Filed under out and about

Terroirs or not terroirs: that is the question

When Terroirs Wine Bar & Restaurant first opened, about a year ago, it created a huge buzz within the wine industry. This was mostly due to its association with Les Caves de Pyrene, the very popular and ever eclectic wine agent.

Les Caves sources and supplies a huge range of natural wines. If you think of biodynamic wines as extreme organic, natural wines are an extreme hyper-biodynamic — max…the natural kind.

There is no governing body for natural wines, but the idea is that they are…well…natural.  Nothing added to them at any point during the winemaking process and sourced most likely from biodynamic vineyards.  The lack of filtering and SO2 leaves the wine cloudy due the combination of left over yeast bits as well as oxidation.  The wines are very delicate too, in a chemical sense, if they are not already completely oxidised once the cork is pulled, you better drink it quick…because it soon will be.

The wines are very difficult to make and keep. They are by no means a recipe wine and when they are perfect can be some of the most sublime tasting wine you will ever try.  There is very little made, and of that very little is palatable.  I would like to cherish my first memory of tasting a natural up there with other great wine moments – sadly however it will only be remembered as the first time my gag reflex when into overdrive.

So  after all the hype about Terroirs, I thought I should pay the place a visit…and to cut a long story short, it sucked.  Snails were rubbery and the bone marrow slimy. …the wine wasn’t nice and the only saving grace was the lemon posset.  I didn’t like the place and for good reason.  This first experience was over a year ago and despite my lack of pleasure in the place, everyone else seemed to be having GREAT meals there. In chronological order there was Jancis Robinson…top wine writer giving the place thumbs up in November ‘08.  Next was the Independent,  4 out of 5, followed by Matthew Norman with a whopping 9.5 outta 10.

The Telegraph gave the place 5 out of 5

AA Gill…gave it 3 out of 5

Then in August, my most trusted food journo…Jay Rayner, the guy who I’ve agreed with most loves the place!

Honestly WTF!

I vowed to not go there again…but two Saturday’s ago was a very very cold 1.0 °C night…couldn’t bear the walk from Whitehall to Bar Italia, so I decided to give the place another go…

Perched in the newly-opened, retro fitted basement bar we quickly tucked in to Fine de Claire oysters at £1.50 each.  A fair price and amazingly fresh, as if the had only just been pinched from Neptune’s palm himself.  This was paired with a wonderful sparkling Tribbiano made by Camillo Donati in the region of Emilia Romagna…it was unfiltered and was cloudy…but despite the look the wine was amazing! It had light baked apple aromas and flavours, with some citrus fruits as well.

Fine de Claire Oysters, at Terroirs London

Camillo Donati - 2007 Trebbiano Bianco Secco

Next was the plate of charcuterie…with the triad of Saucisson “Noir de Bigorre”, Duck Rillettes and Pork & Pistachio Terrine, all as rustic as the wooden board they were served on. A generous helping but at £12, one would expect it.

The Tuscan chopped raw steak for £8 was coarsely cut up and melted in the mouth and came close to being my favourite dish (Note-As many of the dishes were in French I was surprised to see this dish listed as raw steak rather than tartar).

Charcuterie and Tuscan Chopped Raw Steak (why not say tartar?)

But the star of the meal was by far the Partridge and Choucroute, individually the bird was gamey and the sauerkraut…well tasted like sauerkraut (with juniper berries).  But together they made a beautiful flavour combination that deserves its own post – titled Partridge and Choucroute: You didn’t know?! It kicks ass!

Partridge and Choucroute (the chef kindly cut it in half for us)

As for desserts there was three of us and each of our desserts were splendid —>>>> Pain Perdu (French Toast) & Caramelised Banana, Bitter Chocolate Pot and Crème Caramel (this one was prob the best).

Bitter Chocolate Pot and Pain Perdu (don't worry it found its way...into our bellies)

Marco de Bartoli - Vecchio Samperi Ventennale

Besides the sparkler I also enjoyed  a wine that can only be described as a digestif.  Marco de Bartoli’s wine (incidently he is considered one of the best producers in Sicily) – Vecchio Samperi Ventennale is auburn in colour and has a splendid aroma of herbs and nuts, dried fruits and graceful palate with enough acidity to not make it cloying. It is made with the Grillo grape and probably considered a Masala wine in most circles, but de Bartoli ranks it as a table wine.

I can happily say this time around Terroirs stood up to the accolade and I shall frequent it again.

Fin!

Tagged , , , , , , ,

Bloody Marys aren’t just for breakfast

Went to The Clarence last night (it’s on Balham High Road, in Balham) and was greeted by this massive tomato on their bar.  “What is it for!?” I asked, immediately taken in by the little guy.

have to get one!

The tomato was supplied by 42 Below – that Kiwi vodka, they’ve been in the UK for awhile now – and it opened up to reveal a complete set of goodies. Now I am a total sucker for marketing and immediately and without a second thought craved and wanted a Bloody Mary.

Robot's in disguise

And the Bloody Mary was divine! So taken by the whole experience I was, I decided to get another….which incidentally went great with my fish & chips…

Apparently there are only four of these tomatoes in the country…and I really, really want one for Xmas. Yo, 42 Below get in touch and send me one please, I’ll pay for it!

Battle of Waterloo

There you are just south of the river, near Waterloo in fact, with so many cool little dineries to try…there’s Baltic, the Thai behind the Kings Arms on Roupell St, Cubana even has food, in fact there’s loads of places….well trust me to get the worst of them all.

Waterloo Brasserie – is not good.

Don’t really want to make this a long rant but between my being ignored and our order not being taken for a good 15 minutes…there were also plates riddled with more finger prints than CSI-Miami, ice cold fries, a mound of welted salad hiding some nuked goat cheese (it was stuck to the plate in that tell-tale microwave way) and a gloopy, chicken Caesar salad, drowned by salad cream (Rest In Peace you poor, poor salad leaves)….suffice to say, I ain’t going back.
Oh, but the Prosecco was good.

Waterloo Brasserie is across the street from the Old Vic

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , ,

Local is the way to go.

I am a closet glutton, please help.

I’ve been walking by Numidie for awhile now and only recently stepped in when I saw rouille (and fish soup) on the window menu.  Well actually it was fish soup with rouille but I didnt really notice the soup bit because  I have a sort of crack-like addiction to rouille.  It could have said rouille and 3 day old pizza or rouille and toast., I wouldn’t have cared.

IMG_0559
This is the place!

Numidie is on Westow Hill in Crystal Palace and serves French/N.African cuisine.  The place looks nice it has three little art-deco chandeliers, little wooden tables and chairs, and a cool retro-French decor. And best yet there’s a little basement bar too!  Well the basement bar is only part of the best bit…the actual best bit is that three courses is only £14 and nothing on the wine list was more than £40?!

So, they have rouille, the menu and wine list are both excellent value and there’s a cool bar in the basement…PLEASE GOD make the food good!  Well to make a long story short — the food wasn’t good.

le menu

The food was SUPERB! In fact I have since found out that this little bistro is quite famous and has a very dedicated and loyal following.

The fish soup and rouille was very nice, I asked for extra rouille to put on the home-made foccacia-like bread.  For mains I had a roast chicken (always a test for restaurants) with Algerian dumplings and a chickpea sauce. It too was very good.
M, my dining partner enjoyed salade Numidie (say it with a French accent) as a starter – salad leaves mixed with an array of brightly coloured roasted red peppers, houmous and probably the best falafel I’ve ever tried.  For her main M had Couscous Royale with merguez, roast chicken and lamb (I secretly wanted her main) – the portion was huge and like everything else we had, excellent.

I opted out of dessert which was a tarte au chocolate but once taking a nibble of M’s decided it was too good to share, and promptly ordered another (this is the glutton bit, btw)

louis with the rouille

All in all a great experience and the bill came to under £50.  I have vowed not to frequent any more famous chef restaurants, offering little more than a bloated cheque after the meal.  To find such a welcoming, great value and excellent little place only 5 minutes from where I live, was a great surprise and pleasure. I will be most definitely going back.

Oh and nearly forgot, they gave us each a glass of pear digestif after our meals – loved it!

Numidie Bistro – 48 Westow Hill – Crystal Palace – SE19 1PX – tel: 020 8766 6166

Wine I recently tried

If you read imbibe magazine you will see I have a story about Zinfandel in the current issue.  Zin is one of my favourite grapes, that is, if it is made correctly.  Too many times it can be over-ripe, too tannic, sweet – in fact, it can be everything I hate about wine.  But when it is good, I can’t get enough of the stuff.
Sadly, like most things wine and American all the good things come with a price.  Plus with the added bonus in the UK very few California wines – and I’m talking around ten – are good and readily available.

That’s where Ravenswood steps in, Joel Peterson – founder and winemaker – is very well-known for his motto of “no wimpy wines” and this stands true to all that he makes.  Admittedly I am not a fan of all the wines in Ravenswood’s range, but one of my favourite is the Vintners Blend 2006 … for an entry-level, zin-introduction (I refuse to use zin puns) this wine is perfect. So,  I was happy to try it out (again) for the people at Constellation.

very good zin

On the nose there’s loads of dark berry fruit, ripe black-cherries, while on the palate it’s a mouthful of dark black berries, bramble, licorice and a nice cranberry tartness on the finish.  It’s costs £7.99 (Waitrose, Tesco & Spar) and for an entry-level Zin (in fact for a wine in general) it is good value.

By the way I had it with some homemade steak nachos, fresh salsa and guacamole, it was perfect.

Tagged , , , , , , , , ,

3 days in Lisbon and all I did was piss off a bull

And there was also that axe guy…

Recently took a quick jaunt to Lisbon in the hope of becoming a  better person, better soul and most importantly a better blogger, as I was attending the world-famous European Wine Bloggers Conference.

It was a three-day event, broken down in to a day of forums and seminars (all useful in their own way), some tastings and finally a tour day in a wine region, I went to Tejo to look at a cork forest.
Now, when people talk about cork forests it’s not like any forest you or I can imagine.  It’s more like a few trees in a field, I was imagining some sort of highly dense forest with animals swinging from cork branch to cork branch but no, it’s just like an orchard.
The trip was jointly sponsored by Quinta Lagoalva and Amorim (a cork company).

So, how was I able to piss off a bull and get close to some guy with an axe??? Watch the video below to find out.

Alas, the bulls didn’t chase me, but I got in trouble with the corker farmer guys…this was the bull (sorry this link is weird after you click bull there, there is a small menu of links on the page, clink on “animals” – that’s the bull!) eyeing me up btw, mean looking fella.

L1070070

This is the only photo I took. It's a naked cork tree. The bark (which is the cork) was recently harvested, the red colour is natural.

The whole affair was organised by the triad of Gabriella and Ryan Opaz (catavino.net) and Robert McIntosh (wineconversation.com) all I have to say to them is GREAT JOB!

What did I learn besides corks?

The thing I learnt , surprisingly enough, wasn’t how to best use Google to bring traffic to my site, nor tips on producing better videos for my Imbibe video stuff…no, the  most ongoing subject matter of the whole event: bloggers shouldn’t accept samples!  I kid you not, there seems to be a real big anti-accepting samples thing going on in the wine-blogging world.   In fact, if I were to use this conference alone, I would think that bloggers are the most morally driven breed around.

Having worked in the trade for a while, I’ve just accepted samples as a way of life.   And this any anti-sample thing was mentioned in pretty much every seminar I attended.  I got so bored of hearing it that I ended up sending emails out to PR’s asking for samples to be sent to the most vocal of the anti-group.

The two main reasons why sample acceptance is supposedly bad seem to be: 1) said sample will sway said bloggers away from the pureness of the blog and 2) that once samples are accepted, bloggers are obligated to report on them despite not liking them.  I am sure there are loads more but honestly my ears were bleeding so bad from the anti-sample’s shrill that I didn’t get them all down.

C’mon guys, really? I for one would like to put the record straight for spiltwine.com: WE ACCEPT ALL SAMPLES!  If they don’t cut the mustard they won’t get written up, easy as that.  Which leads nicely too…

Wine(s) of the week!

The Bibendum wine tasting was a few weeks back and here are a couple of wines I liked.  (Note to other wine bloggers – please don’t chastise me, they weren’t samples but I tried them for free.)

L1060433

Shampoo d'Anglais

Chapel Down, Primrose Hill, Brut Prestigre NV (Kent, England) £18.11

46% Reichensteiner, 36% Muller Thurgau, 18% Pinot Noir

It isn’t too bad a price for a non-Champers bubbly but hey, we gotta support our home-grown! Fresh nose of raw apricot and peaches and a little bit of biscuit, nice crisp palate with more stone fruits and some crisp citrus.

L1060435

French stuff

Ch des Sarrins, Les Sarrins Blanc de Rolle 2007 (Provence, France) £17.25

100% Rolle

How do I manage to find the most expensive bottles in the room?  This Southern French wine had loads of personality.  The nose smelt of an unburnt matchstick (without the sulphur).  Lots of melon flavours as well as some dried herbs with a sort of dirty, edgy palate that shined brightly against some of the highly polished NW wines on offer.  Liked it a lot!

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Praying to Satan does nothing for Devil’s challenger

Not sure how many of you saw the Grande Finale but the bookies were right and a foodie won!
Congrats to @Scandilicious who created an edible piece of  art.

How am I supposed to compete with this?

How am I supposed to compete with this?

I was lucky enough to get second place with my linguine vongole (to go with the Casillero Sauvignon Blanc). Very proud indeed, but I did get a bit of help from Thierry and Jimmy the two chefs on hand.

Fresh clams always look good in photos

Fresh clams always look good in photos

For the Casillero Cabernet I made two different types of meat balls.  The first was a more traditional style with garlic, onion and loads of herb. The other was a bit more interesting, during the day we found that stilton went very well with the Cabernet, so I made meatballs which had stilton inside…very nouvelle cuisine pour moi but it worked.

Before the pan

Before the pan

Browing off the meatballs before the oven

Browing off the meatballs before the oven

Le Meatball

Le Meatball

All in all, I learnt loads about food preparation and better yet met some high aspiring food bloggers along the way.  You can still see the videos and loads more photos on the Casillero Kitchen Challenge website.

Thanks to all involved Cube, Casillero, the folks at The Kitchen and of course Rob for the tech!

Spiltwine is launched and I’m in a devil’s challenge

Spiltwine.com is officially open for business!  And right off the mark I’m going to announce a small challenge I’m lucky enough to be a part of….

The Casillero del Diablo Challenge is happening today!  It’s a bloggers competition of sorts.
First, we are tasting a range of Casillero del Diablo wines (Sauvignon Blanc, Shiraz Rosé and Cabernet Sauvignon) live via video link and Twitter.  Then we are going to decide what sort of foods to have with the wines and go off in search of products.  After that we  all reconvene at The Kitchen and put our wine matching skills to the test with a live cook-off!

It’s like ready-steady-cook but with lots more wine (and hopefully better food).

casillero del diablo

Besides myself the contestants are:

@scandilicioushttp://scandilicious.blogspot.com and
@goodshoeday –  http://withknifeandfork.com

With @thirstforwinehttp://wineconversation.com –  on hand all day to make sure it runs smoothly.

I was really hoping for some wino alliances but looks as if I’m all alone against some pretty hardcore foodies.  I just hope all that time watching the omelette race on Saturday Kitchen comes in handy.

So if you are around to today tune in!
All video, photos and posts will be on


http://casillero.posterous.com


With the LIVE video TASTING at 12:50 and the COOK-OFF at 19:00

You can also follow us on Twitter at #casillero

Wish me luck.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,438 other followers