This is my day to rant - so be aware
Having just come back from a month in France, I am more convinced than ever that wine is meant to be eaten with food, not to just taste it. I have never seen the point of going to a winery and just having a tasting. I have had to do that many, many times in my lifetime and have always found it boring. Just tasting wine at a vineyard, I have found boring, Wine, I repeat wine if suppose to only be taken with a meal.
First of all, let's face it, drinking wine, first of all is for the nice 'buzz' one gets and second, its is only good because it enhances a meal. That's it.
In my latest France sojourn, I spent a few days in the Beaujolais region at the fabulous Chateau Bagnols.
http://www.chateaudebagnols.com/
The kitchen is phenomenal, with the cooking of the young chef, Jean-Alexandre OUARATTA.
But, the real joy here, what made the meal extra special was the interaction with the dining room wine steward, Robin. A man of considerable knowledge and charm. I put myself in his capable hands and we paired wine for each dish. It was through him, that I discovered a St Joseph Rhone white wine. The red St Joseph has always been a favorite of mine, but I was unaware of a white wine, and OH! what a find.
i am sure if I had the wine alone, it would not have impressed me as much as when I had it with my meal.
so, I will never be convinced to drink just wine alone, but always, always have it with a meal and cocktail parties in the States that only serve wine and not cocktails..DON'T GET ME STARTED!
Tuesday, June 3, 2014
Friday, May 30, 2014
Audrey Hepburn, Fred Astaire and Me.......
In the 1950's, as a teenager, I used to love to go the movies once a week, on a Saturday morning at 10:30am and stay until 5:00pm, when my father would pick me up.
Those days they made movies for adults, not children, today its reversed and there is nothing to see these days or 'movie stars' one can look up to and try to emulate. Thank god, I was around to see the Clark Gables, Gary Coopers, Greg Pecks, Cary Grants, and Audrey Hepburn's and Grace Kelley's and so many other wonderful and exciting people on the silver screen. There was true romance then, not just in the sexual way, but the romance of life, and the romance of places to visit.
Think about it, I was maybe 13 or 14 years old and the movies stars I mentioned about were already in their 40's and 50's and yet, and yet, they excited me as a young man as to someone I wished to be, to dress like, to have great lines to say, to visit exotic locales and the music, ah! the music, was beautiful, stirring, lots of strings and long melodic lines.
Today, I was thinking about when I first say Paris on the big screen ( not realizing then) how important that city and country would be in my future life.
The movie was 'Funny Face' ( music by the Gershwin, who could ask for anything more?) starring Paris and Fred Astaire ( who didn't want to be a Fred Astaire?) and Audrey Hepburn ( and who didn't want a girl like her to be your pal?)
How lucky to have lived in the 1950's and the movies that came out in that decade!
Those days they made movies for adults, not children, today its reversed and there is nothing to see these days or 'movie stars' one can look up to and try to emulate. Thank god, I was around to see the Clark Gables, Gary Coopers, Greg Pecks, Cary Grants, and Audrey Hepburn's and Grace Kelley's and so many other wonderful and exciting people on the silver screen. There was true romance then, not just in the sexual way, but the romance of life, and the romance of places to visit.
Think about it, I was maybe 13 or 14 years old and the movies stars I mentioned about were already in their 40's and 50's and yet, and yet, they excited me as a young man as to someone I wished to be, to dress like, to have great lines to say, to visit exotic locales and the music, ah! the music, was beautiful, stirring, lots of strings and long melodic lines.
Today, I was thinking about when I first say Paris on the big screen ( not realizing then) how important that city and country would be in my future life.
The movie was 'Funny Face' ( music by the Gershwin, who could ask for anything more?) starring Paris and Fred Astaire ( who didn't want to be a Fred Astaire?) and Audrey Hepburn ( and who didn't want a girl like her to be your pal?)
How lucky to have lived in the 1950's and the movies that came out in that decade!
Monday, May 5, 2014
Saturday, May 3, 2014
Off to France for a Month - Hurrah!
Dear Readers,
I am off to France for a month and will pick up my blogging on my return in late May.
You ask? where in France?
I am spending most of my time in my beloved Brittany and then on to Lyon and Northern Provence.
Lots of good food awaits, LOTS!!! ( Chez Jacky), solitary walks on the beach and in quaint villages and time with new and old friends ( The French are the best)
I am off to France for a month and will pick up my blogging on my return in late May.
You ask? where in France?
I am spending most of my time in my beloved Brittany and then on to Lyon and Northern Provence.
Lots of good food awaits, LOTS!!! ( Chez Jacky), solitary walks on the beach and in quaint villages and time with new and old friends ( The French are the best)
A platter of taste - This is worth getting up each day for -
As George and Ira Gershwin once penned "Who could ask for anything more?"
Thursday, May 1, 2014
"All I Want is the Best Of Everything and There's Very Little of That Left " - Lucius Beebe
I recently came upon a photo in an old London Magazine taken during WW2 ( in the underground) and the sign on the wall read
"Temperatures Will Fall, Standards Mustn't'.
My Edwardian grandfather and to a lesser extant my Bostonian father, were constantly hammering that into myself and my brothers. It was not a snob thing, far from it, but an idea to live your life in a style and manner that reflected well on the family, but moreover,a style you wished for yourself. My grandfather use to say ( among so many things) that being a gentleman ( the thing he prized most) was a 24 hour a day profession, not just sometimes.
Smoking a cigar or having a glass of single malt Scottish whisky was something you did in the quiet of a room,to enjoy the full flavors. You sat there and thought about what you were smoking or drinking, taking time ( 45 minutes to smoke a cigar was the norm) to really get all the satisfaction you could out of it. That was one, of many, of life's pleasures that I was taught.
As a boy, my grandfather ( many times) took me to visit his cigar maker and to really understand the time and craft that went into it and thus be able to appreciate it to the max.
He was horrified, as I am today, by people who rudely open bottles of Champagne and let the glorious ingredients spray everywhere as if its the way you do it.
As I love Champagne ( and cigars, port,whisky, foie gras, Tweed clothing and so many other refinements) and have spent much time in the French Champagne countryside and see how long it takes to produce a bottle, I always looked at people in horror who let corks fly in all directions and guzzle the 'stuff' . I guess I am just old fashion....I think there is a song by that name by Jerome Kern...
What this all leads up to, as an Edwardian at heart, I live and have lived since I was 13 years old, in a style and manner that has never changed and I am happier for it as the world today seems that ' have gone to hell in a hand basket', my god, have you seen what young men are wearing today and how they groom themselves..I think they all need a bath and manners? Don't ask and young ladies with tattoos? They look like gangster's molls? Is that attractive? Not to me! Never!!!
OK, OK..I am sounding like my grandfather! Well...that's the nicest thing you could ever say to me.
"Temperatures Will Fall, Standards Mustn't'.
My Edwardian grandfather and to a lesser extant my Bostonian father, were constantly hammering that into myself and my brothers. It was not a snob thing, far from it, but an idea to live your life in a style and manner that reflected well on the family, but moreover,a style you wished for yourself. My grandfather use to say ( among so many things) that being a gentleman ( the thing he prized most) was a 24 hour a day profession, not just sometimes.
Smoking a cigar or having a glass of single malt Scottish whisky was something you did in the quiet of a room,to enjoy the full flavors. You sat there and thought about what you were smoking or drinking, taking time ( 45 minutes to smoke a cigar was the norm) to really get all the satisfaction you could out of it. That was one, of many, of life's pleasures that I was taught.
As a boy, my grandfather ( many times) took me to visit his cigar maker and to really understand the time and craft that went into it and thus be able to appreciate it to the max.
He was horrified, as I am today, by people who rudely open bottles of Champagne and let the glorious ingredients spray everywhere as if its the way you do it.
As I love Champagne ( and cigars, port,whisky, foie gras, Tweed clothing and so many other refinements) and have spent much time in the French Champagne countryside and see how long it takes to produce a bottle, I always looked at people in horror who let corks fly in all directions and guzzle the 'stuff' . I guess I am just old fashion....I think there is a song by that name by Jerome Kern...
What this all leads up to, as an Edwardian at heart, I live and have lived since I was 13 years old, in a style and manner that has never changed and I am happier for it as the world today seems that ' have gone to hell in a hand basket', my god, have you seen what young men are wearing today and how they groom themselves..I think they all need a bath and manners? Don't ask and young ladies with tattoos? They look like gangster's molls? Is that attractive? Not to me! Never!!!
OK, OK..I am sounding like my grandfather! Well...that's the nicest thing you could ever say to me.
The American highly civilized non-conformist ( and one of my life's heroes) Mr. Lucius Beebe
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Locke-Ober – The restaurant that gave hope to generations of Boston men that if they just followed the rules, they too could find their rightful place
Established in 1875 – the restaurant was a fine dining haven,
serving the cities’ most powerful people and old line Bostonian families ( Men
that is –the restaurant only admitted women in 1970) for over 100 years.
The restaurant was an institution, a sort of manners-school-meets-lunch
club for the Irish, Jewish and Italian men who worked downtown but weren’t welcome
at any of the exclusive clubs controlled by the Boston Brahmin. It was the
place for men of Boston
to learn how to behave like Yankee gentlemen.
To me, it was not only the atmosphere, the wait staff, but
it was the food and drink and great company. Now lost on today’s dinners, here
was the food of my past and still lives with me - Lobster thermador, finnan
haddie, calfs liver, Bay Scallops with bacon, Lobster stew, Scrod, lobster Newburg
and many more dishes that gladden the heart and cocktails – like the Ward Eight
and ice cold Gin Martini’s ( for lunch!!) I had arrived when I was able for lunch to down a few Ice-Cold Martini's
My grandfather and father and then just myself, were frequent
clients, no! Frequent members, for it felt like an exclusive men’s club with
better food and people. Men dressed (albeit) in Boston conservative dress, and if you too
where dressed correctly, you would get the Nod of approval, not only from the
staff but from other dinners.
It was and will forever remain one of the great joys in my
lifetime.
It closed after 136 years, because the world had changed, the
younger generation did not care a fig and still does not about tradition, or
style or manners (Ok, don’t get me going!).
But who cares, I had my time ‘to bask under the sun’ and
experience this magical place.
Friday, April 25, 2014
Who Screwed Up the Classic Caesar Salad - I'd Like To Punch Them In The Nose
A Warning - If the photo below is your idea of a classic Caesar Salad, then leave now, because I am going to hurl insults at you,
Le Cirque - shame on you (A Caesar Salad, this is not)
if your Classic Caesar salad must have shrimp or chicken on it, starting running, because I am going to through things at you, if you want your classic Caesar Salad without anchovies, then don't even talk to me, you have no idea what great food is about and never will and don't tell me you (like it seems for a vast majority of US Citizens) have the need for Gluten Free products, I don't believe it, that kind of thing has reached epic proportions in our country and a Doctor I know at the CDC (Center for Disease Control) says that only 1% of the population has the disease known as Celiac (which requires a Gulten Free diet).
When I was young, about 7 years old, in the late 1940's and into the early 1950's, I was taken to a classic continental style food restaurant (where one had to wear a coat and a tie - which I still do today, I am happy to say) and had a table side prepared classic Caesar salad and that salad, its taste and preparation has stayed with me for over 70 years. I, early on made that dish one of my cooking repertories. There is not a week that goes by that I don't make that classic dish it in my garlic-rubbed wooden bowl ( de rigueur, of course) and my mind goes back to those happy days of dining in the 1950's.
The world today, as it does so often of late, has bastardized that dish and many other from my youth.
My blood is boiling, so I need a Caesar salad to calm me down!!!
Here is the classic Caesar from my 1950's days and of course , its correct - never, ever deviate.
Le Cirque - shame on you (A Caesar Salad, this is not)
if your Classic Caesar salad must have shrimp or chicken on it, starting running, because I am going to through things at you, if you want your classic Caesar Salad without anchovies, then don't even talk to me, you have no idea what great food is about and never will and don't tell me you (like it seems for a vast majority of US Citizens) have the need for Gluten Free products, I don't believe it, that kind of thing has reached epic proportions in our country and a Doctor I know at the CDC (Center for Disease Control) says that only 1% of the population has the disease known as Celiac (which requires a Gulten Free diet).
When I was young, about 7 years old, in the late 1940's and into the early 1950's, I was taken to a classic continental style food restaurant (where one had to wear a coat and a tie - which I still do today, I am happy to say) and had a table side prepared classic Caesar salad and that salad, its taste and preparation has stayed with me for over 70 years. I, early on made that dish one of my cooking repertories. There is not a week that goes by that I don't make that classic dish it in my garlic-rubbed wooden bowl ( de rigueur, of course) and my mind goes back to those happy days of dining in the 1950's.
The world today, as it does so often of late, has bastardized that dish and many other from my youth.
My blood is boiling, so I need a Caesar salad to calm me down!!!
Here is the classic Caesar from my 1950's days and of course , its correct - never, ever deviate.
Howard’s Classic Caesar Salad
Ingredients:
1 – Large garlic
clove, mashed
½ lemon
1 – tablespoon of
Worcestershire Sauce
1 – teaspoon of
Dijon-style mustard
2 to 3 Anchovy
Fillets
3 tablespoons of
Olive Oil
1/2 cup of grated
Parmesan Cheese (fresh or prepared)
1 head of Romaine
Lettuce - chopped
1 whole egg
(coddled or raw) -This is NOT an option, without it,its not a CAESAR salad - nuf said!
Salt
Pepper
Croutons
– freshly made, of course!!
Put your serving
dishes for the salad in your refrigerator to chill
In a wooden bowl –
make your dressing:
Mince the anchovies
and mash in the bowl with a pinch of salt with the back of a spoon
Add the Olive oil –
mustard – mashed garlic – few turns of fresh crushed pepper - Mixed well,
pressing the ingredients against the side of the bowl until well blended.
Note: Try to make
the salad just before serving so it remains fragrant and crisp.
~ In a large bowl,
put in the lettuce and pour over it the dressing. ~ ~ toss gently, but not to
long.
~ Add the egg and
toss well, so that the leaves are coated well.
~ Add the
Worcestershire sauce, squeeze the lemon over the lettuce (be careful not to let
the seeds into the salad) and then add enough Parmesan cheese to lightly cover
the top.
~ Mix well.
~ Add the croutons and more Parmesan Cheese to cover the top (again
based on your preference)
Toss well
On the chilled
plates – sprinkled a bit of pepper first and then plate the salad.
Hail
Caesar!
Of course it even tastes better if you prepare it table-side in your dinning room, what you don't have a dining room but an open kitchen - Dining room? Don't talk to me !
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Wilton's London - Not For the Impoverished of Dress nor Pocket...
For those of you who know me (How lucky they are), they know that although I am mad for France and anything French, I am also mad for a touch of Edwardian London.
I never go to London without dining at Wilton's - 55 Jermyn St. It has become my home away from home for most of my 70 years. One dresses to eat here and does one.... eat!!!
I must admit and am rather surprised and in truth ever-so-slightly-disappointed when I arrived as of late, to be informed that I am no longer required to wear a tie ( a coat, still, yes!), This was always a pre-requisite to getting into the building. Well, I guess one must make some kind of nod to the 21st century, but I can tell you, I hope it does not go any further than this!
As you glide through, past the doorman, into the soft-carpeted bar area ( Sammy; the bar man, preparing your oysters as he sees you pass), then into the dining room, there is the most palpable sense that you are leaving behind a world of vulgarity, of hashtags, and reality TV and entering an altogether different sphere. The tone is that of the London Gentleman's club, of staunch Conservative principles and undeniable elitism, but here, for a quiet, stolen couple of hours from the mania of modern life, I care not a jot. Dining at Wiltons for over 65 years has been and will be an experience to savor.
So tuck into a Pullman booth, have you service Nanny take your order and be prepared to return to another world of manners and glorious food and drink. Ah! don't forget at the end , have your savory ( Anchovies on toast is my recommendation) and then a glass of port and some Stilton!
I never go to London without dining at Wilton's - 55 Jermyn St. It has become my home away from home for most of my 70 years. One dresses to eat here and does one.... eat!!!
I must admit and am rather surprised and in truth ever-so-slightly-disappointed when I arrived as of late, to be informed that I am no longer required to wear a tie ( a coat, still, yes!), This was always a pre-requisite to getting into the building. Well, I guess one must make some kind of nod to the 21st century, but I can tell you, I hope it does not go any further than this!
As you glide through, past the doorman, into the soft-carpeted bar area ( Sammy; the bar man, preparing your oysters as he sees you pass), then into the dining room, there is the most palpable sense that you are leaving behind a world of vulgarity, of hashtags, and reality TV and entering an altogether different sphere. The tone is that of the London Gentleman's club, of staunch Conservative principles and undeniable elitism, but here, for a quiet, stolen couple of hours from the mania of modern life, I care not a jot. Dining at Wiltons for over 65 years has been and will be an experience to savor.
So tuck into a Pullman booth, have you service Nanny take your order and be prepared to return to another world of manners and glorious food and drink. Ah! don't forget at the end , have your savory ( Anchovies on toast is my recommendation) and then a glass of port and some Stilton!
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Grits - A Perplexing Thing To Folks North Of The Mason-Dixon Line..BUT....
Southerners have a love affair with grits and as a Born-Again Southerner ( at least in my heart, if not in my soul) they are part of our past, our customs, our hospitality and sheer Southern-ness!
One of the best places to experience this dish of Southern Love is in Charleston at the Charleston Place Hotel in their dining room.
Served on an well starched white tablecloth, a large bowl of love - Shrimp/Sausage and Grits, of course served along with a side order of salty country ham. It does not get any better than this..
One of the best places to experience this dish of Southern Love is in Charleston at the Charleston Place Hotel in their dining room.
Served on an well starched white tablecloth, a large bowl of love - Shrimp/Sausage and Grits, of course served along with a side order of salty country ham. It does not get any better than this..
"Now Give Three Cheers and One Cheer More" As G & S Once Wrote..Hurrah For the True British Soul...
If WS Churchill was still alive, he'd have something to see about it! By god!
Monday, April 21, 2014
Indiscreet - They Don't Make Them Like This Anymore - The Movies nor the Stars.....
One of my favorite movies of the past - the movie still proves yet again that great acting, crackling writing, deft direction and two handsome stars never go out of style.
If you have never seen it, shame on you!
Labels:
Cary Grant,
Indiscreet,
Ingrid Bergman,
Stanley Donan
My Watch Of Choice - Ingenuity and Simplicity Are Always My Choice When It Comes to Wrist wear....
To me, the Rolex Watch, although well made, is an ugly, not very stylish wrist watch,( crass if you wish to know) but that is my opinion. Having forgone wearing watches the last several years and relying on my Smart Phone, I have seen the light and have gone back to wearing a wrist watch. I have also given away my Kindle ( going back to reading hard back books) and have forsaken my computer on my days off among other things. But that's d another story..................
Having visited Zurich last December ( what a WOW! city), I wanted a watch that shouted under-stated elegance, something thin ( not those over-powering gunky sports watches you see men wear theses day), so, shopping one day, I came upon an example of 20th century design, an easy-to-read face, distinctive watch hands and the famous red seconds hand ( this look is the official Swiss Railways Clock) and I knew I had found my watch.
It's made by the MONDAINE WATCH CO.
In fact, their design appears to take a place in the eternal hall of fame along side other well known design icons such as Coca-Cola, the Mercedes star, The Toblerone Packaging or the design of the US dollar bill.
Having visited Zurich last December ( what a WOW! city), I wanted a watch that shouted under-stated elegance, something thin ( not those over-powering gunky sports watches you see men wear theses day), so, shopping one day, I came upon an example of 20th century design, an easy-to-read face, distinctive watch hands and the famous red seconds hand ( this look is the official Swiss Railways Clock) and I knew I had found my watch.
It's made by the MONDAINE WATCH CO.
In fact, their design appears to take a place in the eternal hall of fame along side other well known design icons such as Coca-Cola, the Mercedes star, The Toblerone Packaging or the design of the US dollar bill.
I am back after a long ( blog site Respite) that is........
Last December, I had the good fortune to travel to Germany & France along with my famous chef brother, Robert Lewis (The Happy Diabetic)
We took the Uniworld river cruise from Cologne to Basel during the fabulous Christmas market period in Germany. I am not, to be honest with you, a great fan of Christmas celebrations in general, but seeing these special markets devoted to that season in Germany was an real eye-opener WOW!
Check back for more on that story......................
If you have never taken a river cruise, you are in for a treat and no one does it better than Uniworld's River Cruises.
The above photo was taken in one of my all time favorite cities ( and areas) Eastern France - in Strasbourg. Behind me is the old town section called Le Petit France and its a must to visit when you come to the marvelous city.
So, I am glad to be back and stay tuned for more to follow everyday..
~ Howard
Thursday, May 5, 2011
Caviar Dinner at Wiltons, London - My Favorite Restaurant in London - Missed this years event, but there is always next year.
The Caviar Dinner 11 May 2011
The Dinner will be hosted by Laura King from "Kings Caviar" who is a well known caviar aficionado. The night not only promises to be a gastronomic delight but an education into this wonderful food.
Bollinger with canapés
To Start
Smoked sturgeon parfait
Rio Frio Spanish Naccarii Sturgeon
The only Sturgeon indigenous to Europe farmed in Andalucia. Subtle in taste a little like a mild Osceitra
Complimented with Pouilly-Fumé “Les Cornets” 2009 Domaine A.Cailbourdin
Intermediate
Carpaccio of Rose Dutch veal, goats cheese “Angels Delight” with truffle and pickled salsify
Farmed Sevruga caviar from Bulgaria
A delicately small egg with a taste of salt and the sea
Complimented with
Chassagne-Montrachet 1er Cru 2008 Domaine Vincent Dancer
Pre-main
Gratin of langoustine, asparagus, basil and tomatoes
Farmed Osceitra from Belgium
Large egg with golden tones, subtle flavours with a hint of brie
Complimented with
Meursault “Les Vireuils” 2007 Domaine Dupont-Fahn
Main Course
Cornish turbot and Dover sole with bacon, onions, mushrooms and red wine sauce
Farmed Beluga Caviar from Bulgaria
The largest and most opulent egg, walnut and creamy in flavour
This is The King of the Caviars
Complimented with
Chablis Grand Cru “Les Clos” 2008 Domaine Christian Moreau
Dessert
Raspberry Pavlova iced soufflé with tapioca and mango pearls
Complimented with
Dom Pérignon 2002
Coffee and sweetmeats with chocolate caviar
HOW MUCH YOU ASK?
The Dinner will be hosted by Laura King from "Kings Caviar" who is a well known caviar aficionado. The night not only promises to be a gastronomic delight but an education into this wonderful food.
Bollinger with canapés
To Start
Smoked sturgeon parfait
Rio Frio Spanish Naccarii Sturgeon
The only Sturgeon indigenous to Europe farmed in Andalucia. Subtle in taste a little like a mild Osceitra
Complimented with Pouilly-Fumé “Les Cornets” 2009 Domaine A.Cailbourdin
Intermediate
Carpaccio of Rose Dutch veal, goats cheese “Angels Delight” with truffle and pickled salsify
Farmed Sevruga caviar from Bulgaria
A delicately small egg with a taste of salt and the sea
Complimented with
Chassagne-Montrachet 1er Cru 2008 Domaine Vincent Dancer
Pre-main
Gratin of langoustine, asparagus, basil and tomatoes
Farmed Osceitra from Belgium
Large egg with golden tones, subtle flavours with a hint of brie
Complimented with
Meursault “Les Vireuils” 2007 Domaine Dupont-Fahn
Main Course
Cornish turbot and Dover sole with bacon, onions, mushrooms and red wine sauce
Farmed Beluga Caviar from Bulgaria
The largest and most opulent egg, walnut and creamy in flavour
This is The King of the Caviars
Complimented with
Chablis Grand Cru “Les Clos” 2008 Domaine Christian Moreau
Dessert
Raspberry Pavlova iced soufflé with tapioca and mango pearls
Complimented with
Dom Pérignon 2002
Coffee and sweetmeats with chocolate caviar
HOW MUCH YOU ASK?
You know the old saying
" If you have to ask, you can't afford it"
Monday, March 14, 2011
Cooking is a long march that never ends....Temps Perdu
This past weekend I was laid up with the flu ( that seems to be everywhere these days) and so, when I do occasionally get ill, my prescription is always the same, I take to my bed with a cup of hot Assam tea and lemon, several good book, my IPOD and two to three plumped pillows. This weekend, I did the same, turned on my IPOD and listened to Rachmaninov’s Piano concert #2 (a favorite of mine since childhood) and pulled out some favorite restaurant menu’s for days past. As I lay there, dreaming of past delights, I was reminded of a line from Evelyn Waugh’s “Brideshead Revisited”,
“Just the place to bury a crock of gold," said Sebastian. "I should like to bury something precious in every place where I've been happy and then, when I was old and ugly and miserable, I could come back and dig it up and remember."
These menus’s I have saved for the years, and when revisited, truly make me happy. Dinner in my day was when people would dress up and use the restaurant as a stage, a setting for a night’s entertainment. Today, they just eat out for convenience, and then rush off elsewhere. For me, eating out was like going to a theatre. I prepared for what I was going to eat; I dressed up certainly and wished to spend at least 2 hours, if not more, enjoying the, meal, the service, and the atmosphere. To me, it was like going to church.
One of my fondest memories of dining was in London at the wonderful (now not so wonderful) Edwardian Hotel, The Connaught. That hotel, up to recently was like stepping back in time. Retreating to some safer, cozier era when ladies worn hats and gentleman wore suits. The big draw for me was always the Restaurant and Grill room. Here the low hum of conversation ( that is gone now world wide in restaurants), the genteel clink of polished silver on old china, waiters in tails exuding an a air of quiet efficiently and old fashioned servility. The atmosphere, of course was always clubby, exclusive and stuffy. An menu of mixed English comfort food and classic French cuisine and all under the eye of maitre-chef Michel Bourdin. M. BOURDIN retired (sadly) in 2001 and that began the fall of one of the best restaurants in the world. ………………, Please check back for more on this greatest of chefs and greatest of dining rooms.
“Just the place to bury a crock of gold," said Sebastian. "I should like to bury something precious in every place where I've been happy and then, when I was old and ugly and miserable, I could come back and dig it up and remember."
These menus’s I have saved for the years, and when revisited, truly make me happy. Dinner in my day was when people would dress up and use the restaurant as a stage, a setting for a night’s entertainment. Today, they just eat out for convenience, and then rush off elsewhere. For me, eating out was like going to a theatre. I prepared for what I was going to eat; I dressed up certainly and wished to spend at least 2 hours, if not more, enjoying the, meal, the service, and the atmosphere. To me, it was like going to church.
One of my fondest memories of dining was in London at the wonderful (now not so wonderful) Edwardian Hotel, The Connaught. That hotel, up to recently was like stepping back in time. Retreating to some safer, cozier era when ladies worn hats and gentleman wore suits. The big draw for me was always the Restaurant and Grill room. Here the low hum of conversation ( that is gone now world wide in restaurants), the genteel clink of polished silver on old china, waiters in tails exuding an a air of quiet efficiently and old fashioned servility. The atmosphere, of course was always clubby, exclusive and stuffy. An menu of mixed English comfort food and classic French cuisine and all under the eye of maitre-chef Michel Bourdin. M. BOURDIN retired (sadly) in 2001 and that began the fall of one of the best restaurants in the world. ………………, Please check back for more on this greatest of chefs and greatest of dining rooms.
Thursday, December 30, 2010
My Japanese New Year Feast - A Lewis Tradition
Having been married for 41years to a Japanese-American, New Years to the Japanese ( and myself) is very special and is celebrated ( on New Years Day) in a big way.
Japanese New Year's food is called osechi-ryori, and colorful osechi-ryori dishes are packed in layers of lacquer boxes, called jubako. Each dish and ingredient in osechi has meaning, such as good health, fertility, good harvest, happiness, long life, and so on. The kinds of osechi dishes eaten at Japanese homes vary from region to region.
It's a Japanese tradition to eat osechi-ryori throughout the New Year's holidays (until Jan. 3.) Traditionally, people finish cooking osechi dishes by New Year's Eve so that they have food for a couple days without cooking. Most of the dishes can last a couple days in the refrigerator or at cool room temperature. Nowadays, people buy ready-made osechi dishes at stores instead of cooking them at home. It can be time-consuming to cook so many kinds of dishes. You can even order a set of osechi-ryori at department stores, grocery stores, or convenience stores.
Osechi Dishes
• Kobumaki - Kelp Rolls
• Kuromame - Simmered Black Beans
• Datemaki - Rolled Sweet Omelet
• Kurikinton - Mashed Sweet Potato with Sweet Chestnuts)
• Kinpira Gobo - Braised Burdock
• Tazukuri - Candied Dried Sardines
• Namasu - Pickled Daikon Radish and Carrot
• Nimono - Simmered Dish
Nimono includes gobo (burdock root), satoimo (taro), renkon, carrots, shiitake mushrooms, and more. Oh! my gosh, so much more.....................you spend all day eating, I mean all day!!!
Japanese New Year's food is called osechi-ryori, and colorful osechi-ryori dishes are packed in layers of lacquer boxes, called jubako. Each dish and ingredient in osechi has meaning, such as good health, fertility, good harvest, happiness, long life, and so on. The kinds of osechi dishes eaten at Japanese homes vary from region to region.
It's a Japanese tradition to eat osechi-ryori throughout the New Year's holidays (until Jan. 3.) Traditionally, people finish cooking osechi dishes by New Year's Eve so that they have food for a couple days without cooking. Most of the dishes can last a couple days in the refrigerator or at cool room temperature. Nowadays, people buy ready-made osechi dishes at stores instead of cooking them at home. It can be time-consuming to cook so many kinds of dishes. You can even order a set of osechi-ryori at department stores, grocery stores, or convenience stores.
Osechi Dishes
• Kobumaki - Kelp Rolls
• Kuromame - Simmered Black Beans
• Datemaki - Rolled Sweet Omelet
• Kurikinton - Mashed Sweet Potato with Sweet Chestnuts)
• Kinpira Gobo - Braised Burdock
• Tazukuri - Candied Dried Sardines
• Namasu - Pickled Daikon Radish and Carrot
• Nimono - Simmered Dish
Nimono includes gobo (burdock root), satoimo (taro), renkon, carrots, shiitake mushrooms, and more. Oh! my gosh, so much more.....................you spend all day eating, I mean all day!!!
Monday, December 6, 2010
Eat Your Last Meal NOW! What Would Be Your Last Meal?
In her newest book ( I Love Nora Ephron), Ms. Ephron talks about getting old and eating your last meal now, instead of later, she writes..
"You do get to a certain point in life where you have to realistically, I think, understand that the days are getting shorter, and you can't put things off thinking you'll get to them someday," she says. "If you really want to do them, you better do them. There are simply too many people getting sick, and sooner or later you will. So I'm very much a believer in knowing what it is that you love doing so you can do a great deal of it."For Ephron, there was a moment that helped bring that realization vividly home. She was with friends, playing a round of "What would your last meal be?"
(Her pick, by the way: a Nate & Al's hot dog.) "But (my friend) Judy was dying of throat cancer, and she said, 'I can't even have my last meal.' And that's what you have to know is, if you're serious about it, have it now," Ephron says. "Have it tonight, have it all the time, so that when you're lying on your deathbed you're not thinking, 'Oh I should have had more Nate & Al's hot dogs.'"
This set me to thinking ( as I love food and think about it all thew time) what would be my last meal....
My picks to follow....what are yours?
"You do get to a certain point in life where you have to realistically, I think, understand that the days are getting shorter, and you can't put things off thinking you'll get to them someday," she says. "If you really want to do them, you better do them. There are simply too many people getting sick, and sooner or later you will. So I'm very much a believer in knowing what it is that you love doing so you can do a great deal of it."For Ephron, there was a moment that helped bring that realization vividly home. She was with friends, playing a round of "What would your last meal be?"
(Her pick, by the way: a Nate & Al's hot dog.) "But (my friend) Judy was dying of throat cancer, and she said, 'I can't even have my last meal.' And that's what you have to know is, if you're serious about it, have it now," Ephron says. "Have it tonight, have it all the time, so that when you're lying on your deathbed you're not thinking, 'Oh I should have had more Nate & Al's hot dogs.'"
This set me to thinking ( as I love food and think about it all thew time) what would be my last meal....
My picks to follow....what are yours?
Monday, November 22, 2010
A New Sensual Champagne Find.............Tsarine
Last Month in London, one of the most beautiful and sensual ladies I know, introduced me to a new Champagne ( well, at least to me). It is called Tsarine and the bottle itself is worth the price of admission, as they say!
Created in 1730 by the brothers Jacques-Louis and Jean-Baptiste Chanoine during the reign of Louis XV, it is the second oldest champagne house and was the first house to be authorised by the city of Epernay to dig a cellar in Champagne. Champagne of the Tsars, Tsarine was created in honour of Tsarist Russia (the No.1 export market in the 19th Century). The attractive and unique bottle was inspired by the Kremlin where Tsar were crowned. Tsarine Premium Cuvee Brut
With lightness and finesse, the streams of delicate bubbles rise through the glass, reflecting hints of green and of gold.The aromas gently reveal lime flowers and lemon balm mingled with notes of bitter oranges and of quince. Freshness and elegance are confirmed on the palate. The dominant notes of citrus fruits combine with white peaches and raisins.
It does not come cheap ( but what is anymore), at 80 pounds sterling a bottle.
So find that right lady and sucumb to her charms along with a bottle of Tsarine, you won't be sorry!
Created in 1730 by the brothers Jacques-Louis and Jean-Baptiste Chanoine during the reign of Louis XV, it is the second oldest champagne house and was the first house to be authorised by the city of Epernay to dig a cellar in Champagne. Champagne of the Tsars, Tsarine was created in honour of Tsarist Russia (the No.1 export market in the 19th Century). The attractive and unique bottle was inspired by the Kremlin where Tsar were crowned. Tsarine Premium Cuvee Brut
With lightness and finesse, the streams of delicate bubbles rise through the glass, reflecting hints of green and of gold.The aromas gently reveal lime flowers and lemon balm mingled with notes of bitter oranges and of quince. Freshness and elegance are confirmed on the palate. The dominant notes of citrus fruits combine with white peaches and raisins.
It does not come cheap ( but what is anymore), at 80 pounds sterling a bottle.
So find that right lady and sucumb to her charms along with a bottle of Tsarine, you won't be sorry!
Friday, November 5, 2010
London Comfort food from 1742!

LONDON Wilton’s, 55 Jermyn Street, SW1;
Clubbish in location, in looks, and for the most part clubbish in clientele, wonderful Wilton’s in fact affords a cheerful, courteous welcome to all who show up in properly sober clothes, ready to pay the sobering prices. The best English food (as opposed to the best food in England, which is so grandly cosmopolitan these days) is still that which has been least messed about with. That is just what Wilton’s delivers. “Noted since 1742 for the finest oysters, fish and game,” it says of itself, with every justification.
You might start with a half-dozen oysters. They will set you back a pretty penny, but then they are imposing creatures, five inches across, pale beige rather than silver-gray, in shells as flat as saucers. They come from West Mersea, on an island off the Essex coast, from beds that are harvested exclusively from rowboats, lest oil or gasoline pollute the waters. They are opened by London’s best oysterman, Patrick Flaherty, a 40-year veteran when I last checked. None of the briny juices escape. No nasty bits of shell creep in. Then maybe a wild salmon from the Spey in Scotland (increasingly rare), or a snowy hunk of halibut . But whole Dover sole is the overwhelming choice of English connoisseurs: brushed with melted butter, sprinkled with salt and pepper, turned quickly on the grill so that the grill bars burn a dark lattice pattern into the fish, then cooked under the intense heat of the broiler for roughly 12 to 15 minutes. Perfectly simple, simply perfect and entirely sufficient. This is the porterhouse steak of fish. No sauce is needed, partly because cooking the fish whole (“on the bone”) helps to keep it moist. You may well come across an occasional apostate who insists upon tartar sauce (much too robust, in my view) or hollandaise (too rich). In game season, both partridge and grouse are exemplary.
~ Howard's Note:The Grouse as usual was out-of-this-world and the sole was the tops.
An American single dinner a few tables away ( his first time at Wilton's) remarked to Patrick that he had never had sole that tasted like this and I want to stand up and yell, 'You are right!, Its the best in England!'. but I did not, as I was engrossed with my savory of Anchovies on toast.
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
A musical accompaniment ..when did they start playing music in restaurants?
My worst dining nightmare is the above.
Don't get me wrong, I love music as much as the next person, but there is a time and a place for everything and it's not when I want a quiet meal to enjoy my dinner.
I'm mad a hell and I won't take it anymore.............when did this annoyance begin? I don't remember dining the 1950's/60’s and having music accompanying my meal.
It’s bad enough having to put up with restaurants where the noise level is on stun! Where the patrons and wait staff look like they need a shave and a bath. OK, I’ll stop………..
Thursday, September 16, 2010
You're Only Old As The Era You Love!
30 years ago , Dr Ellen Langer, experimented, involving two groups of men in their late seventies and early eighties. One group remained in a 1979 environment, but was encouraged to reminisce about life 20 years earlier. The second group was placed in a house surrounded by props from 1959 and encouraged to watch Fifties’ films and debate Fifties’ news topics. The study, Langer found, revealed that the elixir of youth may lie in the workings of the brain. When tested, the second group emerged with improved physiological performances: their blood pressure dropped; their cognitive abilities and memory greatly improved; one man was even able to cast aside his walking stick.
That study only proved (what I have always thought was true) –that thinking differently can help wind back the clock. “If you go back to an atmosphere where you could do things, where you were king or queen of the heap, it will bring back those memories. And if you truly believe [that you’re in that environment] then your body will follow where the mind has gone.” To work in business environment and to remain current, one must have all the trappings of the 21st Century - Ipod, Ipads, Blackberries, multiple cell phones, multiple computers , you know what I am talking about. Well, unfortunately to survive, I have all of those and more in my life, but as soon as I leave my office, I turn all of that off and go back to the future to live 100 years ago.
My Edwardian grandfather lived always a measured life - meal at specific times daily, time to sit alone in a room and enjoy for its own pleasure – a good cigar and drink his whisky, time to read and write and reflect. Nothing every changed, he enjoyed life on his own terms and in his own time frame and I believe that helped him live comfortably into his late 90's. No stress. There was no multi-tasking in his life. Well before Martha Stewart, his life was always surrounded with beauty and beautiful things. Not expensive things (although he did have those) but with items that pleasured him and gave him solace and comfort. He taught me to enjoy a drink and a cigar, a love of books and their bindings, of eating a great meal in quiet and pleasurable surroundings, to enjoy just sitting in a room alone and quiet. The world today, in my opinion is going stark raving mad, but for me, its 1908 and it is here you’ll find a very happy man!
That study only proved (what I have always thought was true) –that thinking differently can help wind back the clock. “If you go back to an atmosphere where you could do things, where you were king or queen of the heap, it will bring back those memories. And if you truly believe [that you’re in that environment] then your body will follow where the mind has gone.” To work in business environment and to remain current, one must have all the trappings of the 21st Century - Ipod, Ipads, Blackberries, multiple cell phones, multiple computers , you know what I am talking about. Well, unfortunately to survive, I have all of those and more in my life, but as soon as I leave my office, I turn all of that off and go back to the future to live 100 years ago.
My Edwardian grandfather lived always a measured life - meal at specific times daily, time to sit alone in a room and enjoy for its own pleasure – a good cigar and drink his whisky, time to read and write and reflect. Nothing every changed, he enjoyed life on his own terms and in his own time frame and I believe that helped him live comfortably into his late 90's. No stress. There was no multi-tasking in his life. Well before Martha Stewart, his life was always surrounded with beauty and beautiful things. Not expensive things (although he did have those) but with items that pleasured him and gave him solace and comfort. He taught me to enjoy a drink and a cigar, a love of books and their bindings, of eating a great meal in quiet and pleasurable surroundings, to enjoy just sitting in a room alone and quiet. The world today, in my opinion is going stark raving mad, but for me, its 1908 and it is here you’ll find a very happy man!
Friday, July 2, 2010
There is Always a Moment in Childhood When The Door Opens and Let's the Future In"
(Cary Grant - The man I most wanted to be like ,act like and dress like)
That quote from author Graham Greene is so true to many of us, to me it's perfect to describe my love of life and food.
For me that door openned very early in my childhood, in 1952 to be exact. The generation of my parents and their friends as rule, went out to dine, never with their children. We stayed at home with a baby sitter. They vacationed away from us, except for once a year when we where taken along. But god forbid, if you were unruly or not well behaved, you where never taken out again for many years to come. Fortunately for myself and my brothers, we had Edwardian grandparents who taught us how to comport ourselves in every thing social. They were based on the mores of the 1900's to the early 1930's. I am forever grateful to them for their instruction as it has made my life that much richer.
The moment that 'door' opened for me was during our 2 week annual stay at the Hotel Del Coronado Hotel in San Diego.
As the rule, for dinner for my brothers and I, it was brought to our room and my parents ate later in the formal dining room. Not until we were in our late teens were we allowed to dine with them when we vacationed, save breakfast and lunch. Dinner was their time together, for in those days, our parents, certainly loves us and took care of us, but they did not live their entire life for us, unlike most parents today. I always thought that was more civilized and a wise approach to raising a family.
So, one evening, I asked my father if I could go down to the dining room and have dinner by myself. Being well brought up, dressing well and knowing all the rules of dining, they said yes.
So I wore my best suit and tie, shined my shoes to a polish and went off to the formal dining room. Here I was treated as an adult, because I acted as an adult. Even as a child of 13, I recognized how important that was and that has served me all my life.
It was a wonderful meal and I found that dining by myself was something I enjoyed. I enjoy the theatre of eating a great restaurant and the good service along with well prepared dishes. That dinner proved to be a very happy affair for me and I knew at that moment that was going to be very important in my life and living.
I have become attached to restaurants, some are old friends -the atmosphere, the food, the staff - all become a pleasing part of existence. Restaurants such as d'Chez Eux in Paris have enhanced my life of 67 years.
I must say that most dining today is like dining in a playpen -the buzz, the trendy, the noisy, the slovenly dressed clients, and the silly food concoctions etc.
What I expect from a restaurant (and that is why no one today would want me as a critic) is a grownup restaurant: An attentive reception, a civilized ambience, a well groomed staff and clientele, polished service and a halfway intelligent menu and wine list.
Fine dining (to my mind) like great art , music, and literature ought to be keen-minded, luminous and uplifting.
That quote from author Graham Greene is so true to many of us, to me it's perfect to describe my love of life and food.
For me that door openned very early in my childhood, in 1952 to be exact. The generation of my parents and their friends as rule, went out to dine, never with their children. We stayed at home with a baby sitter. They vacationed away from us, except for once a year when we where taken along. But god forbid, if you were unruly or not well behaved, you where never taken out again for many years to come. Fortunately for myself and my brothers, we had Edwardian grandparents who taught us how to comport ourselves in every thing social. They were based on the mores of the 1900's to the early 1930's. I am forever grateful to them for their instruction as it has made my life that much richer.
The moment that 'door' opened for me was during our 2 week annual stay at the Hotel Del Coronado Hotel in San Diego.
As the rule, for dinner for my brothers and I, it was brought to our room and my parents ate later in the formal dining room. Not until we were in our late teens were we allowed to dine with them when we vacationed, save breakfast and lunch. Dinner was their time together, for in those days, our parents, certainly loves us and took care of us, but they did not live their entire life for us, unlike most parents today. I always thought that was more civilized and a wise approach to raising a family.
So, one evening, I asked my father if I could go down to the dining room and have dinner by myself. Being well brought up, dressing well and knowing all the rules of dining, they said yes.
So I wore my best suit and tie, shined my shoes to a polish and went off to the formal dining room. Here I was treated as an adult, because I acted as an adult. Even as a child of 13, I recognized how important that was and that has served me all my life.
It was a wonderful meal and I found that dining by myself was something I enjoyed. I enjoy the theatre of eating a great restaurant and the good service along with well prepared dishes. That dinner proved to be a very happy affair for me and I knew at that moment that was going to be very important in my life and living.
I have become attached to restaurants, some are old friends -the atmosphere, the food, the staff - all become a pleasing part of existence. Restaurants such as d'Chez Eux in Paris have enhanced my life of 67 years.
I must say that most dining today is like dining in a playpen -the buzz, the trendy, the noisy, the slovenly dressed clients, and the silly food concoctions etc.
What I expect from a restaurant (and that is why no one today would want me as a critic) is a grownup restaurant: An attentive reception, a civilized ambience, a well groomed staff and clientele, polished service and a halfway intelligent menu and wine list.
Fine dining (to my mind) like great art , music, and literature ought to be keen-minded, luminous and uplifting.
Sunday, June 27, 2010
June 28, 1682 - Happy Birthday Champagne!
On this day, French history tells us that a Benedictine monk by that name of Pierre Perignon who was the head cellarer of the Abbey of Hautviliers invented Champagne.
That a drink now so glamorous, associated with seduction and the good life, could have been created by an ascetic monk makes a pleasantly ironic tale that has been carefully cultivated by the Chanpagne house, Moet & Chandon , owners of the abbey of Hautvilliers since 1822. It's a romantic myth, be that as it may ( I love romantic tales, if truth be told) but the good Dom's real achievement, truly dramatic for the time was to make clear still white wine from black grapes. He understood the climate of Champagne, that blending wines from different vineyards did produce a better wine than ones from a single vineyard and so in 1682, he made his first sparkling wine and we are so grateful for that.
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Edwardian SuperSize Me!
The Edwardian era, from the death of Queen Victoria in 1901 to the expiration of her obese but happy son Edward VII from not entirely surprising double heart attack in 1910, was the Golden Age not just of cricket, motoring, amateurism and one piece swimsuits for gentlemen, but of eating!
He generated the first great restaurant boom, an explosion of new and exciting dishes.
I am proud to say, that even in the 21st century, I think, no, I know and comport myself as a latter day Edwardian - to live, dress, exercise, eat and drink like an Edwardian man of means.
Some people for relaxation read crime novels, some play silly games with spiroid balls, while others listen to Mozart and Operas ( you know what they say about Opera - " If it's too silly to say, then sing it!), some jog in tasteless clothes and visit gyms and sweat, BUT…ah! For me, my pleasure is reading old menus, especially ones from 1901 to 1935. It is and has been a pleasure of mine for over 50 years.
Here is one I was reading last night - along with my favorite cat ensconced on my lap and a glass of Maderia close at hand.
From the Savoy Hotel, London - 1905, January 14th 9 courses
Evening wear a must!
Beluga Caviar with native rock oysters (today that would be worth $2000.00)
Pot Au Feu Henry IV - the shoulder, shank, rib and tail of beef braised all day and served in their broth with a blob of Bernaise.
Sole cardinale and Whitebait
Chicken d'Albufera - a roasted bird ( are you sitting down?) served in a sauce of boiled cream, triply-reduced, with mushrooms and black truffles and quenelles of veal tongue and chicken. How I long for that kind of dish! Take that, the Thomas Keller's of the world, that is something you should inspire too. Not the silly dishes you foist on the public!
Saddle of Lamb with spring vegatables and parsley potatoes.
Pressed Rouen ducklings ( the best in the world) in its own juice.
Asparagus hollandaise ( which Edwardians loved as a pre dessert)
Peach melba
and finally Canapes a la Diane.
I love the Edwardian way of life - the great clothes, the staggering food, and the not much having to do.........
Monday, June 21, 2010
Wilton's In London - How Do I Love thee?
I received this today from one of my favorite restaurants in London - All I can say is , I have booked my flight and can't wait until September.
This my friend is true eating, not that insipid food that trendy restaurants try to pawn of on you. And of course, this is not for the impoverished of pocket nor dress. Thank goodness!
The DP Dinner 29 September 2010
29th Sep 2010
Wiltons and Dom Pérignon invite you to experience a very special champagne dinner, tutored by Richard Bampfield, MW and European Champagne Ambassador 2009.
This is truly a unique opportunity to enjoy a variety of Dom Pérignon vintages alongside the exceptional food of Wiltons award-winning celebrity chef Andrew Turner.
Champagne canapé reception served with Dom Pérignon Vintage 2000: 6.30pm
Dinner: 7pm (prompt)
Dress: Lounge suit ( if you have to ask - then this is not for you!)
Menu
Butter poached native lobster and scallop fondant - Oh! My! My favorite!
Dom Pérignon Vintage 2002
Breast of guinea fowl and confit leg with salsify, - OMG - Another favorite!
Wild mushrooms and rosemary
Dom Pérignon Oenotheque Vintage 1996
Pear William Pavlova, cardamom and almonds
Dom Pérignon Rose Vintage 2000
Coffee and sweetmeats
Glenmorangie Signet
£180 per person
.......................too expensive? Naw!
Just remember what Victor Hugo once said
"As the purse is emptied, the heart is filled'..............and stomach!
This my friend is true eating, not that insipid food that trendy restaurants try to pawn of on you. And of course, this is not for the impoverished of pocket nor dress. Thank goodness!
The DP Dinner 29 September 2010
29th Sep 2010
Wiltons and Dom Pérignon invite you to experience a very special champagne dinner, tutored by Richard Bampfield, MW and European Champagne Ambassador 2009.
This is truly a unique opportunity to enjoy a variety of Dom Pérignon vintages alongside the exceptional food of Wiltons award-winning celebrity chef Andrew Turner.
Champagne canapé reception served with Dom Pérignon Vintage 2000: 6.30pm
Dinner: 7pm (prompt)
Dress: Lounge suit ( if you have to ask - then this is not for you!)
Menu
Butter poached native lobster and scallop fondant - Oh! My! My favorite!
Dom Pérignon Vintage 2002
Breast of guinea fowl and confit leg with salsify, - OMG - Another favorite!
Wild mushrooms and rosemary
Dom Pérignon Oenotheque Vintage 1996
Pear William Pavlova, cardamom and almonds
Dom Pérignon Rose Vintage 2000
Coffee and sweetmeats
Glenmorangie Signet
£180 per person
.......................too expensive? Naw!
Just remember what Victor Hugo once said
"As the purse is emptied, the heart is filled'..............and stomach!
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Small Pleasures.................
Waldo Lydecker ( AKA Clifton Webb in Laura)
Small pleasures I enjoy...............A club sandwich with a ice-cold martini (dry), A hot dog with a lamb casing, a classic Caesar salad, Women in Summer dresses, Chili with part beef/lamb and pork and NO beans!, Sunday brunch at the Four Seasons in Los Angeles and their Bloody Mary with extra horseradish and garlic, a Lonsdale cigar and a glass of Calvados and taking of course a BATH.Ah, Yes, most defiantly a bath.............
Bathing...is transporting one's senses to new and liquid dimensions of elegance, ecstasy and luxury. It is sensory, it is sensual, it is exotic, it is...sex without sex. In a bath, one's body is caressed by warm, perfumed waters. Your ears are kissed and nibbled by sweet music...your mind is seduced to a different dimension of peace, and calm, and pleasure.
Small pleasures I enjoy...............A club sandwich with a ice-cold martini (dry), A hot dog with a lamb casing, a classic Caesar salad, Women in Summer dresses, Chili with part beef/lamb and pork and NO beans!, Sunday brunch at the Four Seasons in Los Angeles and their Bloody Mary with extra horseradish and garlic, a Lonsdale cigar and a glass of Calvados and taking of course a BATH.Ah, Yes, most defiantly a bath.............
Bathing...is transporting one's senses to new and liquid dimensions of elegance, ecstasy and luxury. It is sensory, it is sensual, it is exotic, it is...sex without sex. In a bath, one's body is caressed by warm, perfumed waters. Your ears are kissed and nibbled by sweet music...your mind is seduced to a different dimension of peace, and calm, and pleasure.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
1950's Movies - My Guilty Pleasure
More in detail of my love of the 1950's movies - but until then - a clip from Pete Kelly's Blues - Starting Jack Webb (they don't make them like that anymore!)
Ella Fitzgerald in a cameo from the movie and a great movie theme song.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j2VBElCVOvU&feature=related
Ella Fitzgerald in a cameo from the movie and a great movie theme song.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j2VBElCVOvU&feature=related
Labels:
Ella Fitzgerald,
Jack Webb,
Pete Kellys Blues
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Give Me Meat, You Philistine, Meat!
I am leaving for France for 3 weeks in a few days and my thoughts turn to some of my favorite places to spend a 3 hour lunch and one is near the spa town of Evian, over looking ( from the French side of course) Lake Geneva.
High on the hill above the lake is La Verniaz et Ses Chalets. A lovely hotel and restaurant run by the 5 generation ,Verdier family.
A treat here is ordering from "Campfire" grill menu - a large wood fire spit in the center of the restaurant that offers grilled meats.
To be honest with you, I have had one to three star Michelin meals all over France, but when it comes to the 'crunch', give me a spit roasted bird or meat dish and you will find no happier person in the world!
Dining here is one of my most cherished memories and something I come back to year after year. The good part is after a 'thrilling' and full filling ,3 hour luncheon, to be able to walk just a few paces to your awaiting room and to sleep and dream of what you just ate, is heaven on earth. Genesis was wrong, we never left the Garden of Eden, it is here in Evian.
The traditional grill room in the campfire of "La Verniaz":
Bavarian beef filet roasted on a spit (minimum of 2 persons) 30 € per person
Rack of lamb roasted on a spit, flavoured with thyme, (minimum of 2 persons) 28 € per person
Bresse poultry chicken «Miéral» roasted whole on a spit (minimum of three persons)(one hour cooking) 26 € per person
Labels:
Bresse chicken,
Campfire grill,
La Verniaz france
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
The Last Civilized Smoke in London
The Lanesborough is the only hotel where serious cigar smokers should stay when visiting London. It has a multimillion dollar smoking lounge that is unique in the United Kingdom, and perhaps the world, making it a cigar mecca for visitors and locals alike in the capital city. Because of the Government ban on smoking in hotels/restaurants/cafes/private clubs etc, The Lanesborough moved its famous Library cigar bar (which I adored) in the main building to a ground floor outdoor area in the back of the hotel called The Garden Room. It was first a Moroccan tent-like structure, but now resembles a plush library complete with heating, tiled floor, rare wood paneling, leather seats candles and fireplace. With its seating for about 45 people, it's hard to tell you're even outdoors as you relax with a cigar and single malt or something from the hotel's collection of fine Cognacs in hand.
The Garden Room is open from 4p.m. to midnight, although manager Guiseppe Ruo says that hotel guests can stay as long as they like. Ruo is a cigar legend in the city and travels regularly to Cuba. He keeps a well-stocked walk-in humidor with hundreds of boxes representing 60 to 70 different brands and sizes. Most of the cigars are Cuban, with everything from a Montecristo No.4 for $22.50 to a Cohiba Behike for $2,500. Prices are per cigar and about 30 percent more than U.K. retail. Regulars have cigar lockers as well.
But guests are not obliged to buy cigars from the Lanesborough, Ruo says with a smile, adding that there's a $40 minimum per person clipping charge. Bar food is also available, from snacks to steaks to salads. I like to travel with my cigars myself, so I know how it is. Customers are welcome to bring their own.
With the lounge, cigar selection and amazing offerings of spirits, Champagne, wines and Ports by the glass, cigar loving hotel guests might be induced to spend every waking hour there, Close to two dozen pre-1900 Cognacs are offered by the glass as well as 60 vintage-dated whiskeys, not to mention old rums, Calvados and Armagnacs. There's always a glass of 1970 Warre or 1963 Croft on pour as well.
Since I know the GM (he is wonderful and get you all kinds of extras!) why not consider staying and enjoy the comforts of the rest of the hotel with its sumptuously appointed rooms and superior dining.
Labels:
Cigars,
garden room,
london. Lanesborough
Friday, February 26, 2010
The Sunny Days Of yesteryear! ..and Its Music!
In the 1960's, Bossa Nova hit the United States and Europe with a bang! I loved this music and one of my favorite Bossa Nova songs was Tristezza and one of my favorite singers (I was raised an internationalist!, don’t you know) was Italian POP singer, Ms. Ornella VARONI, whom I adored then and now!
Here is her rendition (fantastic musical chart, I must say) of that song!
Gad, how I miss those days of music!
Here is her rendition (fantastic musical chart, I must say) of that song!
Gad, how I miss those days of music!
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