cheese

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I love food, I love wine, I love to cook, I love events and eating out, and I love to write. You probably already knew that, considering the food and wine blog and all, but while steaming artichokes, chopping lemons, and photographing the whole process last night it hit me. Months ago, my focus was blog traffic, and it made me miserable. I spent so much time trying to figure out what other people wanted to read that I forgot what I wanted to write about.

Slowly, somewhere along the way, I rediscovered the joy in writing. It may have been in Sonoma or Napa or attending various wine tasting events or delicious dinners, or it may have just been in my own kitchen. All I know is that hello, I am happy to be here and ready to do more!

As you know, today begins the Eat from Home Challenge, an effort to save money, waste less packaging, eat healthier, and in general get my kitchen mojo back after the marathon. I appreciate all of the support you offered in this challenge which I actually think will be a little difficult. I love going out. I feel like it gives me something to look forward to during the week, and it is always a great option when you are too tired. Still, recommitting myself to my kitchen is a good thing, and I can’t wait to get creative.

With ingredients like these strawberries and artichokes that we picked up at Trader Joe’s, I think it will also be a delicious challenge.

artichokes

strawberries

 

Sunday was NOT part of the challenge, so we went to the Bin Ends Fine Wine Flea Market, a magical wine tasting event which usually houses 9-10 different tables with 5-7 different wines for tasting and ordering. I have found so many wines that I love this way. (past Bin Ends posts here and here)

I will post more on our wine purchases later, but I did fall in love with a new Italian Cabernet Franc and a delicioso sparkling wine made from the Malvasia grape. I am working on my grape Century Club membership (having tasted wine from at least 100 grapes), and I am about 70 into it and tried 2 new ones today. Not too shabby. Bin Ends is a great environment for this pursuit!

After Bin Ends, all I wanted were oysters. I have actually had an oyster craving since pre-marathon but thought it prudent to avoid raw seafood for a few days prior just in case.

We tried Barbara Lynch’s B & G Oyster in the South End, a mecca for all things oyster, but they were closed for a private event. Luckily, Eastern Standard saved the day.

It was a patio kind of day, and an Anchor Steam from San Francisco hit the spot.

anchor steam beer

silly husband

enjoying an anchor steam

We also had the cheese plate which included a Manchego, a Gorgonzola Picante, and a Brie cheese along with quince paste, candied bacon, and Nicoise olives.

cheese plate

image

It wasn’t really lunch, and it wasn’t really dinner, so we ordered homemade potato chips and onion dip. SO GOOD.

chips and dip

We also satisfied my Island Creek oyster craving with a dozen oysters complete with cocktail sauce and mignonette. Delicious and briny, they hit the spot! I could live on oysters!

Island Creek oysters

When I got home, I decided to dive into the artichokes that I bought, so I trimmed them, boiled them, and ate every last leaf and heart, some plain and some dipped in a mix of mayonnaise, lemon, and spicy mustard.

artichoke

Artichokes take forever to eat, but they are so incredibly meaty and delicious!

artichokes and lemon

We ended the night eating homemade pizza, guacamole, roasted veggies, and other treats at our friend Michael and Jill’s house. We popped open one of my birthday wines, a 1980 Beaulieu Vineyards Cabernet Sauvignon, and once decanted and aerated, it was delicious! We were celebrating 2 engagements, a new job, a birthday, and the marathon, so a special wine was in order! 🙂

And here we are starting a brand new week full of possibilities and challenges! I hope you are all well rested and ready for the week and as excited about something as I am about blogging.

AND I hope you have entered my Cabot cheese giveaway! This giveaway closes on Wednesday, and it is too good to pass up!

Tags: blogging, Boston, cheese, cooking, Dining out, events, Food, oysters, recipes, Restaurants, wine, wine tasting, writing

Thank you to everyone who commented on my Boston Marathon recap. It was SUCH a great day, and I had so much fun sharing it with all of you. If you missed it, please do give it a read 🙂

I am excited to announce the winner of a $30 Equal Exchange gift card, Lindsay from Life with Lindsay! Lindsay, please email me at traveleatlove@gmail.com and let me know what email address the e-certificate should be sent to! Congrats!

Now that the Equal Exchange giveaway is over, I am excited to announce another giveaway!

I seem to find the Cabot Cheese table wherever I go, whether I am at the Newport Food and Wine Festival , Newport Vineyards Holiday Wine Festival, Wine Riot, or my own kitchen.  I loooove their cheese and I love their way of doing business. Here’s a little bit of information from their site.

Cabot’s Cooperative Heritage

Cabot Creamery is a 1,200 farm family dairy cooperative with members in New England and upstate New York. We value our roots as a cooperative ~ and as a way of doing business.

So what does it mean to be a co-op? And why are we different?

Being a co-op, we are owned and operated by our members, which for Cabot are our farmers and their families.

As a cooperative, we emulate the Rochdale Cooperative Principles. We value community, quality, democracy and local ownership. Our owners serve on school boards and select boards. They are volunteer firefighters, planning commission members and Green-Up Day participants.

As Vermont is a small, intimate state, owners are also involved in making a difference at the state level, promoting our “working landscapes,” revitalizing our downtown economies and protecting our environmental resources which make Vermont, Vermont.

This is who we are and these are our strengths. Through our principles and actions we support the places where we live and do business. This is what makes us different.

I love that they are made up of small, local farmers and place such an emphasis on community. I firmly believe that this approach creates the best real food, and it certainly shows in Cabot’s cheeses. I am so excited that Cabot has offered to give one lucky Travel Eat Love reader a cheese gift box worth $25. Isn’t that exciting?

To enter:

1) Visit the Cabot website, and let me know by leaving a comment on this post what cheese you want to try OR what your favorite Cabot cheese is if you have tried them before.

2) Follow me on Twitter, and Tweet a link to this giveaway.

3) For an extra entry, follow @cabotcoop on Twitter and let me know either on Twitter or through a blog comment, that you are following them.

4) If you have a blog, link back to this post.

The chance to win starts now, and the winner will be announced on Thursday, April 29. Good luck!

Tags: Cabot, cheese, giveaway

One of the highlights of our recent trip to Napa and Sonoma was our visit to Venge Vineyards. Venge was a recommendation from Chef Robin White and since they don’t hold public tastings, it was quite the special experience. It was certainly unlike any other tasting experience I have had before, and it definitely spoiled us for crowded public tasting rooms!

Venge recently moved to a new location on the Silverado Trail in Calistoga, CA. Up a long driveway flanked by vines and beautiful greenery, Venge’s tasting room actually used to be a private home. When we arrived, we weren’t sure if we were in the right place! It is a breathtaking view from the top, and because it is set up from the road, it is very quiet. The house is sunny and sparkling inside, immaculately clean and comfortable.

 

 

Venge Tasting Room

We were welcomed by Lin, the Director of Hospitality for Venge, and I took a few photos while we waited for the other couple tasting with us.

A long wooden table was set for the tasting, complete with cheese, crackers, and grapes.

Venge Tasting Table

This was the view from my seat.

View from Venge

Through the wine glasses

 

image

 

 

cheese and crackers

Some of my notes on food pairings for the wines that we tasted

Venge tasting notes

 

Venge wine

The lineup of wines we tasted with their lovely, varying label designs

Venge wine

Venge makes small amounts of high quality wines. Several of their wines have been given 92 points or higher by Robert Parker. All of the wines that we tasted were spectacular, but I enjoyed the following the most. Venge is such an interesting winery that I have copied some information about each wine from their website. If you are interested in wine at all, I would definitely suggest visiting their site for more information.

 

2008 Maldonado Vineyard Chardonnay, Dijon Clones (Source)

The Maldonado Vineyard has produced wonderfully again this vintage. 2008 was a bit cooler and longer, ripening nearly two weeks later than in 2007. The longer season combined with the Dijon Clone of Chardonnay has attributed fantastic nuances of tropical citrus notes with and undertone of barrel toast and vanilla creaminess.

I LOVED this Chardonnay. It felt like the wine that I should be drinking, looking out over the valley on a hot and sunny day.

2007 Gladys’s Vineyard Syrah

We could speak for hours about our adornment for this property’s owner, Gladys Boyd. This is not just 2/3rd acre of Syrah vines. It is a piece of her adored garden. She knows nearly every vine by shape or by name. She has a warm heart, a great story and a small and wonderful East sloping Syrah vineyard in Dry Creek Valley in Sonoma that she calls home. It is our privilege to make her grapes into wine. The vines had no problem reaching optimum maturity with excellent hang time. Gladys’ small acreage yielded a mere 1.81 tons; this represented a very balanced crop for the 2/3-acre planting. The concentration and focus of this wine takes benefit from such low yields. Muhlner Vineyard provides the rest of the Syrah from Napa Valley and the Viognier comes from Baranek Vineyard, Clarksburg.

2007 Late Night Harvest Zinfandel (Source)

This sweet-dessert Zinfandel will entice all of your senses. The deep, alluring color pulls you in with inviting visions of black and blue. The aromatics are very ripe with dried currants, vibrant blueberry and blackberry liqueur. Later in the nose arrives scents of barrel vanillin, campfire and a touch of bacon fat. The flavor speaks entirely of chocolate dipped coffee bean and viscous black cherry. The tannin of this wine is very integrated and can be perceived for many lasting moments in the finish. It is both a seductive and exciting bottle of wine!

A little smoky, rich, sweet, and heady, this Zinfandel is the ultimate dessert.

image

Lin was extremely hospitable and knowledgeable about Venge wines, and her warm personality and humor made everything even better. The other couple in the tasting were wine club members and had more experience with Venge wines than we did, so it made for a fun dynamic. We talked about wine, life in California, TV shows, and movies, and I laughed harder than I had in awhile. We were very lucky in that Venge does ship to Massachusetts where some wineries do not. I was the happy recipient of several bottles of Venge wine this past week, including Gladys’s Syrah and Late Night Harvest Zinfandel.

Tasting at Venge was like drinking outstanding wine in a friend’s beautiful hillside home, and I was honored to have had such a rare and special opportunity on my birthday no less! I can not wait to return to Venge and will hopefully get to meet winemaker Kirk Venge on our next visit.

Important news- my raffle to raise money for The ALLY Foundation ends on April 1, and I will randomly pick the winners then. The prizes are great and include a $100 gift card to Williams Sonoma, a winery tour for 10 at Westport Rivers, and a case of wine. For details please visit http://firstgiving.com/meghanmalloyteamally . ALL proceeds go to The ALLY Foundation.

Tags: California, Calistoga, chardonnay, cheese, Food, Napa, Napa Valley, Sonoma, Syrah, Venge, vineyards, wine, wine tasting, Zinfandel

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