Monday, July 30, 2012

The Annual Beer and Cheese Pairing
Wednesday, August 1st
6 - 9 PM
The Schlafly Tap Room


Join us anytime between 6 and 9 PM for a casual sampling of 6 Schlafly Craft Beers expertly paired with 6 distinctive artisan cheeses from The Wine Merchant in Clayton. Take part in the special brewer and cheesemonger discussion at 7:30PM.
Tickets are $15 - available at Schlafly Tap Room 
Pairings (subject to change)

Shropshire, cow, UK - Summer Lager
Cave Aged Gruyere, raw cow, Swiss - Pale Ale
Dunbarton Blue, raw cow, WI - Biere de Guard
Kunik, cow/goat blend, NY - Yakima Wheat Ale
7 year Boerenkaas, raw cow, Holland - Imperial Stout
Pleasant Ridge, raw cow, WI - Your Choice!

Part of St. Louis Craft Beer Week!
stlcbw-logo1-small








"Silver Oak's Cabernet Sauvignons are among the most popular wines of California. I have heard mind-boggling stories about the huge throng of people, ranging from lawyers in three-piece suits, to show girls and Hell's Angels on motorcycles, that shows up at the winery on the day Silver Oak releases its newest vintage." -Robert Parker, The Wine Advocate

2008 Silver Oak Cabernet Sauvignon Alexander Valley
Pre-Arrival Price $59.99
"Our 2008 Alexander Valley Cabernet Sauvignon is a dark, rich full-bodied wine with great tannic structure and mouth-feel. It has a garnet color and a nose of ripe boysenberries, cherry liqueur, dark chocolate, sandalwood and a hint of roasting meat. On the palate, it is mouth-coating and incredibly rich in umami. It has a very long, savory finish with the slight grip of fine-grained tannins. Given proper cellaring, this wine should give drinking pleasure through 2030.008 Alexander Valley Cabernet Sauvignon is a dark, rich full-bodied wine with great tannic structure and mouth-feel. It has a garnet color and a nose of ripe boysenberries, cherry liqueur, dark chocolate, sandalwood and a hint of roasting meat. On the palate, it is mouth-coating and incredibly rich in umami. It has a very long, savory finish with the slight grip of fine-grained tannins. Given proper cellaring, this wine should give drinking pleasure through 2030."
-Winemaker's notes

Les Moulins Mahjoub---Hand-Rolled Tunisian Couscous


We’ve been seriously smitten with m’hamsa couscous from the Mahjoub family for a few years now, so we are happy to see them getting much deserved attention from the powers that be at the SOFI awards.

“July 2, 2012, Portland, ME – The National Association for the Specialty Food Trade, Inc, named Les Moulins Mahjoub Hand-rolled Couscous Winner of the 2012 SOFI™ Gold Award in the category of Outstanding Pasta, Rice or Grain”

Les Moulins Mahjoub is a family owned cooperative of twelve brothers and sisters, with each overseeing an aspect of the production.  Between the twelve of them, they own several organic farms in different environmentally diverse regions of Tunisia – from the deserts of Tatouine (its a real place), to Mediterranean Tunis, and the lush Mejerda Valley – which served as major grain growing region for the Roman Empire. It is in the Mejerda Valley that the Mahjoubs grow the wheat used to make their m’hamsa couscous.  The only ingredients are durum wheat (semolina), extra virgin olive oil, salt and water.  Again setting themselves apart from the competition – the Mahjoubs use their own extra-virgin olive oil in everything they make from the sundried tomatoes, to the couscous.

“M’hamsa” is a style of couscous that has become increasingly hard to find – even in Tunisia, where industrial couscous have long replaced the ones that are painstakingly rolled by hand, a process that takes twelve days start to finish.  Semolina flour is sprinkled with water, and rolled by hand in a shallow ball, until small bits of grain clump together.  Once enough balls have formed, the remaining flour is sifted out, and the process repeats itself.  The couscous are sundried over the course over the next few days, then rolled in olive oil, sprinkled with a bit of salt, and left to cure in the sun.

These are couscous with terroir.  When you stick your nose in the jar, you’ll smell the toasty aroma of the couscous baking in the Mediterranean sun and the smokiness of the nearby outdoor ovens.  Inspect a few in your hand, they are beautiful little irregular pebbles of semolina.  A far cry from Israeli Couscous, which are perfectly spherical and don’t taste like much.


Friday, July 27, 2012

 
2008 Andrew Will Proprietary Red Blend "Champoux Vineyard" On Sale $59.99
"
The 2008 Champoux Vineyard is made up of 46% Cabernet Sauvignon, 25% Merlot, 23% Cabernet Franc, and 5% Petit Verdot. It sports an inviting bouquet of sandalwood, rose petal, Asian spices, a hint of leather, black currant, and blackberry. This is followed by a succulent, plush, pleasure-bent wine that deftly conceals enough structure to evolve for 5-7 years. It offers a drinking window extending from 2016 to 2028+."
-Rated 95/100 points by The Wine Advocate
2008 Andrew Will Proprietary Red Blend "Sorella" On Sale $64.99
"
Impressive for its intensity and elegance, packed with black cherry, cherry, plum and spice flavors, hinting at roasted red pepper and a tarry minerality as the finish glides smoothly over refined tannins. Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc and Merlot. Best from 2012 through 2020. 973 cases made."
-Rated 95/100 points by The Wine Spectator
2007 Andrew Will Proprietary Red Blend "Two Blondes Vineyard" On Sale $49.99
"
...Its blend is 49% Cabernet Sauvignon, 34% Cabernet Franc, 19% Merlot, and 7% Malbec It offers up the most complex and complete aromatics of the single vineyard offerings with its array of sandalwood, lavender, incense, smoke, espresso, cassis, and black currant. Velvety-textured, layered, and opulent, this concentrated, lengthy, full-throttle effort should easily see its 25th birthday."
-Rated 94/100 points by The Wine Advocate

ALSO AVAILABLE.....


2009 Sheridan Cabernet Franc Yakima Valley On Sale $44.99
The 2009 Cabernet Franc which had been blended only 3 weeks previously was aged in 40% new oak and is likely to be bottled in December, 2011. It, too, displays plenty of herb and spice box aromas, a succulence that is impressive, a velvety texture, and exceptional length.
Rated 95-98 points by The Wine Advocate

Saturday, July 21, 2012

New (to us...but really really old) Deseo Biscotti

Tradition...
In 1858 Antonio Mattei opened his business, producing and selling the typical almond biscuits in the old town centre of Prato. His original recipe was awarded a prize at the Exhibitions in Florence (1861), London (1862) and Paris (1867) and it is still kept as a secret of the Pandolfini family, which inherited the old bakery in 1908. In 2008 the brother and sisters Francesco, Marcella, Elisabetta and Letizia Pandolfini celebrated with the whole town the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the biscuit factory, and they continue the tradition of the Biscotti di Prato, proudly spreading their town’s image and flavour throughout Italy and the world.

... and innovation
The natural evolution of things: this is the company Deseo for Francesco Pandolfini, the third generation of the Biscottificio Antonio Mattei. If the classic style and tradition of ancient recipes is on the scene at the Biscottificio Mattei, Deseo is the pastry maker’s
workroom for creative experimentation. Every year there are new combinations, new packaging, always attentive to the needs of a regular clientele already widespread in Italy and in the world; this is how Deseo biscuits make a unique contribution to products MADE in ITALY, interpreting the old family tradition in their own original way.

Friday, July 20, 2012

New Orin Swift Wines Are Here!


2010 Orin Swift "D66" Grenache, Roussillon France

 Sale Price $35.99 (net) 
The 2010 vintage marks the second release of D66 from the winery and vineyards in Maury, France, Situated in the outer Roussillon against the backdrop of the Pyrenees mountain range, old vine Grenache thrives along with some Syrah and Carignan. The intense heat from the daytime sun is reflected back to the gnarled, head trained vines at night, increasing ripeness while maintaining acidity. The result is  a very dark, concentrated and finesse driven wine that embodies this singular region and terroir. Aromas of ripe crushed cherries intertwined with seasoned French oak dominate the nose and lead gently into an enormous entry. Ripe strawberries and watermelon from  the structure mid palate which bursts with bright acidity.
-Winemaker's Notes

2010 Orin Swift Proprietary Red Blend "Abstract", California 
Sale Price $26.99 (net)
"2010 Abstract is a blend of Napa, Sonoma, and Mendocino Grenache, Petite Sirah, and Syrah primarily from hillside vineyards. The aromas are laced with crushed black fruits and bing cherry. A mouth coating entry leads nicely into a mid palate with excellent structure and balanced acidity. Ripe cherry and strawberry dominate the finish which is clean and long. Aged 10 months in new and seasoned French oak"
-Winemaker's Notes

2009 Orin Swift Proprietary Red Blend "Papillion", Napa Valley
Sale Price $49.99 (net)"The wine has a very dense garnet hue with a slight stain of cardinal on the rim. Aromas of plum and cassis are built around soft French oak and cedar box nuances. The entry is intense, yet elegant with loads of boysenberry and dark fruit flavors. Well integrated tannin chains provide for a long, soft finish."
-Winemaker's Notes
Papillon

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

The Gospel According to Prunes

How d'Agen Prunes are Taking Back their Geriatric Image

 

Did your grandparents ever force you to drink a glass of their prune juice?  Mine did.  And I’ll never forget the singularly awful combination of flavors that came with washing down a peanut butter and jelly sandwich with… prune juice.  The prunes many of us grew up on, were visceral enough to keep the ubiquitous purple cardboard box from making its way into our adult grocery carts.  But recently, I’ve undergone somewhat of a prune conversion.
The most famous prune in the world, the pruneau d’Agen, has been a celebrated product of southwest France since at least the 1500s and the Ente plums have been officially protected since 2002 by the European Union.  Agen is a commune in Aquitaine of south-western France.  It lies on the river Garonne 84miles southeast of Bordeaux and is the birthplace of the prune d’Agen.
We get our Pruneau d’Agen from Marc Peyrey, whose small orchard focuses on growing heirloom fruit varietals of the Agen region.  To preserve the moisture and flavors of the prune d’ente, Marc dries the prunes in a special drying oven of his own invention, and partially rehydrates them in their own juice before sealing them in vacuum packs.  His prunes are delicious in savory applications (Duck! Foie gras! Cheese Plates!), as well as in sweeter ones: delicately spiced cakes, ice cream, clafouti.  But here at Great Ciao, we enjoy eating them simply straight out of the bag.
Prune d'ente still on the tree