Thursday, November 29, 2007

Enormous White Truffle found

Enormous white truffle weighing over 1.5 kilos found near Pisa by a mongrel dog called Rocco. It is being auctioned in Hong Kong and may make as much as 150,000 euros.

Brings back memories of early November last year sitting in an agro tourismo (grow much of their own food) restaurant in Barberesco drinking Barberesco with 10g of white truffle grated on my home made pasta for a supplement of about 27 euro! boy was it worth it - how often do you get to sit in such a restaurant in truffle season.

Ramsey is offering it on his risotto in Powerscourt charging similar amounts but crucially not always telling his customers how much extra they will have to pay (according to Liveline on Wednesday - http://www.rte.ie/radio1/liveline/). I know where I would rather eat white truffle given the choice...

see article here:
http://www.stuff.co.nz/4292214a19716.html
and here:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/italy/story/0,,2216999,00.html

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Ferreira Vintage Port 1985 - for 15 Euro!!


Had to post this as it is the best wine bargain I have ever seen in 20 years of dilligently searching through wineshops large and small in Ireland, England, France and the US...

Selected Molloys Liquor Stores are selling off this lovely vintage port at 2 bottles for 30 euro. That is an incredible 15 euro per bottle... - you would barely get Sandymans Ruby for that price. I bought mine in Nutgrove (now out of stock) and in Tallaght (still has a few I think). You could try ringing around but dont bother with Leopardstown as he has only three bottles and had heard nothing of the deal. He is still selling his last three bottles at the old price of 30 euro (still between one third and one fifth of what the port is worth). In Nutgrove they told me they were just trying to offload it as they dont sell much.

1985 is considered a good year and probably the best of the 1980s (according to Michael Broadbent who rates the year and this port highly). Ferreira are probably the best known of the Portuguese houses (as opposed to the English ones like Taylors and Dow) and have a good reputation. They are now owned by Sogrape (who own Offley and Sandeman).

Tasting Note - The 85 is still showing a deep ruby colour despite its 22 years and has aromas of carmelised apple, toffee, sweet prunes and baked plums. The initial taste is rich and sweet which develops into attractive sherry notes on the middle palate and with a rich fruity finish. This is quite a sweet style (typical of the Portuguese houses), is immensely drinkable, and will keep for at least another 20 years and probably longer.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Riesling and Pinot Noir

Thanks to my relative poverty at the moment I will not be visiting too many restaurants over the next month so to compensate expect more things about drink including bottles drunk at home or at my wine clubs. So first off Riesling and Pinot.

Champagne Charles Orban, Blanc de Noirs O'Briens €23.99
White Wines - RieslingPeter Lehmann, Australia 2005 Corks €9.50
Grosset, Australia – Polish Hill, Clare Valley 2006 Gift from PRoycroft Approx €28.00
Hugel, Alsace 2005 Vintry Rathgar €15.95

Red Wines - Pinot Noir
Cono Sur, Chili 2006 O'Briens €8.99
Bourgogne, France – Louis Jadot 2005 O'Briens €13.99
Delta, New Zealand –Marlborough Donnybrook Fair €16.99
Gevrey Chambertin, Burgundy, Domain Thierry Mortet 2003 Donnybrook Fair €46.00

Jackie opened the evening with a lovely champagne blanc de noirs (somade only from the black grapes of champagne (pinot noir and pinotmeunier, thus excluding chardonnay). This had earthy aromas and aprominent yeast overlay with touches of hazelnuts. a very goodchampagne - especially for the money. For the rieslings we got theusual aromas but in unexpected places - the dirt cheap Peter Lehmanhad apple and petrol (what you expect) while the Grosset Polish Hillfrom the clare valley was riper with pear and fruit flavours and goodsearing acidity. Grosset are one of the great riesling makers and abenchmark wine so it was interesting to taste with the Hugel which wasdistinctly floral in character and significantly lighter in texture.to be fair this was their basic blend and you would get moreinteresting (and representative) flavours from their premium Rieslings(or from say Trimbach Cuvee Frederic Emile).

Reds started with simple but very drinkable cherry fruit from Cono Sur and had an unlikely star in the Louis Jadot bog standard bourgogne which had loads of classic pinot character - cherries mixed withearthy tones and subtle fruit. The Gevrey Chambertin (from one of thebetter producers in the region - though his brother Denis Mortet isconsidered more important) was interesting and you could tell it hadmore going on but then it would want to given that it was three timesthe price (3.2857 times the price according to my calculator). TheNew Zealander was much riper (pinot always ripens easier in newzealand thanks to the light) but I confess I didnt write much aboutit. the bottle had been open a day or two and given the importance offragrance to pinot (the first thing to go as a wine gets exposed tothe air) i think it had probably suffered a little.

All in all if you were to test riesling and pinot noir you would goexactly to the places Jackie went so a very useful and representativetasting. you could also go to Germany for riesling (if you could findanyone selling the stuff) or maybe to oregon or washington state (ifyou wanted to throw a load of money at the issue). Carneros inCalifornia is one other place worth considering but again be prepared to pay for anything decent.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Rhodes D7

Rhodes D7, Capel Street, Dublin 7 - www.rhodesd7.com tel: 353 1 804 4444

My first visit back to Rhodes D7 in over a year and things have changed - for the better. It could be my memory but the menu seemed much longer this time and included enough interesting dishes that I had difficulty making up my mind what to choose. And even more importantly the portions are larger and prices seem lower, or at least more in proportion.

Many Irish people resented the idea of a cheeky chappy celebrity chef invading our city and suggesting by his mere presence that he could do better than us (of course he never implied any such thing - he just wanted to expand his empire and make more money and who can blame him for that?). Personally if the food is good and service polite and efficient I don't care who owns the place. I'm not pushed on the Oirish elements of the decor on the way to the loo (olde dublin photos of street urchins playing happily outside their tenements while granddad dies slowly of consumption inside) but sure Gary is only trying his best to fit in and this is what they told him we would like.

The classic complaint is "but where is gary rhodes if its his name over the door??" again, who cares if the food is good. The food on the menu is clearly Gary Rhodes with the emphasis on local ingredients and new spins on classic English (and Irish) dishes (yes lots of Irish ingredients such as crubeens, ardsallagh cheese, clonakilty black pudding, soda bread etc.).

The problem with La Stampa was not the non-appearance of JC Novelli, it was that the food was crap. New Yorkers dont expect Thomas Keller to bi-locate and be a constant presence in Per Se and the French Laundry and neither do the citizens of Montecarlo and Paris (not to mention New York, Tokyo, Las Vegas and Beirut) expect as much from Alain Ducasse.

The rumour mill has been (gleefully) suggesting that the restaurant was not doing well at lunchtime (surely something they banked on given the vast numbers of hungry legal people in the area with plenty of money to spend on lunch) and barely surviving during the week. We ate at 2.30 on a Friday and there were around 30 people in the restaurant - I realise official Dublin lunch break was over but I reckoned there would be more.

The location has been criticised but I am not really sure why given that it is literally a stones throw from the winding stair and Mick Wallaces' Quartier Bloom and the various Polish pubs, bakeries and restaurants have definitely improved Capel street. When it opened there was a certain superciliousness evident and not a little arrogance it seemed to me. Pricing was too high, portions too small and staff just seemed far too pleased with themselves. Hopefully this last is also a thing of the past as our waiter was pleasant and attentive (though he did do my least favourite thing - he asked if we wanted to taste the wine - of course we fucking do).

Anyway to the food...
For starters we could have ordered beef carpaccio, smoked eel, duck confit or potted crab among other things but we went for Crispy sliced ham hock filled Crubeens with piccalilli and baby gem salad €7.50 and Mushroom, Celeriac and Truffle Risotto €9.50. The slices of crumbed deep fried crubeen stuffed with ham hock were sticky and meaty exactly as they should be and although the piccalilli overpowered them a little they managed to hold their own. The risotto was correctly cooked and tasted rich and creamy with good seasoning - both plates wiped clean.

Our bottle of Telmo Rodriguez Rueda was a lovely tangy fresh mouthful with not a little depth. The wine list is another thing that has much improved since my last visit by the way.

For Mains we ordered Slow roast pork belly with Clonakilty black pudding, caramelised apple
and parsnip colcannon €18.90 and Roast Guinea fowl, wild mushroom and leek fettuccine with pan fried foie gras €22.50. The belly pork portion could have been larger but was the perfect texture with a touch of caramelisation on the top and creamy melting pork beneath, complemented by the clonakilty pudding and the apple with an extra layer of flavour added by the mash. The Guinea fowl was relatively moist (no mean feat with this bird) and the baby fist sized piece of foie gras carmelised on the exterior but delicate and moist on the interior. The fettuccine was a good foil, if a little bland. I can think of no restaurant in Dublin that offers fresh foie gras in any dish for even close to this price so Rhodes is to be praised highly for a) having it on the menu in these politically correct times and b) not overcharging - in fact undercharging.

For Dessert we shared a Passion fruit panna cotta cheesecake, mango and vanilla salad and ginger shortbread €7.90 to share and had a glass each of Muscat de Beaumes de Venise for €5.50 per glass. The wine could not cope with the searing acidity in the passion fruit or the over-spiced ginger shortbread but it fared better with the panna cotta. The dessert had too many loud clashing flavours to be called successful but it was not a disaster either.

So I am not recommending you drive from cork to get to the restaurant but if you are in the area there are many many worse places you could eat for a lot more money.

PS a year ago the "chips" were dreadful hunks of undercooked potato an inch thick and I forgot to enquire if they were still going for this style instead of the crispy ones we all want - so make sure to ask before you order the good value sounding 10oz striploin with Bearnaise for €23.90.

Friday, November 2, 2007

Another Reason to bring your kids to Ratatouille


So finally a gratuitous pic of my seven year old Grellan who was inspired enough by Ratatouille to want to help me cook dinner. This is genuinely the first time he has wanted to create something rather than just help me chop or stir. The dishes in the pic are of his own creation and were our starters this evening. On the right is Cinte Senese Ham (see here to understand why this is special - http://www.slow-food.info/cinta_senese.htm) a gift from our Italian friend Giulio who stayed with us recently but it was Grellan's idea to arrange it on top of peeled apple and top with chopped sage and drizzle with olive oil. He did have help in choosing sage over basil, rosemary, mint, thyme and marjoram (the fresh herbs available) but the apple-proscuito combination was his own. As for the olive oil he knew it needed something and he just needed to be nudged in that direction. On the left is just cut apple drizzled with maple syrup and lemon juice which was his own starter. He did taste the ham but hated it - he will come around... give him time.

Next we had steak frites with very well hung sirloin from Christy's butcher on Terenure Road North - sawdust on the floor, non-organic butcher that is half the price of the supermarkets and a third the price of his neighbours in the village; O'Tooles and Downeys. Steak was fried for about a minute or two on each side and rested in the oven set at 60 degrees C. We bought enough steak for 3 greedy people or 4 normal people for 12.50. Frites were blanched at 140 degrees, cooled down in the beer fridge (the crappy old fridge in the garage for party wine and beer) and then fried at 190 degrees for about 30 seconds til crisp. sauce was a splash of white wine, a spoonful of creme fraiche and the juices from the resting meat.
for dessert we had mars bar ice cream - dont knock it til you try it...

Ratatouille

Just returned from a trip to Ratatouille with a 3, 6, 7 and 9 year old. It truly is as good as you have been hearing. A little long for the 3 year old but he still loved it as much as the other three, but it is likely that none of them loved it as much as me.

The attention to detail in the animation is phenomenal from the fine ridges on the sliced leeks to the tiny droplets of water on the rat''s fur to the texture of the sauces. This film takes food and chefs seriously unlike virtually all hollywood films. The dishes sound right and look right and the characterisation is realistic. The wines are a little on the extravagent side - Cheval Blanc 47, Latour 61 etc but in the spirit of the film - or rather the scene (and movie) stealing food critic Anton Ego voiced perfectly by Peter O'Toole. O'Toole is given some fantastic lines and on the true nature of the critic.... quote below from http://www.imdb.com/

"In many ways, the work of a critic is easy. We risk very little yet enjoy a position over those who offer up their work and their selves to our judgment. We thrive on negative criticism, which is fun to write and to read. But the bitter truth we critics must face is that, in the grand scheme of things, the average piece of junk is more meaningful than our criticism designating it so."

uncomfortable but true words. (Nerd alert - For his meal in the restaurant O'Toole orders Ch. Cheval Blanc '47 but at the end there is a bottle of Ch. Lafite and a Ch. Latour on the table. Perhaps they were out of the Cheval blanc given that it is one of the world's most sought after wines (the cheapest on http://www.winesearcher.com/ is around 2000 euro per bottle), and offered him Lafite instead - I certainly wouldn't have complained but they say the '47 Lafite is tiring so I would have looked for the 1945 or the 1959.... I confess I rely on Michael Broadbent and others rather than my own experience!)

The film uses sounds and images to explain how combining flavours (say charantais melon and parma ham) can lead you from individual perfect notes to a symphony so kids will actually learn something while laughing uproariously.

Bottom line - this is up there with Babettes Feast and Eat Drink Man Woman and way better than Big Night, Tampopo, or star vehicles like Woman on Top and Simply Irresistiable (despite the charms of Penelope Cruz and Sarah Michelle Gellar)

Mulcahys Kenmare

Mulcahys, 16 Henry Street, Kenmare, 064 42383.

Kenmare is one of the restaurant capitals of the country and really is a gorgeous place to visit. The Park Hotel, the Sheen Falls, Packies, Prego, Bricin, the Lime Tree etc.

Mulcahys has had some of the best reviews of recent times and was open on Sunday night last so we had to go. The menu seems rather conventional at first glance with steak, fresh cod, lemon sole, black sole etc. but dont let this put you off. For starters we ordered sushi and scallops and prawn terrine. Sushi was as good as any I have tasted and better than Aya in my view. I have never been to Japan or Masa in the Time Warner building so am not claiming sushi expertise but this was a generous portion, elegantly presented and just 11 euro.

My terrine was served warm (I had expected a cold terrine for some reason) and again eleganly cooked and full of flavour and great value at 11 euro.

I had dithered over ordering the black sole but decided to see what the kitchen could do with the generally inferior lemon sole which was 18.95. The sole was perfection - barely cooked, correctly seasoned and as good or better than 90 per cent of the black sole I have tasted. Cod was also perfectly cooked and steak for the 7 year old was a good hunk of perfectly pink meat, again perfectly seasoned. Veg. were proper croquettes, crispy home made frites and cumin flavoured mashed turnip - even the 7 year old ate this up. Desserts of chocolate brownie home made toffee sauce and perfect ice cream left us totally stuffed. A bottle of dry tokaii and a bill E. 135.90 - perfect...