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Drinking Eating Experiences Food The Chef Travel Wine

Madrid! Madrid!

Much of what makes Madrid the capitol city appears to have remained constant.  The July heat, cañas flowing into the streets, people destined for tapas, a reward for an urban culture working more and more hours than in the recent past.  The plazas continue to serve as the backbone of the city.  People pause throughout the day to sit with friends and talk, shaded by the marriage of old and new buildings, some adorned with street signs and shuttered windows, other edifices showing an old world wear and tear that the tourists find charming.

But there is a subtle change in the population diversity, with a noticeable stream of Latin American immigrants filling into the roles of the working class, citizenship less daunting than the U.S., working through the trend of youth apathy, contributing to unemployment and a declining construction industry.

My stay in Madrid could be likened to living in Jackson Heights in relation to Manhattan, at Villa de Vallecas, way south on the blue line of the metro.  This barrio is proof positive of the immigrant wave, Dominicans, Ecuadoreans, Peruvians, Hondurans, etc. coexisting with native Spanish, and of course the Chinese, who have cornered the market in the alimentacion stores department.

But that is the beauty of any city metro, each stop can take you world’s away from the last place, yet still be in the same place, overall.

I didn’t mind the 35 minute trek to the Gran Via daily, save for at night when the metro stopped (24 hours in New York), having to take an expensive cab ride back (the euro, ouch) or wait it out until six in the morning when the trains were running again.  Given that on certain nights the partying goes on until eight a.m., this is not a problem.

One would think that with the incoming people brings the food, but I found no Latino expression of cuisine anywhere.  Even the Chinese restaurants that exist offered no semblance of Chinese palate.  All of it is unedible.  Even the so called sushi parlors that have started to spring up are to be avoided at all costs.

No, Spanish tapas remains strong, and homages to specific cuisines, such as Galician, Basque or Catalan, are still kings of the hill.   The Spanish are fascinated with the hamburger, but alas, they should stick to what they do best.

The first day I headed over to Casa Mingo for lunch, the specialty being a rotisserie chicken and some house cider.  I hadn’t been since 1998, and decided to test the evolution of my taste buds.  The chicken was crisp and juicy, but not fantastic.  The cider was bottled and refreshing, but they’ve got nothing on the Basque stuff.  I shared some blue cheese with a neighboring table, and chatted up an Irish fellow about the merits of Dublin, which are many, and the yearn for a pint of plain (Guinness).

Then walkabout, which is the best way to see any town, and of course tapas. I sampled as much jamon as I could.  Most of the ham was tough, a bit on the jerky side, and not enjoyable.  Who was hiding the good ham?  At Plaza Santa Ana, I tried some jamon at Cinco Jotas, a national chain with a good reputation.  The best part of the meal was the oozing torta del casar cheese and the morcon, a part of the ham not sold everywhere.  But no real deal pata negra.  I sell better stuff in NYC.  Off to some cocktail bars like Del Diego and La Bardemcilla, where a civilized Sidecar is actually served.

Wine bars existed but were sparse and disappointing.  The selections reflected a new world palate, and wine service was abysmal.  Besides, it was too hot to drink red wine under the Madrid supernova.

The next day I opted for paella at La Barraca, after a long stint at El Prado, even though everyone knows the best paella hails from Valencia and that most of the Madrid versions are veritable tourist bear traps.  But I heard good things about La Barraca, and treated myself to a plate of croquetas de jamon, arroz negro and seafood paella, all of which were actually quite good.  Washed down with a bottle of Blanc Pescador.  After a friendly chat with two American ladies, we set off to the Matisse exhibit at the Thyssen Reina Sofia, leaving me desperate for a siesta.  I threaded the seafood theme with a Galician spot at Metro Tribunal, Ribeiro do Mino, which for a Wednesday night was jammed with regulars with mounds of seafood platters called marisquerias, filled with Dungeness crab, shrimp, prawns, langoustines, and goose barnacles. The plate took me over an hour an a half to plow through. The name of the restaurant would be a good omen for things to come.  Dizzy from a seafood extravaganza, I filled the rest of my night with cañas, uncertain of when I would be able to eat again.

The girls arrived, meaning my lady friends and their respective entourage, and that meant real partying as their sub 28 ages dictate.  At one point we were in Tribunal again, where there is a proliferation of aggressive Chinese salespeople, offering beers and bocadillos from cardboard stands.  While inspecting an empty box, a Spanish woman yelled out to me, “Oye Chino, tienes Mahou?”  I pretended to look for it, and replied “I’m sold out!”  Apparently my ambiguous looks passed me for a Chinaman.  It took a while to peel my friends off the floor from laughter.

More tapas at Metro La Latina,  specifically on the strip Calle Cava Baja, headed by the famous Casa Luzio and its new taverna, where rotos (shredded eggs on fries) became popularized, along with a better set of wine bars.  Innovative tapas at Txakoli, and good selection of wines at Tempranillo, where incidentally I finally stumbled upon a great plate of ham.  The owner sliced it from the legs hanging on the wall, and a gorgeous plate of purple cecina (air-dried and salted meat from the hind legs of a cow or horse) to boot.  Wines are served in three ounce pours, a perfect size for sampling.  Emerging from such a dizzying tapas run, my body ached for a siesta.

Sure as a bull’s horns, the that night I was invited out near Metro Cuzco, by a hospitable gentleman named Antonio, who has an appetite for Cuban cigars and fine food.  We had sterling clams and prawns, followed by the glory of Galicia, pulpo gallego (octopus), and other fish fancies in sea salt.  A couple of bottle of Marques de Riscal sauvignon blanc from Rueda was the accompaniment, followed by a balcony vista, aged rum, and more cigars.  All in all, a civilized evening.  The next day we were heading to Alicante for beach time, and in desperate need of some beauty rest (it was a mere 2 am).

Alicante, located just in the south east, was a whole other whirling dervish.

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Drinking Eating Experiences The Chef Travel

Cana

As promised, the next few blogs will be about my trip to Spain. I’ve let memories marinate for some time while in New York, and admit that I am having a hard time adjusting (the whole work thing), but am glad to be home at Pata Negra – I hope you visited while I was away.

My trip can be broken into three parts. Part one was to check out the tapas scene. Part two was a trip to wine country with my friend El Capitan, acting as a sort of translator/travel companion, and part three was to visit some of my old pals.

The only thing that could stave off the heat in Madrid was beer, and lots of it. No thoughts about wine, just cañas, perfectly poured tiny glasses of cold, frothed refreshment. This is the true Spanish way of life. Hit the post office. Reward yourself with a caña. Errands to run? How many cañas can you schedule along the way? This is the tapeo tradition. Stop at a bar, drink, say hi, consume a tapa, and hit the next spot. This is the culture that is so Spanish. And the reward is a plate of something good to nibble on. Some ham or cheese, or pork rinds, or meatballs. It is really up to the bar. Chef Jorge Arola of Gastro told me that the art of pouring a perfect cana is indeed Spanish and a pivotal part of society. I’ll go for one right now!

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Drinking Experiences The Chef

A Rush of Tempranillo to the Head

One of the travails of a professional in the wine business is to go to tastings and gather intel about wine to be used for future purchase and knowledge. There is a lot of spitting and yearning for a beer. Some importers know how to promote an event better than others. Venue, food, crowd management, and many others variables factor into what separates a good tasting from a great one.

At the forefront for some time in the Spanish wine market is Tempranillo Inc., a New York based Jorge Ordonez company, whose mission is to bring unique and distinct Spanish winemaking to the world’s cellars, retail shops, restaurants and wine bars. Part of what made the May 14th tasting so memorable was the roster of star winery representatives present. Meeting and conversing with the actual producers gives the consumer/buyer a real inside track to the wine’s intent. They are genuinely interesting people who love to talk about their wines with passion and great enthusiasm.

There was a “warm-up” tasting at Amalia restaurant in midtown which was well attended. Tasty hors d’ouevres were passed out so as to try the wines in context with food. I am a big proponent of this method of tasting because this is how the everyday person consumes wine on a daily basis. More often than not the wine needs the food to express its flavor profile, if not to enjoy it more fully.

The evening venue was top notch, the upstairs private room at Eleven Madison Park. Just the presence of Art Deco architecture and design evokes a feeling of Gotham, and is one of the reasons New York is such a charmed city.

The menu, created by executive chef Daniel Humm, featured four courses plus dessert, accompanied by the thirty or so wines slated for tasting. Herein lay the only true flaw of the evening, as the invited guests tasted through the majority of the wines accompanied by brief introductions by the winery representatives. While the added info about the wines was useful, tasting 30 wines in rapid succession does little for me to understand the wines carefully. My palate was seriously hampered by wine number twelve.

Finally, relief arrived in the form of bread and water, and after a brief seating rearrangement, the food commenced and we were allowed to bring whatever wines to the table for pairings. At my table was Mani Dawes, owner of Tinto Fino, Tia Pol, and Quinto Pino, her partner Karen, formerly Tempranillo Inc.’s golden girl, Shelley McClure of interior design, her husband Steve Flynn of September Wines & Spirits, and Amy Hopkinson, winemaker of special projects for Bodegas Juan Gil, and Jose Manuel Azofra, representative of Sierra Cantabria in Rioja. Present at other tables: Juan Muga of Muga, Rioja, Raphael Canizares winemaker of Volver in Toledo, Nathalie Leboeuf of Allende,  Maite Esteve from Marques de Gelida, Loren Gil, and Victoria Ordonez (Jorge’s sister).

With the serving of dinner finally set, we had the liberty to taste any of the wines with the ensuing courses. This was great freedom and exceptionally fun. This type of bottle sharing occurs naturally at normal meals at home.

The first course, a composed plate of Hawaiian prawns with a puree of avocado, lime and yogurt – a bright seafood dish – begs for acidity, and the Avanthia godello, Botani moscatel, and Shaya verdejo married nicely. The next offering, poached Nova Scotia Lobster with spring carrots, ginger and vadouvan granola, required a white wine with an oily mouthfeel – although the Cana albarino fared well enough.

The next course, the milk fed veal with fava beans and chanterelles is an old wine’s best friend. Many of the older vintages served improved with this pairing. My favorite red with this dish was the 2004 Allende, a Rioja with minerality. Some of the more tannic wines were too overpowering. Not so for the next plate, black angus beef tenderloin with asparagus, potato puree, and Oregon morels, the morels creating a minor shock wave of earthy excitement on the tongue. I am not a huge fan of black angus, what is sold in the supermarket with this brand often disappoints in flavor, but this preparation made me a believer. The bigger wines (Torre Muga 2005, Remrez de Ganuza 2004, Clio 2006) were in heaven here, all of their masculinity supported by the bold flavors of the black angus beef. The 2007 Almirez of Toro really shined here, as well as the Vega Sindoa blend cab/temp blend.

A Fuji Apple tarte fine with granola crumble and vanilla ice cream rounded things out, and the 2006 Jorge Ordonez Victoria moscatel from Malaga is like an ice wine with less residual sugar – breezy and delish.

The winery representatives, weary from an exhausting tour of U.S. cities, were just about finished, having missed their siestas indicative of Spanish culture. Ramon del Monte, my friend and rep. from Tempranillo Inc. brought a few of them to Pata Negra for a tapas run before the evening’s event. They had Basque cider, Estrella beer, tortilla, gambas and jamon iberico. I am only sad I could not offer them hammocks. I asked Juan Muga what he planned to do when he got back to Spain. He replied, “I will sleep for three weeks.”

After that many wines and such a fine meal, I think I will join them.

Highlights of some of the wines tasted from both events:

Torre Muga 2005
Aro 2005
Muga Prado Enea Gran Reserva 2001
Sierra Cantabria Amancio 2005
El Bosque 2006
El Punitdo 2005
Sierrra Cantabria Coleccion Privada 2006
Sierra Cantabria 2001
San Vicente 2005
Protocolo Rosado 2008
Allende 2004
Remirez de Ganuza 2004
Emilio Moro 2005
Emilio Moro Resalso 2007
Malleolus 2006
Almirez 2007
Volver 2007
Mas de Can Blau 2006
Alto Moncayo 2006
Borsao Crianza Seleccion 2006
Atteca Armas 2006
Wrongo Dongo 2007
Clio 2006
Avanthia Godello 2008
La Cana 2008
Shaya 2008
Botani 2008
Marques de Gelida Brut Res. Ecologico 2005
Urban Uco 2007

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Drinking The Chef

Penin Guides Spanish Palette

For college basketball fans, March means the NCAA tournament, a.k.a. March Madness, and people fill out their brackets in hopes of winning their respective pools. The basketball drama can be too much, even for the most fanatic zealots. For people in the food and wine industry, March signifies tasting month. Importers showcase new acquisitions and latest releases, often enticing the wine makers themselves to pour their wines with a personal touch.

Often the tastings are scheduled during the same day, and you end up doing two, sometimes three per day. As with the tourney, there are so many games to view, and many more wines to choose from. Prudence and absolute diligence is the only measure to protect your palate and senses from overkill.

Such was the case on March 18th, when the Penin Guide to Spanish wines held an event showcasing their recommendations for the best wines of 2009, as well as the best values. The tasting was held at the American Museum of Natural History, displaying over 60 wines with their respective importers and wine representatives.

The Penin Guide has long been a respected resource for Spanish wine professionals, and strives to be the foremost authority on the Spanish wine industry. The Penin team reviews over 8,000 wines per year and use a 100 point system similar to that introduced by Robert Parker.

Starting with a selection of 32 of the best wines, the strategy for choosing which ones to taste proved difficult. Cava was the first choice, and Gramona was pouring their Imperial Gran Reserva Brut 2004 from Catalunya. The classic xare-lo, macabeo, chardonnay blend was elegant, refined, and medium bodied, an excellent alternative to any vintage champagne. La Rioja Alta, one of my favorite old school producers, poured the 1997 gran reserva 904, which showed its power and aging potential rather than any subtlety or readiness. The next table was manned by Marques de Murrieta, a family owned winery for over 150 years who have been one of the benchmarks for classic Rioja wines. The 2004 reserva needed a few more years, but the 2000 seemed to be hitting its stride. The wine of the tasting had to be their special cuvee, the Dalmau 2004. This wine exhibited such grace, power, and finesse – the finish lasted over 20 seconds. The suggested retail price of $165. is actually a bargain for a wine of such class.

Nearby were a few selections from Tempranillo, mainly the Clio, a Bodegas El Nido masterpiece, elevating monastrell to new heights. Also present and drinking well was the old vine phenomenon of Atteca from Calatayud, where the vines are from 85 to 150 years old. The Atteca Armas showed great maturity and style. Many of the wines such as Pingus, Aurus, Cintino graciano, and Corullon displayed their aging potential, confirming that in fastening wines in a more modern style the winemakers are still cognizant of tradition, allowing for natural development in the bottle over time.

There were only a few whites, but all were showing well. Leading the way was a godello from A Coroa, an elegant, silky white proving once again that godello is the great white grape of Spain. Then came the Gorrondona, a txakoli from the Basque country, a wine that celebrates a revolutionary spirit. At hand was an oaked txakoli, well integrated and unusual for its depth. Doniene Gorrondona also produces a red txakoli, earthy and delicious in its own right. The Castell del Remei Oda Blanc from the Costers del Segre showed how atypical some of the Spanish whites can be.

Overall, the winemaking was of superior quality, with style varying from old world to new, to something in between. Several of these wines offered value in terms of cost, especially the 25 or so from the “New Values” category. Look for them at your local wine shop, pop in a Vicky Cristina Barcelona DVD and enjoy.

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Drinking Eating Experiences The Chef

Upper West Side Upswing

Upper West Side Upswing

In the evolution of restaurants on the Upper Westside, patience and challenging are two words that come to mind. For the last two decades, cheap ethnic food has been the standard and the only viable form of dining accepted by the residents. Attempts have been made, small coups if you will, to bring downtown uptown, but alas, you can take the diner out of the neighborhood, but not the neighborhood out of the diner. The Upper Westside is saddled with bad Chinese, Thai, Japanese, Spanish, Korean, Mexican etc. There are maybe two pasta places of note, and not one passable diner around. Neighborhood bars are tired and dated, not a gastropub among them. French bistros? All faux and disingenuine. The only saving grace is brunch, but the lines are downright vicious on weekends. And don’t forget some bakeries that do deliver, like Silver Moon and Magnolia, as well as Jacques Torres sweetening the pot.

The litmus test is simple. If you had your choice, ask yourself would you rather have any of these cuisines at UWS locations or elsewhere in NYC where the cooking and atmosphere is far superior. The collective UWS palate has become so muted and complacent that undue excitement is bestowed on any establishment that remotely pretends authenticity.

Certainly strides have been made, but upscale and better dining has mostly gone up in flames. Some savvy chefs have stuck around. Just look towards the Tom Valenti empire, Ouest, Cesca, and now West Branch. If you extend the zone to the Lincoln center area, there stands a formidable group spearheaded by Picholine, Telepan, and Bar Boulud. This trend has seeped into the West eighties with Kefi, Dovetail, 81 and Mermaid Inn. Even fast food has had a face lift with the Shake Shack and Pinch S’mac.

Wine bars have arrived, and although the quality is not great, they are a definite improvement to the dreary landscape of dining uptown.

Recently, Fatty Crab opened to much press and anticipation, in the space formerly inhabited by Zen Palate, juxtaposed to West Branch, making 77th Street a destination block, filling the voids left by the closings of the overrated Ruby Foo’s and the dreadful seafood aquarium Dock’s, both of which did not belong on the UWS for different reasons. The UWS is not Sushi Samba, and the acceptance of mediocre seafood via Dock’s is inherently blasphemous, the kind of thing that is wrong with UWS dining in the first place.

All indications are good, save for the spotty service. After all UWS diners have had much to complain about in the past, and cooperation on both parts will do well to erase the terrible service reputation from all the coffee shops and restaurant that remain which still need to close. At Fatty Crab, there is an ample bar and separate rooms, enough for all that baby carriage traffic to make its inevitable way through and not annoy other diners. The food is consistent and esoteric for these parts, but welcome and time appropriate.

I can’t say the same for West Branch, whose design feels a little disjointed. It would have been better for Mr. Valenti to have spent more time in the Spotted Pig or The Redhead in the East Village, because West Branch is a restaurant pretending to be a casual bar, and the design of the space does not allow for either experience to take place. The bar is out in the open, and seems to get in the way of the dining room, whose only redeemable accents are its “smoky” mirrors. But the menu is spot on and long overdue.

For charm and elegance look towards Barbao, upscale Vietnamese fare with a beautiful artistic frame around it. The front barroom could come out of an Asian Hotel lounge, the dining room adorned with flowing features allowing for connectivity and glimpses into the other parts of the restaurant, giving the illusion of different levels of a ship – an oasis on the UWS. The wine list is a tad overpriced (a bottle of Abadia Retuerta Rivola 2005 was listed for $60.00! – it retails for $10. to $13. depending on the shop). It is better to stay with the cocktails which are well conceived. The food is clean and correct with good choices such as sweetbread and frog’s legs.

Can these places persist amidst the rising costs of rents and the refusal of UWS residents to spend for quality dining? Will landlords continue to sit on empty spaces refusing to lower the rent to small business owners who are passionate about what they do? All the mom and pop joints have been run out of town. There is one advantage. There simply can’t be any more room for banks, pharmacies, and coffee shops. Necessity is the mother of invention, and the UWS’ need for this type of fix has been long overdue.