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Saskatchewan Gold Medal Plates 2011

07 Nov

Ecstasy on the podium in Saskatoon - thanks to CJ Katz for this image!

Sophomore years can sometimes feel like the morning after… Not in Saskatoon! Gold Medal Plates took over spacious Prairieland Park for our second-ever Saskatchewan event and it was a fabulous triumph any way you look at things – from the mind-boggling amount of money raised to the mood (very high energy but eagerly attentive) and the VIP reception – but especially to the excellent food. Chefs from Saskatoon, Regina and Prince Albert really lifted the bar high above last year’s mark and set the room abuzz with admiration. Speed-skating immortal Catriona Le May Doan was the MC, eliciting great stories from the pack of Olympic and Paralympic athletes who paraded onto stage. Excellent, get-up-and-dance music was provided by Jim Cuddy, Barney Bentall, Anne Lindsay and the inimitable Alan Doyle. And, once again, Hailey Pasemko, mixologist extraordinaire from Nita Lake Lodge in Whistler, produced her stunning cocktails. Her Victoria gin-based G.B.G.V. (Victoria gin, fresh grapefruit juice, fresh lemon juice, vanilla and basil) particularly caught the city’s fancy (the basil leaf and vanilla syrup really lift this cocktail to dizzying heights) but all three of her creations ended up as the talk of the town. A huge thankyou to Hailey for travelling with us, working so hard, squeezing a hundredweight of citrus in every city and generally thrilling the cities of Western Canada with her luxe textures and layered flavours.

Trevor Robertson's bronze medal dish

            This was indeed a night to remember for chef Trevor Robertson of the Radisson Hotel, Saskatoon, who won the bronze medal. He chose to prepare a “deconstructed osso bucco,” slow-braising the meat but leaving it juicy and rich as well as superbly tender, carefully removing the bone and then rebuilding the boneless shank inside a sheath of cawl fat. He removed the marrow from the bones, turned it into a creamy foam then piped it back into the bone which became a second element on the plate (somehow, “whipping” the marrow made it seem less heavy but every bit as rich). The third component was a crisply fried arancino ball of toothsomely textured Italian rice pressed around a spicy Italian sausage that was in turn filled with a heart of buffalo mozzarella. An asparagus mousse panna cotta with a rosemary cream sauce continued the Italian theme. The final touches were a dab of roasted red pepper paste and some cubes of an intense jelly made from the wine Chef Robertson picked. Tangy, fruity, big and delectable, it was the 2007 Nk’Mip Cellars Qwam Qwmt Syrah.

Ryan Marquis's delectable silver medal rabbit

            Our silver medal went to chef Ryan Marquis of the Delta Bessborough hotel, Saskatoon, who also won silver last year. His dish seemed to elevate the level of the competition when the food runners brought it to the judges (as we sat in our splendour in the centre of the great room, our round table spread with scarlet satin and Union Flags in honour of the coming Olympiad). Chef chose to cook rabbit saddle sous vide which left the truffle-scented meat very pale and interesting, juicy and yieldingly tender. Tucked in around the bunny were some perfect, pan-seared chanterelles (Saskatchewan has the best chanterelles in the world – and that’s official), streaks of red beet purée, a pool of intense truffled-balsamic reduction like some supercharged jus, and dots of a pungent green onion emulsion that made all the judges coo. As a kind of post-modernist component, a transparent plastic tetrahedron held a super-creamy cauliflower purée strewn with crimson beads made (by subtle molecular methods) from chef’s chosen wine. There was also a yummy rye and sesame cracker which I used as a spoon for getting the last of the cauliflower parfait out of its gaol. The plates were hot, the parfait chilled, the rabbit warm: Chef Marquis aced the textural component and also the wine match – the smooth, fruity 2008 Adieu Pinot Noir from Le Vieux Pin winery in the south Okanagan: it worked particularly well with the red beet.

Gold for Anthony McCarthy's dish

            Our gold medallist pipped the silver by only a couple of percentage points – though Vancouver has taught us that that can be a substantial margin. Chef Anthony McCarthy from the Saskatoon Club won bronze last year; this time he vaulted over Ryan Marquis to bring home the bacon – or, more precisely, the foie. Chef McCarthy had been planning this dish for the best part of a year, so when the morels were in season last spring he bought a thousand of the biggest and best and froze them with all the care and precision afforded to Walt Disney’s head. He thawed them for us and filled them with foie gras and a brunoise of black winter truffle and coated them in a superfine grinding of last summer’s corn before cooking them off. I loved the texture and the flavour of the morels and the way the molten foie gras squirted out into my mouth. Beside this superlative treat was a sort of agnolotti made with a dense gnocchi-like pasta and filled with slow-braised organic beef, oozed through with some creamy, sweetly blue cambazola cheese that had melted into the forked meat. There was a swipe of supersmooth squash purèe and a token salad-moment of embryonic broccoli and radish microgreens, a stripe of finely minced parsley in oil and a classic demiglace so perfect it would have made Escoffier reach down from heaven and pat Chef McCarthy on the toque, had he been wearing one. The wine was an unusual blend of Cabernet Franc and Syrah from Nichol Vineyards in Naramata – a wine I really enjoyed, especially since it scored a bull’s eye matching with the braised beef and the demiglace. Great work.

            So thank you, Saskatoon! Once again you came to play and to party and to support GMP and our wonderful athletes. Having now eaten my way across Western Canada, I can say that the standards have risen for our competition in every province. I’ve noticed a radical commitment to sourcing local, seasonal and sustainable ingredients, to interpreting those ingredients within every imaginable cultural idiom, to an ever-increasing awareness that wine or beer or a cocktail can be a part of the work of art rather than some kind of front-of-house afterthought. Which leads us, coincidentally, I assure you, into the report about the wines that showed up at our party in Saskatoon. In the words of Gold Medal Plates National Wine Advisor, David Lawrason, it was

 A  B.C. Wine Showcase

The chefs of Saskatchewan presented one of the most stylistically diverse menus of the campaign, so it was no surprise that a broad range of wine styles emerged as well; with all but one being from B.C.  Unfortunately no winemakers were on hand for the pouring, but they were represented by the staff of Cava Wines and Spirits, the only private wine store in Saskatoon, who were well versed in the particular wines they poured.

            For the judging of Best of Show Wine I was joined by Cava owner Cameron Rizos, who acted as an invaluable liaison in getting many of the wines “imported” into Saskatchewan.  And as fate would have it, Cameron was hosting an Australian winemaker Shane McLaughlin who volunteered to judge as well.  No stranger to Canada or international sport, Shane was on Australia’s national rowing team in the nineties, and competed in the Commonwealth games in Canada in 1994. He now makes wine at Canonbah Bridge in New South Wales.

            There was no unanimous decision on the best wine of show but the bright peachy and honeyed Orofino 2010 Riesling from the Simikameen Valley placed in the top three by all three judges. The runner up was Nichol Vineyard 2008 Cabernet Franc Syrah, a stylish, subtle and complex blend that faithfully showed its varietal and regional roots. Third place went Le Vieux Pin 2008 Adieu Pinot Noir, a firm, complex pinot named Adieu because it will be the last vintage – with the vineyard in the south Okanagan being replanted to reds more suitable to the sandy soils and hot climate.

            Other wines donated to the chefs pairings included Tantalus 2009 Riesling, See Ya Later 2010 Gewurztraminer, Laughing Stock 2009 Blind Trust, Haywire 2010 Pinot Gris, Nk’Mip 2007 Syrah, Ganton & Larsen Prospect 2008 Pinot Noir, and finally, the only Ontario wine, Peninsula Ridge 2010 Cabernet Franc Rose.  Le VieuxPin 2008 P’tit Rouge was poured to all during the Celebration and Awards portion of the evening.

 

 


Vancouver Gold Medal Plates 2011

06 Nov

Rob Feenie's golden dish

Friday night in Vancouver! The Westin Bayshore hotel welcomed Gold Medal Plates in style and the fabulous weather that we have encountered around the country continued to hold. Stately boats floated motionless in the marina outside the hotel; seagulls drifted across a cerulean sky; the mountains (their peaks dusted with snow) posed with typical B.C. nonchalance. Inside the building, however, all was action. Indeed, as night closed in, the tempo and the excitement built to a pitch that can only be described as wild and crazy. Alan Doyle, Barnie Bentall and friends on mandolin and double bass had the room literally dancing in the aisles with some awesome blue-grass renderings of Rolling Stones songs. MC Marnie McBean was her usual brilliant, irreverend self, dialoguing with the host of Olympic and Paralympic athletes.

            For most of the tight-knit crowd of 550, however, the real drama lay with the gastronomic events of the evening. The line-up of the chefs was formidable indeed – perhaps the strongest in the country. The line-up of judges was equally august, led by Senior Judges Sid Cross and Andrew Morrison, with revered chef and restaurateur John Bishop, chef, author and cracker queen Lesley Stowe, food guru and proprietor of the wonderful bookstore Barbara-Jo’s Books to Cooks, Barbara-Jo McIntosh, and last year’s Vancouver GMP champion, Chef Robert Clark of C. We needed all our experience and judgement last night!

            I don’t usually mention a fourth place chef in these reports but the other judges were unanimous that I must acknowledge Rod Butters of RauDZ Regional Table in Kelowna. Every ingredient in his dish (except salt) came from within 94 kilometres of his restaurant, including the array of exotic spices he used to create a fascinating collation of goat meat – curried shoulder, a sausage spiked with apricot chutney, the loin rubbed with masala mix, the tissue-thin vegetables… I can’t remember having a dish of goat before at GMP: kudos to chef Butters for his staunch localism and all-round courage.

The bronze dish was so tempting I dug in before realizing i ought to snap a pic...

            Our bronze medal was awarded to Joël Watanabe of Bao Bei Chinese Brasserie. He showed us how to bring pork belly to the ideal texture by cooking it sous vide for 12 hours then finishing it in the pan to give a crispy crust and finally the oven, just prior to serving, so the the layers of tasty fat were almost beginning to dissolve. He paired his pork with a fruit – Asian pear cut into flattened spheres and then poached under pressure with a little of his chosen wine, a process that literally forced the wine into the pear. There were tiny mounds of jellified superior stock for extra meatiness, a jaunty crisp of deep fried crackling on top and a broad stripe of very sticky buckwheat honey and soy sauce, in case any more umame was needed! Chef’s chosen wine, the 2007 sparkling Chenin Blanc from Road 13 Vineyards in Oliver, B.C., was a charming and refreshing counterbalance.

            We have often had close marks determining the colour of medals at GMP – never as close as last night. First and second crossed the finish line together, in a blur of talent, and it was necessary to slow everything down and analyze the numbers and scores from each judge to determine the final winner. Both chefs are highly competitive individuals; either one would have been a worthy champion. In the end, it was an Olympic moment – with gold and silver separated by a mere 0.15 of a percentage point.

The silver medal dish from Dale Mackay - pre broth - so delicious!

            Our silver medal went to Chef Dale Mackay of Ensemble. He set a bowl in a pretty display of Thai herbs and spices and when we peered inside we saw a tangle of fresh herbs, several peeled local spot prawns (amazingly sweet and juicy), some miniature shimiji mushrooms, three or four tiny moments of bok choy, two slices of a Thai sausage made from coarsely chopped pork butt and spiced with kaffir lime, lemongrass, coriander, anise, turmeric and no doubt several other spices. Then chef poured on his spiced broth from a teapot – a rich, meaty, topaz-coloured pork broth with a profoundly layered flavour of all those Thai spices plus a touch of fish sauce for a funky fermented colour on the palate, and a drop of chili oil. Our tongues were left pleasantly tingling by such a subtle, perfectly integrated soup and despite the amount we had to eat last night, the judges were moaning for more. Chef Mackay’s wine was the 2010 Pinot Gris from Laughing Stock Vineyards in Penticton, B.C., aged sur lie so it had nuances of its own and was a pretty good match.

            Taking the gold medal, as he has done before, was Chef Rob Feenie of Cactus Club Restaurants with a dish that was masterful in its balance and technique. Chef arrived at the judges’ table with instructions that we should begin by downing the shot of rich duck consommé he poured into a shot glass over a brunoise of black winter truffle. “As a palate-cleanser,” he explained. On the plate itself, the premier protein was a perfect slice of rabbit leg confit, the delicate but tasty meat lightly pressed together with duck fat, impeccably seasoned and so rich and soft it was beginning to venture into rillettes country. On top of this was a scrumptious ragout of sliced veal tongue, chopped porcini mushrooms and finely diced chestnuts. Brussels sprouts had been chopped and buttered and blessed by minute fragments of applewood-smoked bacon. A squash and brown butter purée pretended it was a vegetable when it was really more of a luxe sauce. Colour and extra texture came from orange-spiked carrots that had been turned into a crisp “paper” and into slippery, ethereal little beads. Chef Feenie’s wine was the 2010 Switchback Vineyard Pinot Gris from Haywire, in Summerland, B.C.

            So we now have five champions to bring to Kelowna next February. The level of talent is jaw-droppingly high. Tonight we stage our event in Saskatoon – and may the best chef win.

 And here is the Wine Report from David Lawrason, GMP’s National Wine Advisor:

Pinot Gris and Riesling in All Their Finery

The wine roster in Vancouver read like an Okanagan who’s who, but to my surprise there were far fewer hefty B.C. reds on display than I would have predicted.  Instead, it was B.C. pinot gris, riesling and sparklers that dominated the show floor and the awards.  And these very fine, elegant wines captured the tone of perhaps the most refined and accomplished food and wine pairings I have experienced so far in the 2011 campaign.

 I was joined for the Best of Show judging by two Vancouver amigos.  Anthony Gismondi of the Vancouver Sun, Gismondi On Wine.com, is also Editor in Chief of Wine Access, and my co-founder of the Canadian Wine Awards.  Sid Cross is one of the most travelled and accomplished palates in Canada and wine judge for the Canadian Wine Awards.  We tasted eleven wines paired with the chefs plus another two served at the VIP Reception and four wines donated to the Celebration portion of the evening.

 We gave the nod to Best of Show to a spectacular, focused, complex Tantalus 2009 Old Vines Riesling that was impeccably matched to a riesling-inspired creation in by chef Mark Filatow of Kelowna. Our second place vote went to Road 13 2007 Old Vine Chenin Blanc Brut, an intriguingly complex, mature yet very lively sparkler.  We couldn’t decide on third place so we tied the very rich, semi-tropical yet elegant Mission Hill 2010 Martin’s Lane Riesling, and Black Hill’s 2009 Syrah, a particularly tasty red and a promising debut from young vines. It was poured at the VIP Reception.

The Gold Medal For Best Paired wine went Haywire 2010 Pinot Gris, matched to the star dish from Rob Feenie’s Cactus Club. Haywire, from the Okanagan Crush Pad,  is an instant modern classic pinot gris with subtle, layered fruit and a juicy yet refined palate.  The silver medalist paired wine was Laughing Stock 2010 Pinot Gris, a completely different take with pinkish hue and a creamy, subtley oak influenced palate. The Bronze paired wine was Road 13’s aforementioned Sparkling Chenin Blanc – a white wine sweep!

 Other paired wines included: BlackHills 2010 Viognier, Poplar Grove 2006 The Legacy, La Stella 2009 Nine Hundred, and Nichol  Vineyard 2010 Pinot Gris; plus a fine apricot-infused beer from Cannery Brewing and a Schramm Gin Cold Herb Tea martini from Pemberton Distillery.

 Other wines generously donated for the VIP and Celebration portions of the evening include L’Acadie 2008 Brut Prestige from Nova Scotia, Hillebrand Trius Brut from Niagara, Calliope Figure 8 Red by Burrowing Owl, Laughing Stock 2008 Portfolio and Le Vieux Pin 2008 Adieu Pinot Noir.

 

 

 


Montreal Gold Medal Plates 2011

04 Nov

 Gold Medal Plates left the blocks with a double report this year as events were held on the same night in two different cities – Montreal and Winnipeg. Since I was in the prairies, Montreal Senior Judge, Robert Beauchemin, led the adjudication in his city. By all accounts (including his) the dishes were splendid and the marks between third and fourth necessitated a recount they were so close. Here is his eloquent report, for which, Robert, my sincere thanks. Robert writes:

 “The Gold Medal Plates contest opened up to a full house – and a sold-out one – this Thursday, October 27th.  The event was held at the old Gare Windsor, built in 1887 by the American architect Bruce Price, who also did the Château Frontenac in Quebec and the Banff Springs hotel. Incidentally, it is the only train station in North America that is still intact and even the interior, where the event was held, boasted lots of features that are original. As was to be expected the competition was fierce, and as should be predictable from some of the best restaurateurs and chefs in the city, quite high-strung. It seems that the competition is a well-talked-about contest, and a well-respected one as well, considering the stakes.

            “The bronze medalist was Nick Hodge, a native Texan, adopted by both a French-Canadian wife and Montreal as one of the most original chefs in the city. The first restaurant of his is called Kitchenette, a clear reference to the small kitchens that were so prevalent in working-class neighbourhoods around America and from which some of the dishes are inspired. Hodge grew up with Mexican-American and tex-mex dishes. His “carte” is full of such references: chilies abound, tortillas and corn fritters, cilantro, anything-salsas – and all are reinterpreted with a quite formidable technique often tricking us into thinking about the dish without recognising it once it’s in our mouth. His is a surprising, playful cuisine. He also recently opened Icehouse, another metaphor of old-time eateries, where ice was sold alongside beers and small tidbits in wooden shacks. But Icehouse circa 2011 is not a shack, it is one of the most popular venues in the city.

            “The dish prepared by Hodge for the contest was a taco made of crispy chicken skin, at once light and brittle, which he filled with a cleverly prepared BBQ of hand-skinned Kamouraska eels, slowly braised and totally glossy and smooth, with some delicately fiery notes of chilies as punctuation. The taco was almost weightlessly placed on what looked like a sixties-type brown glass ashtray, garnished with green goddess dressing – another redolent idea brought back from the days before ranch dressing was invented, and made of sour cream, fresh herbs and normally anchovies but in his version, sea urchins. The dish was topped with fresh “queso” and some fresh green sprouts. Despite the apparent simplicity, a lot of work goes into such compositions. In the mouth, it was a celebration of wonderfully compatible tastes and notes at once acidic and spicy. The chef proposed a Creemore Springs Premium Lager from rural Ontario to accompany his dish to stunning and cooling effect.

            “The Silver medal went to Danny Saint-Pierre, chef owner of restaurant Auguste in Sherbrooke, possibly one of the best restaurants outside of Montreal. For the competition, Saint-Pierre who was once well-known at the helm of such places as Laloux, and Derrière les Fagots and is regularly seen on TV, decided to tackle a classic Flemish Carbonade of beef, slowly braised in maple and topped with a crusty slice of grilled Alfred le fermier cheese from the Beauce area, and served alongside puréed turnips, topped with a silky and harmoniously blended sauce with crème brûlée overtones, a sauce made of the beer which accompanied the dish, a McEis Scotch ale from Siboire brewery in Sherbrooke: dark, creamy and simply too exquisite to describe. Again, deceptively simple, involving three components, the meat, the veggy and the sauce, and a little “plus” from the cow milk cheese, yet a lovely and tuneful dish.

The golden dish

            “Finally, the gold went to Jean-Philippe Saint-Denis from Kitchen-Galery Poisson (or KGP as it is know in Montreal), a restaurant that specialises in the freshest products from the sea, operated on, distorted, and interpreted with what we can only describe as expert skills. Indeed Saint-Denis proved, again and again, that he is on top, this time with a Vitello Tonnato, the classic Piemontese dish of veal scallops with (ordinarily canned) tuna sauce. But it was anything but banal. Knowing Saint-Denis’s capacity and nerve, we could well expect anything but a slice of meat with a brown sauce. What we got was a dish that reminded one of a cross between Jackson Pollock’s paintings and three star Michelin chef Michel Bras’s inventive dishes. The composition was laid out in apparent chaotic style on a grey slate, revealing both formidable energy and emotion, in a bold architecture of deconstructed elements. Here the base of the slate was covered with a fresh, thinly sliced piece of almost pink and translucent tuna, then slivers of veal tongue, paper-thin, the whole joined together by the accompaniment of radish sprouts, miniature cubes of tomatoes, tiny chunks of fried bread and small but stunningly concentrated cubes of jellified balsamic vinegar. The whole dish was larger than life and contrary to the sort of conceptual dish where the form may take over the content, it was not so. This was an explosion of taste, blunt and elusive, at once a counterpoint of many layers and flavours, bound by a silky light mayonnaise. To wash it all down, again, no wine but a beer, a Saint-Ambroise cream ale from McAuslan brewery, one of the first and still one of the best microbreweries in Quebec. And the match was almost perfect, certainly one of the very best that evening. Among all the other dishes from the other chefs, all without exception were truly clever and competently presented and polished. There is always a lot of work involved and the chefs proved that theirs is not a simple profession and that most are passionate about their job. As a final point, one could detect leitmotivs, in which ingredients came back again and again in many of the ten dishes on competition that night… There always is in that sort of contest. This year, beets, (yes!), beers, pigs and apple! This being Quebec, should one be surprised at any of them ?”            Robert Beauchemin

 

David Lawrason, Gold Medal Plates National Wine Advisor, was also in Montreal and presents the following impressions of the wines:

 

Prince Edward County Wines and Quebec Brews Rule  

The kick-off to the 2011 Gold Medal Plates campaign in Montreal unveiled a new Best of Show award designed to bring more attention to the incredible generosity of Canadian wineries, brewers and distillers who provide their products to the chefs, to the VIP Reception and the Celebration portion each event. In each city I am joined by a local expert or experts to judge the wines, beers and spirits on their own merit. The food judges are responsible for assessing the food and drink pairings as part of the overall performance.

In Montreal I was joined by Veronique Rivest of the Gatineau region, twice a finalist representing Canada at the World Sommelier Competition held in Europe, and a frequent contributor to Cellier, La Presse, Wine Access and CBC.  Our first choice for Best of Show was unanimous: the incredibly rich elegant Closson Chase 2009 South Clos Chardonnay made in Prince Edward County. The runner up was not quite unanimous but ranked in both our top three – Norman Hardie 2009 Cabernet Franc, an elegant, layered, light red brimming with fresh currant-berry fruit.  Third place went to Quebec’s own Domaine Le Brome 2007 Vidal Reserve, a very elegant barrel aged, maturing dry vidal. 

Other wines donated to chefs included: Grange of Prince Edward 2010 Late Harvest Sauvignon Blanc (PEC), Haywire 2010 Pinot Gris (BC). But it was the beers that hauled in the medals when it came to the chef pairings led by Saint-Ambroise cream ale from McAuslan brewery with gold medal winning chef  Jean Philippe St-Denis of Kitchen Galerie-Poisson.  McEis Scotch Ale Glace by Siboire was chosen by silver medalist  Danny St. Pierre of Auguste in Shrebrooke, and Ontario’s Creemore Springs Premium Lager accompanied the recipe of Nick Hodge from Kitchenette.

I would also like to acknowledge the following donations: Nova Scotia’s L’Acadie Vineyards for their elegant 2008 Prestige Brut Sparkling wine, Malivoire 2008 Pinot Noir from Niagara which is being released in Quebec in November, and imported reds including Masi 2010 Bonacosta Valpolicella and Cono Sur 2010 Pinot Reseve from Chile. The last three Celebration wines were very kindly donated by Authentic Wines Quebec.

 

 

 

 


Edmonton Gold Medal Plates 2011

04 Nov

Edmonton gold medallist Jan Trittenbach of Packrat Louie, positively beaming!

If it’s Thursday, it must be Edmonton – and look over there: the Gold Medal Plates touring team is standing in Edmonton airport by the special carousel for large and fragile items. Jim Cuddy, Barnie Bentall and Alan Doyle of Great Big Sea are waiting for various guitar cases (Anne Lindsay already has her violin case slung onto her back). David Lawrason and I are looking at eight huge and heavy boxes of very fine wines destined for the silent auction. All of us are looking forward to an evening of fun and games in the friendly but always spectacular confines of the Shaw Conference Centre. Gold Medal Plates has a special place in this city’s heart and the crowd of 730 highly enthusiastic connoisseurs were totally involved in the proceedings. Marnie McBean was our MC, chatting on stage with dozens of inspiring Olympian and Paralympian athletes before handing over to the fast-talking local auctioneer and then the musicians. Energy levels were through the roof!

Some of us were in town to work, however. Our roster of judges performed as valiantly as ever. A huge thank you to Senior Judge, Chef Instructor Clayton Folkers; wine, food and travel writer, Mary Bailey; gastronomic consultant and educator, Gail Hall; food writer and style guru Liane Faulder; chef and gastronome Chris Wood; and last year’s Edmonton GMP champion, chef Andrew Fung (who provided an awesome take on Scotch eggs for the VIP reception – miniature pucks of beautifully seasoned duck sausage topped by a slice of hard boiled quail egg over a tangy slaw).

Our bronze dish from Paul Campbell of Cafe de Ville

The quality and imagination of the dishes the chefs offer in Edmonton has grown with every passing year. Last night, with five out of ten of our competitors new to the show, the city once again surpassed itself. The scores were very close between the top four. Taking the bronze medal was Paul Campbell of Café de Ville who worked with Alberta lamb shoulder, braising the meat for eight hours in duck fat then forking it apart, adding basil and rosemary then rolling it in bacon before slow-baking it again. It ended up as a savoury, lamby, densely textured drum folded in the bacon, set over an incredibly smooth, velvety parsnip purée. Perfect little sage and porcini gnocchi hid under a porcini crisp (if Chef Campbell ever decided to mass-produce and market those chips he would be a millionaire) and the sauce was a rich glace de viande reduced from lamb, chicken and beef stocks. The wine match was one of the evening’s most successful – a bold red called Night, vintage 2007, from Ex Nihilo winery in the Okanagan.

Silver for Deependra Singh of Guru

Our silver medallist was Deependra Singh from Guru Restaurant & Bar. South Asian cuisine has taken Edmonton by storm in recent years and the quality of the restaurants is very high – perhaps the best in the country. Chef Singh presented a trio of delights on his plate, starting with a juicy, tender prawn dusted with a subtle clove-and-cardamom garam masala spice mix then lightly battered in chickpea batter and swiftly fried. Beside that was a tiny skewer of exceptionally tender beef tenderloin and sweet pepper, invisibly spiced but beautifully judged so that a tongue-tingling heat slowly grew on the palate. The third element was a bulging little purse of crisp, unexpectedly light pastry, dyed green with spinach, that held gorgeous, finely chopped butter chicken, set in a pool of rich, buttery, tangy makhni sauce. The judges admired the distinct variety and deft levels of spicing, the several textures, the fact that the butter chicken “potli” was served hot. Chef Singh paired his dish with a 2008 Pinot Rosé from Little Straw Vineyards in the Okanagan, a merry mouthful of off-dry fruit that made its own contribution to the experience.

 

Jan Trittenbach's gold medal dish

 

Our gold medallist was a chef who has competed at Gold Medal Plates several times in the past and always impressed. Last night he aced it – Jan Trittenbach from Packrat Louie. Meat was front and centre on his dish. He began by braising beef chuck flat in red wine for four hours until the meat was so tender and juicy it could be pulled apart at the touch of a fork. Then he used this beef as a filling for a rolled venison tenderloin, cooked for an hour sous vide to leave it deep crimson and delectably moist and tender. Small purple pools of blackberry gastrique and beet purée were perfect condiments as were tiny mounds of shaved purple and green cauliflower, a refreshing watercress salad in a lemon vinaigrette and a fried sage leaf. The other major presence on the plate was a super little canoli – as crisp as could be – filled with a rich cream of smoked goat cheese and berries with a hint of dark chocolate. It was a bold idea, serving the main course alongside the dessert, as one judge opined, but it worked! So did the wine match – a very small production of 2007 Private Reserve Syrah from Peller Estates in the Okanagan, a wine that reached out to the berries and chocolate but had the structure to flatter the heavenly venison.

So we have another worthy champion to send to Kelowna in February for the Canadian Culinary Championship! Tonight, Vancouver awaits…

And now, as an added bonus for diligent readers who have got this far, here is the wine report from Gold Medal Plates National Wine Advisor, David Lawrason:

Edmonton 2011 Wine Report – Night of the Big B.C. Reds

The three-cities-in-three days western leg of Gold Medal Plates touched down at the massive, terraced Shaw Centre in Edmonton, in a city that came out to play, and drink some great red wines. In the previous three cities the chefs had overwhelmingly gone for white wines and brews, but in Edmonton it seems any season is red wine season.

For the Best of Show Wine Award I was joined by two local pillars of the wine community. Gurvinder Bhatia is a wine columnist for The Edmonton Journal, a Canadian Wine Awards judge and manager of Vinomania, leading Edmonton wnie shop.  William Bincoletto is another wine institution in Edmonton, the chief wine consultant at Vines Wine Merchant (a long time supporter of Gold Medal Plates) and instructor of the Independent Wine Education Guild programs in the city.

The winner was a shoe-in with two first place votes and a second place vote: the beautifully constructed, firm and cellar worthy Le Vieux Pin 2007 Merlot from B.C.’s Okanagan Valley. Second place went to new, creative and very successful layered and fine Road 13 2009 Merlot Syrah.  Third spot went to another iconic B.C. red: Laughing Stock’s 2008 Portfolio – the second time this complex, layered and reserved cellaring red has shown up in the winner’s circle this year.

There were actually many good wines in the room this night – my point spreads were not that far apart. The winning wine wine paired with Gold Medal Chef was Peller Estates 2007 Private Reserve Syrah. Other red candidates included Le Vieux Pin 2008 Pinot Noir, Le Vieux Pin 2008 P’tit Rouge, ExNihilo 2007 Night,  Township 7 2007 Merlot, Lake Breeze 2007 Seven Poplars Pinot Noir.  Other seelctions included the racy Little Straw 2010 Pinot Rose, La Stella 2010 Leggerio Unoaked Chardonnay and Sumac Ridge Steller’s Jay Brut.

 

 


Calgary Gold Medal Plates 2011

29 Oct

Silver, gold and bronze: past champion Jan Hrabec, new champion Michael Dekker, future champion (?) Justin Leboe

Last night’s Gold Medal Plates event in Calgary was another triumph. It looks like we have finally found the perfect venue – the Telus Calgary Convention Centre – and our 700 guests (plus 50 Olympic and Paralympic athletes) had plenty of room to breathe. Speeches were short and pithy, the entertainment (Jim Cuddy, Ed Robertson, Barney Bentall and Anne Lindsay) had the crowd dancing in the aisles, and the food was excellent – continuing the ever-ascending curve of quality in Calgary over the years.

Once again, Hailey Pasemko of Nita Lake Lodge presented her irresistible trio of cocktails featuring three exceptional Canadian artisanal spirits – Victoria gin, Iceberg vodka and Alberta Premium Rye whisky. This time I concentrated on the G.B.G.V., a subtle concoction of Victoria gin, freshly squeezed grapefruit and lemon juices and vanilla syrup, infused with bruised basil leaves and garnished with a grapefruit twist. Layered but curiously refreshing, it allowed the aromatic botanicals in the gin to glow upon the palate.

The supreme court of judges was a powerful one – our Senior Judge in this city, as ever, was writer-broadcaster- educator-and-all-round-food-guru John Gilchrist, together with chef and educator Michael Allemeier, caterer extraordinaire and world-class foodie Susan Hopkins, writer and educator Kathy Richardier, and last year’s champion, chef Duncan Ly, who also dazzled the VIPs at the opening reception with perfectly cooked lamb tenderloin and what looked like sausage rolls but were filled with moist pulled lamb shank meat.

I loved this bronze-winning dish - grits and shrimp and ham hocks every which way

Glancing over the list of dishes in the competition, it seems that foie gras is currently Calgary’s favourite ingredient, featured in six of the ten we tasted. It was not, however, a component of the dish that took the bronze medal, created by chef Justin Leboe of Model Milk Restaurant. He began with delectably creamy hominy grits (ground in-house he explained) flecked with chervil, tarragon and chives. In the middle, he set a spoonful of chopped rock shrimp and the chopped lean meat from a ham hock, sharpened with a gentle vinaigrette. On top of that came two large pieces of a spectacular sausage made from side-stripe shrimp and more ham hock, full of flavour but with a soft, moist texture. Adding scrunch to the dish were fried tapioca shrimp crackers, like crisp little bubbles. It was a dish that hit directly at one’s pleasure centre, as did the well-matched wine – a charming 2010 rosé from Bartier Scholefield in the Okanagan.

PERFECT balance of sweet, tart, salty, funky SEAsian flavours from Jan Hrabec

Our silver medallist was Jan Hrabec of Crazyweed Kitchen in Canmore who won gold here in 2009. Her dish last night was stellar, exploring south-east Asian flavours and beautifully paired with the fresh, tangily citric Fumé Blanc from Peninsula Ridge Estates in Niagara. Hrabec set a pure, tremblingly tender piece of steamed sablefish over a vibrant peanut nahm jim sauce – a perfectly pitched balance of the sweet, sour and salty made with ginger, garlic, lime, coriander, palm sugar, peanuts and fermented fish sauce. Beside it were cubes of pork belly that had been braised, deep fried, tossed in tamarind and then rolled in lemongrass and chili, lending them a fabulously subtle chili heat that built in one’s mouth. A garnish of chopped herbs and threads of chili finished the dish. The wine was asked to do double duty – cutting the richness of the pork and cradling the delicate fish: success on both counts.

Foie Gras Sundae, Michael Dekker's luxe fantasy, won the gold in Calgary

Our gold medal dish was the work of Michael Dekker from Rouge restaurant. He called it a Foie Gras Sundae and that’s exactly what it was, served merrily in a Martini glass with a jaunty poppyseed tuille. A ball of foie gras ice cream perched on top of a layer of candied oats, drizzled with reduced balsamic and strewn with microgreens. Beneath the ice cream was a slice of foie gras torchon, as rich and firm as cold butter. At the bottom of the glass lurked rhubarb compote, its sweet-sharp tang and fruitiness the key to the success of the wine match and indeed of the dish, as one dug down, mixing the different components for each rich and sinful mouthful. Chef Dekker’s wine was the 2008 Cabernet Icewine from Stratus in Niagara – sweet enough, obviously, but also, mercifully, possessed of the necessary acidity to boost the rhubarb and cut through all that sleek, smooth, inscrutable fat.

So we have another winner heading to Kelowna in February! That makes three because on Thursday, while I was busy in Winnipeg, another Gold Medal Plates gala was held in Montreal with the judging presided over by Montreal GMP’s Senior Judge, Robert Beauchemin. I will report on that shortly.

And now, as an added bonus for diligent readers who have got this far, here is the wine report from Gold Medal Plates National Wine Advisor, David Lawrason:

Calgary 2011 Wine Report – White Wines Rule in Cowtown?

The third city in the 2011 Gold Medal Plates campaign was Calgary, and as we moved farther west the number of great B.C. wines increased, with a who’s who of big names from the Okanagan. And there were a surprising number of white wines in the room given we were in Canada’s beef capital.

For the Best of Show Award I was joined for the judging by Jackie Cooke, president of the Sommelier Association of Calgary; and Tom Firth wine writer with Wine Access magazine and a Canadian Wine Awards judge. The winner was Dirty Laundry 2010 Woo Woo Gewurztraminer from BC, a beautifully defined and balanced gewurz donated to Catch restaurant. The runner-up was the impeccable Stratus 2009 Red Icewine from Niagara; followed by Laughing Stock’s 2009 Blind Trust, a modern Bordeaux blend.

Other wines donated to the chefs included:  Kettle Valley 2008 Gewurztraminer (BC), Bartier Scholefied 2010 Rose (BC), JoieFarm 2010 Noble Blend (BC), Inniskillin Okanagan 2009 Marsanne (BC), Peninsula Ridge 2009 Fume Blanc (ON), and Black Hills 2010 Viognier.

The following were donated for the VIP Reception and Celebration portions: L’Acadie Vineyards 2008 Brut Prestige (NS),  Hillebrand Trius Brut (ON), Le Vieux Pin 2008 Adieu Pinot Noir (BC), Laughing Stock 2008 Portfolio, and the newly released Calliope Figure 8 2010 by Burrowing Owl (BC).  Many thanks to all the wineries for making Calgary one of the richest wine cities on the tour.

 

 


Winnipeg Gold Medal Plates

28 Oct

Champions past and present: Makoto Ono (left) and Michael Dacquisto (standing)

 

Gold Medal Plates started its 2011 campaign with a triumphant return to Winnipeg under a starlit prairie sky. We were last here in 2006 when Chef Makoto Ono won the event and went on to represent the city at the first ever Canadian Culinary Championship in Whistler. He won that, too, then headed over to Asia to open a restaurant in Beijing in time for the Olympics and two more in Hong Kong (they’re still going strong). Now he’s back in the Peg for a while and he joined us as an honourary judge last night as well as providing dazzling little dishes for the VIP reception to start our party. Chef Jeff Gill returned as Senior Judge while the rest of the high-powered panel consisted of chef, baker and educator Mary Jane Feeke, writer and broadcaster Arvel Gray and writer and journalist Christine Hanlon. We had our work cut out. All the competing chefs performed superbly and while we had a unanimous winner there were six chefs within a couple of percentage points who could have taken silver and bronze.

The party itself was a true celebration of Canadian excellence. This year, we’re introducing a new component honouring Canadian artisanal spirits, presented in our western cities by the brilliant mixologist Hailey Pasemko of Nita lake Lodge in Whistler. She created three cocktails to showcase Alberta Premium rye, Victoria gin and Iceberg vodka, working a British theme into the mix. I couldn’t resist the Lavender Lass, a luxe, silky liaison of rye whisky, lemon juice and honey syrup topped with lavender-infused cream and garnished with a sprinkle of dried lavender. It was delightfully aromatic and creamy but the lemon juice kept everything from venturing even close to after-dinner country. I’m saving her other two cocktails for other cities later in the campaign.

Another innovation, shining a bright light on the genius and generosity of the Canadian winemakers and brewers who contribute so much to Gold Medal Plates events, was our new award for Best in Show wine, beer or other beverage, judged by three local experts Ben MacPhee Sigurdson, Gary Hewitt and Domer Rafael. Their verdict: Grey Monk Pinot Gris 2010 VQA from the Okanagan.

Our emcee was none other than multiple Olympic medallist Marnie McBean who held the audience in the palm of her hand, chatting on stage with a galaxy of Olympic and Paralympic athletes. Needless to say, the 2012 London Olympic games was a universal topic of conversation and the athletes were, as always, brimming with inspiring stories.

The entertainment also had a British timbre with Jim Cuddy, Anne Lindsay, Barney Bentall and Ed Robertson from Bare Naked Ladies playing some classic Brit rock showstoppers which brought more than one nostalgic tear to this reporter’s eye.

Michael Schafer's dish won bronze

For me, and for the other culinary judges, however, the main event was the splendid array of dishes created by our competing chefs – so much imagination and effort on parade!. In the end, we awarded the bronze medal to Michael Schafer of Sydney’s at the Forks. He had great fun with his idea – a play on the many flavours of crisps he used to enjoy in pubs when he lived in London. A spiral of crispy potato held potato chips upright as if they were tiny pieces of toast. Fried in duck fat, they were delicious in their own right. Beside them was a little drum of creamy pearl onion mousseline topped with a thick layer of gelatinous brawn (aka head cheese). As a garnish, Schafer had made three kinds of “caviar” – one from Worcestershire sauce, one from malt vinegar and a third from shrimp and rose sauce to imitate the flavour of “prawn cocktail flavour crisps.” He advised the judges to mash the brawn into the onion mousseline with the tangy beads and scoop up the result with our crisps. It was fun and delectable and worked very well with one of the three beers chosen last night – Russell’s Blood Alley Extra Special Bitter Ale.

Cameron Huley's dish took silver

Our silver medal was awarded to Cameron Huley of 12 Resto Bar for a dish of almost classical balance and tonal precision. At its heart was an impeccable piece of salmon rubbed in a star anise dry rub and then cooked sous vide (at 42 degrees) until the texture softened to extreme tenderness. The fish was surrounded by a bouquet of baby vegetables – crunchy yellow carrots that had bathed ever so briefly in pickling liquid, tiny golden beets that had more of a tang, a perfect, peeled cherry tomato, all sorts of baby sprouting leaves and seedlings. Serving as a sauce for the salmon and a dressing for the vegetables was a vibrant pea purée and, looming over the entire plate, a hoop of tissue-thin fried potato added scrunch and flavour while conjuring notions of the Olympic rings. The accompanying wine, Henry of Pelham’s 2007 Reserve Riesling VQA, was a fine choice, its fruity, petrolly notes unchallenged by the pickling vinegars.

Acapulco Sunset - Acapulco gold from Michael Dacquisto

Our gold medal, a unanimous decision, went to Michael Dacquisto of Dacquisto, who named his dish “Acapulco Sunset.” It looked like an exuberant abstract painting full of bright colours from the squiggle of green avocado purée to the sunburst of red chili coulis to the clouds of tart passion fruit foam at the top of the plate. There were two principal elements, the first a ceviche of roughly chopped raw scallop with finely diced yellow pepper that had steeped in lemon, lime and orange juice spiked with cilantro and chili. Beside it was a mound of raw, soft, ruby-coloured tuna that had seen just enough of a pasilla pepper sauce to acquire some knowledge of the world. The tuna was topped with pumpkin seeds and crunchy little ribbons of cumin-accented tortilla. A lot going on! But it all made perfect sense in your mouth, each forkful different, the flavours hitting beautifully calibrated spikes of acidity and spicy heat, the textures very well judged. Dacquisto paired his dish with Grey Monk Riesling VQA from the Okanagan – a dry, rather butch Riesling that was unintimidated by the Sunset.

Congratulations to Chef Dacquisto, who now goes on to the Canadian Culinary Championships in Kelowna next February. The Gold Medal Plates goes on to Calgary tonight, to do all this again. The fun never stops.

And now, as an added bonus for diligent readers who have got this far, here is the wine report from Gold Medal Plates National Wine Advisor, David Lawrason:

Winnipeg 2011 Wine Report – An Auspicious Debut

With the opening night of Gold Medal Plates 2011 Campaign split between Montreal and Winnipeg, my wine duties fell to Montreal (but given the state of my French I don’t quite understand the logic). Anyway, to do the duties in Winnipeg I enlisted the help of friend and fellow Canadian Wine Awards judge Ben McPhee-Sigurdson, wine columnist of the Winnipeg Free Press and a Canadian Wine Awards judge. He was joined by Gary Hewitt senior wine consultant and educator at Banville and Jones, a leading Winnipeg wine shop, and by Domer Rafael of the Manitoba Club, who recently earned his International Wine Education Guild Diploma.

The first ever Best of Show Award for wines, beers and spirits was handed out one hour prior to Montreal, with the top nod going to Gray Monk 2010 Pinot Gris (BC), a wine praised by the judges for its purity and balance. The runners up were virtually tied in the judges estimation, and indeed of very similar origin and style.  A pair of 2008 Rieslings took the honours: Cave Spring Niagara Peninsula, and Henry of Pelham Off dry.

The gold medal winning paired wine also went to Gray Monk, with their 2010 Riesling.  Other products donated to the chefs included Pelee Island 2010 Blanc de Blanc Vidal Riesling, Malivoire 2010 Gamay, and two beers: Picarroon’s Timber Hog Ale and Half Pints Bulldog Amber Ale.   And for the Celebration portion of the event guests were treated to a pair of Italian wines from a property owned by Tina Jones of Banville and Jones:  Quadri 2010 Pinot Grigio Delle Venezie and Tolaini 2006 Valdisanti, Toscana IGT, Italy

 

 


Parties for wine lovers

26 Oct

Everyone knows how good Prince Edward County bubbly is getting. It’s a style that suits the terroir perfectly and it’s going to grow in importance with every passing vintage. How to keep up with the latest wines and enjoy them at their very best? Here’s a great opportunity that also supports Slow Food the County. More details below, courtesy of Peter C. Fleming, chair of Slow Food the County:

 

Slow Food the County has changed the format for its annual fundraising event and announces a beginning of winter celebration of Sparkling Wine. Local sparkling wine producers and area chefs will partner to produce an evening of delectable bites each paired with its perfect liquid partner. Proceeds will go to supporting our ongoing food education activities, including the Healthy Lunch program and to other County food charities.

The gala event will take place on Saturday 19 November from 6:30 to 10:30 at Highline Hall in Wellington and will feature an auction of wine, art and other unique items as well as a chance to bid on dinner prepared in your home by one of our fine chefs. The event will feature music from the Lenni Stewart Jazz Trio.

Sparkling wine is a growing sector of the County wine industry with 8-10 sparkling wines now being produced in a variety of styles including méthode champenoise, méthode ancestral, Charmat and Prosecco. The following wineries have confirmed their participation – Huff Estates, The Grange of Prince Edward, Hinterland Estates, 3660 Vineyard and County Cider. Our chef partners are Michael Hoy, Heinz Haas, Sebastien Schwab, Luis de Sousa, David Dee, Paula and Victoria from Pasta Tavola and apprentice chefs from the Loyalist College hospitality program.

Tickets are $75 per person and are only available in advance. They can be purchased online at County Tix http://www.countytix.ca/events?view=list.

 And…

 Ottawa wine-writer Natalie MacLean is coming to town, on tour with her new book, Unquenchable, A Tipsy Quest for the World’s Best Bargain Wines. Natalie has so many devoted readers in print and online that she needs no endorsement from me but it’s rare to have a chance to meet her in person in Toronto. By way of a launch party, she’s hosting two events – the first being a multi-course gourmet dinner with matching wines at Grano Restaurant in Toronto on November 23. Anyone can go simply by buying a ticket and great food and wine, merriment and story-telling is guaranteed. More info can be found at http://bit.ly/GranoDinner. Call 416-361-0032 or email Ben McNally (ben@benmcnallybooks.com) to buy a ticket.
The day before, which would be November 22, according to my calculations, Natalie’s hosting a wine tasting in Niagara. More details on that at http://tktwb.tw/NiagaraWine.
Unquenchable is an excellent read, chronicling the travels of a perpetually curious and often thirsty wine writer, visiting great characters around the world and listening to their enthusiasms. Natalie’s writing is always vivid and entertaining so that one feels more like a travelling companion than a reader. For more information about the book and an amusing video trailer about it, please visit www.nataliemaclean.com/book.

 


La Bonne Cuisine

23 Oct

Chef Alexandra Feswick of Brockton General, purveyor of delectable treats inspired by dazzling music

It was the most fun I’ve had, standing up, for a long time: this afternoon’s concert by the Amici Ensemble at the Glenn Gould Studio with guest chef Alexandra Feswick of Brockton General. The sun shone outside and it was unseasonably warm, which might have accounted for the full house – or perhaps it was the unique opportunity the concert afforded to explore the relationship between music and food.

Musically, it was a bold and eclectic program that ranged from Mozart, Rossini and Schubert through Poulenc and Martinu to Nikolai Kapustin, Leonard Bernstein and William Bolcom, the heartbreakingly sublime to the hilarious. Some pieces were inspired by food; where others were concerned, we invited Alex Feswick to listen to the music and then interpret it as an hors d’oeuvre. Her food surprised and astonished and invariably delighted the audience, her responses ranging from the instinctive to the cerebral. She did most of her prep work at her restaurant but created a kitchen in one of the Studio’s larger dressing rooms to finish the dishes. They were served during an extended intermission which meant the audience were also given a work-out for their memories, forced to remember the music from the first half of the concert when they tasted each piece’s respective treat and then to remember the taste and texture of other dishes once they sat down to listen to part two. It all worked splendidly.

We began with L’Invitation au Château by Francis Poulenc. He wrote it in 1950 after seeing the play of the same name written by Jean Anouilh – a play that might be more familiar to you in the adaptation by Christopher Fry called Ring Round the Moon. If you recall, it’s a satirical comedy of manners with twin brothers in love with different women and all sorts of deceitful schemes, assignations and misconceptions. But it’s far from a door-slamming farce – there’s a bittersweet edge to it – snobbish confrontations between lovers of different social classes – and the frame of the play is the smouldering rubble of the aftermath of World War II, looking back to a more genteel era of waltzes and country-house weekends. It was the play that inspired Poulenc’s lyrical, nostalgic music and its plot that got Alex thinking about deceptive twins. She sent out a “blackcurrant jelly” topped with pea shoots that was really beets, not blackcurrants.

L'Invitation au Chateau: quivering to the beet

Bohuslaf Martinu was a prolific Czech composer who moved to Paris in 1923, at the age of 33, where he discovered all the musical joys of surrealism, neoclassicism and jazz. He composed La Revue de Cuisine in 1927 as a ballet involving the tango and the Charleston, and then quickly worked it into the four-movement suite the Amici ensemble and their brilliant musical guests performed. The ballet’s narrative is a whimsicality set in a kitchen with dancers portraying a variety of cooking utensils involved in a range of love affairs and dalliances. We withheld this interesting libretto from our chef, hoping she would respond more directly to the music. And she did. For her, the many distinct layers of sound from the piano, violin, cello, trumpet, basson and clarinet conjured images of walking in a forest, as if in a dream – Snow White suddenly approached by a 1920s flapper. The forest led to aromatic thoughts of mushrooms; the rich musical layers to buttery puff pastry. The result was delicious – little pastry discs topped with peppered goat cheese, caramelized onions and mushrooms that Alex had partially dried and then re-infused with butter, thyme, garlic and lemon juice.

La Revue de Cuisine: Snow White and a flapper walking in the woods

We gave Chef a break for the third composer – the immortal Gioachino Rossini. I have always loved the story of Rossini’s life. He was born in 1792, the son of talented but impoverished musicians and when his father was imprisoned for backing the wrong political side he and his mother went to live with his grandmother, who was a baker. He was apprenticed to a pork butcher while he studied music – and that experience, as much as his gran’s pastries, helped form his lifelong passion for delicious food. Young Gioachino worked incredibly hard and by the age of 38 he was the toast of Europe, having composed no less than 38 operas. At that point he decided to retire and spent the second half of his life, another 38 years, coincidentally, in total self-indulgence, famous and beloved, eventually settling in Paris where his home became a glittering salon. His passions were devoted to his second wife, Olympe Pélissier (a great beauty who had been, in her youth, the model for Judith in Vernet’s painting of Judith and Holofernes), and to their parrot, Perruche, and their little dog, Nini. And above all to food, for Rossini was a seriously accomplished amateur chef. Many dishes were created in his honour, including, of course, Tournedos Rossini.

He still composed, but only for friends and for his private gatherings, with no thought of publication. Among his last works was The Sins of Old Age and it begins with four hors d’oeuvres dedicated to  radishes, anchovies, gherkins and butter. Serouj Kradjian (one of the Amici’s three artistic directors) played Anchovies, a set of variations that conjured up images of shoals of the living fish, flashing and darting in the water. Before that he played Dried Figs, another of the maestro’s food-inspired dainties, a companion piece to Raisins (dedicated to Perruche the parrot), and Hazelnuts (dedicated to Nini the dog). Dried Figs was dedicated to his wife – not that he was in any way likening her to the sweet-but-wizened fruit. Rossini explained at the time that he was remembering a morning when he woke her up in bed with a plate of delectable dried figs for her breakfast. He followed it with a Fig’ of a different kidney – a piano reduction of highlights from The Barber of Seville – a dazzling virtuoso piece. One imagined the great man playing it for his smiling guests after dinner, showing off the fact that he still had his technical musical chops, reminding them of his genius – a delicious confection indeed.

            During the intermission, I hung about backstage, grabbing stuff off the plates of food that Alex Feswick continuously sent out to the ravenous audience in the lobby.

L'amero Saro Costante: what becomes of the broken-hearted

            Act two began with Mozart’s exquisite aria, L’ameró saró costante, from his opera The Shepherd King, written when he was 19 and first performed in Salzburg in 1775. The role of the shepherd king, Amintas, was originally written for a castrato voice but was sung this afternoon, unforgettably, by the dazzling soprano Aline Kutan. It’s a moment in the opera when Amintas sings of his true love for the beautiful Elisa but the man who overhears the song, Agenor, thinks he’s singing about Tamiri, the woman Agenor loves, and is therefore heartbroken… (Yep, it’s an opera…) Chef Alex responded to the paradox of passionate love set within the ironical emotional context of heartbreak and represented it in a startlingly literal way, sautéeing chicken’s hearts quickly with a montée of butter and soft white onions, cutting them to the quick with a piece of tartly pickled carrot and then impaling them on a skewer as the coup de grace de l’amour. The hearts were piteously tender and delicious. While some audience members seemed alarmed by the tiny, bulbous, pink organs, most devoured many.

            After that, we heard the fiendishly difficult, jazz-influenced Burlesque for Cello and Piano by Ukrainean composer Nikolai Kapustin, and then Leonard Bernstein’s 1947 song cycle, La Bonne Cuisine. Each of the four songs is a setting of a recipe from a cookbook – La Bonne Cuisine Francaise by Emile Dumont, that was awarded an honourable mention in the Great Exposition of 1889 and has since been through 31 editions – it’s still available on Amazon. Plum Pudding, Queues de Boeuf, Tavouk Gueunksis (a Turkish chicken dish) and Civet a Toute Vitesse (sung incredibly fast by Aline Kutan) were the recipes he chose. Chef Alex chose to interpret the Queues de Boeuf, braising ox tails with a brunoise of carrots and celeriac, reducing the braising liquid and adding it to the fork-pulled meat which she then formed into plump, juicy, melt-in-the-mouth croquettes topped with tart plum sauce. This time, the entire audience swooned.

Then The Shepherd on the Rock – one of many lieder Schubert wrote in 1828, in the final months of his tragically short life. He was only 31 when he died. The song was commissioned by Schubert’s friend the operatic soprano Pauline Anna Milder-Hauptmann as an exhibition piece that would show off her command of a wide range of emotions, and Aline Kutan sang it superbly with Joaquin Valdepeñas on the clarinet and Serouj Kradjian on piano. So much of the music Schubert wrote in his last two years seems deeply introverted and meditative – you can hear a vast silence behind the music – certainly in the intensely lonely middle section of this lied – and yet there are also moments (the final section that looks forward to the coming of spring) when he seems to find reconciliation with the infinite.        

I first heard this music years ago in a concert hall in Germany. I was really over there for the spargelfest – the annual festival dedicated to white asparagus – when the whole country aches and yearns for white asparagus and every restaurant menu is devoted to it. Ever since then I have imagined the sound of a clarinet as the aural representation of poached white asparagus – bright, firm, shiny, slippery, tubular, perfect – as flawless as Joaquin’s playing – with a little soft, grated, almost-melting Limberger cheese in the lower register.

The Shepherd on the Rock: playing with his bundnerfleisch

Chef Alex approached the music in a different way, putting herself into the mind of the shepherd, imagining what he might have to eat up in the mountains. In her interpretation, the lad was also lucky enough to be rather a dazzling cook, setting down his clarinet to rustle up a little potato rösti, adding a dab of the crème fraiche he must have made earlier that morning and topping it with a shaved slice of his air-dried bundnerfleisch.

The sweet finale of our afternoon was an outrageously funny song by the serious and much-revered American composer and pianist William Bolcom, called Lime Jello Marshmallow Cottage Cheese Surprise. One of Bolcom’s lifelong goals has been to erase the boundaries between popular songs and art songs and this number certainly achieves that, but at the same time the lyric drags gastronomical dissonance down to new and abysmal depths. It’s sung by a woman on the committee of some sort of small-town club and is a litany of the dishes served at its “culture night,” including “strawberry ice enshrined in rice with bits of tuna fish,” and “shrimp salad topped with choc’late sauce and garnished with a leek.” Chef Alex was keen to prepare something inspired by the words but that idea was firmly vetoed by all. Instead we finished with a redemptive encore – Morgen, by Richard Strauss – one of the most beautiful and rapturous songs ever written, impeccably sung by Aline Kutan and played by Serouj Kadjrian on piano and Marie Bérard on the violin. Its ethereal intensity sent the audience into prolonged applause (Alex Feswick received a standing ovation) and we all stepped out into the warm, sunlit evening emotionally drained but thoroughly well fed.

The Amici Ensemble (www.amiciensemble.com) is playing again on December 16, January 29 and April 22, offering the most creative series of chamber music programs I’ve ever come across. How lucky we are to have such artists in our midst!

 

 

 


Top Chef Canada stars cook for Visa

21 Oct

Mark McEwan, arbiter of talent

To Bymark on Wednesday, to MC an evening for VISA Infinite card holders, an evening starring the three finalists from the television program, Top Chef Canada, and the show’s head judge, Mark McEwan. Not having a tv, I had missed the popular series but caught up quickly last week through the miracle of the internet. Besides, I had eaten these chefs’ food before. Connie DeSousa is co-chef and co-owner of Charcut Roast House in Calgary, a place renowned above all for the quality of its meats and house-made charcuterie. Before opening Charcut, Connie competed for team Alberta at the Culinary Olympics in Germany in 2004, cooked in Cologne for a year then moved to California where she opened a restaurant in the St. Regis hotel in San Francisco and also worked with Alice Waters at Chez Panisse in Berkeley. Rob Rossi spent the last couple of years as Executive Chef of the Mercatto restaurants in Toronto, raising the standards of the homespun Italian cooking to deliciously unexpected heights. He’s in the process of opening his own first restaurant, called Bestellen, on College Street at Rusholme – it should be ready by Christmas. Dale MacKay, the ultimate victor of Top Chef Canada, worked for six years in Gordon Ramsay restaurants around the world before taking over as Executive Chef of Lumière and DB Moderne in Vancouver. When Daniel Boulud closed them down, MacKay opened his own restaurant Ensemble. For the last two years, he competed at Gold Medal Plates in Vancouver and won silver (he is an intensely competitive chef). He’s back this year and will be a strong contender for gold on November 4.

Each of these chefs contributed a canapé to the pre-dinner Champagne scrum up in the bar and an appetizer to the meal downstairs. The main course and dessert were courtesy of Bymark’s own chef, Brooke McDougall. Wines were generously provided by Lifford, the wine agency, and introduced (though not actually chosen) by the brilliant Melissa Stunden, a gifted sommelier who now works for the agency.

            Rob Rossi got the ball rolling with a dish that looked delicate but packed a punch in terms of vibrant flavours. He started with some big raw scallops from the Bay of Fundy – plump and juicy with that creamy, almost sticky texture raw scallops have – cured them for a quick half hour in a dry mixture of salt and sugar, citrus, coriander, black pepper and bay. Then he rinsed them clean, dried them and diced them into trembling opalescent chunks.  Beneath them was a green streak of peppery, citric arugula purée that he made by sweating some shallots and garlic in a pan, throwing in the arugula with a little oil and lemon juice and then blitzing it to an emulsion. He finished the dish with a little dressing of meyer lemon and olive oil, a pinch of smoked Maldon salt, some tiny fried garlic crisps and a scattering of basil cress. The final flourish was bottarga – the dried and pressed roe of Mediterranean grey mullets – which he grated over the top with a microplane to make gorgeous intense little flakes of flavour. I thought it was a brilliant dish. Scallop is always rich but raw scallop seems even more so because of the texture and the tangy purée and dressing brought out the sweetness in the protein. The wine match was spot on – a creamy2009 Sauvignon Blanc from Craggy Range Te Muna Road in New Zealand’s Martinborough area – not as tart as a Marlborough SB and richer, with the body to match the sticky weight of the scallops.

Dale MacKay prepared our second dish, using ingredients he brought with him from B.C. – a perfect, juicy little fillet of baked black cod that looked like a white building block in a topaz-coloured Thai pork broth. There were pea shoots and bok choy and smoked maitaki mushrooms in that heady consommé, perfumed with kaffir lime, lemon grass and a trace of chili oil. The flavour was wickedly layered and exotic and people could be heard moaning with pleasure as they tasted it. The wine wasn’t so happy. Mitchell Watervale 2010 Riesling from Australia’s Clare Valley tasted fresh and pleasing before the soup arrived but, together, it was as if that blithe, innocent Australian child had woken up in an opium den in Thailand surrounded by shadowed people in masks and incense and cellos… never to be seen again.

            Connie DeSousa created the third dish – a radical leap into an entirely different style of food. Charcut is a real nose-to-tail shrine and Connie and her co-chef, John Jackson, take pride in breaking down and using up the entire animals that they buy. The largest beasts on their shopping list are the farmed bison up in Grand Prairie and for this dinner they used the bison’s heart and a lot of pork to make massive, hearty smoked kielbasa sausages that came to the table on platters, served family style for people to help themselves. Under the sausages was Connie’s take on sauerkraut – shaved raw fennel pickled with caraway – and a rather good grainy mustard made by a Calgary company called Brassica. The sausage was excellent and there were so many that half the guests (including me) asked for and were given doggie bags. The wine was Piovene Porto Godi merlot Fra I Broli 2008 from the Veneto – a classy, ripe, demure Merlot that played well with the sweet juices of the sausage. I would have liked something bigger and rougher with more acidic structure – a rustic Sangiovese maybe – but I suppose that would have been fairly predictable. A good proportion of the room approved the Merlot match.

            The main course was classic Mark McEwan – gorgeous short rib braised in white wine beside a garnet-coloured slice of beef striploin with soft polenta, a spoonful of tomato sauce that had been made from oven-dried tomatoes and was textured halfway between a concassé and a purée, and the very last of the year’s fava beans. What wasn’t classic McEwan was the fact that the beef was Canadian. For as long as I’ve eaten Mark McEwan’s food – going back to Pronto, circa 1988 – he has been the champion of USDA beef. Last summer, however, he and Brooke McDougall did an event where they compared USDA Prime with grass-fed beef from Prince Edward Island. McEwan was so impressed that he went out to PEI to see for himself and found a great little operation with a dozen or so small farms raising grass-fed, hormone-free cattle which were briefly finished, just before slaughter, on potatoes. Well, what else would it be on PEI? McEwan decided to switch to this beef in his restaurants and at his store and he hasn’t switched back. His kitchens still use USDA beef for burgers and there’s a USDA cowboy ribeye on Bymark’s menu, but otherwise it’s now Canadian beef for Mark. Last night’s showing explains why – a delicious dish, honest and hearty and beautifully matched with a 2007 Bordeaux blend from Hawkes Bay, New Zealand, the legendary Te Mata Coleraine.

Then there was cheese – the cider-washed Le Guillame Tell from Quebec with a subtle aroma of apple and mushroom; sweet, gentle Niagara Gold from the Upper Canada Cheese Company; and a firm, forthright Avonlea Clothbound Cheddar from Prince Edward Island – in honour of the beef, presumably. Melissa Stunden poured a smashing young single-vineyard vintage port with this – Quinta do Noval Silval 2005 – that surprised everyone by its precocity.

The finale was a miniature chocolate and peanut butter torte with concord grape ice and crisp vanilla tuille that was gone in a flash.

Apparently the second season of Top Chef Canada finished shooting in September and is now in the editing salon, ready to appear on tv screens next March. The nation is holding its breath.

 

 


The Hennessys

16 Oct

Not sure how many people read Noël Coward’s short stories any more but I found a copy of The Complete Stories at a garage sale last week and have been enjoying them enormously. No one else describes children as “artificial-looking” or an elderly Englishwoman as “wriggling a little, like a dog waiting to have a ball thrown for it.” Somehow these tales read like loving parodies of Somerset Maugham, written by someone who wished he had the romantic sincerity to be Maugham but was far too witty and ironic for that to be possible. They are an absolute delight.

            As are the other two precious things on my desk tonight – a bottle of Hennessy Paradis and another of Richard Hennessy, both on loan from a kind friend and to be returned tomorrow. I have enjoyed many treats over the years but these two are right up there near the very pinnacle of treatdom, the Kanchenjunga of self-indulgence. Paradis is simply spectacular in its subtlety, complexity and length. It’s a blend of “several hundred” rare eaux-de-vie from the Hennessy archives, aged between 25 and 130 years old and first created in 1979 by Maurice Filioux, the company’s master blender at the time. The bottle before me was blended by Maurice’s grandson, Yann Filioux, from the seventh generation of the same family of Hennessy’s master blenders. Even as he bottles this batch, the man must be setting aside young spirits that his great-great grand-descendant will blend for future Paradis…

Richard Hennessy (left) and Paradis (right).

            It’s the length that impresses so much. It just lingers on the palate for ages and ages so there’s no need to raise the old crystal snifter again until at least ten minutes have ticked by. The aromas lifting into the room are very hard to describe. Like very good Cognac only much more so. I could list the fleeting impressions but it would be like a painting-by-numbers kit of some Turner masterpiece – not a great deal of use. Okay, there’s dried cherry and tangerine, spiced prunes and lots of floral notes… No, it’s no use. It just smells like sublime Cognac, as smooth and elegant as a silk dressing gown but rather more expensive at $652 a bottle.

            But bargains are relative. The other bottle beside me, Richard Hennessy, takes everything very much farther. It’s named for the Richard Hennessy who came across to France from Ireland and founded the house in 1765. This is a blend of over a hundred separate eaux-de-vie, some of them distilled in the early 19th century. Almost two hundred years old, in fact. Older than Napoleon (Napoleon III, that is, the emperor for whom “Napoleon Brandy” is named), and older than phylloxera – an astonishing time capsule that is somehow still vibrant and muscular. It costs about $6,000 and just to taste it is an extraordinary privilege. Some very old brown spirits (a handful of glorious old rums and whiskies, for instance) have a ribald, fruity old age, like Christmas puddings or plum cakes, beloved old grandpas sitting by the fire with excellent stories to tell and a twinkle in their eye. These superb antique Cognacs are more awe-inspiring than that – still so elegant, so powerful, so disciplined. The tales they tell are immortal truths, as plangent and as perfectly phrased as Mr. Coward’s dialogue.

            Hennessy is the biggest Cognac house, responsible for 40% of Cognac sold in the world. It’s important to them to be seen as more than just large and successful, however. Hence these two masterpieces, on sale at the LCBO right now and most handsomely packaged. I will never own a Turner or a snow leopard or a Caribbean island, but it’s good to know they exist.