Restaurant August in New Orleans

Jay Miller

Jay Miller
The sommelier at August deserves special praise, both for the service and for the wine list she's put together. Where Stella was rigorously up to date with "in" wines (many of which I love) August's list was full of familiar gems. Where Stella has Peter Lauer and Equipo Navazos August has JJ Prum and 2012 Luneau Papin L d'Or Muscadet by the glass. Who can't love a list that is sensible enough to serve great Muscadet alongside a seafood centric menu?

When the vintage on the list turned out to be slightly out of date (the half bottle of 2011 JJ Prum WS Spatlese turned out to be a 2012) due to all the business they've been doing lately the sommellier was very apologetic and brought us 2 complimentary (and complementary) sweet wines with dessert. The Bera Moscato d'Asti (she must be psychic to know that it's one of Arnold's favorite wines) and a luxurious BA made from Sylvaner.

They also allow BYO though it seems a shame not to take advantage of a list which has so many good choices at reasonable pricing.

The restaurant was also the highlight of the trip foodwise. The Gulf Grouper "courtbouillon" was the best fish I've had in a long time and the breaded trout Poncharterain wasn't too far behind. The amuse bouche was a perfect mix of lightness and richness leaving you satisified. potato crips P&J oysters (oysters breaded with potato) was also delicious. Only slight disappointment was the grilled octopus and wild boar sausage salad. Personally I wouldn't have ordered a non-local fish like octopus when you have so much wonderful Gulf seafood available but Arnold loves octopus. You can get better any number of places in NYC these days (Though I'm old enough to remember when the only option for grilled octopus outside of Astoria was Periyali).

I couldn't stop laughing as I ate the incredibly delicious banana pudding. The flavors were like a delightful joke reminding me of a peanut butter and banana sandwich that someone's fairy godmother waved a wand over and made into something magic. The meyer lemon souffle tart was excellent and tart but the gingersnap ice cream accompanying it was heavenly.

A truly fine meal and a fitting conclusion for dining in New Orleans.
 
Jay, we ate at August a year ago during the American Chemical Society meeting in New Orleans. I agree completely with your assessment. When we were there, the Riesling selection was the standout. Maybe they were between Muscadet vintages.

Mark Lipton
 
originally posted by Jay Miller:
(the half bottle of 2011 JJ Prum WS Spatlese turned out to be a 2012)

hate when that happens!
I once had a 79 hermitage turn out to be a 78, so I can sympathize
 
originally posted by .sasha:
originally posted by Jay Miller:
(the half bottle of 2011 JJ Prum WS Spatlese turned out to be a 2012)

hate when that happens!
I once had a 79 hermitage turn out to be a 78, so I can sympathize

Yeah, yeah, but I've had several 2012s showing very tight over the last few months, especially Spatlese for whatever reason. 2011s have been wide open. The 2012 JJ Prum needed 30-60 minutes of air to start opening up.
 
2012 Luneau Papin L d'Or Muscadet by the glass.

Huh.
I just picked up my order of the 2010 L d'Or.
Didn't know the 2012 was even released yet.

Thanks for the notes Jay.
I am heading down that way in April for Jazz fest.
Very helpful.
 
Didn't make it to Antoines or a bunch of other places that were recommended as we only had 4 days and lost the first half day due to a sick pilot.

Full travel notes are here:

Despite the flight problems and all the rain we had a great time.

We're already planning a return trip in a year or two.
 
Can't speak for Joe, but I think he may be saying that it wasn't reportedly so difficult a year in the Muscadet. Remember, the Loire is really too big to generalize about such things.
 
Reasonable. I'd heard from a source trusted by the bored that 2012 for Olivier specifically had been a difficult harvest, with low production, because of heavy selection; and that the very good '12 Briords was the result of this process. Better straighten me out if I have the essential narrative wrong.
 
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Reasonable. I'd heard from a source trusted by the bored that 2012 for Olivier specifically had been a difficult harvest, with low production, because of heavy selection; and that the very good '12 Briords was the result of this process. Better straighten me out if I have the essential narrative wrong.

Let's start with how he spells his last name....
 
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Reasonable. I'd heard from a source trusted by the bored that 2012 for Olivier specifically had been a difficult harvest, with low production, because of heavy selection; and that the very good '12 Briords was the result of this process. Better straighten me out if I have the essential narrative wrong.

Let's start with how he spells his last name....

That's hardly narrative.
 
Yields were low in the Muscadet. They had a tough spring. August was great. The wines are spectacular from good people who did the right stuff.

As Michael so rightly points out, it might take you three hours to drive from your favorite Muscadet estate to your favorite Vouvray producer, not to speak of Sancerre.

But the wines are in the market, why not get all empirical about them instead of resorting to the vintage chart?
 
Who's using a vintage chart? I asked friend Jay how he liked the wine. Jeez. If this bottle were on the shelf of the local winemonger, I'd get one.

Moreover, my question was about two Nantais wines; who said anything about assessing the vintage across the whole valley?

For goodness's sake.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
My favorite critic liked the wines a year ago.

I've read and highly appreciated you reports several times; it still didn't seem out of place to ask Jay about his experience.

Your '12 report didn't specifically mention the '12 L d'Or, but thanks for reminding me to put Clos des Allées on the shopping list - as you write, it's a great bargain.
 
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