Got home from a pretty productive day at the shop, got lots of wine up, helped a bunch of customers and gathered a few goodies to smuggle back to the kid in Louisville for our upcoming trip. I felt good, I love those busy days when the hours fly, the team is working together to get everything done and my department looks full and ready for the picking. Came in the front door and rather than plug in my laptop and flip on the television, which is my regular routine, I grabbed a few trash bags and started cleaning out our way too small pantry. It’s amazing the crap that gets piled up in that thing, odd oils that I needed for a dish that I never made again, multiple containers of unsweetened coco, used for our once passionate, now dead, ice cream making…junk like that. Three bags and a damn near empty pantry later, I poured myself a Pastis and made my way to the couch.
Call-o called from the driving range….the “what do you want for dinner” call…I was expecting it and had given it some thought. “Let’s just do hotdogs” I told him “it may be boring, but it’s cheap, easy and satisfying in that ghetto way” he had to agree and headed to the market. He came home with wheat buns, (I was very impressed) and hotdogs….but not the Nathan’s that we usually get when we are hankering for a dog. I looked at the grocery bags and figured out why, he went to the store that doesn’t carry Nathan’s, so we were going to have something new…Farmer John’s hotdogs.
Looking at the pale dogs I noticed that they were on the teensy side, both kind of skinny and short, sizing them up to the big fluffy whole wheat buns, I could tell that we would be tearing hunks of bun off to correct the bun to dog ratio, (shrugging) no problem. Now we are normally a boiled dog house but I wanted something a little different, so I asked Call-o to toss them on the, “oh-so-crappy” shared apartment grill. This is always an adventure, the thing is as uneven as hell in the heating department and not everyone that uses it is great about cleaning up after themselves, so the likelihood of a fire is always high.
There was a fire and Call-o returned with a plate of, black on one side and perfect on the other, hotdogs….sigh. While he had been out fighting fire and punishing our hotdogs, I had assembled the toppings, mayo, mustard, chopped onion and one twist, diced kim chee. Amy threw a hotdog party for Jeremy once, grilled dogs with every topping you could imagine, I brought the kim chee and it was a freaking hit, so remembering that we had some, I diced it up and put it out with the rest of the toppings.
In their scorching the already tiny dogs had gotten even smaller, so there I was hacking my bun to fit this burnt offering, seriously had to whack off about half the bun…both at the end and across the top. I dressed my modified bun with a swath of mayo, little mustard and a sprinkling of kim chee, plopped my puppy of a hotdog in the bun and took a bite…an abomination. Holy hell was that a nasty hotdog, Farmer John, stick to bacon dude…blech! The spicing was weird and the thing was a little on the sweet side, who makes a sweet hotdog?! I piled on a mountain of kim chee and only then could I choke that nasty bastard down.
I went to the fridge and grabbed one of the bottles that Amy and I had cracked into the night before, we had opened more than the four that I wrote about last but thought 4 bottles for 2 people was probably just about enough…..so thankfully there were leftovers!
2008 Pascal et Nicolas Reverdy Sancerre Rose, ($21.99) now I will tell you that we didn’t continue with this wine that first night because it has one of my least favorite smells….banana. I have heard that a yeast is responsible for this characteristic, and I know tons of people that rather like it…I don’t, that being said, beyond the banana there is some beautiful stuff going on, I just had to get past that initial, “ewe”. Clearly Pinot Noir on the palate, plenty of dark cherry, watermelon and gentle spice. Very delicate on the palate, light and airy with just enough snap from the racy acidity. The wine was delicious with the spicy sweet hotdog, something about the softness went well with the spicy topping and the tangy bits of the wine were a nice contrast to the slight sweetness of the dog.
Got me thinking about the other night when we had a table full of beautiful food, (When Only Rose Will Do) that just clashed with the exquisite bottle of 1999 Pierre Peters, absolute disaster…two beautiful things that beat each other up in the mouth. Well here I had two things that I didn’t really like that were made better when brought together, the wine was much tastier with that hotdog and the hotdog was much more palatable when washed down with this wine….this is the shit that just geeks me out, just proves that there is no perfect answer to this whole pairing thing and we can never know it all….which of course makes this business that I adore even more interesting…man, I dig that!
Samantha-
ReplyDeleteI am really sorry to hear about the hot dog disaster. So frustrating when something that should be really simple and quick goes so wrong. So, with all this rose talk I thought you would enjoy hearing about the best rose I have ever had. Last night I helped pour at a charity function and all the guest sommeliers(some real soms most just wine geeks willing to help) had some down time before we had to pour and we all drank 2007 Tempier Bandol rose mags. The melon/strawberry aromas were bursting from the glass and it was medium bodied with great acidity. It was like dinking kiwi strawberry snapple with out the sweetness and a touch of watermelon. It was really great! cheers!
Kevin
Kevin,
ReplyDeleteTempier is the best Rose out there! They even age well, freaks people out when they see the price but it is so worth it! I had lunch at Tempier last year, they started the meal with Mussels on a grill made from burning grape vine clippings...served it with Rose, YUM!
Samantha-
ReplyDeleteWow I hope to be able to have lunches like that some time! Sounds amazing! I decided to make wine my life after I was laid off from my previous job in Dec 07. So far I am pretty sure I made the right decision. I was really spoiled at this charity function..so as it turns out not only did I have the best rose; I also had wines like 97 harlan,90 and 00 Ch margaux, 82 mouton, 05 haut brion blanc, 01 d'yquem. It was truly the biggest "ah ha" momemet(bordering on out of body experience) I have had yet since I started drinking wine. I will gladly donate my time next year. really like the blog! Cheers!
Kevin
Kevin,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the kind words, my friend and fellow blogger Benito once wrote that blogging is a lonely business...so it really means a lot when people take the time to comment....just so you know people are reading!
Welcome to the wine biz dude, aint much money in it but there is a tremendous amount of pleasure to be had, kind of a lifestyle thang. I've been at it for 13 years and I still love it...cannot tell you how lucky I have been, because if I did it would sound like I am bragging! Good luck on the new gig, hope it steals your heart as it has stollen mine.