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InterWined is still on holiday…but will be returning next week. In the meantime, to keep your toddies warm…we have some info that has been previously misreported in the press:
Victoria Beckham spent £5000 (not £8000!) at a recent dinner at ITHACA, a Japanese restaurant in Manchester on Thursday 28th August. She was […]

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Did you try Friday’s buffalo wing recipe? Well, I did, but without the benefit of the suggested wine. Simply put, InterWined’s recipe inspired me to experiment.
In this case, the gamble was with the widespread 2006 Jacob’s Creek ‘Three Vines’ white, £7 from Costcutter. The Three Vines offerings by Jacob’s Creek are nothing short of the […]

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InterWined Food
Each Friday and sometimes Saturday, InterWined.com pairs one great wine with one great meal and publishes the results along with the recipe in a little feature it likes to call ‘Blow the Bank’.

This week, ‘Blow the Bank’ continues InterWined’s All American, a month-long celebration of some of American cuisine’s greatest dishes from classic comfort foods to the unsung greats of American soulfood, with InterWined’s Own New Orleans King Prawn Po Boy.

Fried King PrawnsKing PrawnsFresh from the FryerNew Orleans King Prawn Po Boy

The Po Boy is something of a culinary institution in the city of New Orleans. And whether you believe its name comes from the Franglish quip “pour le boy” or a bunch of striking streetcar drivers, two things are clear. You will find it on the chalkboards and menus of corner stores and cafes, bistros and banqueting halls, across the city of New Orleans and the southern United States, and it is definitely not a submarine sandwich, hoagie, grinder, or Hero/gyro.

Leaving New Orleans for London in 1997, there are few things that leave me with greater nostalgia than the simple pleasure of a naked Shrimp Po Boy with hot sauce. My favourite Po Boys, from which InterWined’s Own recipe derives, came from a small corner grocery on Magazine Street, where the Vietnamese shop owner served them naked, or dressed on French bread stuffed with a choice of shrimp, oyster, or roast beef and covered in sauce or debris. For those unfamiliar with the lingo of New Orleans, dressed means with salad, naked without, and debris is a kind of hot gravy for roast beef akin to that found on a drip beef sandwich. (For those unfamiliar with drip beef, we’ll leave that description for another day.)

The 2003 Ronco del Gnemiz Sauvignon from Friuli-Venezia Giulia in Eastern Italy, available through Cadman Fine Wines and reviewed here and here is the perfect companion, ably managing to match the heat of the chilli pepper, paprika, and hot sauce with its “kick-ass hint of jalapeño pepper” as well as subtly of the king prawns.

InterWined’s Own Recipe in Full

New Orleans King Prawn Po Boy

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InterWined Food
Each Friday, InterWined.com pairs one great wine with one great meal and publishes the results along with the recipe in a little feature it likes to call ‘Blow the Bank’.

This week, ‘Blow the Bank’ brings you InterWined’s Own Monkfish Mexican Rice (Arroz con Rape).

Monfish Mexican RiceMexican Rice

For those whose experience of Mexican rice is limited to Old El Paso and Taco Bell, InterWined’s Own dish might seem more accurately described as Spanish paella. After all, when was the last time that you saw monkfish on the menu at a Mexican restaurant in the United States? Even Wahoo’s Fish Tacos — regardless of its name might suggest ‐ serve relatively little fish.

But, fish is an integral part of much Mexican cuisine — how could it not be with nearly six thousand miles of coastline. And, while that figure might only be half that of the United States, it’s a pretty big number when one considers that the United States is nearly five times the size of Mexico.

What makes this rice dish Mexican rather than Spanish is the same thing that makes a Pinot Noir from Burgundy a Côte de Nuits or Côte de Beaune and not an Italian, New Zealand, or Oregon Pinot Noir. They share the same ingredients but result — sometimes subtly, sometimes dramatically ‐ in different things.

The central difference between InterWined’s Own Mexican rice and Spanish paella is that paella is most often made with calasparro rice, rarely found in the UK or US outside of specially shops. (InterWined used a simple long grain.) A further one comes in the use of the main ingredients. Whereas paella begins with the meat, fish, and broth, InterWined’s Own Mexican rice dish begins with the rice and the spice.

Paired with the Monkfish Mexican Rice is the Catalan 2002 Xavier Clua Vindemia (13.5%) from Terra Alta in Spain, currently on sale at Cadman Fine Wines for £13.99 (original price £18.99). Made from Chardonnay (15%), Sauvignon Blanc (10%), and Garnacha Blanca (75%), the Vindemia smells like candied apples and caramel, making it seem like it might be better suited as an aperitif. However, once it reaches the tongue, the wine reveals as an intriguing blend of high-acid and oaky complexity reminiscent of the Sherries found in Jerez. This is a very good wine for food, with both the acid and oak sit well with the monkfish, prawns, squid, and cubed pancetta found in the Monkfish Mexican Rice.

InterWined’s Own Recipe in Full

Monkfish Mexican Rice

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InterWined Food
Each Friday, InterWined.com pairs one great wine with one great meal and publishes the results along with the recipe in a little feature it likes to call ‘Blow the Bank’.

This week, ‘Blow the Bank’ brings you savoury dinner that doubles as a nice mid-afternoon snack or late-night dessert courtesy of InterWined’s Own Ricotta & Sun-dried Tomato Samosas.

Ricotta & Sun-dried Tomato SamosasSamosasSamosas Sizzling in OilCooked Samosas

InterWined could bore you with stories of the history of the samosa and it’s journey from the middle-east to India or somesuch, but that would be boring. See, you’re already yawning. It would also be misleading, because these samosas are samosas in name only and inspired by a bit of late night food television viewing and a recipe for what was by all accounts an apple turnover that the chef chose to rename an apple samosa. I might have been tired, and it might have been late, and I might not remember the name of the programme, but the simple samosa recipe stuck in my head.

And now, I’m sticking it in yours.

Making your own dough can be daunting; it certainly is for InterWined. In fact, I’ve yet to follow a recipe for making dough and get the appropriate results, from the stated measures of ingredients. I’m forever having to adjust the flour or the water or the milk or whatever to make the mixture wetter or dryer and easier to knead into dough. And, even though, I vow each never to make my own dough again…I always do and almost always get the same mixed results.

Not this time. This time, I followed a simple formula of 2 parts flour to just less than 1 part water. And it worked.

Now what about those samosas?

Citrus fruit and ricotta are classic pairing partners and regularly feature in numerous Italian recipes, such as those for cannoli. While InterWined recipe for Ricotta & Sun-dried Tomato Samosas doesn’t include citrus and isn’t Italian, the same classic thinking prevails with pairing them with a wine.

The 2005 Château Saransot Dupré Blanc Sec (12.5%) Sauvignon Blanc/Semillon (60/40 blend from Bordeaux, currently available from Cadman Fine Wines for £8.99, brings with it a zippy acidity that pairs well with the peppery ricotta of the somosa, the Sauvignon Blanc helping the wine to find balance with the creamy flavour of the ricotta cheese.

It’s the salt, found of the sun-dried tomato, that proves the most challenging aspect in this pairing and, as mentioned in previous ‘Blow the Bank’ posts, countless others. However, the creaminess of the ricotta mixed with pepper and the Semillon in the wine do a nice job of taming it and preventing the wine’s overall acidity from clashing with the saltiness of the sun-dried tomatoes and leaving a pucker on the lips and a grimace on the face.

On the nose, the Château Saransot Dupré gives a good mix of mild honey and hay that translates as pretty well to the mouth where the honey clearly dominates before finishing with a slightly sharp zip of lemon and acid.

Personally, hay is one of those strange terms that sometimes appears in tasting notes that, while entirely accurate, is kind of meaningless to anyone who didn’t grow up near horses, under a thatched roof, or chewing it while pretending to be Tom Sawyer, Huck Finn, a gunslinger from a 1950s’ Western. It’s like gooseberry…only people that have had the occasion to eat enough gooseberry so as to create a sense of it in their minds, noses, and palates should ever be allowed to use that tasting note — especially when describing Sauvignon Blanc. Why would such a common wine smell of such an uncommon fruit? No one ever says the reverse, “This gooseberry smells exactly like a 2004 Sancerre from Château Pretentious Tasting Note”. Do they?

Well, I am not one of those gooseberry gobblers. But, I do know what hay tastes like, since I did grow up doing one of those things (any guesses?) and, thus, feel pretty OK using it to describe the wine. It’s a bit…hay.

And, for those worried about their salt intake, the current unpopularity of sun-dried tomatoes, hay-tasting, or the availability of the Château Saransot Dupré Blanc Sec, a great alternative would be to replace the sun-dried tomatoes with freshly chopped pomordorinos, as fresh tomatoes tend to be fairly acidic, and pair the dish with the equally well-suited Ronco del Gnemiz Sauvignon twice reviewed by InterWined in recent weeks. (They make quite a bit of ricotta in Friuli, don’t you know.)

InterWined’s Own Recipe in Full

Ricotta & Sun-dried Tomato Samosas

Click on the post to view and download the recipe

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Last week, InterWined.com posted a video review of the 2004 Sauvignon Sol from the Fruili producer Ronco del Gnemiz as part of its submission to Wine Blogging Wednesday and vowed to get better acquainted the wines of Friuli-Venezia Giulia.
So, when we saw some more Ronco del Gnemiz offerings on sale at Cadman Wines for £11 […]

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For the theme of January’s Wine Blogging Wednesday, the hosts Jack and Joanne of Fork & Bottle chose the white wines of Friuli-Venezia Giulia.
Running along the Austrian/Slovenian border in northern Italy, the region is renowned for the high calibre of its white wines; but, perhaps, in the UK it is best known as the birthplace […]

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The white 2005 Parducci Sauvignon Blanc. Grassy and crassy, with a citrus nose. Simple and zippy. A fun, fun wine. Could be aged in oak for awhile, though, to soften those edges: 8.5 alone; 8.7 points as part of a mixed case.

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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’ continues to take a departure from the norm and comes courtesy of its own recipe for Cod Saltimbocca with Butter Bean Arrabiatta.

Cod Saltimbocca and Butter BeansCod Saltimbocca with Butter Bean Arrabiatta

InterWined’s little sister Kathy moved from the States to Rome last month, where she rents a very smart little flat in the centre of the city with all the modern amenities save for an oven. Never the best cook, she turned to her elder brother InterWined’s ‘Blow the Bank’ scribe Sean for help devising recipes and meals for hob and microwave. As the phrase ‘fresh from the microwave’ is close to oxymoronic and less likely to parse the lips that the ever-popular two-finger salute to detente ‘I nuked it’ in reference to results of microwave cooking, this leaves the hob and a bevy of fantastic dishes such as InterWined’s own Cod Saltimbocca with Butter Bean Arrabiatta.

As searches on Google and the Wikipedia will no doubt confirm, saltimbocca and arrabiatta are Italian approximations for the more mundane ‘bacon-wrapped’ and ‘spicy-sauced’, both names are far more exotic and impressive in Italian than they will ever be in English. So, when in Rome do as the Romans do; and when in London or wherever you might be reading this, do as the Romans do too.

The 2006 Cuvée Pierre-Louis Pouilly Fumé makes a stunning match to the Cod Saltimbocca. Its slight acidity and lemony flavour adds a gentle zing to the fish and speck, while its crisp aftertaste and freshness nicely compliment the spice of the butter beans.

A Loire Sauvignon Blanc, the Cuvée Pierre-Louis Pouilly Fumé perfectly suits its £10 price tag (£9.99 from Sainsbury’s), even if, it was ultimately unsurprising. This isn’t wine to inspire friends or verse; however, it is a wine to enjoy and buy more than once and perfect for pairing with food — especially when you wish for the dish to steal the show.

Pouilly Fumé is famed for its dryness and minerality, with wine critics often citing the Loire’s unique terroir and chalky soil as the source of its minerality. And while, the 2006 Cuvée Pierre-Louis is characteristically dry, it’s not very or chalky. Which is no bad thing, simply worth noting: 8.5.

InterWined’s Own Recipe in Full

Cod Saltimbocca with Butter Bean Arrabiatta

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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’ comes courtesy of Son, the Single Guy Chef, and his delectable Scallops Wrapped with Serrano Ham and New Baby Potatoes with Paprika Vinaigrette.

Scallops Wrapped with Serrano Ham with Paprika VinaigretteRaw Scallops Wrapped in Serrano HamChilean Sauvignon Blanc

At the beginning of August, InterWined questioned the overproduction of Sauvignon Blanc, noting that both New Zealand’s Oyster Bay and California’s Berigner seemed disappointingly samey. Given the profound affect that geography (soil, sun, climate) has on wine grapes, wines from New Zealand should not naturally taste like wines from California. It asked readers to venture beyond the global brands and seek out less predictable examples of one of the world’s most popular grapes.

Thus, when InterWined chose to prepare one of the Single Guy Chef’s favourite recipes, it decided to follow its own advice and chose 2005 Santa Rita Floresta Sauvignon Blanc from Leyda in Chile (£9.99 at Waitrose/$25 online at Primo Vino.net).

While Chile might be the world’s 5th largest wine exporter with big brands like Concha y Toro and Cousino-Macul to wave its flag, it is not yet one of the top producers. For the 2003, it ranked bottom of the top 11 wine-producing nations, just behind Portugal, Germany, and — surprisingly — 6th place China. (Santa Rita ranks somewhere in the middle in terms of production and export; its 120 label its most ubiquitous.)

Fortunately, InterWined’s fears were largely unfounded. Straw in colour, the 2005 Floresta has a gentle nose of fruit and blades of grass making it seem fairly typical of French Sauvignon Blanc and less citric than New Zealand ones often taste. InterWined might almost be forgiven for saying that it tasted of gooseberry — a long-time signature of classic Sauvignon Blanc that seems to be slowly being replaced by a more acidic, lemony flavour; and a fruit with which only celebrity wine tasters seem adequately familiar. InterWined certainly isn’t. However, what made this Sauvignon Blanc special was its bizarre after-taste: juicy, green grape skins the likes of which you play with on your tongue when peeling grapes in your mouth. A perfect partner to the fleshy deliciousness of the scallop.

The Single Guy Chef’s Recipe in Full

Scallops Wrapped with Serrano Ham and New Baby Potatoes with Paprika Vinaigrette

Click on the post to view and download the recipe

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The 2006 Les Champs Clos from Sancerre, Loire, is a Sauvignon Blanc. The mineral of the Sancerre was there as well as a lightness and wonderful acidity. Heavy lemon zip. Light and pricy, at £10, but worth it: 8.7 points. A perfect Old World wine for the grill.

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InterWined recently received a series of private messages from the United States asking for some wine-buying guidance.
In response, InterWined recommended some wines from a Houston wine retailer called Specs — mainly white wine such as Albariño from Spain and Riesling from the Mosel and Rhine in Germany. These wines are great served slightly chilled and very versatile with food.

Here’s a recommendation for those hot summer picnics:

Get a bottle of Beringer Sauvignon Blanc 2006 (or similar California Sauvignon Blanc), £7 at Tesco, and widely available in the US. Pour a glassful into a tall tumbler over ice and sip through a straw. California Sauvignon Blanc is often filled with melon and citrus, but does not have a very enjoyable aroma in this price range, so it’s best to ‘keep it real’. But don’t go adding strawberries or lime wedges…it’s not a cocktail.

Simply pour the California Sauvignon Blanc over ice and sip…simple, refreshing, enjoyable and relaxing.

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New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc should have a hint of gooseberry, as part of its ‘flavour profile.’ Had a supermarket version from Sainsbury’s for £7; it was decent, hint of petrol in the nose. Lots of zip and tang, and really, really didn’t go with my team losing at (American) football last weekend. New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc 8.4; New Orleans Saints 6.3.

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The 2004 Grove Mill Sauvignon Blanc is a stunner, £7. Good with anything, even spicy sausage: tropical fruits on the nose; dry finish, light on the tongue. Two days later, the wine had mellowed to being almost buttery. It was smoother than Brazilian legs during Carnival. 8.5.

2001 was not so good for California and Bonterra’s Cabernet from that year shows it. Watery and thin, little identity, no wonder many bottles of it are available to buy now – though it’s not a complete wash-up. It was drinkable as a table wine. Serve with dinner. 7.7

Same for 2004 Valdevieso Merlot. It holds it own, but can’t hold your attention. 7.7.

The ‘Taste the Difference’ 2003 Connawarra Cabernet from the grocer Sainsbury’s was on sale for half-off, £4.

The fumes alone are flammable. Hard to taste anything else when a wine is pimped out with so much silly sauce. A day later, ripe fruits, mainly blackberry, tinge of oak, still strong. Price was right though. Eight pounds would be a joke. 7.0.

Finally the 2003 Heartland Petit Verdot from the Limestone Coast of Australia…The Heartland gave off wild aromas violets, black cherry but still very rustic, like an old leather belt that will never give up holding onto pants. Also a bit of rust and a hint of mint.
8.9 points, mainly for controlling a late harvest grape most people won’t bother with.

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