Posts Tagged ‘Wine’

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You’re the Next Contestant on Let’s Make a Meal

Friday, May 18th, 2012 by Kathryn

My husband and I recently celebrated our one year anniversary (hooray!). It was fun to look at our wedding album and reminisce about our ceremony and reception. It was also a fond memory to recall that my dress zipped up the morning of our wedding since I had reached my weight loss goal of… zipping up my dress (equal to losing about 20 pounds). True to the cliche, happiness has put about ten pounds back on my frame since then and I’m aiming to get rid of them!  For me, then, part of our anniversary reminisce was going back to my food journals of 2011.

My key to dropping those pre-wedding pounds was keeping close track of my caloric intake. My “food journals” were just spreadsheets that tallied up my calories throughout the day (I just love me a spreadsheet – especially one with formulas!). I tried to keep my intake around 1600 calories a day. At first this seemed like the most tedious thing I’d ever done, but over time it transformed into a kind of game. I thought: Whaaaa? Did I just make calorie counting fun? Yes! You’re the next contestant on… Let’s Make a Meal!

To do the best I could on as a contestant on this game show, I aimed to eat as much as possible for those 1600 calories. Some of my favorite foods are pretty healthy and relatively low-cal if eaten in appropriate portions. I was surprised at how much really good stuff I could eat and still stay in my calorie budget. The nice thing about this approach was that I didn’t cut anything out of my diet; I just knew if I ate this bag of chips now, I’m sacrificing my three Oreos after dinner. (Not gonna lie, sometimes I ate the chips and the Oreos. You can’t win every day.)

The other fun perk I got out of my calorie counting game show was that I would often plan out my whole day of eating while I ate breakfast. That way I knew how many calories I needed to save up if I was planning on having that leftover piece of cheesecake for dessert that evening. This might sound like a lot of planning, but I’m a food nerd that LOVES to plan ahead. One must be diligent if one is to win Let’s Make a Meal. Another benefit of this planning ahead was that I found myself looking forward to the things I’d get to eat throughout the day – and savor each bite just a little bit more.

So here’s what a typical day looked like for me on Let’s Make a Meal:

Breakfast:  Black coffee; 2 slices toast with peanut butter: about 400 calories
Lunch: Tuna Salad (with light sour cream, capers, red onion) on rye; carrots; apple: about 450 calories (Total for day: 850)
Snack: CHOCOLATE (sugar free, but still chocolate… ): 100 calories (Total for day up to 950)
Dinner: Chicken sausage with mashed sweet potatoes and roasted asparagus: about 475 calories (Total for day: 1425)

Tell her what’s she’s won, Johnny… a glass of wine!

Oh, do I still have calories left? YES! I’ll take that glass of wine, Johnny: approximately 175 calories for a total of…. 1600 calories total for the day! (Applause sign on!) It makes me so happy that I can eat so many different kinds of food in one healthy day – including chocolate and wine – and still be right at my caloric mark.

So, I’m back with my food journals, lovin’ that spreadsheet again and trying to shed those ten pounds before I hit the beach for a few games of volleyball this summer. Let’s make a meal. In fact, let’s make three. And let’s add a snack. Maybe most importantly, let’s add that glass of wine and feel like a real winner. Ahhh, it is so good to win.

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Kathryn Premo Mingione, has lived in Chicago for four years and recently joined the team at The Chopping Block as a Class Assistant. Growing up on a dairy farm in Wisconsin, Kathryn learned to value and take interest in food at an early age. Her double major at UW-Madison in Elementary Education and Theatre serve her well in her position as a Kids Club Manager for the Chicago Athletic Clubs. Those skills are also great assets at The Chopping Block in helping folks learn to love cooking and in adding some entertainment to it too! When she's not taking care of children, cooking, or baking, she enjoys the other good stuff in life: spending time with friends and family, especially her wonderful and willing-to-taste-any-new-dish-she-makes husband, Louie.

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A “Diamond” in the Uco Valley

Friday, May 4th, 2012 by Janet

As many of you may remember, this past March I embarked on a grand adventure through various wine regions of Argentina and Chile with my husband and our friends, Tanya and Kent.  I am still in the process of exercising away the calories from our indulgence in the “meaty-licious” cuisine and voluptuous malbecs that accompanied them!

One particular winery visit stands out in my mind, and I believe it always will.

DiamAndes is a winery that is located in the Uco Valley, which is in the southwest region of the Mendoza wine region.  This area is considered one of the greatest wine regions in all of Argentina, with long growing seasons, high elevations, rocky soils rich with clay, and vast temperature differences between day and night, all contributing to the full expression of the grapes.   All of the irrigation comes from the Andes Mountains, and throughout our travels from vineyard to vineyard we saw the vast aqueduct systems that supply the properties with the moisture from the melted snow from the mountains.

Aldana Gallardo was our gracious host who walked us through the winery, the product of artists and architects, explaining every part of the winemaking process along the way. We then sipped the 2010 DiamAndes de Uco Chardonnay as we enjoyed homemade empanadas out on the veranda, right off the formal dining area of the Bonnie family, the owners of the winery.  It is their belief that guests must enjoy a full experience of hospitality with a visit to DiamAndes.   The outdoor wood-burning grill contained a beautiful selection of five different meats that we enjoyed, coursed out individually, during our meal in the dining room.  Once again, the homemade chorizo and blood sausage were spectacular, as were the pork ribs, beef tenderloin, and beef short ribs. We were joined by Silvio Alberto, the winemaker for DiamAndes, which was a spectacular and almost nerve-wracking surprise. We chatted about the perfect acid-fruit balance of the 2010 DiamAndes de Uco Malbec, and then we swooned over the elegance of the Malbec-Cabernet Sauvignon blend in the Diamandes de Uco Gran Reserva 2008.  Needless to say, the hospitality was unparalleled, the wines were the treat of a lifetime, and we furthered our wine education with a great winemaker.

There is even a bonus in this for all of you!  DiamAndes is part of a group of French winemakers in Uco Valley who combine their spectacular vintages into a blend called Clos de los Siete.  It is a blend of Malbec, Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah, and Petit Verdot.  It is a luscious bargain at around $18, and we are going to feature it on our wine list at The Chopping Block.  You will be doing yourself a big favor if you stop by and pick up a bottle to try!

 

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Janet Kirker is the Executive Chef of The Chopping Block. She oversees the culinary staff at both of The Chopping Block locations, manages the curriculum and menu development teams, and works with the Event Sales team to organize private events. Cooking is still her favorite hobby, whether it be a simple dinner for two or a huge family gathering. Wine is a major interest, and it often dictates where she and her husband choose to vacation.

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Top Three Wine Questions Answered

Monday, April 30th, 2012 by Diana

I’ve been in the wine business now for thirteen years, and I’ve (gleefully) been teaching wine classes for eight of them.  It definitely falls under the auspices of nice work if you can get it.  In all that time, I’ve seen trends ebb and flow, but there seem to be a few, constant questions I’m repeatedly asked as a wine educator, no matter the decade.  I’ve narrowed them to the top three and included the answers below in hopes to shed some enological light “en masse.”

After I open a bottle of wine, how long does it last?

I’ll tell you, but you’re not going to like the answer:  two, maybe three days for reds; three, maybe four days for whites.  As oxygen is introduced (by way of your now half bottle), red wines lose fruit and oomph, white wines lose acidity and zip.  Will it make you sick to open a bottle of wine and then finish it a week later?  No, it’s just that your once-dynamic wine will now only elicit a meager “meh” at best.

When do I need to decant?

We decant for three reasons.  Number one: you’re finally ready to open your 1973 Mouton-Rothschild, and lo these many years the wine has thrown sediment.  You’ll want to decant simply for the utilitarian purpose of putting down the bottle when all the schmutz starts to pour out. Two: you simply can’t wait the prescribed requisite years to drink that tight and tannic Barolo, Cornas, or Bordeaux—you must have it RIGHT NOW!  You’ll decant in efforts to open aromatics and soften (oxygenate) tannin—that astringency factor in some red wines that give you distracting levels of cotton mouth.  Three: Your red wine is too warm.  People tend to drink their whites too cold, meaning refrigerator temperature, and their reds too warm, meaning room temperature or warmer (which is none too appealing when your Australian Shiraz already clocks in at 14.9% alcohol).  For the latter, chill a decanter, then pour in your too-warm wine and swirl it around a bit until the temperature comes down.  (The ideal temperature for serving red wines is 65 degrees; room temperature is 72 degrees.)

What is corked wine? 

“Corked” wine actually means something other than the cork was moldy, brittle, smooshy or weird.  It means that the wine (via the natural cork) has been infiltrated by a bummer of a chemical compound called 2, 4, 6 trichloroanosole (or mercifully, TCA for short).  What does this do to your wine?  It may smell like musty, moldy cardboard, the creepy recesses of a dank basement, or the Denver airport.  Put the cork back in, and return it to the retailer and get your money back.

The first two weeks of May I’ll be answering more questions just like these in our most popular wine class, Intro to Wine, Friday May 4 at the Merchandise Mart, and Thursday, May 10 at Lincoln Square.  We’d love for you to join us.

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BFFs: Wine and Cheese

Friday, April 27th, 2012 by Kate

Allow me to geek out a bit on wine. Lately, I’ve been working wine classes with the lovely and talented Diana Hamman at The Chopping Block. And my long-time flirtation with wine has turned into a full-fledged obsession–we’re not quite at the Fatal Attraction stage yet, but if wine ever dumps me, it should protect its bunnies.

I now find myself magnetized to the wine aisle, reading labels and trying to really understand each bottle–from whence it came, what’s in it, what it wants to be eaten with. I’m convinced that pairing is the true superpower of the wine geek. Diana has taught me how much the right food-wine combo can make your whole palate sing. A few weeks ago in class, we were pairing French cheese and French wine (I know! I get paid for this!), and there were a few combos that truly were divine. We paired a Crement de Bourgogne (our house bubbly) with a brie on steroids named Brillat-Savarin (after the notable French gourmand)–this cheese was my favorite. The acidity in the bubbly cut through the salty, creamy cheese, and the two created a flavorful balance on my palate–and this is the trick, I think. Pairing seeks balance. We had a Sancerre that was lovely on its own, but after I popped a bit of its aged goat cheese compadre in my mouth, the two flavors harmonized and everything was exponentially more delicious. Another great pairing was the Vouvray and the Comte’. On its own, Vouvray can be a bit sweet. But after tasting a piece of the Comte’ (French Gruyere), the Vouvray was mellow as a pussycat, pulling out a harmonious chord from the cheese. This is the amazing thing: wine, cheese–two of the best inventions on earth in and of themselves–can get even better when paired well together. You’d think there’s little you could do to improve them. But the right wine and cheese together is like having an entire orchestra playing (quietly) in your living room. They bring out the subtleties in one another and you are left with just the most delicious buzz on your palate.

Recently, my boyfriend and I met friends at the Chopping Block Lincoln Square for a cheesemaking demo by Chef Paul. One of the things I was most excited about was trying to find the perfect wine to go with all the soft, cheesy delights. My gut said Riesling, but the one I wanted was a bit spendier than I wanted to spend. It’s a beautifully complex, off-dry Selbach-Oster Riesling, well worth it; but, you know, I’m on a budget. We chose the house bubbly, which has a yeasty, citrusy, acid kick. It was a great complement to the soft, fresh cheeses, and was versatile enough for all the plates Paul made: fresh ricotta on grilled crostini with grilled asparagus and cream of balsamic; fresh mozzarella roulade with prosciutto and basil; fresh paneer tikka masala; and homemade yogurt with granola and berries. For a dairy- and wine-lover like myself, it was a smorgasbord.

I’ll leave you with the recipe for the fresh ricotta, which is easy and delicious–try it with some bubbly!

Fresh Ricotta

4 c. whole milk
1 c. heavy cream
1/4 c. lemon juice or buttermilk; or 1 tsp. citric acid dissolved in 1/4 c. water
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. granulated sugar

1. Heat and curdle the milk:
In a saucepan, heat the milk and cream. Bring to a boil and immediately remove from heat.
Add juice, salt, and sugar. Stir well and allow to stand 20 minutes.

2. Strain the curds:
Line a conical sieve with cheesecloth and pour tepid mixture through, allowing the whey to drain through (whey is the liquidy portion at the bottom).
Allow to stand at room temperature for 2 hours and press lightly to form conical shape.
Turn out onto a plate and cover with parchment paper.

Note: This is best eaten on the day it’s made, but will last several days in the refrigerator.

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Kate Soto is a part-time class assistant at the Chopping Block, and has never met a vegetable she didn't like. She writes about recipes and feeding people at domestikating.wordpress.com. When not thinking about food (especially anything with the carb-sauce-cheese trifecta), she's thinking about books, and is coordinator of the Creative Writing and Poetics programs at the University of Chicago. She was born and raised in LA by card-carrying members of the Fraternal Order of the Casserole.

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Where’s the Beef? Argentina!

Wednesday, April 4th, 2012 by Janet

I recently had the great pleasure of visiting South America with my husband and two of our friends, Kent and Tanya.  We spent a short time in Buenos Aires, a few days in Mendoza and a couple more days in Santiago, Chile.  It seemed like a whirlwind adventure, but our focus was clear:  wine… and all the great food we could find to go with it.  I think I have enough material for many blogs to come, so I will make the focus of this one a bit narrower:  beef.

When one visits Argentina, one must be open to the idea of gaining a few pounds on the scale as well as a few points on the cholesterol chart.  The sooner one accepts this fact the better, as there is a lot of tasty and affordable beef to enjoy, as well as excellent Malbec with which to wash it down.  We made a point to visit two parrillas, one more traditional and one more modern.  A “parrilla” refers a style of grill used for cooking asado (barbecue), and is also the name for a steakhouse that serves said grilled meats.  This is charcoal grilling at its best, with great markings and smoky flavor.  At La Brigada, we feasted on several delectable cuts from various animals:  (parallada – mixed grill) the lomo (beef tenderloin), bife de chorizo (top loin or strip loin), short rib, morcilla (blood sausage), and Andean lamb “oysters”—not the Rocky Mountain kind.  All of our steak cuts were cooked to a beautiful medium rare and served with chimichurri.  For us Americans, that was quite a switch for eating short ribs, as we generally cook those low and slow until they melt in our mouths.  But here we did more chewing and savored the flavor along the way.  As a professional chef I feel that it is important to try food that hasn’t tickled me in the past, and I expected the morcilla would not be a great thrill for me.  I was pleasantly surprised by the delicate texture, and mild yet full flavor with smoke from the grill.  That inspired us to enjoy morcilla at several more restaurants that week.  While our husbands snickered over being able to order testicles in Spanish, Tanya and I rolled our eyes but were surprised by the delicate flavor and smooth texture.

Miranda, our second parrilla, had similar meat and offal offerings with a more contemporary twist on some of the entrees and side dishes.  Kent’s ribeye was accompanied by a halved red pepper, grilled with a soft-cooked egg inside, and my husband had a side dish of a whole, roasted sweet potato drizzled with honey.  I lightened up my dinner with a salad of chicken and grilled vegetables, but still enjoyed sharing a mixed grill of morcilla, kidneys, sweetbreads and chorizo.

These restaurants certainly fulfilled our Argentine steakhouse fantasy, and they did not disappoint in the wine department.  Stay tuned for our journey through the land of Malbec in future blogs!

 

 

 

 

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Janet Kirker is the Executive Chef of The Chopping Block. She oversees the culinary staff at both of The Chopping Block locations, manages the curriculum and menu development teams, and works with the Event Sales team to organize private events. Cooking is still her favorite hobby, whether it be a simple dinner for two or a huge family gathering. Wine is a major interest, and it often dictates where she and her husband choose to vacation.