originally posted by Claude Kolm:
originally posted by Tom Blach:
Is that not because great German non-dry Rieslings are at their very best on their own?
They actually work amazingly well with food, too, and especially foods that would surprise you. Dr. Manfred Prüm has long delighted in serving one of his Auslesen with wild boar.
On the other hand the traditional food of Burgundy is that which was eaten by people who lived there-grand wines were sent out of the region
What is your source for that? I've read a fair number of books from the first half of the 20th century by Anglophone authors who were amazed at the great wines that they could find in Dijon and Paris and that never made it to London. Rousseau didn't begin selling in the UK until a few years after the end of WWII, but the wines were available in Burgundy and in Paris before then -- one book comments on drinking one in 1915.
While I have plenty of respect for Japanese cooking its extraordinary penetration of French gastronomy is to me a disappointment even while I worry that my concern for cultural purity is in complete opposition to all my views on matters away from the dining table.
Much of it is not really Japanese in style, but rather the respect for purity applied to classic French cuisine. If you come to Paris, try Alliance (but above all, do not waste your money on that travesty Kei).