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Archive for September 2007

InterWined Food

Every Friday, InterWined.com pairs one great wine that exceeds its normal £10 ($20) threshold with one great meal, prepared following the instructions of some the Internet’s best food blogs.

This week’s ‘Blow the Bank’ takes another slight departure from the norm and comes courtesy of its own recipe for Cumberland Pie.

InterWined’s Own Cumberland PieCumberland Pie Plated

As mentioned previously, traditional British foods have a universally poor reputation — especially when compared to the traditional foods of their European neighbours to the South, such as France and Italy. The only fly in the ointment, however, tends to be that so few of the people doing the comparisons have ever had many of the traditional British foods that they deride.

Perhaps it’s their names: To people born outside of the Commonwealth, names like Fish Pie, Cumberland Pie, Cottage Pie, Shepherd’s Pie, Toad in the Hole, Bangers & Mash, Bubble & Squeak conjure up images of Monty Python sketches far more than they do desirable cuisine. And to be fair, who wouldn’t rather eat something exotic sounding like Coq au Vin over Steak & Kidney Pie, which to the American ear — at least — must sound like the worst dessert ever.

Yet, pies in particular are an essential and complicated part of British cooking and cuisine. There are pies that have crusts and pies that don’t. To complicate things further, there are vast differences of opinion on the most appropriate method of preparation. Does one steam a steak pie or cook it? If a Shepherd’s Pie is prepared with beef, doesn’t it become a Cottage pie? Should a Cottage or Cumberland Pie always have minced meat?

And while InterWined has its own opinions on each of the above, any debate would, in part, miss the point: Traditional British pies, like French cassoulet and Italian osso buco are comfort foods, hearty dishes made for eating on rainy days and after arduous work, that people love to eat because they taste good rather than simply sound tasty.

The Spanish 2004 Sangre de Torro from Miguel Torres might not ‘Blow the Bank’ with its £5.49 price tag (available at supermarkets everywhere) and slight air of ubiquity (again, available at supermarkets everywhere), but don’t hold those things against it.

Made of Garnacha and Cariñena, the Sangre de Torro or Bull’s Blood is commonly hailed as a great Catlan table wine; and, as with the Vinho Verde served in the previous ‘Blow the Bank’, that’s not intended as an insult. This is a wine for serving with roasts and casseroles and all matter of traditional comfort foods.

Its rich mix of blackberry, current, and pepper gives added flavour to the sweated onions and meaty vegetables such as the mushrooms featured in this week’s pie, during their preparation. And, once in the oven, it serves as an excellent blanket in which to wrap the meat under a heavy lid of mashed potatoes and grated cheese, ensuring that meat is tender, juicy, and slightly sweet. A comfort wine for comfort foods: 8.7.

So rather than argue the details of whether InterWined prepared a fully authentic Cumberland Pie, let’s simply agree it’s a comforting and hearty meal and one of the Worst Desserts Ever!

InterWined’s Own Dish in Full

Cumberland Pie

Click on the post to view and download the recipe

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Hate to sound like a broken record…

Hate to sound like a broken record…

Hate to sound like a broken record…

Seriously, an in-depth knowledge of Burgundy is something, it’s fair to say, none of us would even hope to achieve. And why bother, when so many wine writers already tell us what to buy.

InterWined said awhile back that 2004 whites (Chardonnay) in Burgundy and 2005 reds (Pinot Noir) were the way to go… and now that many of the budget wines in this area are on sale now, buy ‘em up. Stick to major producers, Latour, Rodet, Drouhin, etc. even LaRouche.

TIP: When at a dinner party and serving your freshly purchased Burgundy, announce that you have cellared it for six months and when it’s poured take a big smell and then a long, obnoxious slurp and declare, “Now, that’s how the Phoenicians liked it!”

No one will doubt you.

The 2004 Louis Latour Pouilly-Vinzelles ‘En Paradis’ Chardonnay: On sale for just under a tenner, at Nicolas wine shop, this white is exceptionally smooth and tinny, with fresh citrus acidity bursts. Hints of fleshy peach make it tough to pair distinctly with anything but salads and shellfish, but this is best drunk on its own. Decent dry finish balances the sweet hits here and there: 8.9 points.

The 2005 Aegerter Hautes Côtes de Beaune ‘Reserve Personnelle’ (That’s sweet of them, isn’t it?) Pinot Noir. £8.50 at Nicolas. Caramel and Indian spices in the nose, with a soft and fleshy body. Simple and elegant. Good for cooking with and drinking with heavy, blue-veined cheeses. Cinnamon on the finish with also a harmonious ending. Excellent value, and exactly how the Phoenicians like it: 8.9 points.

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‘InterWined In Conversation’

In Conversation With Even Keel Part III

Winemaker Jeff AstonWelcome to the final part InterWined’s four-part conversation with Australian winemaker Jeff Aston of Even Keel Wines in New South Wales, where Jeff Aston explains the decision to try to break into the UK export market.

Click the title to view the full interview.

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In addition to drinking loads of wine in order to make its readers happier (how does that work again?)… InterWined is dedicated to bringing helpful health news on a weekly basis. One of the little discussed benefits of responsible wine drinking is that, quite simply, it helps you sleep. The wine helps the […]

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One of the best ways to purchase halfway decent wine without everyone else knowing how little you may know is to pick the right vintage.
Case in point, in the £5 to 10 range in England, California suffers. Maybe it’s because of the low dollar that we don’t get many decent California wines and it is […]

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‘InterWined In Conversation’

In Conversation With Even Keel Part III

Winemaker Jeff AstonWelcome back. This week the third instalment of InterWined’s four-part conversation with Australian winemaker Jeff Aston of Even Keel Wines in New South Wales; and InterWined is grilling Jeff with some seriously tough questions.

Click the title to view the full interview.

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When it comes to washing with soap and water, some Americans seem be slipping up.
In an observational study sponsored by the American Society for Microbiology (ASM) and The Soap and Detergent Association (SDA), slightly over three-quarters of men and women (77%) washed their hands in public restrooms – a six percent decline from a similar […]

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Finding good Mexican food in London can prove a challenge, but it pales in comparison to finding Mexican wine. And while Mexican wine might read like a misnomer, in recent years, its wines have won considerable renown and acclaim — particularly its wines from the California across the border, Mexico’s Baja California.
One such wine […]

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InterWined Food
Every Friday, InterWined.com pairs one great wine that exceeds its normal £10 ($20) threshold with one great meal, prepared following the instructions of some the Internet’s best food blogs.

This week’s ‘Blow the Bank’ takes a slight departure from the norm and comes courtesy of a meal rather than a recipe.

Pancetta & Banana PizzaVinho Verde

As any chef will attest, cooking from a recipe and cooking from memory are not the same. It’s the difference between visiting a new place with a travel guide and street map and arriving in a town you visited once with the name of a café you vaguely remember and five quid for cab. You hope the fiver is enough to get you to the restaurant and that both it and the city are as good as your memory tell you they are.

Well, this week’s ‘Blow the Bank’ is the culinary equivalent of that cab ride down memory lane. On 4 August, InterWined wrote with relish of the discovery of Banana and Bacon Pizza. Since then, several readers have asked about this somewhat unorthodox combination in comments and e-mails and encouraged InterWined to grab a few bob and head down to memory café.

From memory, the Banana and Bacon Pizza was sauceless, sweet, and salty; and, as its name suggested, was topped with slices of banana and bacon.

The wine on the occasion, a Hungarian Pinto Grigio, was ordered more for curiosity’s sake than flavours, but paired incredibly well. It was mildly citric and subdued and cut the through the fat and saltiness (always tough to pair with wine) of the smoky bacon.

This week, InterWined chose a different wine with a different signature than that of the Pinot Grigio: a 2006 Quinta de Simaens Vinho Verde, for £4.17 from Waitrose.

Vinho Verde, or Green Wine, is a Portuguese table wine; but that’s not written as an insult. Rather, it’s indication of the wine’s purpose. The Vinho Verde isn’t made for cellaring; it’s made for today and enjoying with a meal tonight.

The 2006 Quinta de Simaens is ripe and tropical in colour and bouquet with slight acidity that mellows after the first sip. An excellent companion for the hot, soft banana and woody pancetta. Like most white table wines, the bottle says serve as an aperitif or with white fish; InterWined says be more adventurous and serve with Pancetta & Banana Pizza sprinkled with black pepper and ripped basil leaves.

For those unable to source the Quinta de Simaens, InterWined highly recommends the 2007 Gazela Vinho Verde, retailing for $4.99 from Astor Wines.com. The 2007 is lighter than the Quinta de Simaens with a slight sparkle and gentle acidity.

InterWined’s Recipe in Full

Pancetta & Banana Pizza

Click on the post to view and download the recipe

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The recent purchase of several bottles from the Tesco’s Finest wine range yielded a big problem: the identity of each wine was wiped out.
The Tempranillo tastes like Australian Cabernet and has no taste of Rioja.
The Chablis lacks the flints and minerality of the region. It’s closer to an inexpensive Kiwi Sauvignon Blanc.
The Tesco Web site […]

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