rachael ray evoo bitches by joeytheteapo

the vegetarian hundred

from trixtah

1) Copy this list into your blog or journal, including these instructions.
2) Bold all the items you’ve eaten.
3) Cross out any items that you would never consider eating.
4) Italicize any item you'll never eat again.
5) Asterisk any items you'd be willing to try but have not yet.
6) Mention the original source
7) Post only behind an LJ cut!

Collapse )
drinking hobby by apiphile

trying to enjoy white wine

subtitled: A to Z 2007 Oregon pinot gris

i thought not too long ago i had read an article in the nyt (in case you have not realized i am a huge nyt fan) by wine guru eric asimov about oregon pinot gris. at least i thought it wasn't too long ago, turns out it was december of 2007, see how these things stick in my mind? :)

i'm a huge fan of eric's. he writes about wine in a way that is accessable to the layperson. he's not fussy, he's not pretentious, he's not afraid to challenge some of the "old-fashioned" was of thinking about (and drinking) wine, and most importantly his love and passion for the subject shines through each and every article and blog post. it is simply not possible to not get excited about something that he is excited about. his enthusiasm reaches across the miles here as i sit (usually at the front desk at work) reading in mississippi something that he has written for a new york city paper. wine, like words, is universal :)

as i mentioned in my first post here, my first experience with wine was with white wine. i was not impressed. truthfully i wasn't impressed with alcoholic beverages in general. beer disgusted me, mixed drinks were strong and overpowering, and no one at the time drank red wine. as i talked about, over the years i began to develop an appreciation for red wine, but for some reason that first experience with that cheap white zinfandel (sorry sally!) had soured my opinion of white wine - so to speak.

my turning point was when i moved from the greater cincinnati, ohio area back to mississippi to be closer to my parents. a new climate, a new humidity level (familiar but the extent of which i had forgotten after eight years in the midwest), a new thirst for something not only wet but cold in a hot, humid, hundred degree plus summer's day. the time, my friends, had come for ms ladylamia to try white wine again. oh, i admit i was loathe to open my palate back up to it. in truth, i had gotten a little pretentious about my red wine. red wine is more of an aquired taste so they say. people who don't know much about wine drink white wine. i don't know much about red wine, but i know what i like. white wine was the mcdonald's of wines and red wine was the truffle kobe beef burger that you are the one that is bold enough to eat!

yeah i let myself get a little wrapped up in my "red wine only" big-headed furvor. i developed my own wine pretention that had little to do with price, but more to do with finding a great taste in a bottle that wasn't going to break you. it didn't have anything to do with anything except my own deep-seated predjudice against white wine.

it was a blog post of asimov's that got me started thinking about a more summer-friendly wine that was fesibly in my universe: the pour: a red wine on ice - it's not blasphemy. i'm not ashamed to admit to you that i gasped aloud when i read the headline. chilled red wine brought back crashing horrific memories of merlot hidden in mini-fridge of my sister's dorm at millsaps when we were all still underage. "i like it cold." she told me defiantly. it also wasn't going to get the attention of a resident advisor if it were hidden in the back of a fridge rather than out breathing on a study desk of those cubby-holes they called "rooms".

i skipped that dorm experience for a myriad of reasons, i was simply never interested in sharing a bathroom with twenty virtal strangers. in fact, i've found that having my own bathroom is a big part of cutting down on tension when living with a significant other. i don't need a lot of "me time" or personal space but i do need a bathroom that is my own, but i digress. the aforementioned merlot which i can't tell you much about except that it was disgusting, probably no more chilled than it would've been at room temperature, was my only experience with chilled red wine. upon further reading of the blog i agreed with a lot of what asimov had to say. room temperature is not all created equal, and it's true that room temperature here in august of missisippi is not room temperature of a more nothern locale. so i decided to give it a go. i chose a wine that i was familiar enough with that i would have a pretty good idea of the changes that it took when chilled. a chose a light, fruity red that i thought would hold up to a bit of refridgerator time.

i was highly disappointed. perhaps it was my own lack of knowledge when choosing the wine. i tried to follow asimov's advice: "Big, heavy red wines like most zinfandels are not suited to the cold." so i thought that i was choosing something that would be ok with a bit of a frost on it. i can't tell you what it was exactly (as i've admitted i need to start writing things down because i forget details very easily, i will say that it was a tempranillo, i believe argentinian or spanish and i'm fairly certain it was a 2006. it was not a wine that asimov mentioned specifically, but it was what i chose. it was so bland when chilled for about a half an hour that i could scarcely believe that it was a wine i'd previously enjoyed. i left it out and as it began to warm the complexity came back to it, the rich flavour, the slighty spicy texture... yes that wine was not meant to be chilled, it took all of the personality out of it.

so i was confronted with a choice: i could continue expiramenting with chilled reds (something that i will do) or i could satisfy my urge for a cool refreshing summer drink by giving white wine a chance. i had no idea where to begin. i knew what i don't like: really dry white wines, most champagnes, white zin (i'm afraid i don't have the balls for it quite yet...). i knew that i'd had a lovely sparkling white that bridget had served us one evening at the W bar, but i didn't know anything about it but that it was fruity and slightly sweet. so i turned to the hometown "experts". the sweet lovely gentlemen at the northside mcdade's wine & spirits. i love mcdade's because they are a locally owned store, and they are friendly. while i frequent several wine stores in the area depending on my mood (they stock different things and some places have better prices than others) i find that mcdade's staff is simply the best at being friendly but not in your way. another wine shop, briarwood wine, i find that the staff is aloof and condescending. they will ask if you need help, but in such a way that doesn't really make you think that they want to help you. this is if i'm in jeans or casual clothes, if i am more dressed up like directly after work some of the staff is a little friendlier which frankly doesn't make me like them any more because i think that everyone that walks into your store deserves the exact same service, because my money is just as good if i am in jeans and little makeup than when i am in a dress all femmed up & hotter looking. :P so there. to be fair, the gay guy is always disinterested, no matter how i look.

i suppose it is just a personal preference, but i like the smiles and the greetings at mcdade's, that i know the staff not by name but by sight (and vice versa) and that the sweet lady in there always calls me "dear". also, the one time we did ask for help (lel and i) at briarwood wine we took home the worst wine i have ever tasted in my life, a 2007 chilean pinot noir. this was late december 2007 so i really feel that perhaps that wine may have been a bit more palatable if it had aged more, but that is neither here nor there, the recommendation was bullshit.

so when it was time for my housewarming party i wanted to have at least one white. i had told people to bring what they wanted to drink but i enjoy the role of hostess so i wanted to have something for the people that forgot, or just because. so i picked out two bottles of low-end red that are very drinkable especially at a party (barefoot red zinfandel and shiraz, both of which were big hits at the "a christmas carol" function my company put on last christmas at new stage) and began to survey my options in the similar range of whites. chardonnay lept out at me from left and right, but chardonnay was dry wasn't it? was it? is that what people like? what would my guests like? did they even drink white wine? would it just be a waste? still i couldn't not have one, i'm me...lol. so i asked one of the lovely gentlemen in there for help (the one with the thinning hair). i said that i was leaning toward one that i hadn't heard of before that was described as "sweet".

"it depends on what your guests like." he informs me.
"i don't know what they like." i said, somewhat panicked, "a lot of the people who are coming i don't know well enough to know their wine habits. they may not care at all...i just don't know!" 'help me' my gaze cried desperately into his eyes. they know me in there well enough to know that if i am asking for help it means business because generally i wander through the reds until i find something interesting and buy it, never once asking for help except when i needed something that would go well with scallops. i was at a loss, he knew that i needed help.

he suggested a pinot grigio. i racked my brain, trying to remember what i had read about pinot grigio vs pinot gris. finally i just bought the damn wine. turns out, it wasn't too bad. since it was a party however, i wasn't paying a lot of attention to the wine so i can't really say very much about it either way (just that the bottle of red i received from a guest at the party was absolutely lovely and the white paled in comparison...forgive the pun.)

so after the "it didn't make me want to vomit" experience with the pinot grigio i decided tonight to try a pinot gris. something that i could really concentrate on, formulate an opinion. to that end i chose a pre-chilled wine, A-Z 2007 oregon pinot gris. normally i would've picked something from a wider selection and chilled it myself but it was around 8pm by the time i hit briarwood (i don't like mcdade's pre-chilled selection though if you have time to wait they will chill anything you'd like for you!) since i'd spent the day with my parents and i didn't really want to wait.

overall i'd say it's a decent wine. it's not bad. but i have yet to spot the appeal of white wine. it lacks the complexity of a red, any red, which is something that i enjoy. i like a sensation or a taste that you didn't catch on your first sip that will jump up and grab your attention on the second. i like a deep, rich, wine. it's an indulgence, like a really good dark chocolate truffle. it's luxurious, like silk sheets, or an aromatic bubble bath. i like red wine i guess because in a way to me it's an indulgence, it's slightly naughty because you are doing something just for yourself. like a bubble bath or a piece of really decadent chocolate, wine is something that is just for me. i might share the experience with someone really special but at the end of the day i am going to relax with a really rich succulent wine and reward myself for a hard day of work, studying, cleaning, whatever obligation i've met. it's like intellectual orgasm... i could do it with food, but i choose not to because a.) that's a lot more effort and b.) i don't want to be huge and i love eating more than i love exercise...lol.

so i do with wine. while i can't say that i don't mind a little summer fling with white wine, and i might find one in my experiences that truly steals my heart, i think that for me white wine is just that - a fling. it doesn't satisfy me the way that it could. it's not deep, rich, complex, surprising, challenging at times. i guess that in a way wine to me is like a really good lover... newness and difference can be exciting and certainly intoxicating at first but in the end it is the layers of experience that truly entice and arouse me. i don't just want one note, one taste, one overwhelming thing no matter how good, i want the differences, the aromas, the depth, the textures, the rich luxurious flavours... ok that was a bad analogy because i'm not sure if i'm talking about wine or women now. ;) but i guess it is about the same, a woman like a glorious red wine is going to overtake every portion of your senses. making love to a woman, even the same woman, is going to be similar and yet different every time, there's a depth to it.

i suppose i will never be a great lover of white wine, and it appears evident that i either need to switch back to reds or get laid as soon as possible, lol. i'm thinking more likely it will be switching back to reds, though i see that there's no harm in having a little tryst with whites now and then, after all red wine and i have made no formal committment to one another.
star wars adventure jedi craves not by g

pacific moon

so i wanted to post a restaurant review but i realized i haven't really done a good restaurant review in a while. i chose one from my personal journal ladylamia from back in november '06, my first experience with what would become one of my favourite restaurants: pacific moon @ newport on the levy, newport ky. (it is still a favourite despite the disasterous night that lel and i visited on her spring break visit, when the sushi chef left because he needed ingredients and didn't come back for 2 hours, prompting us to not have sushi as we planned and lel getting freaked out thinking the fish in her dish was chicken which thankfully it turned out not to be...)

------------------

last night was d's last night here, we went out to pacific moon at newport on the levy to celebrate his birthday which is tomorrow.

i had put together a list of restaurants that i thought he would like based on the menus and the premise that we wanted a place that had good steaks. while looking at the menu for another restaurant on the levy, brio, i decided to go through the directory. pacific moon caught my eye, i saw that their kitchen is open until 2am. i had just read a piece in the times [note: ah yes, i have always been a great lover of the new york times] about restaurants in nyc staying open late or all night like that, how more gourmet and trendy places are doing that, so that got my attention. when i started reading the menu i was like "oh my God, i have to go to this restaurant!!!!" literally everything on the "little pleasures" (appetizer) menu sounded good.

i read the menu to d over the phone, not in a "we should go there for your birthday" way, because asian is sort of a default for us, of course we're always going to want chinese or japanese food so i was trying to do something more out of the ordinary. just because i knew he'd go "yum" just like me. in the end he read 7 menus and said "you know i'd really rather go to pacific moon". because everything on the menu sounded like something he'd like. so we went to pacific moon...

and we were definitely NOT disappointed!

check out their dinner menu [2008 note: the pdf menu is gone now so i deleted that link] in pdf format or visit their levy page and click on "dinner menu" for the java/html version.

we started out with drinks, i always like to choose a "special" drink when i go to a restaurant. something that is their speciality or that you can only get there, usually something different. it's fun to experiment. the "greentini" caught my eye right away a concotion of green tea, sake, and some other stuff that i can't remember, but alas they were out of their greentini mix. we were actually a bit worried because our waiter (who looked surprisingly like an actor who i can't quite place...) just walked away after i ordered my drink and seemingly forgot to take d's drink order. turned out he didn't think they had the mix so he was double checking. i ended up going with a pear sake tini thing which was pear sake and a mixture of tropical fruit juices that was lovely, flavorful, not too sweet, and it was my first experience with sake so i was pleasantly surprised that no scary tastes overwhelmed me.

d ended up getting a mojito and i did give him a hard time about it ;)

we decided that we were going to get a bunch of "little pleasures" instead of entres, so that we could try a lot of different things, all of which it seemed impossible to choose between otherwise.

we ended up with:

soup
  • chicken coconut basil soup

    sushi
  • yum yum roll - "spicy crabstick & cucumber"
  • shrimp tempura roll - "shrimp tempura & asparagus"

    little pleasures & assorted
  • stuffed crab claws - "snow crab claws wrapped in minced shrimp and crabmeat coated in crispy rice noodles"
  • 5 spice baby octopus - "a traditional chinese delicacy lightly fried, tossed with our five spice powder."
  • cold sesame noodles - "flat noodles and bean sprouts in a slightly spicy peanut sauce."
  • sesame vegetables

    dessert
  • key lime tart
  • mango ice cream

    Collapse )
  • rachael ray evoo bitches by joeytheteapo

    watermelon granita

    so this happened much by accident. i was planning on making sorbet for my housewarming party but like an idiot i didn't take my brand new ice cream/sorbet maker out of the box until the night before the party (when i planned on making the sorbet). i found much to my chagrin while reading the directions that the bowl actually needed to freeze and that could take up to 22 hours. i tried in vain hoping to get around that, but in the end i froze the mixture that would've been sorbet and it turned into granita.

    it ended up being the one thing that everyone raved most about, so i share this with you as my first recipe here on lamiawines (it is so ridiculously simple anyone can make it and i do mean anyone!)

    watermelon granita
    (adapted from alton brown's melon sorbet recipe)

    1 lb 5 oz of diced watermelon (or other melon)
    3 Tablespoons lemon juice
    1-1/4 cups sugar

    blend diced melon in a blender or food processor until smooth.
    add lemon juice and sugar, blend for a few seconds.
    pour into a container with a lid and freeze for at least 24 hours, stirring every few hours (as possible) to "flake" the mixture.

    note: if you are anything like me you are going "how the f*** do i know what 1 lb 5 oz of diced watermelon is in a grocery store?" what i did was take half a watermelon that was already prepared and dropped into one of those scales in the produce section. i'm sure it looked a bit odd. it was around 2 lbs so i figured once i got rid of the rind and diced it that it'd be close enough to 1 lb 5 oz. i'm a big believer in fudging around with recipes, and usually the things i make have no actual measurements... :)
    drinking hobby by apiphile

    my love affair with wine...

    red wine is a bit like coffee. when i started out drinking coffee i was 13 or 14, i started out drinking frou-frou sweet drinks with whipped cream, until it evolved into drinking black coffee. now i prefer to take my coffee with a little soy milk or splenda (either or, never both) unless it's very good coffee.

    i remember the first time i tried wine. i was seventeen, nearly eighteen, and i was spending the post-christmas new year holiday with my then-girlfriend sara (sally). it was pretty much my first time trying alcohol really. there had been a few times in high school where we'd mixed together tiny bits of everything out of my friend erin's mother's liquor cabinet but i don't really count that as any sort of experience with alcohol.

    sally had picked out a white zinfandel because that's what most people liked. i hated it. it was pungent, i felt like we should be eating cheese with it perhaps because it reminded me of cheese. i just remember it being tangy, tart, and disliking it very much. i'm not sure what prompted me to try the fruity wine "wild vines" unbelievably cheap things. i liked them though and like my slide from frou-frou coffee drinks the enjoyment of the "wild vines" wine turned into an interest in "real" red wine.

    i think it was really after sally & i separated that we started drinking red wine. that's a funny way of remembering, isn't it? but it's true. we started drinking red wine together after we'd split. we hung out a few times a week (yes, typical lesbians staying close friends after a breakup but in truth we were always friends) and she started buying a random bottle here and there to try. whatever looked interesting. i wasn't buying it because i still wasn't 21 yet, but we'd have a glass of shiraz or red zinfandel and watch buffy the vampire slayer, that's back when it was still airing new. oh so many years ago...

    her sudden interest inspired an interest in me too. i liked what i was trying. i was intrigued, yet i never wanted to get too deeply into wine because i felt there was simply too much to it. there was too much to know, so many intricate things that i didn't quite understand or know about. i felt like i couldn't really get passionate about wine unless i knew all there was to know, and since i didn't have the time to read about it or know where to begin i just drank it occasionally at the theatre, or opera, or at sally's house. slowly over time however, i began to follow sally's odd but fun way of choosing a bottle of wine - i looked for something in my price range that jumped out at me in some way: a name, a label, a description.

    what i came to realize is something that i see reflected in many wine blogs: it doesn't really matter what the critics say, it matters what you like. drink what you like. somehow i became known in my family in some friend circles as being some sort of wine coniseur but in truth, i'm not. i do drink a lot of wine. i like the ritual of it. i like taking the cork out and sniffing it though i still don't know exactly what i'm smelling but i do get an impression from it. i like swirling the wine in the glass and then smelling it, and then taking the first sip. with most wines, i can't really tell you the notes i taste there. with a few i can, mostly it just tastes good or bad or has a bite, or is light and delicious.

    i do like to read about it, and i know over the years i will learn more and more about it. i think that's truly what draws me to wine, it's a lot like life. no matter how much you know there is always more to learn, and most of us will never know it all. what i share here won't be especially brilliant, or teach you anything about wine. i'm simply going to share my thoughts about what i like, what you like could very well be different. i hope that what i can convey is my sheer joy and love for wine. because it is true, it doesn't matter if the wine costs $5 or $50 for most of us, it's about the enjoyment we find in the bottle, and that is something that is priceless.