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| Wine (alt.food.wine) Devoted to the discussion of wine and wine-related topics. A place to read and comment about wines, wine and food matching, storage systems, wine paraphernalia, etc. In general, any topic related to wine is valid fodder for the group. |
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DaleW wrote:
Anyone I know? I tend to trust those I've found common ground with more than random tasters. Quite likely, but I can't tell you who it is, as they go by the nom de plume of "Iris Heyes." I suspect that it's a NYC ITB person from their posts, but that's all I know. Just looked up Gilman's comments on '05 Argiles. I won't post whole thing here, but includes: 3 g/l RS, On the palate the wine is medium-full,,,,,,,with beautiful focus and zest, and a very long, very minerally backend that displays outstanding grip and cut. 92" We'll see! Indeed. It's gratifying to know that my impression matches John Gilman's, but you'll still have to see what you make of it. Mark Lipton -- alt.food.wine FAQ: http://winefaq.hostexcellence.com |
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Mike Tommasi wrote in
: Spaghetti carbonara - this staple that has kept many a student alive through his studies is extremely simple and fast to prepare. You quickly drain the cooked pasta, and while hot (but not over the fire) you pour onto it egg yolks and fried bacon bits with lots of pepper and grated pecorino or parmigiano and some olive oil, letting the heat of the pasta gently cook the egg until it's creamy. The trick is to get it creamy, if you miss it will dry up. In France, somebody has decided that one needs to put lots of onions and... guess what! Crême fraîche again! No guessing with how much to cook the egg yolk, just throw cream. And with the onions and cream and egg, it looks like somebody threw up on your plate. Most unattractive and unpleasant in the mouth. Mike, I do quite a good carbonara (no cream) but I learnt that the best way to get a creamy texture is to use bain-marie so the temperature of the egg goes up so slowly that you can detect when to stop. I learnt this from a TV show featuring Ignacio Luis Aduriz (chef at "Mugaritz", a ** MIchelin restaurant) that gave this tip to make a "revuelto" and I thought it would be great for carbonara. And it is. Just perfect. Now, ¿what to drink with spaghetti carbonara? egg is difficult, bacon is easy, spaghetti is quite neutral in the context, black pepper is strong. Rosso di Montalcino? Brunello? s. |
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On Apr 29, 3:49 am, Joseph Coulter wrote:
Mike Tommasi wrote [...] My particular peeve is the insistence on deep frying eggpant when making any dish called eggplant parmesan or the like. eggplant bakes very well thank you. [...] Eggplant is also delicious when grilled. I used to make ratatouille with grilled veggies. But not with Vouvray. Andy |
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santiago wrote in
. 96.78: Mike Tommasi wrote in : Spaghetti carbonara - this staple that has kept many a student alive through his studies is extremely simple and fast to prepare. You quickly drain the cooked pasta, and while hot (but not over the fire) you pour onto it egg yolks and fried bacon bits with lots of pepper and grated pecorino or parmigiano and some olive oil, letting the heat of the pasta gently cook the egg until it's creamy. The trick is to get it creamy, if you miss it will dry up. In France, somebody has decided that one needs to put lots of onions and... guess what! Crême fraîche again! No guessing with how much to cook the egg yolk, just throw cream. And with the onions and cream and egg, it looks like somebody threw up on your plate. Most unattractive and unpleasant in the mouth. Mike, I do quite a good carbonara (no cream) but I learnt that the best way to get a creamy texture is to use bain-marie so the temperature of the egg goes up so slowly that you can detect when to stop. I learnt this from a TV show featuring Ignacio Luis Aduriz (chef at "Mugaritz", a ** MIchelin restaurant) that gave this tip to make a "revuelto" and I thought it would be great for carbonara. And it is. Just perfect. Now, ¿what to drink with spaghetti carbonara? egg is difficult, bacon is easy, spaghetti is quite neutral in the context, black pepper is strong. Rosso di Montalcino? Brunello? A wine to match a dish for starving students? Easy! Box wine. More seriously I'd say a simple red table wine with enough tannin to give it a bit of a bite to match the pepper. I'd go for a local wine (if possible) that matched that description. Definitely not one of the "popularly priced" wines that seem sweetened. |