Friday, March 26, 2010

"W" is for Wine and Wellington


I tried beef Wellington for the first time at age 16 at Inn on the Park in North York, Ontario. My first boyfriend and his family invited me to join them for dinner. This was the first sophisticated restaurant I had ever attended and it certainly left a great impression on me. My boyfriend assured me by whispering in my ear, "You can order whatever you like." I decided to order the same dish as my boyfriend's father, as I was enamored by his enthusiasm for a menu item called beef Wellington. Well, that evening I fell in love with the boy, his family, beef Wellington and fine dining.

It is believed that the Duke of Wellington, who won the Battle of Waterloo in 1815, was a finicky eater, yet happen to like one particular dish -- beef wrapped in puff pastry. So, this dish was named after him. Another story says this dish supposedly resembled his highly polished Wellington boot, and therefore acquired the name this way.

Whatever the true story might be, beef Wellington has remained a decadent and popular dish since this time.

This is a dish I've struggled with and have yet to master. The reason is my possessing an unwillingness to remember to use a meat thermometer.

Classic beef Wellington uses filet of beef tenderloin covered with pate (often liver or foie gras) and duxelles (mixture of mushrooms, onions, shallots and herbs), wrapped in puff pastry.

One version uses a Madeira sauce. Due to the richness and sweetness, this sauce requires, as a wine partner, a full-bodied red wine with forward fruit flavours and soft bitterness. Too much tannin (bitterness and astringency) will clash with the sweetness in the sauce. Try Merlot or Shiraz from a warm climate like Australia.

You might also choose to pair this dish with a dense, off-dry rose or even a small glass of tawny Port.

Forgo the Madeira sauce and partner classic beef Wellington (with or without a red wine sauce) alongside an austere red wine of choice, such as Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Tempranillio, Amarone, etc.

There are many Wellingtons one can make using vegetables, fish, seafood, chicken, duck, pork, veal, venison, buffalo and even elk. I've recently discovered elk and absolutely adore it.


When making a classic rendition I use puff pastry. When making mock Wellington I like to use Pillsbury’s croissant dough, available in the refrigerator section at supermarkets. The croissant dough is easy to work, reliable and delicious and makes for outstanding individual, mock Wellingtons of every flavour. Just be sure to par cook heavier flesh like pork, chicken, venison or elk before wrapping it in the pastry.

I enjoy creating mock versions, such as salmon, chicken with pesto Wellington, steak with blue cheese and others.

Salmon Wellington seasoned with fresh herbs, such as dill or chives, tastes wonderful with pinot noir or red Burgundy. Salmon has enough fattiness to stand up to a light, fruit red.

Chicken with pesto Wellington is fatty, thus requiring a white wine with lots of fattiness, such as a barrel fermented and aged white like fume blanc or chardonnay. Fume blanc is sauvignon blanc that has been fermented and aged in oak barrels. Or look for a white from a warm climate with higher alcohol (14%). Alcohol adds viscosity to wine -- thickness in weight and texture. This occurs on the palate as fatty or creaminess.

Steak with blue cheese Wellington certainly requires a red wine with austere tannins, such as cabernet sauvignon.

You could also create pork Wellington with honey mustard, as well. The sweetness in the honey mustard needs a white wine with a hint of sweetness to match. Try off dry riesling or off dry gewürztraminer.

In fact, any sauce that you like with a particular flesh will work within the croissant pastry, as well. The choices are endless. Thai versions could include a coconut curry based sauce that can be matched to an off dry white wine, like riesling. Chicken Wellington with an Asian slant could include soy sauce with garlic and ginger or even a spicy plum sauce. Match the spicy plum sauce version to an off dry rose.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

"V" is for Vegetarian Appetizers


When entertaining I always suggest you begin with lighter dishes and move to heavier ones. Nowadays people are apt to enjoy vegetarian dishes in an attempt to cut back on animal fat. Meat can also be expensive, especially if you're incorporating it into many dishes throughout a meal.

I enjoy preparing an array of vegetarian appetizers. You are sure to please most guests and keep costs relatively low. It's also pleasurable to buy fresh vegetables at the local farmer's market, thus adding a seasonal approach and a level of quality and sophistication to the evening.

About a week ago I attended a fund raising, women-only event for one of my best friends, Terri Catlin. The profits from the evening were to fund her upcoming trip to the WOMEN'S INTERNATIONAL FILM & ARTS FESTIVAL in Miami where Terri's short film would be celebrated. The Dirty Truth is about a 1940s detective duo and how they discover that their new case may be more than they bargained for. When a domestic dispute turns out to be a matter of global proportions, Vic & Vera find themselves out of their league.

Back to vegetarian appetizers...

We chose four appetizers from my latest cookbook entitled Orgasmic Appetizers and Matching Wines -- Tiny Bites with the MOAN FACTOR.

We paired one wine style each with four appetizers. However, when entertaining, the key is to do the opposite -- choose three to five appetizers that partner with one wine.

Dining became with a sheep's milk feta dip incorporating olive oil, fresh oregano, black olives and artichokes. The tangy and bitter taste sensations in this dip called for a bone dry (brut) sparkling wine offering similar characteristics.
This dip is very easy to prepare. Lay out 2 pieces of tin foil in a "cross" formation. Drizzle the tin foil with quality olive oil. Add a handfull of chopped black olives (from a jar), artichoke hearts (from a can) and about a half cup of fresh oregano. Pull a large piece of sheep's milk feta from its way and lay it on top of the other ingredients. Wrap the cheese tightly in the tin foil and refrigerate for a couple of hours, allowing the flavours to meld.

About 45 minutes before guests arrive, place the tin foiled cheese in the over at 350 F. Upon guests arriving, open a bottle of brut sparkling wine or Champagne. Pull the cheese from the over. Open the tin foil and convert the cheese into a bowl. I like to slice a French baguette and fry the slices in oil in a fry pan. Serve the fried bread with the feta dip.

We also enjoyed sweet potato and curried latkes with a dollop of apple sauce. Another easy and inexpensive and tasty appetizer. The sweetness from the sweet potato and apple sauce and heat and spice from the curry demand a white wine with sweetness to match. The key is to ensure that the wine is sweeter than the potato and apple. An off dry Riesling with a sugar code of 2 will serve as ideal.

Our farmer's market features a mushroom vendor who supplies the most fabulous variety of fungi! The great thing about mushrooms is that they are high in the fifth taste sensation of umami. This makes them compatible with every style of red wine.

Wild mushroom and three cheese bruschetta complemented its accompanying red wine, an Ontario Shiraz.

We also enjoyed a Shitake Mushroom and Cashew Pate with an Ontario Merlot Reserve.

Spring is on the horizon and there are many Ontario grown fruits and vegetables available at this time of year, such as apricots, beets, carrots, mushrooms, onions, cabbage, etc.

All of these ingredients can be highlighted in appetizers. How about substituting the apple sauce for spicy apricot chutney on the sweet potato latkes? Or prepare a curried carrot and apple soup served in small portions inside cappuccino cups? Caramelized onions can be the centre piece of flat bread topped with brie or blue cheese and paired with Pinot Noir.

When considering ideas for appetizers think fresh and local vegetables. By doing so you can feature your meat in the entree -- perhaps Roasted Rack of Lamb with Spring Succotash and Wilted Spinach. Be sure to pair this lamb dish with a South African Cabernet Sauvignon.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

"U" is for Unbelievable Mushrooms


Recently, owner, friend and chef extraordinaire from Rare restaurant on Brock Street in Peterborough, handed me a bright red-orange and wonderfully lumpy ingredient.

“A gift,” he said. His eyes twinkled with excitement. You would have thought he was Jack T. Colton, soldier of fortune in the 1984 movie Romancing the Stone, handing me the treasure. “A lobster mushroom,” he said.

I had sampled lobster mushrooms in dishes before, but I had not actually seen one whole until this moment. The mushroom’s colour resembled the red-orange shell of a cooked lobster. I felt giddy, knowing Brad had just given me a hard-to-obtain culinary gem.

When I put the mushroom up to my nose to smell it, one question immediately came to mind. “What wine would harmonize with the damp woody smell of this British Columbian delight?” I had a plethora of wines to consider.

Fresh lobster mushrooms are a rare find in Ontario. I have chef friends who have only tasted dried versions of this exotic Canadian west coast fungi. In fact, this is not a mushroom at all, but rather a parasitic ascomycete that grows on mushrooms, turning them lobster red.

Grown in areas, such as Vancouver Island, lobster mushrooms are firm, but softly textured with a distinctive woody smell and taste. Some say the mushroom smells like sweet cooked lobster. I don’t think so. I think its woody character makes it an ideal ingredient for a wine offering earthy aromas and flavours.

That evening I cut the mushroom in half, deciding to incorporate its flesh into 2 meals. Using fresh tomatoes, garlic, fresh basil, extra virgin olive oil and balsamic vinegar I made bruschetta on toasted Italian bread for my husband and parents.

This appetizer had an overall tangy taste from the tomatoes and balsamic, calling for a chilled pinot noir. We sipped Pelee Island Winery 2007 pinot noir, VQA, (CSPC # 135939), $12.45. What I love most about Pelee Island wines is that they are predictably good from year to year. It’s difficult to get a pinot noir at this price, let alone one with loads of flavour. At $12.45 per bottle, this is the ideal price to spend on a wine that you’re serving with an appetizer. The wine is light bodied with good tangy notes with earthy flavours that gently drew the palate’s attention to the woody flavour of the lobster mushrooms. This bruschetta can be made with shitake mushrooms, as well.

While the mushroom provided earthy notes to the bruschetta, I did feel that it had competed with the big flavour of ripe tomatoes. So, I decided to feature the second half of my fungi in a pasta dish the following evening. Brad had suggested I keep the pasta dish simple, sautéing the thin slices of mushroom in quality olive oil with fresh minced garlic, fresh herbs, and salt and pepper. I made this pasta sauce according to his directions, tossing it with a bowl of hot spaghetti. I sprinkled the dish with freshly grated parmesan. The mushroom flavours shone through this time, adding exotic flair to such a simple meal. Any Spanish red, with an earthy quality, will work with this dish. You can use any wild mushrooms in this dish, as well.

My husband and I sipped a glass of Tapena 2008 tempranillo, (CSPC 72942), $13.95. This Spanish red is also a culinary gem, medium bodied with earthy, chocolate and coffee tones on the nose and palate. It is a delightful quaffer at a reasonable price.

Tempranillo is one of the most popular grape varieties grown and vinified in Spain. This particular Tapena red is bold enough to work with beef, lamb, duck and game meats, and of course, lobster mushrooms.

Tapeña wines are generally fruit forward. You may recognize this winery byone of its most famous wines called “Freixenet.”

Sunday, March 7, 2010

"T" is for Taking the Time for the Song and Dance


This is part three in the series called Romancing the Grape.

In many restaurants the mark-up on wine can be hefty. You pay not only for the wine, but for the sommelier or server's song and dance - that is the art of opening and presenting the wine to you, the host, and your guests.

After ordering from the list, the server will return to your table, presenting the bottle of wine to you. He/she will display the label. Be sure to read the name of the winery, the style (Bordeaux) or grape variety (Cabernet Sauvignon) and most definitely the vintage date. The same wine can vary in quality and price from year to year.

While attending sommelier training at George Brown College (I need not mention the year), my teacher, Jacques Marie, taught us that a professional server or sommelier will blend into the wood work. Today too many servers are looking to be the centre of attention during your dining experience. A trained, professional sommelier or server will create a quiet, seamless and professional experience for the host and his/her guests.

Quietness is key. This includes the sommelier quietly pulling the cork from the bottle rather than popping it out. The sommelier uses the cork screw to pull the cork about three quarters out of the bottle neck. Wrapping his/her hand around the cork, the sommelier will then gently wiggle the remainder of the cork from the bottle, thus ensuring complete silence in opening the wine.

Again quietness is key. At no time should the server or sommelier interupt or listen in on the table conversations.

The sommelier may then wipe the rim of the bottle if some cork has been desposited here.

After opening the bottle, the sommelier will then put the cork in front of you, the host, who ordered the wine. The bottle may be placed on your table for stability or the sommelier may hold the bottle in the air. In either case, the sommelier stands to the right of host.

You may have noticed some people smelling the cork. This is to apparently determine if the wine is ‘off.’

Smelling the cork tells you very little about what's in the bottle. A musty or moldy smell from the cork could mislead you, as well. It is common for the cork to develop a little mold just under the capsule. It will most likely not affect the wine in the bottle.

Look at the brand name on the cork and make sure it matches the brand on the label. If the names are different this could be an indication that the wine is homemade or a fake.

For some it is advantageous to feel the cork. If it is completely dry, this may be a sign that the bottle has been stored upright, rather on its side, thereby allowing air inside the bottle and causing the wine to oxidize – to age before its time. Young wines, however, may have dry corks because they have just been bottled. If the cork is gummy, this may be a good indication that the wine has oxidized.

The sommelier or server will then pour an ounce into the host’s, glass. The host’s job is to swirl the wine, smell it and taste it. If you’re unsure as to what to smell, just concern yourself with the taste. If the wine tastes pleasant, nod and let the sommelier then fill your guests’ glasses first; yours last.

If the wine’s taste reminds you of cooked fruit – the kind you put into a pie – then the wine may very well be oxidized. If the cork is gummy and the wine taste liked cooked fruit, ask for another bottle of wine. Cork taint affects approximately about three percent of all wines. So, your chances of getting one are slim.

If ready for a second bottle of wine to be brought to the table, make sure the server does not put new wine into your used glasses. Politely put your hand over the bowl and request a new glass for your second wine. If you’re switching from white to red wine, it’s also appropriate to ask for a clean glass.

If you like the wine, be sure to tell the restaurant owner. This is the only way he/she will know how to successfully build a wine cellar.