, and radio host Tom Douglas is the keynote speaker. Tom Douglas Catering will prepare lunch, with a minimum suggested donation of $150 per person.

Speaking of charity, Starbucks, whose first store is located in the Market, generously donated $5,000 per year for the next five years, earmarked for the Market’s Farmer Relief Fund. The Farmer Relief Fund was created in 1999 after a hailstorm struck the Puget Sound area, destroying the crops of many Pike Place Market farmers.

On March 30, barbecue experts will once again invade Pike Place for the annual Pike Place Market Barbecue Competition. This year’s event is a state competition, and will draw the best cooks from all around the region. Come around lunchtime and chow down on a pulled-pork sandwich! All proceeds from food sales benefit the Market Foundation. www.pikeplacemarket.org

Now that spring has officially sprung in the Market, why not pick up a copy of the Pike Place Market Cookbook or the Pike Place Public Market Seafood Cookbook for fresh recipe ideas from the Market’s leading farmers, fishmongers, restaurateurs, and chefs?

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RESTO REVIEWS

Treasurable Txori

I’ve dined twice at Txori (pronounced CHOR-ee), Joseba and Carolin Jimenez de Jimenez’s smaller sibling to the Harvest Vine, located in Seattle’s trendy Belltown. And each time I’ve had one of the most joyful experiences of my life! Perhaps it’s because, during my sophomore year in college, I was an exchange student in Madrid. Txori immediately whisks me back to open-air meals in student cafés, where I inevitably ordered jamón con queso (a ham-and-cheese sandwich) while sipping agua tónica con hielo (tonic water with ice) and discussing how best to save the world with my Spanish counterparts in my sloppy Spanish. At Txori, the “small plates” are truly that, perfectly imagined and crafted nibbles presented on a lovely array of ceramics and glassware. Pulpo a la Plancha (Grilled Octopus) is a tender tentacle or two drizzled with fresh olive oil and sprinkled with sea salt. Piquillo con Brandade is one smoky, scarlet piquillo pepper stuffed with creamy salt cod and potato. Be sure to order anything containing gulas (baby “eels” that are somehow, almost magically, made out of hake, a traditional Spanish finfish). The version with garlic and olive oil is reminiscent of Baked Escargots, but a lot healthier. Either the coffee flan or nut tart makes a lovely choice for a sweet finale. Or order both, along with extra spoons, for sharing. www.harvestvine.com

Toast for Two

Melissa Nyffeler’s heartfelt venture, Dinette, located in Capitol Hill, is a welcome roost on a cold night, for it offers a selection among nine different grilled toasts, which may be the world’s most delicious comfort food. A couple of toasts we enjoyed on a recent Sunday evening included Gorgonzola Dolce (blue cheese with toasted walnuts and balsamic syrup) and Broccoli Rabe Pesto (pesto with Fontina cheese and Tuscan salami). Bowls of Steamed Mussels with Green Apple, Smoky Bacon, Mushrooms, and Calvados Cream and Handmade Ricotta Gnocchi with Braised Beef Short-Rib Ragu sent us back into the cold air with warm, happy tummies. www.dinetteseattle.com

Only in Seattle!

We were so happy to share the long-running party that is the Pike Place Market’s Pink Door restaurant with our good buddy Debra Prinzing, a garden and design writer from Los Angeles, when she flew in for the Northwest Garden & Flower Show in February. Our langorous dinner included two bottles of Northwest wine (Novelty Hill Sauvignon Blanc and an Oregon Chardonnay), sautéed calamari, perfectly cooked risotto with pancetta, a whole grilled branzino, and the fish of the day—striped marlin. Another bonus of eating at the Pink Door is the daily entertainment. On Sunday and Monday evenings, you can watch the gorgeous trapeze artist twist and twirl overhead while you enjoy dinner, as attested to in the photo below. www.thepinkdoor.net

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SHORT TAKES

The Farmer-Chef Connection
In early February, a crowd of 150 people attended the fifth annual Farmer-Chef Connection, a conference sponsored by Seattle Tilth. The conference seeks to join local producers (such as farmers and fishers) with buyers (such as chefs) so that they can conduct business face to face. Agri-culinary tourism was a hot topic, explored by a panel of experts including Fernando Divina (chef at Tendrils restaurant at SageCliffe), Susan Ujcic (Helsing Junction Farm), Charles Finkel (The Pike Brewing Company), Janet Leduc (Washington Wine Country), and Fred Fleming (Shepherd’s Grain). Conference organizers wisely waited until after the gourmet lunch (featuring dishes devised from many of the participants’ fresh fruits and vegetables, grain products, shellfish, and finfish) to schedule Chef Tamara Murphy’s demonstration on how to break down a whole pig (see photo, below). Attendees also learned about winter crops and value-added products, and how to conserve and share precious water resources. During the late-afternoon closing reception, conference-goers mingled and networked while sampling local cheeses, smoked seafood, and beverages, such as Pike Pale Ale, Red Barn Cider, and wines from Kiona Vineyards and Winery. www.seattletilth.org

Dine Around Seattle in March
Dine Around Seattle, formerly the 25 for $25 promotion, is back on the menu March 2-31. All month long, Sundays through Thursdays, 30 select Seattle-area restaurants will offer prix-fixe dinners for $30, and many will also offer prix-fixe lunches for $15. This price will not include beverage, tax, or gratuity and menus will not be available on Easter Sunday, March 23. One exciting change for March will be the addition of the Pike Place Market’s own Steelhead Diner, which replaces Cascadia Restaurant in Belltown. www.dinearoundseattle.org

Kudos to Mission Hill’s Terrace Restaurant
In the February 2008 issue of Travel + Leisure magazine, Mission Hill Family Estate’s Terrace Restaurant was named one of the top five winery restaurants in the world. In an article entitled “Top Winery Restaurants,” the publication refers to Mission Hill Family Estate as “the centerpiece of the Canadian wine tourism industry” and the Terrace as “one of the most glorious dining experiences around.” Terrace Chef Matt Batey, under the direction of Winery Chef Michael Allemeier, has developed a signature cuisine de terroir which highlights the palette of flavors and ingredients unique to the Okanagan Valley. Guests at the Terrace enjoy culinary creations al fresco with breath-taking views of the winery’s courtyard and vineyards and the spectacular Okanagan Lake. You’ll find Chef Allemeier’s recipe for Roasted Halibut with Shellfish Cioppino in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining, page 245, and a photo of the Terrace graces the book’s cover. The photo below shows Chef Allemeier’s ode to spring—Scallop and Spring Ragout. www.missionhillwinery.com

Photography by Hamid Attie

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DISH OF THE MONTH

Trellis, in the new Heathman Hotel in Kirkland, Washington, hits the mark on many levels, thanks to the dedication of long-time Seattle chef Brian Scheehser (The Hunt Club), who grows many of the baby greens and herbs featured on his menu. We loved his beet, sliced orange, and frisée salad, kaleidoscope spheres of red and orange beets with a ruff of curly frisée and fried leeks; the impressive Grilled Flat-Iron Steak; and the silky peanut-butter cookies on the Trellis Cookies plate. But of all the dishes we sampled, most warming was his Pacific Seafood Soup, served in a sturdy Staub cast-iron pot, and brimming with fresh shellfish of the season (clams, mussels, and prawns), along with salmon and whitefish, and a not-too-saffron-y, not-too-tomato-y herb broth, as well as crostini and rouille, for a combination that let the simple goodness of the seafood shine through and through. www.trellisrestaurant.net

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SUPER SIPS

Washington Wine Month Special Events
Throughout the month of March, several Seattle restaurants will honor Washington Wine Month with special dinners and wine pairings. Started in 2000 by the Washington Wine Commission, Washington Wine Month helps foster connections between the state’s culinary community and wineries.

From March 4-28, Tuesdays through Fridays, Rover’s, located in the Madison Valley neighborhood, will serve a four-course tasting menu paired with Chateau Ste. Michelle wines. Rover’s celebration of Washington Wine Month culminates on March 26, with an exclusive wine dinner co-hosted by Rover’s chef/owner Thierry Rautureau and Chateau Ste. Michelle CEO Ted Baseler. Last September, we enjoyed my birthday dinner at Rover’s. Here’s a shot of one of the memorable seafood dishes from Chef Thierry’s nine-course tasting menu. www.rovers-seattle.com

Qube, located in downtown Seattle, is launching a “Candlelight and Wine” series during Washington Wine Month. On Saturday nights in March, from 9:30 p.m. to midnight, fusion-style hors d’oeuvres and a flight of four wines will be served in the wine bar and lounge. Leading Washington winemakers, such as Brian Carter of Brian Carter Cellars, will be on hand to discuss their creations. To reserve, call (206) 770-5888.

Jason Wilson, chef/owner at Crush, located in Seattle’s Central District, is offering a five-course tasting menu and wine pairings. In a twist on the norm, Wilson is serving one set of wine pairings for the first two weeks of the promotion, and another for the latter two weeks. His rationale? To expose diners to “more excellent Washington wines,” according to a press release. Meanwhile, on March 9, Crush hosts Mark McNeilly of Mark Ryan Winery and Trey Busch of Sleight of Hand Cellars for an “over-the-top” winemaker dinner. www.chefjasonwilson.com

Northwest Wine Academy Spring Release
On March 21 and 22, South Seattle Community College’s Northwest Wine Academy will hold its Spring Barrel Tasting, which is open to the public. The Academy’s 2007 Rosé and 2007 Riesling will be released; the 2006 Petit Verdot, 2005 Cabernet Sauvignon, and 2006 Late-Harvest Sauvignon Blanc will be for sale; and several barrel samples will be available to taste. www.southseattle.edu/programs/proftech/wine.htm

James Beard House Welcomes the Northwest
In the next two months, the Northwest is going to be well represented at the venerable James Beard House in New York City. On March 3, Nick’s Italian Café, a long-time Northwest favorite located in downtown McMinnville, Oregon, will pair with award-winning Oregon winemaker Rob Stuart for an Oregon Winemaker Dinner. Chef/Owner Nick Pierano’s recipe for Dungeness Crab and Pine Nut Lasagne appears in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining on page 138. And Joie Wines, whose recipe for Claybank Farm Lavender Biscuits appears in the book on page 232, will partner with Chef Angus An of Vancouver’s Gastropod Restaurant for dinner at the Beard House on March 15. The dinner is entitled, “Modern Canadian Gastronomy.” Next month, Portland’s Andina restaurant will prepare a “Novo-Peruvian Dinner” for James Beard attendees on April 28. Finally, a special out-of-House event will take place in McMinnville, Oregon, on April 2, in conjunction with the Portland Indie Wine Festival Celebration. www.jamesbeard.org

NORTHWEST NOTES February 2008

February 1, 2008

NEWSY NOTES

Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining Update

Early in January, we received the very welcome news that Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining had gone into its second printing after only nine weeks, a truly thrilling development. Also early in the month, we enjoyed a 35-minute ferry ride across Elliott Bay for a book signing and my presentation of a new speech at the venerable Eagle Harbor Book Co. on Bainbridge Island. In business for 40 years, this independent bookseller supports the island population’s book needs, and offers an impressive line-up of author appearances.

In mid-January, I spoke with Liane Hansen of National Public Radio in Washington, DC. Situated before a microphone in NPR satellite station KUOW in Seattle, I spent a very enjoyable 30 minutes discussing the wonders of the Pacific Northwest food-and-wine scene for a segment that was ultimately condensed into 8 minutes and 59 seconds. After Weekend Edition Sunday aired multiple times on Sunday, January 13, I received congratulatory e-mails and phone calls from all over the country (thanks, family and friends!).

That Sunday afternoon, the Amazon ranking for Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining soared from 135,000 to 180, and the ”bump” from the NPR interview, NPR’s subsequent e-mail blast about the interview, and the popularity of the interview link on the Internet helped boost the book’s Amazon ranking for weeks afterward.

The same day as the NPR interview aired, I taped an episode of the Secret Ingredient Video Blog at Whole Foods Market in Seattle. Theme of the weekly-changing series of Vodcasts is a chef’s “secret ingredient,” and I chose dried Northwest cherries as my secret ingredient. I used the cherries to demo one of my favorite recipes from Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining: Wild King Salmon with Macerated Cherries and Smoked Almond Beurre Noisette, from Steelhead Diner in the Pike Place Market. I’ll keep you posted on when the weekly-changing Vodcast is available on the Whole Foods Market Web site, YouTube, and iVillage—sometime in February, March, or April. Here I am chatting up the book with host Scott Simons (photo below).

February promises a fresh crop of appearances [appearances link], including booksignings and slideshow presentations at one of my favorite events of the year—the Columbia Tower Club Platinum Dinner (sponsored by Wine Press Northwest) on February 1; Molbak’s on February 9; and the Bellevue Regional Library on February 22.

To purchase a copy of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining, please go to your local bookseller or visit Amazon’s Web site, www.amazon.com

Pike Place Market News

January and February are historically quiet months in the Market, when farmers take well-deserved holidays, and farmland lies fallow until spring. During these quiet months on the farm tables, make time to revisit the highstalls (the Market’s seven permanent fruit and vegetable stands), fishmongers, and specialty-food shops (such as DeLaurenti Specialty Food & Wine, The Souk, and Oriental Mart). Get to know the owners, ask questions, and discover some new, exciting ingredients to brighten your winter menus. Or pick up a copy of the Pike Place Market Cookbook or the Pike Place Public Market Seafood Cookbook for fresh recipe ideas from the Market’s leading farmers, fishmongers, restaurateurs, and chefs. www.pikeplacemarket.org

You can also turn winter blahs into winter “aaahs” with greenhouse-grown flowers now available on Market farmtables in the North Arcade. Alm Hill Gardens, a family-run operation that has been selling at the Market for more than 30 years, offers mix-and-match tulips in rainbow shades, along with aromatic hyacinths in stark white, vibrant pink, and periwinkle. Market farmer Ted Jonkheer of Jonkheer Greenhouses brings his tulips and other flowers from the fertile Skagit Valley, where he’s farmed since 1963. Winter bouquets add brightness to any desk or table, whether for a special occasion or daily “pick-me-up.” And fresh-cut flowers form the perfect solution for what to get your sweetie for Valentine’s Day!

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RESTO REVIEWS

Joule is a Jewel

Chefs Seif Chirchi and Rachel Yang have been on the radar screens of local foodies since serving as opening chefs at Coupage restaurant in Seattle’s Madrona neighborhood. During their first three months in the kitchen there, they garnered three-star reviews from both the Seattle Times (January 2007) and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer (January 2007). Due to “creative differences” with Chef/Owner Tom Hurley, the couple departed Coupage in May 2007. In November, they realized a long-held dream—to open their own restaurant—and christened it Joule, named after the scientific unit of energy. This warm, small (35 seats in the restaurant and eight seats at the bar), darkly inviting restaurant is located in the Wallingford neighborhood of Seattle on North 45th Avenue, which is quickly becoming something of a mini-Restaurant Row, with Tilth (see “Tilth Brunch” article, below) and Smash Wine Bar just down the street.

Yang is a Culinary Institute of America (Hyde Park) grad and cooked her way around New York City at white-tablecloth places such as Per Se and Alain Ducasse at the Essex House, where she and Chirchi met. They tag their resto as “eclectic American,” with heavy influences of Korean and French ingredients and techniques. The menu is divided into sections such as Tossed (Salads), Crisped (Small Appetizers), and Sparked (Entrées). We enjoyed a delicately flavored salad of chilled seafood with daikon and sweet chili vinaigrette that was poetry on the plate. Joule already has a steady following for its Spicy Beef Soup with Tender Leeks and Crème Fraîche (listed under the “Simmered” section of the menu), although we opted for the AMAZING Cornbread, Preserved Garlic, and Smoked Gouda appetizer (save your calories for this one—it’s worth it!), as well as the Crispy Kalamata Olive Gnocchi with Toasted Almond and Sweet Pepper. Appetizers are visually stunning, arriving in small ramekins, iron pots, and glass bowls composed over large plates and serving vessels.

Seafood lovers will thrill to the choice among THREE whole fish of the day, such as Branzino, Mackerel, Anchovies, or Dourade on the Bone, specimens whose flesh falls sensuously off the bone thanks to perfect oven roasting. Among other enticing entrée choices are Bison Hanger with Garlic Chive Chimichurri and Preserved Garlic or Veal Sweetbreads with Tomato Sauce and Pickled Sweet Pepper. Don’t forget to order something from the “Pickled” section of the menu, such as the Cucumber Kimchi with Shiitake Mushrooms, which arrives in its own miniature Mason jar.

The small, well-thought-out wine list includes reasonably priced selections from Washington, Oregon, and around the world, as well as sake and beer. We were particularly impressed to see beverages by the glass such as Viento Riesling from the Columbia Gorge, Wash., and Hou Hou Shu Sparkling Nigori Sake. www.joulerestaurant.com

Tilth Brunch

Tilth restaurant, the heartfelt operation of long-time Seattle chef Maria Hines, started offering brunch on Saturdays and Sundays a few months ago, but we didn’t have a chance to sample it until early January. I’ve always love the sunny-bright dining room, located in a small house decorated with light and airy furnishings. I enjoyed a simple lunch of Butternut Squash Bisque and Baby Red Butter Lettuce Salad with Blood Orange, Blue Cheese, and Hazelnuts (photo below). Spencer loved the Croque Monsieur. The ham and Gruyère sandwich was napped in creamy Béchamel sauce and topped by a still-quivering, perfectly poached egg fresh from the nest. A glass of Sparkling Beaujolais tempted the taste buds and perked the palate. You’ll find Maria’s recipe for Golden Beet Carpaccio with Herb Vinaigrette in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining on pages 20-21. www.tilthrestaurant.com

Flying Fish

Owner/Founder/Chef Chris Keff keeps dishing up her long-time menus standards, along with new delights, at Seattle’s venerable and ever-popular Flying Fish. Tried-and-true favorites, such as Fried Oyster Caesar Salad and Grilled Fish Tacos with Charred Tomato Salsa, Guacamole, and Hand-Made Tortillas are always a comforting delight—classics we love to revisit time and again. Meanwhile, an entrée of Neah Bay Steelhead with Five-Spice Marinade, Noodles, Mushroon Stir-Fry, and Black-Bean Vinaigrette (photo below) shows off Chris’s prowess with southeast Asian/fusion cuisine. With its spicy components and rich textures (soft wood-ear mushrooms, steaming noodles, and lush salmon-like steelhead), this dish made a perfect pairing with the 2005 Holloran Vineyard Wines Chehalem Mt. Vineyard Riesling from Oregon’s Willamette Valley. The wine exhibited lovely petrol notes in the nose and fresh pear and tropical-fruit flavors in the mouth along with a slight sweetness, all backed by just the right amount of acidity and a resounding finish. www.flyingfishrestaurant.com

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SHORT TAKES

West Taps New Exec Chef

Warren Geraghty, one of London’s leading chefs, will make his Vancouver, BC, debut at West restaurant in South Granville early this month after the departure of Chef David Hawksworth last December. Geraghty was most recently chef at L’Escargot restaurant in Soho. Prior to that, he manned the stoves at Aurora, The Orrery, Chez Nico, and Pied à Terre in London. In Cannes, he worked alongside master chef Richard Neat as head chef at Restaurant Neat. While there, the London Evening Standard noted that Geraghty was “instrumental in obtaining the Michelin star.” You’ll find my thoughts on West, and a recipe from former chef Hawksworth, in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining (page 202). www.westrestaurant.com

Salty’s Good Ciao Dinner

In mid-January, under piercingly clear skies, and with the skyline of Seattle as a backdrop, a room full of foodies and wine lovers welcomed Italian chef Roberto Russo to Salty’s on Alki’s third annual “Under the Alki Moon” dinner. Rosso was in town to debut his new cookbook, Good Ciao: Recipes Embracing the Flavors of Tuscany, Umbria and the Pacific Northwest. Co-written with Salty’s co-owner Kathryn Kingen, the book is a beautiful four-color production containing 57 recipes from Russo and 12 from the chefs at the three Salty’s locations in Seattle and Portland. Recipes we sampled that evening included Chef Russo’s Tagliatelle with Chickpeas and Shrimp (paired with Alexandria Nicole Viognier) and Tuscan Soup (Fielding Hills Merlot). Salty’s on Alki Chef Jeremy McLachlan gifted the crowd with an outstanding Orange-Flavored Duck with Brussels Sprouts Salad, which award-winning Sommelier Tim O’Brien paired with Walter Clore Reserve Red. Sea Bass Three Ways (in the styles of three of Salty’s top toques) paired nicely with Chelan Estate Pinot Noir, and Chocolate Surprises by Salty’s on Alki über pastry chef Jane Gibson made a sweet match with Barnard Griffin Syrah Port (dessert pictured below). www.saltys.com

Award-Winning Hotel Vintage Plaza

Portland’s Hotel Vintage Plaza, which hosted me during my book-launch tour of the Rose City back in November, made the top-500 list in both Travel + Leisure’s 2008 World’s Best Hotels and Condé Nast Traveler’s 14th Annual Gold List. Not only was the hotel selected as one of the world’s best hotels by both publications, it was the only Portland hotel to make both lists. Known for its wide variety of unique luxury suites – including two-story townhouses and garden suites with outdoor hot tubs – the Kimpton-managed Hotel Vintage Plaza is an Oregon wine-themed boutique hotel that evokes the romance and adventure of wine country, offering packages like “Pinot in Portland” and “A Love Story.” www.vintageplaza.com

Be Chef-for-a-Day at Salish Lodge

Salish Lodge & Spa, located in Snoqualmie, Wash., has introduced a new component to its Culinary Adventures program: the Chef-for-a-Day series. These events enable guests of the luxurious hotel and spa to experience the craft of winemakers, cheese makers, and foragers by “walking a day in their shoes,” then creating their own artisan products. Each “adventure” promises to be an exhilarating and unique experience, a good way to get up-close-and-personal with local food and wine producers to taste of the bounty and rich beauty that is the culinary side of the Pacific Northwest. www.salishlodge.com

Saint-Germain Becomes La Côte Crêperie

February 18 is the debut date for La Côte Crêperie, in the former Saint-Germain space in Seattle’s Madison Park neighborhood just outside of downtown. Owner Laurent Gabrel, who also runs Voilà! Bistrot a few doors down, announced that his casual crêpe-themed resto will be open for lunch and dinner every day except Monday. The menu includes soups and salads, in addition to savory and dessert crêpes. I’ll be ordering La Baltique, which is stuffed with smoked salmon, crème fraîche, and scallions for dinner, and La Madison, brimming with vanilla ice cream and chestnut spread, for dessert. Suggested beverage pairings? Les Cidres—hard cider. Mais oui! You’ll enjoy reading more about Voilà Bistrot in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining, pages 6-7, and trying Gabrel’s sumptuous recipe for Blue Cheese Mussels. Or check out La Côte’s menu at www.voilabistrot.com/menu/CoteMenu.pdf

Dishing on UrbanSpoon

Seattle-based Urbanspoon.com offers users basic information about restaurants in major North American cities, along with interesting features such as the ability to compare reviews from mainstream restaurant critics alongside those of bloggers; maps of host cities at night, lighted by pinpointed restaurant locations; and the ability to create a list of friends to compare respective restaurant likes and dislikes. Among the cities on the UrbanSpoon network are Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, Portland, Seattle, and San Diego. The site, which celebrated its first anniversary in October, gets over two-million page views per month. www.urbanspoon.com

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DISH OF THE MONTH

Frank’s Veggie “Meatloaf,” one of chef/owner Kevin Davis’s signature dishes at Steelhead Diner in the Pike Place Market, appeals to vegetarians and meat-lovers alike thanks to its bold flavors, “meat-y” texture, and wide array of perfectly cooked eggplant, tomatoes, and several types of squash. The picholine olives, warm goat cheese, and broken tomato vinaigrette add additional enticing flavors and textures. Pair with a lighter, less tannic red wine, such as Shooting Star 2005 Blue Franc (a.k.a. Lemberger), from Washington State. Chef Kevin describes this wine as, “light, soft, and slightly fruity, which will compliment the acidity and richness of the dish.”

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SUPER SIPS

Mission Hill Family Estate Named as Top Canadian Winery

In December, one of the Northwest’s most beauteous wineries, Mission Hill Family Estate, was awarded 2007 Canadian Winery of the Year by Wine Access Magazine, Canada’s most respected wine publication. Mission Hill beat out 300 competitors for this honor. There is a lengthy profile and several dramatic photos of Mission Hill in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining, pages 242-246. There you will also discover winery chef Michael Allemeier’s recipe for Roasted Halibut with Shellfish Cioppino. Chef Allemeier is a Chef de Cuisine, Canada’s highest culinary honor. www.missionhillwinery.com

Wine Perception Linked to Price

In mid-January, Randolph E. Schmid, a writer with the Associated Press, reported that, “Apparently, raising the price really does make the wine taste better.” In his article, he goes on to suggest that, “The part of the brain that reacts to a pleasant experience responded more strongly to pricey wines than cheap ones—even when tasters were given the same vintage in disguise.” This comes as no surprise to this writer, because when wine writers are blind-folded or use black tasting glasses, they are sometimes unable to guess even if the wine is white or red! Read the article here.

Only in Seattle!

The “Insider” column on the Business page of the Seattle Times recently reported a story that is so “Seattle,” I had to share it with you. For only $89,000, EA Brevita Cooperative Association, based in Camano Island (about a 45-minute drive north from downtown Seattle) will sell you an eight-foot-by-14-foot drive-through coffee stand that the company will deliver on a flatbed truck anywhere in the lower 48 states. Presto-chango. Your own instant business! And good news, you can purchase your own coffee stand—lock, stock, and barrel—on Seattle’s own Amazon.com. There, the Web-site page promises, “Complete, self-contained business. Just pick your site and we’ll provide everything else you need to start your own espresso business.” Sign me up! www.amazon.com/EA-Brevita-Branded-Drive-Thru-Unit/dp/B0012OH7UE

NORTHWEST NOTES January 2008

January 1, 2008

NEWSY NOTES

Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining Update

Holiday sales for Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining were strong, fueled in part by a plethora of appearances in the Seattle area, at venues such as the third annual Tom Douglas Cookbook Social, Queen Anne Books, Third Place Books, The Tasting Room: Wines of Washington, and the venerable Elliott Bay Book Co., where I ended my Seattle book tour on December 16. The photo below shows my booksigning station at the Cookbook Social.

A week after the Cookbook Social, we enjoyed a half-hour chat in studio with Tom Douglas and Thierry Rautureau on their KIRO-AM radio show, “Tom Douglas’ Seattle Kitchen.” Here I am chatting up the book with hosts Tom and Thierry.

Spencer and I took off for eight days (and 18 meals!) in New York City over the holidays. There, I met up with my Web site designer, Chris Prouty, and wife Amy for some strategic planning of this Web site in 2008.

The next day, I enjoyed lunching with Justin Schwartz, the editor of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining, and Wiley publicist David Greenberg at Craftbar, a Manhattan hotspot in the Flat-Iron District. Having lunch with my editor in NYC was a long-held dream that capped three years of writing and production of my seventh book. Justin even blogged about our lunch. www.justcooknyc.blogspot.com Here’s a shot of my Calamari with Piquillo Pepper, Niçoise Olive, and Leek.

The day we left NYC for our flight out of Newark Airport, we made a slight detour through Hoboken and snapped a few photos at Wiley’s home office there.

January appearances include a booksigning and discussion at Eagle Harbor Book Co. on Bainbridge Island (a short ferry ride from downtown Seattle), and an appearance on National Public Radio Sunday Edition (broadcast date still TBD, so please stay tuned!).

And articles and reviews of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining continued to roll in during December. A lovely article by Seattle Post-Intelligencer food writer Rebekah Denn appeared on December 5. Seattle Post-Intelligencer article link.

And CeCe Sullivan chose Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining as one of her Top-10 holiday cookbooks. Seattle Times article link.

As did Angela Murrills, in British Columbia. Vancouver Strait article link.

And Kate Heyhoe reviewed Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining on the Web. GlobalGourmet.com article link.

To purchase a copy of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining, please go to your local bookseller or visit Amazon’s Web site, www.amazon.com

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Pike Place Market News

January and February are historically quiet months in the Market, when farmers take well-deserved holidays, and farmland lies fallow until spring. During these quiet months on the farm tables, make time to revisit the highstalls (the Market’s seven permanent fruit and vegetable stands), fishmongers, and specialty-food shops (such as DeLaurenti Specialty Food & Wine, The Souk, and Oriental Mart). Get to know the owners, ask questions, and discover some new, exciting ingredients to brighten your winter menus. Or pick up a copy of the Pike Place Market Cookbook or the Pike Place Public Market Seafood Cookbook for fresh recipe ideas from the Market’s leading farmers, fishmongers, restaurateurs, and chefs. www.pikeplacemarket.org

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RESTO REVIEWS

Northwest Wining and Dining Does New York City!
Over the holidays, we clocked 18 restaurants during eight days in the Big Apple, revisiting old favorites and discovering intriguing new places to swirl and sup. We were thrilled to find Washington wines by the glass at wd-50 and Church & Dey restaurants; less happy to discover “organic salmon” on several menus, which was described to us as “farm-raised Scottish salmon.” Hmmm. . .seems like the antithesis of “organic” to me!

At most restaurants, white wines were served way too cold (sometimes even offered in ice buckets), and wines were often opened away from the table, a practice that seemed really strange. Table service was, for the most part, however, impeccable. It’s really a joy to see professional servers who enjoy what they are doing and don’t share their names with you at the beginning of every meal. We also appreciated tasting menus offered at both lunch and dinner, men and women dressing up to dine, the city’s strict nonsmoking bans in restaurants and bars, reliable coat checks, and a New York Times article touting Oregon Pinot Gris. Another New York Times food-page column noted that many fine-dining chefs are opening smaller places with riskier menus, as opposed to food palaces, a trend I think we are beginning to see more and more in Seattle (e.g., Quinn’s gastropub, Txori, How to Cook a Wolf).

Here’s a brief rundown of our experiences and epiphanies along the very pleasurable way.

Best Meal: Aquavit
Chef Marcus Samuelsson’s shrine to Scandinavian cooking was our first, and proved to be our best, meal in New York City. From expert, unhurried service to a perfectly paced seven-course tasting menu to a thoughtful wine list, this meal won our hearts. We even enjoyed being “serenaded” by a table full of native Swedes singing their country’s national anthem after far too many shots of Aquavit, glasses of red wine, and snifters of Cognac! The photo below shows a luscious shot of Octopus with Smoked Avocado and Persimmon, the consummate blending of sweet, salty, sour, bitter, and umami. And yes, we did try an Aquavit flight with traditional (caraway), vegetable (cucumber), and fruit flavors (raspberry, which gave the Vodka-like drink a lovely rosy color). Bottoms up! www.aquavit.org

Fresh From the Farm: Blue Hill
We thank Kim Ricketts, owner/founder of Kim Ricketts Book Events in Seattle and San Francisco, for recommending this intimate resto just off Washington Square. The subterranean space, formerly a speakeasy (!), is reputedly a favorite of Microsoft employees when they visit NYC. We can see why—of all the places we tried during our visit, this rang the closest to Northwest cuisine thanks to its emphasis on farm-raised produce sourced from the Chef Dan Barber’s two farms, and other purveyors in the Hudson Valley. The Farmer’s Feast, at $72 per person, was a veritable bargain for food this well crafted and executed. We enjoyed Monkfish with Spicy Vegetables, Dried Fruit, and Pinenuts, as well as This Morning’s Farm Egg with Chicken Wings, Foraged Mushrooms, and Arugula. (The eggs, gathered every morning, are a signature dish on the menu, with fillings and toppings that change daily!) Below you will see the Grilled Hamachi with Baby Fennel, Basil and Preserved Lemon, surrounded by Warm Golden Raisin and Almond Vinaigrette. www.bluehillnyc.com

In a Class By Itself: Le Bernardin
A three-star Michelin restaurant should be special, and Le Bernardin lived up to its ranking, although at prices of $190 per person at lunch (!) for the Christmas Eve Tasting Menu ($340 per person with wine pairing), each dish should have been gold-plated. The menu was divided into Simply Raw, Lightly Cooked, and Main Course, and we chose an appetizer, main, and dessert for a much more reasonable $64 per person. My Warm Peekytoe-Maryland Lump “Crab Cake” with Shaved Cauliflower and Dijon Mustard Emulsion was like a baby’s fist of the softest, most buttery crabmeat with tiny, almost shaved slices of cauliflower, and a gentle mustard-y emulsion. Escolar (a hearty white fish with an oily texture) held up nicely when poached in extra virgin olive oil and served in a Light Red Wine Béarnaise. My main of Wild Striped Bass with Langoustine was served in a complex bouillabaisse consommé spiked with a spicy curry emulsion. Grouper was a simpler dish—served with Shiso-Matsutake Salad in a Lemon-Miso Broth. A surprise course of Organically Grown Farm-Raised Osetra Caviar on a Nest of Tagliolini, with a Quail Egg and Bacon Carbonara Sauce was one of our favorites. It’s shown (quivering yoke and all!) below. www.le-bernardin.com

Best Deal: The Tasting Menu at VONG
Open since 1992, VONG often gets a bad rap when compared to Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s newer, perhaps flashier (or more expensive) restos. It’s not even that difficult to obtain (or necessary) to make a reservation for dinner here. Still, after the stratospheric prices of some of the other tasting menus we’d had about town, to dine here for $70 per person ($40 per person extra with a flight of five wines, and well worth it) was a surprise. This was a value from the get-go, when they brought each of us the very generous appetizer plate and dipping sauces pictured below. A filling and relatively complex version of the classic Chicken and Coconut Milk Soup was next, served with a ball of jasmine rice on an pristine white Asian soup spoon (our server advised us to swirl the rice into the soup). An entrée-sized portion of Slow-Baked Salmon (I wonder if it was “organic?”) swam in a sweet-and-sour broth (which didn’t exhibit much of the flavor of either, unfortunately), and was overpowered by autumn veggies and dried-fruit chutney. Main courses of Soy-Glazed Venison and Crispy Tofu with Lily Bulb, Radish Salad, White Sesame, and Lavender were fine, but the signature dessert of Passion-Fruit Soufflé with Mango Ice Cream (which took the place of the more traditional Crème Anglaise) was sublime. www.jean-georges.com

Didn’t Hold Up to Memory: Café des Artistes
The wood nymphs still cavort in darkly suggestive murals on the walls, while elderly men in ties and jackets and women in fashionable suits chat in hushed tones, but both the menu and the wine list are seriously in need of an overhaul at the Café, which has always (at least until this trip) been one of our favorite go-to places in NYC. Salmon Four Ways (poached, smoked, rilletes, tartare) lived up to memory, the asparagus salad had an oddly thick and tasteless vinaigrette (should have opted for the Hollandaise), and the Dover sole was okay, but pretty uninspired. For dessert, even though it was a gut-buster, we managed to nibble on the berries and sop up every last drop of the rich chocolate sauce on the Hot Fudge Napoleon. www.cafenyc.com

Most Over-rated (Tie): Carnegie Deli and The Russian Tea Room
Like thousands of other holiday tourists (and probably even a few native New Yorkers) we waited “on line” in sub-freezing temperatures for lunch at the world-famous Carnegie Deli (a sign in the window boasted that the deli has been listed in the book, One Thousand Places to See Before You Die). Our “reward?” Cramped quarters, well-worn grade-school-like tables and chairs, and 80-year-old servers with an attitude (which I realize is part of the schtick, but still). If your idea of a world-class sandwich is a pile of meat served on fluffy Wonder-like rye bread in a boring plate presentation, then you can have my place “on line.” Even the pickles were bland, limp, and inedible! www.carnegiedeli.com

We were thrilled to see the Russian Tea Room (RTR) restored to its original location, graciousness, and glory; less thrilled at the hefty prices and small portions. Below you will see my $15 bowl o’ borscht. Made with a broth infused with braised short ribs (whose flavor was totally masked by the bright beet flavor), this was a mighty good bowl of soup, but still. Chicken Kiev, lamentably, didn’t squirt butter in a dramatic stream when the Cossack-costumed server cut into it with the tip of his sharp knife. Even the tea service, in all its silver-plated splendor and at $10 per person, disappointed, with the “Russian Country” tea in cheap tea bags instead of properly infused in a tea ball or paper sachet. www.russiantearoomnyc.com

Play With Your Food: wd-50
Chef Wylie Dufresne (the “wd” in the restaurant’s name, which is located at 50 Clinton Street—get it?) enjoys playing with his food, turning “normal” ingredients into creative building blocks in dishes such as Popcorn Soup with Shrimp, Jicama, and Tamarind (better than it sounds!) or Smoked Eel with Salsify, Guava, and Puffed Yuzu. Of course, going off the tried-and-true path sometimes leads to stumbles, as in the dish below: Scallops with Black Trumpet Mushrooms, Cranberry Leather (!), Pecan, and Spice-Bread Consomme. Too many flavors and textures simply overwhelmed the poor scallops, who seemed to want to swim out of their star-anise-powered broth. Luckily, Toasted Coconut Cake with Carob, Smoked Hazelnut, and Brown Butter Sorbet finished this playful meal on a sweet note. The wine list is outstanding and innovative (with bottles from boutique wineries across the globe), and as long as your arm. www.wd-50.com

Best See and Be Seen (Tie): Craftbar and Bouley
As my editor explained when we were trying to choose a place for lunch in Manhattan, “Craftbar is the (only slightly) less expensive sister restaurant to Chef/Owner Tom Colicchio’s Craft,” which is located around the corner and which has also spawned several locations of ‘wichcraft,” a casual sandwich bar, in tony NYC neighborhoods. “Snacks” on Craftbar’s menu included LEGO-like stacks of Chickpea Fries with Black Olive Aïoli and Pecorino-Stuffed Risotto Balls in Marinara Sauce. Sandwiches, such as the Chicken with Apple, Brie, and Cucumber, are massive wedges, properly grilled panini-style. My appetizer of Calamari with Piquillo Pepper, Niçoise Olive, and Leek was pretty, if not terribly infused with flavor from the smoky piquillos. One of the best desserts I tried in New York City came out of pastry chef Karen DeMasco’s oven: her Brown Sugar Cake with Roasted Pear and Eggnog Ice Cream was both soothing and homey, and very fitting for the holiday season. www.craftrestaurant.com/craftbar.html

Things got off to a bad start for us at Bouley, the Tribeca flagship resto of much-touted Chef David Bouley, after our request for seating side by side was overlooked and we were moved from the main “red” dining room to the “white” room. People-watching was still good, but no doubt would have been even better in the main room. Servers seemed somehow haughty yet intimidated by the moneyed crowd, there really wasn’t any dish that stands out in memory here, and everything had a pretty steep price tag for portion size and execution (apps $16-29 and mains $38-44). www.davidbouley.com

Best French Bistro (Tie): Brasserie Les Halles Park Avenue and Pastis
We had a wonderful meal at Pastis, an authentic French bistro that reminded us so much of lively meals we’ve enjoyed in Paris at Le Dome and La Coupole. I had a Staub cast-iron pot full of big, plump mussels steamed in Pernod, and Spencer had a grilled whole Branzino that was perfectly cooked and deboned. A bottle of reasonably priced Gigondas and a slice of Bûche de Noël ended the night on a sweet note, and the place was absolutely packed (and not just with tourists). We walked over and back from our Soho hotel, and enjoyed seeing a bit of the trendy Meat-Packing District en route. www.pastisny.com

Brasserie Les Halles, which still lists Travel Channel superstar Tony Bourdain as “chef-at-large” on its Web site, was a bit more of a walk from our hotel in Soho, but no less inviting, with great people-watching at the bar, closely packed tables (lots of food comparing among neighboring tables and photographing by the young Japanese women to our left), and perfectly prepared French bistro-style food. We shared escargots in garlic butter to begin, roasted chicken with endive salad (instead of thin frites) formed my dinner, while Spencer went for a pepper steak with frites. Chocolate Mousse was dense and rich—we almost licked the bowl clean. www.leshalles.net

Best Breakfast: Balthazar
For our final meal in New York City, an expertly rolled Omelette Avec Fines Herbes, Eggs Benedict, and strong coffee at this 200-seat, perfectly aged and choreographed French-style bistro were enough to hold us for eight hours before our plane ride back to the Emerald City. www.balthazarny.com

Best Farmers’ Market: Union Square Greenmarket
I felt in my element at this world-famous farmers’ market, which is open four days a week and attracts upwards of 250,000 customers each week during the growing season. We particularly enjoyed the Pennsylvania Dutch pretzels, freshly pressed pear cider, and the elderly gentlemen selling “the world’s sharpest vegetable peelers” on the corner, two for $10. An added bonus from Thanksgiving until Christmas Eve is the Union Square Holiday Market, which features arts and crafts from 100 vendors. www.unionsquarejournal.com/greenmarket.htm

Fun for the Young and the Young at Heart: Max Brenner
Max Brenner, a.k.a. the Bald Man of Chocolate, is creating a “chocolate culture” just off Union Square (with a second location in NYC, and numerous locations in Australia and in southeast Asia). Among the huge vats of warm, swirling chocolate, Max’s Chocolate Shop, Chocolate Bakery, and Dining Room create a Willy Wonka ambience with savory food and a completely chocolate-centric menu (s’mores, fondue, chocolate decadence, chocolate drinks, etc.). We discovered what may be the world’s best hot chocolate (choose from milk, dark, or white) served in a specially designed “hug mug,” which supposedly enhances the sensory experience of hot chocolate, including hand-warming, sniffing, and spooning thanks to its unique egg-shaped bowl and saucer. www.maxbrenner.com

Just for Fun: The M&M Store on Times Square
Skip the entire Disney-esque first floor of branded M&M products downstairs and head up the escalator for your choice of every color of everybody’s favorite “melt-in-your-mouth, not-in-your-hand” candy. Mix up a bag of your favorites (make mine light purple, dark chocolate, and almond), or you can even have them personalized with your own special message! www.mymms.com

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SHORT TAKES

West Chef Opens New Restaurant in 2009
In early December, David Hawksworth, award-winning chef at West restaurant in Vancouver, British Columbia, announced plans to open his first restaurant at the revitalized Hotel Georgia, a landmark property in the heart of downtown Vancouver at the corner of West Georgia and Howe Streets.

The heritage hotel first opened its doors in 1927. During its heyday in the 1950s and 60s, the hotel’s Cavalier Grill, under chef Xavier Hetzman, was known as the restaurant in town. It was a social hub hosting Howe Street brokers, lawyers and judges from the nearby law courts, along with Hollywood legends and visiting royalty. Some 50 years later, Chef Hawksworth plans to restore the restaurant to its former glory and recapture some of the era’s glamour.

You’ll find David’s recipe for Smoked Sablefish with Spiced Cherry Tomato Vinaigrette in Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining (page 202).

Kaspar’s Champagne Dinner
Local foodies were heartbroken several years ago, when Kaspar’s restaurant morphed into Kaspar’s Special Events & Catering, and closed the wine bar and dinner service. Since then, the elegant restaurant has been open for holiday dining and winemaker dinners. Last month, we enjoyed the annual Champagne and Northwest Sparkling Wine dinner, which featured both one Northwest, two French, and one New Mexico (!) sparkler.

Strolling the glittery dining room between courses, Chef Kaspar seemed in his element among his long-time customers, as Champagne corks popped merrily in the background. The Butternut Squash, Dungeness Crab, and Sherry Chowder was superior (I heard a doctor at the next table say it was the best soup he ever had, and I’d be quick to agree), a trio of hummus dips were intriguing (my fave was the celery root/lemon, especially with the lemon-y notes of the Domaine Ste. Michelle’s top-line Luxe!), and Kaspar’s Kasu Black Cod (marinated in sake lees) has always been one of the best around town, especially when paired with Veuve Clicquot.

Because I don’t eat beef, Kaspar prepared a hearty tuna fillet for me, along with a complex and earthy Jerusalem artichoke (a.k.a sunchoke) and mushroom hash. The beef-lover in the family enjoyed his Roast Beef Shoulder with Port Wine Peppercorn Sauce. Dessert was an old-fashioned delight, from the Chestnut/Hazelnut/Bitter Chocolate Cake (great combo!) to the banana-rum ice cream. The next special events offered by Kaspar include a Steppe Cellars/Chinook Wines Winemaker Dinner on January 26, a Valentine’s Day cooking class on February 2, and Valentine’s Day dinner on January 14. Kaspar’s recipe for Butternut Squash and Oregon Blue Cheese Lasagne, which appears on page 58 of the Pike Place Market Cookbook, Second Edition, “is an intriguing mix of meltingly tender winter squash, lush blue-cheese cream sauce, blanched spinach, and earthy hazelnuts.” Mmmmm. . . .www.kaspars.com

New Culinary Tours Showcase Seattle’s Top Restaurants
From June through September 2008, visitors to Seattle can experience the diversity of the region’s local cuisine on a culinary tour with a premier chef from a top Seattle restaurant. Gray Line of Seattle has organized eight different culinary tours, including popular restaurants such as Crush, Palisades, and El Gaucho.

“People are looking for personal, interactive experiences during their vacations,” said Judy Sprute, Gray Line of Seattle’s director of sales. “We expect these tours to sell out quickly because they offer a very intimate experience with chefs at well-known Seattle restaurants. It’s a unique way to experience the city.”

The Chef will greet participants at the Sheraton Seattle Hotel and accompany them on a deluxe touring coach to their chosen market, be it Pike Place Market, a neighborhood farmer’s market, or local grocery. After shopping for the day’s ingredients, it’s off to the restaurant for a lively cooking demonstration and recipe sampling. Tours begin at 1:00 p.m., last about four hours, and cost $99.95 per person. www.graylineofseattle.com

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DISH OF THE MONTH

A luncheon combo offered at Shuckers, the seafood-centric restaurant in the Fairmont Olympic in downtown Seattle, definitely caught our eye and sated our appetites. For $10 for a Duo (two items) and $15 for a Trio (three items), you can choose among eight popular items on Shuckers lunch menu to create your own tasting plate. We had to have Shuckers Seafood Chowder (a rich tomato-based seafood stew), the Dungeness Crab Melt, and the Lusciously Loaded Louie (seafood salad) paired with a glass of Cloudline Pinot Gris from the Willamette Valley. www.fairmont.com

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SUPER SIPS

DeLille Cellars Honored on Three Top-100 End-of-Year Lists
As 2007 drew to a close, Woodinville, Washington-based DeLille Cellars pulled off an oenological hat trick, being distinguished on the Top-100 lists of Wine Spectator, Wine Enthusiast, and the Robb Report. It is an honor that no other winery in the world claimed in 2007. DeLille was one of only four Washington State wineries named to the Robb Report list of Top 100 Wineries of the World in 2007. “While DeLille makes several Rhône-style whites, its big, lusciously layered Bordeaux reds steal the show. The Harrison Hill (2004) is especially gratifying, with voluminous tannins, round black cherry, and smoky depth.”

DeLille’s 2004 D2 (Columbia Valley) was recognized in Wine Spectator’s list of the 100 most exciting wines of 2007. Throughout the year, Wine Spectator editors assessed in excess of 15,000 wines in blind tastings and narrowed down their favorites to this diverse list of 100, hailing from 13 countries. Only four were from Washington wineries.

Lest DeLille’s whites feel slighted, the editors of Wine Enthusiast selected the 2005 Chaleur Estate Blanc as one of their Top 100 Wines of 2007, noting, “The 100 wines…are of such outstanding quality and craftsmanship that cellaring them for a few years is an option, but all are ready to be enjoyed now.”

“It would have been great to be included on just one of these Top 100 lists, but to make three simultaneously is a terrific honor,” says Greg Lill. “It’s fair to say we’re pretty excited; we’re honored to be the only winery in the world to have achieved this.” You’ll find DeLille winemaker/partner Chris Upchurch’s recipe for Butternut Squash Bisque on page 45 of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining. www.delillecellars.com

Below is a photo of DeLille winemaker/partner Chris Upchurch and me signing books at the winery’s Fall Open House last November.

Cyril Frechier Named Campagne and Café Campagne Sommelier
In December, long-time Seattle sommelier and wine educator Cyril Frechier joined the team at Campagne restaurant and Café Campagne in the Pike Place Market.

Most recently, Frechier had been the Northwest Sales Manager for Robert Kacher Selections, responsible for French boutique wine sales in the Pacific Northwest. From 1990 to 2007, he was the wine director and general manager of Seattle’s acclaimed Rover’s restaurant. Frechier was also an instructor at South Seattle Community College between the years of 2004 and 2006.

“Cyril brings tremendous experience and presence to Campagne that beautifully complements both the style of dishes from Chef Daisley Gordon and the quality dining experience on which we have built our reputation,” says General Manager Gordon Kushnick. “Cyril will obviously focus on the wines of France, but will also enhance our domestic wine list, as well as wines from the Pacific Northwest.” You’ll find Chef Daisley Gordon’s recipe for Lamb Burgers with Balsamic Onions, Roasted Peppers, and Aïoli on page 98 of the Pike Place Market Cookbook, Second Edition. www.campagnerestaurant.com

Wine Spectator Chooses Abacela Among Top Wines
The December 31, 2007, issue of the Wine Spectator chose a handful of wines from France, New Zealand, Australia, and the United States for inclusion in its “best-of” list.
Of the Abacela Tempranillo Southern Oregon “Estate” 2004, contributing editor Matt Kramer said, “The wine of the year from Oregon is not Pinot Noir from Willamette Valley but Tempranillo, of all grapes, from Abacela Vineyards and Winery in southern Oregon (really, the Umpqua Valley). Never heard of it? You should and, over time, you will. The reason is simple: This is stunning Tempranillo. Mind you, I’m not talking about how it’s a good-for-an-American Tempranillo—this is Tempranillo that can take on all the high-ranking Spanish Tempranillos. Who knew that southern Oregon had a vocation for this variety? Nobody did until Earl and Hilda Jones rolled in from Pensacola, Fla., in the mid-1990s with a passion for Spanish grape varieties and a conviction that southern Oregon was the place to grow them. They were right. And this dense, luscious, refined red wine—redolent of plums, blackberries and spices—proves it. (Abacela’s Viognier, Albarino, and Malbec are top notch as well.)” You’ll find Abacela co-owner Hilda Anderson’s recipe for Dungeness Crab with Ginger-Cilantro Mayonnaise on page 164 of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining. www.abacela.com

“Breathable Glass” Proves Convincing
In November, German glassmaker Eisch Glaskultur hosted a special event with Master Sommelier and Master of Wine Ronn Wiegand and renowned wine writer Dan Berger at the Culinary Institute of America (CIA) in the Napa Valley. Napa wine-industry professionals were invited to sample Eisch’s newest product, the “Breathable Glass” fine-wine glass.

“We held this event to provide industry professionals the opportunity to experience for themselves how a wine poured into one of our ‘Breathable Glass’ wine glasses will within two to four minutes show signs of aeration equivalent to a wine that has been decanted and aerated for one to two hours,” explained Alan Zalayet, Partner and President of Export for Eisch Glaskultur.

“I was, of course, skeptical at first of the claims that [Eisch Breathable glasses] softened wine and enhanced their characteristics within just a few minutes,” said Wiegand. “But I found that they actually do. This is a real contribution to the enjoyment of wine.”

Eisch Glaskultur “Breathable Glass” wine glasses (SRP $19 – $26) are currently available at retail at Bed, Bath & Beyond (www.bedbathandbeyond.com) and at Macy’s headquarter stores nationwide. www.eisch.de/de/frameset/frameset.php

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ON THE HORIZON

Interesting upcoming events in the Pacific Northwest and beyond include the following:

Thursday, January 10, 7:30 p.m.:
Booksigning and Discussion of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining
Eagle Harbor Book Co.
Bainbridge Island, WA
www.eagleharborbooks.com

Saturday, January 19:
The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry “Science in the Kitchen: An Evening with the Nation’s Top Culinary Alchemists”
The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry
Portland, OR
www.osmi.edu

Monday, January 21:
Spanish Wine Dinner
Madison Park Café
Seattle, WA
www.madisonparkcafe.citysearch.com

Saturday, January 26:
A Celebration of Washington Wines Black-Tie Reception, Dinner, and Auction
Chateau Ste. Michelle
Woodinville, WA
www.wineauction.wsu.edu

Saturday, January 26:
The Oregon Truffle Festival Grand Truffle Dinner
Valley River Inn
Eugene, OR
www.oregontrufflefestival.com

Saturday, January 26:
Fifth Annual Winter Wine Gala
Wenatchee Valley Museum & Cultural Center
Wenatchee, WA
www.wvmcc.org

Sunday, January 27:
The Extraordinary Dining Society, “Power and Personality: The Singular Wines of the Rhône Valley” Wine Dinner
Crush
Seattle, WA
www.extraordinarydiningsociety.com

Wednesday, January 30:
Yappy Hour! Paws for Love (Wine Tasting with Dogs)
Urban Wineworks
Portland, OR
www.urbanwineworks.com

Friday, February 1:
Fifth Annual Platinum Wine Dinner, Celebrating Wine Press Northwest’s 2007 Platinum-Award-Winning Wines, Plus a Booksigning and Discussion of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining
Columbia Tower Club
Seattle, Washington
$137 inclusive per person
www.columbia-tower.com

Saturday, February 9, 11:30 a.m.
Booksigning and Discussion of Pacific Northwest Wining & Dining
Molbak’s
Woodinville, WA
www.molbaks.com

Friday, February 15 through Monday, February 18, 2008
Red Wine & Chocolate
Multiple Locations
Yakima Valley, Washington
www.visityakima.com

Tuesday, February 26 through Saturday, March 1:
Classic Wines Winemaker Dinners and Annual Auction
Various Portland Restaurants (Winemaker Dinners) and the Oregon Convention Center (Auction)
Portland, OR
www.classicwinesauction.com

Friday, February 29:
20something: the new vintage (Washington Wine Commission event)
W Hotel Seattle
Seattle, WA
www.thenewvintage.org

Friday, February 29:
First Annual Vegetarian Winemaker Dinner
Urban Wineworks
Portland, OR
www.urbanwineworks.com

Monday, March 10:
The Extraordinary Dining Society Wine Dinner
Lark
Seattle, WA
www.extraordinarydiningsociety.com

Thursday, April 3:
The Extraordinary Dining Society Dessert Wine Dinner
The Herbfarm
Woodinville, WA
www.extraordinarydiningsociety.com

Saturday and Sunday, April 5 and 6:
Taste Washington
Bell Harbor International Conference Center 
and Qwest Events Center
Seattle, WA
www.tastewashington.org

Saturday, April 26:
Winemaker Dinner featuring Cathedral Ridge Winery (2007 Oregon Winery of the Year from Wine Press Northwest magazine)
The Cellar on 10th
Astoria, OR
www.thecellaron10th.com

Sunday, May 18:
The Extraordinary Dining Society Perfectly Aged Wines Wine Dinner
Rover’s
Seattle, WA
www.extraordinarydiningsociety.com

The Icewine Cometh

January 1, 2008

Tourism BC sent out the following notice that will appeal to all lovers of ice wine: To take the chill off the winter months, Sun Peaks Resort celebrates the season by blending wine, seasonal menus and plenty of outdoor play during one unforgettable week: the annual Sun Peaks Icewine Festival.  Set for sipping January 12 – 17, this picturesque alpine village pops the corks on a fleet of Icewine and late harvest wines during a mix of casual and intimate events sure to tantalize.  Indeed, this gathering of grape expectations will feature Winemasters’ Dinners at various Sun Peaks restaurants as well as the Sun Peaks Progressive Tasting, a flagship event which offers cool wines and crisp mountain air as guests wander the village during an evening of tasting and touring.  All You Need is Cheese…for Dessert will pair some of the best aged cheeses with Okanagan dessert wines, while Sinful Chocolate & Heavenly Wine poses the question of light versus dark as the perfect complement for vintage offerings.  If it’s all about the main attraction, Icewines & Nothing More promises pure liquid gold with a seminar set to sample the best the Okanagan Valley has to offer.  Coffee and wine?  It’s the perfect way to end the meal, and Taste the Aromas of Coffee & Wine with Starbucks will couple six roasts with an equal number of wines to show you how it’s done.  As a perfect finish, package it all together with a combination of sleeping, skiing and sipping with an array of Sun Peaks stays.  Just don’t forget to take in the Icewine Brunch on the week’s final morning – and savour those last few golden sips.  www.sunpeaksresort.com

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