Peter Creasey
Peter Creasey
MENU:
originally posted by Cole Kendall: I am curious to know what it's like now, though not curious enough to risk any money trying it again.
That would be the 9th of April Club. They'll be at the 7-11. Menu follows.originally posted by Nathan Odem:
What will the Seventh of April Club be doing, say, tomorrow?
Grilled octopus is pretty meaty and intense, depending on any marinade or sauce I could see this working well, although not my first choice. I'm more curious about the Calabrian Tonnato - how is that prepared?originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Ch9 and octopus? This seems... inauspicious. Was it?
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
Tangentially related P.S. - even though it's delicious, I can't bring myself to order octopus anymore, after all these documentaries on how clever, perceptive and characterful octopi are. Anyone else feel the same way?
Sounds wrong. But since I have no clue what Calabrian Tonnato is; I hope it is not the classic sauce for vitello with hot chiles added. Then the pairing would be truly awful, well, unless you enjoy the blowtorch effect when the heat in food gets together with higher alcohol wines.originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Ch9 and octopus? This seems... inauspicious. Was it?
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Well, they certainly didn’t spare any expense.
You know, I have dreamed about one day doing something akin to this. Simpler food and certainly simpler/less expensive wines. But 6-7 courses over an entire evening, each with it own wine or wines. Maybe 8 people so it’s not out of hand and so everyone gets a decent pour.
While I’m sure I could get 7 other people to show, I’d have a hard time getting 7 that would fully appreciate the experience.
And if I could get 7 that would fully enjoy the experience, I know they’d bring wine, etc. - which is when it all becomes an entirely different event.
Ah well . . .
I hope you enjoy it, Pete.
Best, Jim
I claim no philosophical insight or consistency on this. Just a gut reaction from my feeling that they are smart and cute, and recent impressive exposure to examples. I suppose I could reconcile occasionally eating octopi with my occasional noshing on other meats/poultry that are humanely raised, if I was convinced that commercialized octopi were raised/caught and dispatched humanely. Which I strongly doubt. Their difference from fish stems from my perception that octopi are more aware and sensitive to their environment. I've probably just opened and poured a can of worms down a rabbit hole, given the philosophical expertise and intelligence on this board.originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
Tangentially related P.S. - even though it's delicious, I can't bring myself to order octopus anymore, after all these documentaries on how clever, perceptive and characterful octopi are. Anyone else feel the same way?
I've had a couple of divine octopus dishes in recent weeks, and was thinking I should eat more. So now you give me this buzzkill!
More seriously, I didn't know that 'clever, perceptive and characterful' were criteria for whether someone/something deserved to live. Those would be some interesting standards to try and uphold in court!
Personally, I eat mostly vegetarian, with fish/seafood about 2 or 3 times per week maximum. But I think it's clear that humans have been designed to be omnivores, and 'reasonable' omnivore diets would be sustainable for the planet.
Not that we're likely to be 'reasonable' anytime soon!
originally posted by mark e:
Sounds wrong. But since I have no clue what Calabrian Tonnato is; I hope it is not the classic sauce for vitello with hot chiles added. Then the pairing would be truly awful, well, unless you enjoy the blowtorch effect when the heat in food gets together with higher alcohol wines.originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Ch9 and octopus? This seems... inauspicious. Was it?
Getting a bit nitpicky there, aren't we. I imagine Peter was probably using the term in the sense of Merriam-Webster's definition 1(a), "lacking a definite plan, purpose, or pattern," as opposed to definition 2(b) which you have in mind, "being or relating to a set or to an element of a set each of whose elements has equal probability of occurrence." His usage was correct and likely not uncommon even on this very board, and the grammar police ought to understand by now that being friends with the dictionary does not license them to make false arrests.originally posted by robert ames:
if the wines were actually random you'd think there'd be something like a gallo hearty burgundy or friend tucked in there somewhere.
ascribing the term random to this, as a sample set of wines in general, means that you don't know the definition of random.
as in, i have a random collection of cars--you know, an aston martin db7, a bugatti royale, a gull wing mercedes 300, a ferrari berlinetto lusso, and a stutz bearcat. no pintos, no impalas, no mustangs, no chevys, no volkswagens. just random stuff i stumbled across.
hint: make the dictionary your friend, or at least acquaintance.