Posts Tagged champagne

The Drinks World

As we tune out and wind down, let’s not forget how the beverage world has changed this decade. Very few people carried individual water bottles wherever they went. Did they even sell those 35-pak cases at Costco? OK, I know not everyone recycles, but drinking water is good for us, right? Now we’ve even flavored them and forced people to make major water decisions when dining out: Tap or expensive? Maybe that approach will stay in the decade we’re leaving behind. Hope so.

Artisan beers became a craze, and big brewers needed to step down into the craft market. Wait, for many that became a significant financial step upwards. Look at the popularity of Blue Moon and the significant number of brewers making Hefeweizens. Slice of lemon, please.

Remember expensive bottles of French wine? OK, they still exist as do the reserve wine lists, but as the recession took its toll on our dining out and dining-in budgets, we learned to embrace new regions of the world and become familiar with other wines and sparklings such as Malbec, Cava, and Prosecco. What was being poured in Chile, Argentina, New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa became of greater interest to us as we scoured those regions for our new vintages.

No longer were we limited to American wines from California, Oregon, Washington, and New York. We learned Thomas Jefferson was right: Virginia became an established wine region with award-winning wines from Barboursville, Chrysalis, and Jefferson Vineyards.

We even became fascinated by different wine glasses for different wines. What was once limited to high-end stores and fancy restaurants became more commonplace on the shelves at Target as Riedel moved into the consumer space with its 4 and 6-boxed items. A glass for red, one for white, and the emergence of the flute instead of the floating half circle for sparkling! Of course, those who follow every trend knew they needed a specific glass for a specific pour. Stop, not that one, that’s for Zinfandel only!

We even bought the whole wine lineup including the darling of the opening set, the Rabbit, and the multitude of decanting carafes. We became serious wine drinkers, and as we traveled wine regions, we became more knowledgeable, and less intimidated, by what we drank!Rabbit7

As we look forward, we’ve gone back to the old cocktail routine and elevated the bartender to a drink specialist who has studied the chemistry, or alchemy, of an ingredient-shaken beverage. Specialty cocktail menus re-emerged and the high priced, fun-sounding cocktail helped many restaurants survive.

We became caffeine freaks with an almost unstoppable fascination with coffee drinks, both hot and iced. It was clearly the Starbucks decade, a title the company hopes to regain in the upcoming year. Grocery stores proudly introduced coffee bars. We decided one double espresso was too limiting and added caffeine-based energy drinks to our daily consumption routines. All these steps hit soda sales as they plummeted, and the old brands started to lose the high fructose corn syrup and explore cane sugar drinks.

We were a thirsty group and little has quenched our thirst as we reach for the next tantalizing trend.

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Ask Her

2009mothersday2It’s that time of year when email and snail mail folders are filled with all kinds of good ideas about Mother’s Day. Take her to breakfast, OK, try brunch, and if that doesn’t work, think lunch;  as a fall back how about dinner out, Mom?

I love restaurants. I spend half my life dining out, and the other half dreaming about my next meal. So there is little doubt that I am food obsessed, but eating out on Mother’s Day draws a big Yuck face from me. After too many wonderful plans and too many spoiled experiences, my favorite option is to eat in. Let everyone else eat out and treat me as Queen for the Day in my humble abode. Works every time.

Sure, I’ll take breakfast in bed with the newspaper, please (this may be the last year you’ll have a printed paper to bring)! This is a good time to bring my first Hallmark card.

A lazy patio lunch works great. I can handle it.

How ’bout you BBQ for dinner, and I’ll settle for cheese and crackers and something sparkling, say champagne, midday–I’m pretty easy.

So what’s the MDEO (Mother’s Day Eating Out) debacle? Simply put, it’s too many people trying to accomplish the same end result at the same time. It’s very hard for restaurants to please everyone in this scripted scenario and thus difficult for them to shine as well as they can on this sacred day. That means guests walk away thinking the restaurant is the problem when the problem is too much, too many–as in too much of a good thing attempted by too many people all at one time.

It’s not that restaurants can’t pull it off but in a room with all VIP guests, i.,e. your Mom, your grandma, or your aunt– that’s way too many people who are important and way too many family members trying to please simultaneously.

So as a Mom my advice is quite simple: Take Mom out another day or evening. That in itself will be a special occasion. You’ll receive the right attention from the restaurant, and your decision will prove a winner. Buy her a flower for her backyard champagne cocktail and let her sleep in. The rewards are so much better.

Trust me.

Ask her.

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V-Day Weekend: A Recipe for Romance

With the economy in such turmoil and restaurants tripping over each other to invite you into their comfortable environs, this year’s Valentine’s Day may not be be a restaurant lovefest. Normally when the evening is a Saturday night, restaurants do the whoopee party. They celebrate with overflowing tables.

Not this year. It’s questionable how many people will go out for a special dinner. Some restaurants have adjusted their calendars and turned them into Valentine’s Weekend Specials. Others are just scaling back and hoping that  traditionalists will stay on the agenda and celebrate in a restaurant.

These are bad times for restaurants and Valentine’s Day, the second most popular holiday after Mother’s Day for dining out, may find fewer taking advantage of the many specials. The dozen roses from the local grocery store or the cliched box of heart-shaped chocolates may prove more popular than the romantic restaurant meal. This may be the night for the less expensive, potentially equally romantic, home-cooked dinner.

Dinner for two, prix-fixe menu, champagne dinner–these are all common Valentine’s Day front-burner restaurant choices, but will the numbers match those of just even a year ago?

The Washington, DC area is bracing for the answer to the ultimate heartfelt boost: Where will President Barack and Michelle Obama dine? Everyone is waiting and shouting, “pick me…please.” The long-term benefits from such a visit are measurably positive. The secret’s safe with me. Where will they dine?

The glasses are chilling.

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Drum Roll, Please–Bring On the New

wine-glassesIt’s that day, the one that marks the end and morphs into the new. I know I’m supposed to say how I regret this and that and promise that I will whatever this coming year, but the 31st has its own special significance.

It is after all the night when too many people party too hard. I remember the one-way street in St Louis that an approaching driver thought was a 2-way. That may have marked the beginning of  “we can cook it better, be safer, and enjoy ourselves” without being crowded into a banquette  for two hours to eat, drink, and hurriedly vacate the table.

We are now masters of the beautiful meal, the great wine and accompanying champagne, the cheeseboard, and the scrumptious dessert. What will it be this year? There is the tenderloin that almost has no equal or the multi-pound lobster that comes cracked and ready to rip, or even the butterflied lamb. It almost doesn’t matter. They all work as fabulous entrees. It’s the dessert that has me fretting.

Of course, chocolate plays a major role. A dessert cup of beautiful, multi-flavored sorbets  surrounding the chocolates might work. Oh, how I wish I had a Paco Jet, that magic machine that lets you be a master of individual scoops. I just need a small loan…

As for the chocolates, there are so many to choose from. I could go to my everyday cache of Junior Mints, or Rittersport Marzipan Bars, but this is a special night. One that calls for at least 65 % cacao, something like Green &  Black’s Espresso Bar that can so easily be broken into mouth-watering bites of ecstasy.

You see it is about the food, not the resolutions. After all it was the year of so many bad headlines, it was hard to focus on the victory of our new president. Gloom and doom filled many a recycling bin. It was the year that made me skip the news and focus on the puzzles and food and wine news.

So it was not as wretched a year as some would have us believe. Time to move forward. Throw out the hard news. Read about the good life, do the puzzles, and raise your glass to what will be: a year of hope, a time of promise, and a future filled with multiple sections of  newspapers worth opening.

Cheers.

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