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Recently I accepted a job at a local Poblano-Italian restaurant. Beginning next week I will be El Barzon's new beverage director. This means I will have to remaster the tricks of tending bar, and I invite your disorderly advice and tips on the subject. This is a picture of my take on an ungarnished Sazerac cocktail using Wild Turkey Bourbon, Ricard Cassis and Peychaud bitters. I like it better with Chartreuse as a substitute for Absinthe, but I am on a budget and the Ricard pastis goes a lot farther. I hope to stock Carpano Antica vermouth too, both for serving with soda and in Manhattans.

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My buddy John S. is thinking about opening a bistro on Detroit's east side. The other day he came over with a salmon filet. I was shocked to discover that a 2005 Haut Medoc du Beyzac (sp.? - a Handpicked item) didn't go "well" with raw salmon, wasabi and soy sauce - it went OMFG amazing with it. I'm still puzzled about how to fit this in my food-wine pairing conceptual schemes. We steamed the rest of the fish over a broth infused with mirepoix, cinnamon, cumin, anise, tamari, curry and shrimp stock. We had two different wines with it:

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2008 Clos Roche Blanche Sauvignon, something I've been binging on lately, has lots of ripe flavor and texture. At least one diner at the barbeque restaurant where I work sent a bottle back. I suppose it doesn't resemble "Sauvignon" very much, rather it tastes more like dry "Auslese" made out of Sauvignon. It paired well with the salmon. We also drank 2006 Gamay Pouille (Thierry Puzelat.) The exotic food flavors brought out the elegant dry structures in the wine. The tannins were soft textured while they determined the grand pace of mineral, spice and fruit flavors.

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At some point we cobbled together a pork and bean soup made with smoked ham hocks, pinto beans and celery. The dish probably cost less than $1.

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Moving backward in time, I spent an evening recently with Steve K., Jerry B. and families on an island in the Detroit River. There was one dish: Italian sausages, peppers and onions fried in a large iron skillet. The aperitif was Aleks Simcic's 2008 Pinot Grigio from Brda, which was fresh faced and even interesting despite its polish. Lots of fruit. Nothing forced. There were two reds. Steve and Jerry loved the Pouille Gamay (same edition as above.) So did I, but the surprise was a bottle of 2007 Lang and Reed North Coast Cabernet Franc. Recognizable. Plush. Not a come on, just comfortable red wine with some adult flavors, currants in particular. At their best California Bordeaux varietals remind me of a warm wood cabin after coming in from the cold.

Dessert was liquid: 2005 Mueller Catoir Haardter Buergergarten Riesling Auselse. I haven't ever drunk a MC wine more than 10 years old and from the evidence I'm not sure I would want to spend a lot of energy finding one. This wine was balanced, complex with flavors of marmelade, honey, fresh fruit juices and herbs, all morphing spontaneously in a beautiful way.
 
...Lang and Reed North Coast Cabernet Franc. Recognizable. Plush. Not a come on, just comfortable red wine with some adult flavors, currants in particular.

I had one of these back about 10 years ago. Sounds like they are still making good c.f.

Might want to ask Levi directly about the bartending comments, esp. after his 'Tour d'Tokyo' barapallooza.

And the Dee-troit River has islands in it? Cool. Never really noticed any in it from all the landings at Detroit Metro.
 
Congrats on the new gig, Putnam. Does this mean that you'll cease working with Slows, or is that an ongoing deal? More and more reasons to find my way to the Motor City...

Mark Lipton
 
1 day a week at Slows. 3 at El Barzon - weekend dinners. 3 at Everyday Wines in Ann Arbor. I might add in more doubles once I get used to the routine.

Thanks for asking. I still haven't ruled out Brooklyn and Portland OR either.

Among the Detroit River's many fabulous islands are Belle Isle and Grosse Ile (the latter is pronounced "eel.") Belle Isle is near Grosse Pointe. Grosse Ile almost touches Trenton.
 
Looks great but..."Sazerac cocktail using Wild Turkey Bourbon"...why not use the Sazerac 8 yo straight rye"??? I have been enjoying this for the last several months...not sure it isn't as good or better than the older (?18 yr) version...I'll have to try Chartreuse rather than Absinthe..sounds good... The food looks out of this world
 
Typo. It was Wild Turkey Rye, not Bourbon. I suppose the structural reason for this choice is budgetary. I've managed to convince myself that WT Rye has a redeeming husky dry flavor that occasionally appears to be in sharper focus vs. the Sazerac brand.

The food was really good. I wish there was a more faithful way to share the experience with you all.
 
I like Carpano Antica.

I like Wild Turkey Rye okay, and I think it is a good blending rye. But personally, if the rye is going to the base of the drink, I usually prefer Rittenhouse 100 proof, which is also cheap.

I would recommend Perucchi Vermouth to you. In either color.

Hope you have fun with the new gig.
 
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
I like Carpano Antica.

I like Wild Turkey Rye okay, and I think it is a good blending rye. But personally, if the rye is going to the base of the drink, I usually prefer Rittenhouse 100 proof, which is also cheap.

I would recommend Perucchi Vermouth to you. In either color.

Hope you have fun with the new gig.

Agreed. Rittenhouse is cheaper and more distinctive in my opinion. Also you may consider a French sazerac substituting cognac for half of the rye.

The martini glass seems a bit unusual for a glassware choice as well, half you considered a shorter, straighter sazerac glass or even just a rocks glass?
 
Deprivation. To my knowledge the Rittenhouse you mention is not in Michigan (I haven't even seen expensive Rittenhouse either.) I should reconsider the glassware too. Last night I drank a half-portion Embury Old-Fashioned (lemon twist garnish) from a cheap champagne flute. It did the trick! Minutes later I was eating a savory chile en nogada, wondering if food gets any better.
 
I was shocked to discover that a 2005 Haut Medoc du Beyzac (sp.? - a Handpicked item) didn't go "well" with raw salmon, wasabi and soy sauce - it went OMFG amazing with it.

I am guessing this was a relatively lightly-styled wine? Even in 2005? Nonetheless, it still surprises me. Nice to have these discoveries.
 
originally posted by drssouth:

Looks great but..."Sazerac cocktail using Wild Turkey Bourbon"...why not use the Sazerac 8 yo straight rye"??? I have been enjoying this for the last several months...not sure it isn't as good or better than the older (?18 yr) version...I'll have to try Chartreuse rather than Absinthe..sounds good... The food looks out of this world

Why substitute for Absinthe?
 
If real Absinthe is available here, it's too ambiguous and too expensive for me.

The wine is called Haut Medoc du Haut Beyzac. Quoting Google quoting handpickedselections: "This is a lush yet firm, completely unoaked blend of 75% Merlot, 25% Cabernet Sauvignon. The grapes are fully destemmed. Fermentation lasts about 10 days, ..."

As wine it had plenty of weight and ripeness. As "2005 Haut Medoc" it was probably lighter than most. It's the first Bordeaux in at least five years that I've considered drinking twice.

Maybe that's hyperbole. Limit the set to that which has been stocked and known to me in my state and I can defend it.
 
Putnam,

I think that if I couldn't find Rittenhouse 100 proof in my area, my next rye of choice for the drink you wrote about would be Old Overholt, before I moved to the Turkey.

Have you visited www.cocktailkingdom.com? You might find things of interest there, like bitters, old cocktail recipe collection reprints, barware, etc.

Also, I find myself learing something from www.drinkboston.com whenever I read it. And the website for the Difford's Guide can be helpful with inspiration as regards recipes.

I would recommend you to Imbibe magazine, as well. And of course the NYT.

We just changed up the entire cocktail menu where I am, so we are in similar frames of mind, you and I.
 
Thanks for the suggestions. The only publication I recognize is Imbibe. I've enjoyed it, follow it on twitter. (I can' remember, did they publish a letter of mine?)

I'll look for Old Overholt too. But our liquor selection is spotty compared to yours. One in a while we find the stunning hidden gem, but for listing purposes it's limited. No surprise I hope.

I'll hope to team up with other outlets in order to improve things ...
 
originally posted by Putnam Weekley:
Is it possible to add too much lemon twist to Carpano Antica on the rocks?

The trend in NYC at this moment seems to be for adding surfboard size orange rind slices to everything. Guess we'll see how far that goes. I'm definitely tired of it already.

BTW, I am told that Rittenhouse and Old Overholt Rye are readily available in Brooklyn.

Just say'in.
 
Oh, and I would mention that egullet, in the liquor/beverage forums, is a good resource. Much better than the restaurant side of that site.
 
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