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Monday, January 30, 2012

Cooking 101: Grilled Indian Tuna Salad

      Another very simple recipe, takes no time but is TOTALLY dependent on one ingredient. You must have Sashimi quality Tuna available in your area, (shockingly our local Costco has some fresh and beautiful steaks). Start by finding your favorite spice mixture. For this recipe I used an Indian rub I had in the spice drawer,( you do have a spice drawer correct?), hence the name.


      I like to add layers of flavor to a dish, so I started with some liquid Jamaican jerk sauce rubbed into the steaks, followed by a healthy tablespoon of spice rub  and lastly I toasted some sesame seeds, (toasting gives them another layer of flavor, all about layers) and thoroughly covered each steak with sesame seeds. Then I let them sit for a couple of hours in the fridge, to let the flavors sink in. Just a couple words of caution about toasting sesame seeds, A) sesame seeds go from toasty to burnt in a split second, B) As sesame seeds toast they pop and jump around alot, have something over the top of the pan, (I used a grease screen) and finally C) If you think your cool and can do the wrist flip to flip over the food in your pan, remember that sesame seeds ALL OVER the kitchen make a mess.



      While your tuna sits in the fridge, prepare your salad. In this case I had found a nice "bag a salad" at Costco. It was called Parisian salad and came with some mixed lettuces, candied almonds, dried cranberries, feta cheese with a white balsamic vinaigrette. Sounds weird, but there is alot going on in this salad, some sweet, some sour, some salty, all of it very good and the flavors mixed incredibly with the finished tuna. Speaking of, now would be a good time to get that grill heated up, crank it up to high because you want a good crust and not much else, as we shall see. Once the grill is red hot, drop in your steaks, this is critical DO NOT walkaway, you want just a minute or two on each side, yea, yea, I know you don't like rare fish, get over it. Believe me when I say this is a totally different meal if the fish is cooked well done or even medium. The tuna will take on a whole different consistency, not necessarily bad but different. When good tuna is rare it has the feel of butter, soft, melts in your melt, luscious. Medium or (shudder), god forbid, well done tuna taste and feels more like what you get in the can, and if that's what your after, WHY oh WHY, pay for these gorgeous steaks??



      As always, lets your steaks rest a bit and then slice into 1/3 to 1/2 inch wide slices, (no, you don't need a ruler).  Arrange around the salad, (yes, presentation counts, even at home) and enjoy.



      A word about wine. As most of you know from reading here, I do not always subscribe to the "white wine with fish" theory. Salmon goes incredibly well with an Oregon Pinot Noir and for Tuna Steaks you need a big hearty red, look at the picture, does that not remind you of a big juicy steak.  So for this meal I chose a wine from one of our favorite little wineries, Oso Libre, ( you may remember them from the Tiny Thai review). I chose their 2008 Carnal, this is big wine, a nice blend of six different grapes, the majority being Syrah at 51%, Mourvedre at 21% and Grenache at 22%. We once went to a great wine school and something the instructor told us always stayed with me, pair spice with spice. And while a Zinfandel would have more pepper notes, the Carnal has some great mocha spices going for it, not to mention some wonderful stone fruit on the nose, mainly cherries. This turned out to be a PERFECT pairing, the flavors of the salad, the tuna and the wine blended together in perfect harmony. Total Bliss, If you can't find Oso Libre, look for a nice California Zinfandel or Syrah, these will all match great.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Bluebird Tavern Review

      UPDATE; This review and visit occurred before Bluebird moved to their new downtown location. We have not had a chance to visit the new location but look forward to visiting soon.

      We have had a strange relationship with the Burlington areas very first gastropub. Our first experience was that we were seated and left for 25 minutes until we got up and walked out, (even then nobody said anything to us). After the owner heard, she was nice enough to comp us a $75.00 gift certificate and we tried again. Service was marginally better but the food was only so-so and unbelievably expensive (gift certificate didn't even cover half the bill and we left hungry). So we walked away from the Bluebird and waited for its eventual demise.

      But then we heard of a shake-up and that a new chef had taken over. Having eaten at the Daily Planet during his short stay there, I knew he could be innovative but still give you something recognizable to eat (really its nice you can cube chorizo to microscopic proportions but I actually like to TASTE my chorizo, thank you very much). So we mustered up our courage and went back, WOW, now this is what a gastropub should be like. Don't get me wrong  it was still ungodly expensive, but this time we both left full and very happy.

      So for my birthday, I was asked where I wanted to go and since the new menu at Bluebird featured bone marrow (OK, I may be obsessed with this and you just don't find it on very many menus), I said let's go back and see what's new. We had a 6pm reservation and they weren't quite ready for us so we had a seat at the bar and I had that oh-oh moment of, was this a mistake. The bartender gave us a drink menu and then forgot us for about 10 minutes. She finally came back to us and really wasn't the friendliest person in the world, though she did answer my questions about the different Hill Farmstead beers. Quick aside, I don't believe you can buy Hill Farmstead, (brewed in Greensboro), anywhere but Vermont, but if you ever see it in your local bar, BUY SOME. Just delicious.

      Once we received our drinks we were summoned by the hostess that our table was ready. And oh-oh moment number two. First the tables at Bluebird are VERY close together and the couple seated next to us did not seem to be having a good time. I found out later that they thought this was still the old Mexican place when they came in, well DUH one look at the menu should of cleared that up, Anyways he hated the burger he ordered and walked out leaving his poor wife to finish her meal by herself. There are serious jerks everywhere. Now at this point I must say that the oh-oh moments stopped and life became great. Our server was wonderful, the menu looked incredible and the beer ..oooohhh the beer. Hill Farmstead, I started with the Abner, (all their beers are named after relatives), an Imperial IPA, which was incredible and then with my meal had a George, an American brown ale, both beers were just superb and went well with my meal. The dear wife had a couple of glasses of wine, the first, on special, was a Leo Hillinger Zweigelt, what a great and unusual choice, full of full of great cherry and chocolate flavors, and the 2nd glass, Le Pinot Noir from France,,matched perfectly with her salmon.

      And on to the meals, I started with the aforementioned bone marrow, served with shrimp stuffing over the top and sitting in a deep pool of roasted garlic sauce with chunks of garlic, leek and carrot. An incredible melding of flavors and our server was sweet enough to rush over another helping of grilled bread, as this sauce could NOT be wasted.  Wifey went with the butternut squash bisque, laced with an herbed oil and cocoa nibs, YUM, and I am not even a fan of squash, hearty and delicious.


      For our entrees, I went with stuff stuffed with stuff, specifically pork belly and quail, stuffed with a stuffing made of pork, quail and mushrooms , served over french fries with an incredible gravy. GOD this was good , like the most unreal Poutine ever, (Canadian dish of french fries, cheese and gravy for you non-Quebecois). For her entree, the wife went with wild salmon over chestnut risotto and fried strips of parsnip and this also was just incredible (or so she says, as I was only allowed a very little taste). We both were extremely satisfied and also STUFFED, so an over all great meal.



On a scale of 1 to 5;
Food,                Quality means much more to us than quantity.
Beer and Wine,  Based on selection and pricing
Service,             Speaks for itself
Ambiance,          Does the look fit the food and pricing
 Price,                And finally does the pricing equal the results we had.

Food,                     4.8  Totally inspired, ridiculously good. One tiny quibble, stuffing was a bit dry
Beer and Wine,    4.5  Nice beer and wine selections, list is small but well thought out and highly unusual.
Service,                 3.5  I knocked it down by .5 for the poor service by the bartender,everyone else was superb
Ambiance,             3.5  Nice exposed brick but tables for two are packed in way to close to each other.Bar area is nice but its COLD back there.
Price,                     3.5  VERY pricey, but the excellence in taste and presentation make up for it. Definitely a special occasion place

Overall                  3.96  I have to say this is probably my favorite special occasion place in Burlington. You are guaranteed to have a superb meal with expertly prepared ingredients. There just seems to always be one little thing that stops me from giving Bluebird all 5's, and it seems to always be something in the service. This is probably the last time we get to go to Bluebird at its current location, as they will be moving to downtown very soon and a new barbecue place is going to spring up here. Downtown is much more inconvenient for us but we will certainly check out the new space and we will try the new barbecue place once it reopens. Stay tune for more updates and please if you love innovative, unusual and well prepared foods, don't hesitate to visit.

Monday, January 16, 2012

A tale of two reviews

      My organizational skills were called into question, when I realized I had bought tickets for two events at the Flynn on consecutive week nights. WHOOPS. Fortunately, the dear wife got the nights off and I just decided to go without sleep for a couple nights. These type of event reviews (concerts, plays, musicals), always seemed silly to me. Your read about them in your local paper the day after the event and basically the reviewer is saying NAH NAH I went and you didn't. But in these days of cyberspace technology, hopefully the review you read from Burlington, may reach you before the event comes to your town, and help you make a informed decision. Or if not, NAH NAH I went and you didn't .

      The first event was a Broadway musical called "In the Heights". The winner of the 2008 Tony for Best Musical, this is a tale too often playing out in real life. A former Irish ghetto has been recolonized by a Latino community, consisting of generations of people from the Dominican Republic, Cuba and Puerto Rico, and their little barrio is now threatened by real estate developers, yuppies and hipsters, moving in and driving up rents and driving out the people that made this community thrive. Tell me you haven't heard this story in every major and not so major city in the U.S.

      What makes this musical so enjoyable is not just that the story is topical and current, but that the music and dancing is so vibrant. A mix of Salsa, Latino, hip hop and rap, the music carries the story along from beginning to end. And the choreography and costuming is incredible. The only problem we encountered, and this is not the first time this has happened at the Flynn, is the music drowned out the lyrics in several place. The band was a live band and was a great Latin orchestra. But in a musical that depends so much on the song lyrics to keep you informed, missing those lyrics takes away from the experience. As I said, this is something we have run into before at the Flynn and you would think that with their years of experience they could get the sound mix just perfect.




      I really though this was an incredible musical and highly recommend it to you if the touring company is coming to your town, A+, appropriate for all ages.

      On our 2nd night out we had tickets to see Lucinda Williams. Arguably, one of the greatest living singer songwriters around.  I have loved her music for years and years and got to see her once at the Ottawa Blues Festival , along with 10,000 other fans, so I was looking forward to seeing her in the intimate confines of the Flynn. A rather sparse crowd turned out but you could tell from the start we were all great fans. Her backing group also turned out to be the warm up. Buick 6 started the night about 15-20 minutes late and played a totally instrumental set of mainly alternative versions of Lucinda Williams songs. Not a bad warm-up but I would of liked to hear some of their own music.

      After a short intermission, Lucinda came out. The first thing you notice is she seems to need some help. There is a person around her after every song, handing her a drink, helping her with her guitar, etc. The second thing you see is a small music stand next to her mike, with all her songs and lyrics on it. Very strange and a bit disturbing as there seems to be no explanation for it on the Internet. But the the music starts, and all is forgotten. She has a voice like no other and with this back up band really is exploring her rock/grunge side. And she certainly give you your moneys worth. She played an incredible 22 song set, with songs both familiar (to fans) like Drunken Angel  and Change the locks, to covers, Allman Brother's Cross to Bear and an incredible version of Dylan's Trying to get to heaven, to brand new stuff not even recorded yet. A real experience for hard core Lucinda fans.

       For those of you not real hardcore fans, this may be a hard set to sit through. Lucinda has never been about happy, happy, joy, joy. Alot of songs are dark, her main subjects being lost love, unrequited love or abusive love. But for those of you who love original, American music, do yourself a favor and go see Lucinda when she comes to your town. For me this was one of the best concert experiences ever. Another A+ night at the Flynn. Oh and the sound problems of the previous night, not in existence tonight, the sound was incredible.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Madeleine's Bakery Review

      We have a new bakery in Milton, Madeleine's. Located in the same building as the new Ace Hardware on Route 7. At first glance its hard to get a feel for this bakery, the outside door and storefront are very plain, looking like nothing more than another entrance to Ace. But step inside and be prepared to be amazed. As you step in, you see cases of goodies right in front of you, but what's even more amazing is look past the cases though an open window and see the actual working part of the bakery, and it is HUGE. it stretches back what must be 50-60 feet and filled with all kinds of cool equipment, (I love baking equipment).

      As I mentioned earlier, the first thing you see is two nice cases devoted to "normal" bakery type items. Doughnuts, bearclaws, cookies, croissants and many other items of the same ilk. To the left against the wall is another rack devoted to breads and rolls. This rack was rather sparse on the day I was there but I was assured many more bread items were coming. I did buy a loaf of white sandwich bread and it was good. There was a very good selection of dinner rolls.

      Off to the right hand side were two other cases, these are filled with more elegant desserts. napoleons, cakes, pies, really yummy looking stuff.  I will make one suggestion, DO NOT enter here on a hungry stomach. In the interest of a proper review, I felt I needed to test a number of products. HA, if you believe that I have some swamp land to sell you. Anyways here is what I ended up going home with;


      Let's go over the goodies one at a time. First plate, (starting at the top and in a clockwise rotation), cinnamon roll, nice and sweet, great cinnamon flavor, strawberries and cream croissant, point for using whole strawberries, point off for not enough cream cheese, maple walnut scone, only clunker of the bunch, dry with not alot of maple flavor in the scone, frosting was good, and finally bearclaw, great flavor but a little on the small side, must of been a baby bear.

      Second plate, cookies were both very good, chocolate chip and ginger. Donuts we ate the next day so they were a bit dry, but great flavors on the frosting, not cloyingly sweet. and finally the bread, not extraordinary but then again nothing bad. just a good old white bread. All in all a great addition to our little town.

On a scale of 1 to 5;
Food,                Quality means much more to us than quantity.
Beer and Wine,  Based on selection and pricing
Service,             Speaks for itself
Ambiance,          Does the look fit the food and pricing
 Price,                And finally does the pricing equal the results we had.

Food,                     4      Really good , fresh made goodies. Scones are dry.
Beer and Wine,    no   Its a bakery people, though I did just read about a dessert and wine bar (next business idea).
Service,                 4.5    Excellent, I was waited on right away and the person was very helpful.
Ambiance,             no    Strictly take out, no tables inside.
Price,                     3.5  A bit pricey but excellent selection and overall everything tasted great.

Overall                  4.0  This is great addition to Milton. now if we could only get a DECENT restaurant we would be in heaven !!.