TN: Celebrating Christine's birthday- with pics.

Brad Kane

Brad Kane
Christine's birthday was last week. Rather than go out to celebrate, what does she do? She decides she wants to cook a fabulous feast for her friends! I'm down with that as is Marty Ellington and Paul and Sandy Jaouen. Howard Camhi e-mailed me a few days prior that he was taking an impromptu trip to New York with his son, Jake and so they, too, got a lucky invite to what would be an evening of great food and friends. Unfortunately, the wine Gods gave a bunch of our selections a rather hard time, but such is life. It in no way dampened the spirits of the revelers. In fact, it gave us more to laugh about.

1990 Pol Roger- Champagne 2000 Selection Brut - France, Champagne
From magnum, it's a deep gold color, darker than I would've expected. Apples and intense nuttiness dominate the nose and palate, with a bit of yeastiness on the back. Ripe, but with good acidity. The bead is just a bit more lively than I prefer and overall I find the nutty character too dominant. B+.

2004 Bouchard Père et Fils- Meursault 1er Cru Les Perrières - France, Burgundy, Côte de Beaune, Meursault 1er Cru
There's talk that this might be an off bottle. I'd say so. It showed an extremely unpleasant nose of intense vanilla with a strong chemical component. It showed better in the mouth, but there just wasn't a lot there. The oak stands out, but there's no real palate presence. NR.

1970 Bodegas Riojanas- Rioja Monte Real Gran Reserva - Spain, La Rioja, La Rioja Alta, Rioja
Showing just as nicely as the few other bottles I've had over the past several months. This one took a little more time than the others to get going, though, with the last sip revealing so much more than the first. The wine was supple, elegant and fully integrated with typical cherry, leather, citrus and worn wood flavors and aromas. Just in a really good place right now and a surprisingly good match with Christine's porcini fonduta with black truffle. Solid A-.

1989 Ch“teau de Beaucastel- Ch“teauneuf-du-Pape - France, Rhône, Southern Rhône, Ch“teauneuf-du-Pape
Not much worse than a corked magnum of this. Dang! NR (flawed)

1964 Rivetto- Barolo Riserva Speciale - Italy, Piedmont, Langhe, Barolo
Maderized. NR (flawed)

1978 Giuseppe Martinengo- Barolo Riserva Speciale - Italy, Piedmont, Langhe, Barolo
Maderized. NR (flawed)

1990 Prunotto- Barolo Bussia - Italy, Piedmont, Langhe, Barolo
This just isn't doing it for me. It's got plenty of ripeness that manifests itself in black fruit, but it's trying to walk the line between modern and traditional and it stumbles badly. There's tar, spice and chocolate, but it's overly extracted and shows coarsely with a big hole in the middle. I also find the tannins a little too influenced by the wood. B/B-.

1966 Ch“teau Palmer - France, Bordeaux, Médoc, Margaux
And here we have our wine of the night. Just a gorgeous showing and, imo, consistently one of the best bottles the estate has ever made. There's beautiful cherry and raspberry fruit here with a crunchy mineral component, a touch of tobacco and integrated, spicy wood. There's a wonderful freshness and liveliness to the wine that belies its age. Layered and perfectly balanced, it adds a pleasant herb/tobacco note with some air. Just a joy to drink and while a number of '66's are starting to get a little tired at this stage, while mature, there's no hurry with this one. The fruit is still vibrant. Solid A.

1998 Domaine Ponsot- Clos de la Roche Vieilles Vignes - France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Clos de la Roche Grand Cru
Acknowledging that there's a vintage difference and the fact that Howard just (generously) schlepped this bottle with him from California, so it might have been a bit shocked, but this wine is much tighter and unyielding in comparison to a 2000 tasted five days prior. Whereas the the 2000 was extremely fruit forward with a generous personality, here the cherry fruit is present and has a nice purity to it, but it's tightly coiled and doesn't seem to want to come out and play. There's a strong green note on the back end and the oak still needs to integrate some more and overall, the structure is a bit tough. Give it some more time to smooth out a bit, but I wouldn't expect miracles from this wine. B+/A-.

1966 Ch“teau Climens - France, Bordeaux, Sauternais, Barsac
Looked in good shape with a nice fill and possessing an orange/amber color. The vintage is noted for being rather lean and high acid for Sauternes/Barsac and it shows here. The wine shows grilled pineapple, lots of hazelnuts and hints of caramel on the nose and palate, but age has stripped it of much of its original sweetness and combined with its lean and high acid profile, has left it a bit ungenerous. I think it would actually work better as a food wine with a savory dish at this point. Drink up. B+/B.

1997 Quinta do Noval- Porto Vintage - Portugal, Douro, Porto
My second silly Port decision in a month. I had intended to open a '71 Baumard Quarts de Chaume, but seeing that we were having chocolate cake for dessert, I threw a half bottle of this in my bag just in case. I hoped to get an answer from folks when I got there what they would prefer, so I could at least get a couple of hours of decanting in just in case, but got none and in the end, we opted for the Port over the Quarts de Chaume. With no decanting, this wine was monolithic, just a black hole where neither flavor nor aroma could escape. After an hour or so there was the faintest hint of raspberry, but the evening ended with not much to go on. I corked the remainder and tried it a day and a half later. Though more open, with an intense black fruit and baker's spice profile and a cedariness that dominates, it's still rather reluctant to play nice. Call it an A/A- a day and a half after opening, but I'd lose these in the cave for at least a couple of decades.

Some pics from the evening.

The group.
The_group-3.jpg
Some vino. I didn't get many of the bottles.
Some_vino.jpg
Pork and mushroom arancini.
Arancini.jpg
Christine's homemade duck pastrami.
Duck_pastrami.jpg
Scottish salmon tartare.
Scottish_salmon_tartare.jpg
Fonduta just out of the oven.
Fonduta_out_of_the_oven.jpg
Christine shaves an Italian black truffle.
Shaving_a_truffle.jpg
Porcini fonduta with Italian black truffle.
Porcini_fonduta_with_shaved_truffle.jpg
Soooo good!
So_good-1.jpg
Crusting the beef with porcini powder.
Putting_the_porcini_crust_on_the_Piedmontese_beef.jpg
Porcini crusted petite tenders of Piedmontese beef.
Porcini_crusted_Piedmontese_beef.jpg
Bloody good!
Porcini_crusted_Piedmontese_beef_II.jpg
Ricotta and mushroom agnoloti (she made the pasta, too!)
Ricotta_and_mushroom_agnoloti.jpg
Leek Purée.
Leek_puree.jpg
Much yum on a plate.
Much_yum_on_a_plate.jpg
Chocolate layer cake with raspberry filling.
Chocolate_cake_with_raspberry_center.jpg
Christine went all Jackson Pollock on it.
Chocolate_cake_with_raspberry_center_II.jpg
A nice slice.
Slice_of_nice.jpg
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
I am digging all the fungi.

Not as much as we were!

Btw, just corrected an error in my notes. I brought a half of the '97 Quinta do Noval, not the '07, as I originally posted.
 
fwiw, 1998 burgs seemed to have shut down again in the past few months - whereas 2000s probably never did and never will before they fade. 2001s seem to have also shut down recently - for young vintages, smart money is on 2002s for current tasty drinking.
 
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
Yum! Any chance of getting Christine to part with the leek puree recipe?

That one I think I could figure out. I'm more interested in the Fonduta. From appearances it looks like the heated cream, cheese (fontina?) and porcini (powder?) mix was poured over the whole egg yolk. On second look I noticed a water bath. Was this there just too keep them warm? Good guess? Off base?
 
I'll try to get Christine here to post the leek recipe. She was a little intimidated when I mentioned she had to get through the Politburo and I didn't even mention all the FUs she'd be bombarded with.

Jason, the Fonduta cooks in the water bath. There are sauteed fresh porcini mushrooms on the bottom of each ramekin. I know the mixture is part roux, part fontina cheese and I don't know if there's also milk or cream added. I think there is. A raw egg is added on top and the whole thing gets cooked until the egg is about soft boiled.
 
Hi Christian,

The Leek Puree is as easy as it gets. I usually use 1 medium leek per person. Clean it thoroughly and cut into 2" pieces, using the white and light green parts only. Boil in salted water for roughly 4-5 minutes, just until they are soft. Drain, but do not press out the water. Pulse in a food processor until you get the consistency you want. Add 1 Tablespoon of butter per 2 leeks or to your taste. Salt and Pepper to taste. That's it. It will taste like you used a lot more butter than you actually did.
 
Christine,

As you know Brad regularly posts photos of the dinner parties you give - bravo (brava?) to you - but now you have the entire group of disorderlies dying to dine at your table - so watch out!
 
Thanks Brad and Christine.

Looking forward to making the founduta. The leek puree is as I expected - It is fantastic on pasta with the addition of some creme fraiche or heavy cream.
 
originally posted by Christine Huang:
Leek PureeHi Christian,

The Leek Puree is as easy as it gets. I usually use 1 medium leek per person. Clean it thoroughly and cut into 2" pieces, using the white and light green parts only. Boil in salted water for roughly 4-5 minutes, just until they are soft. Drain, but do not press out the water. Pulse in a food processor until you get the consistency you want. Add 1 Tablespoon of butter per 2 leeks or to your taste. Salt and Pepper to taste. That's it. It will taste like you used a lot more butter than you actually did.

Thanks! We have some serious leek-freeks in our household, so this will be appreciated.
Christian
 
originally posted by JasonA:
Thanks Brad and Christine.

Looking forward to making the founduta. The leek puree is as I expected - It is fantastic on pasta with the addition of some creme fraiche or heavy cream.
And maybe some black truffle, plus an old Chablis...
 
I'm going to the Carpentras market in an hour or so and I plan to buy leeks and cook them a la Christine for tonight.

I have always depended on the kindness of strangers. Thanks Christine.
 
Back
Top