After Hours - Travel Tips and Extraordinary Finds at the Fancy Food Show
By Kathy Biehl, Published on September 20, 2004
Travel Tips
New York Wines and
Dines: The Empire State’s foods and wines take center stage at more than
50 NYC restaurants during the month of October. The participating
restaurants, which include Café Boulud, Gramercy Tavern, Home Restaurant
and Union Square Cafe, have crafted menus (some prix fixe) around local
products and pourings from 28 New York wineries. Some 15 wine shops in and
around Manhattan are spotlighting the wineries throughout the month as
well. For this year’s participants and a cook booklet’s worth of recipes,
visit
New York Wines and Dines website.
Looking for a change of pace?
SixNewThings.com, a city guide/calendar
with a twist, may have something for you. The subscription service, which
debuted September 1, scouts out six new things a month in each of 70
locations in the US, Canada, Mexico and the Caribbean. The “things” are a
smorgasboard of things to do and places to visit, stay or eat, from
events, exhibits and performances to hotels, restaurants and spas. Choices
are light-hearted and eclectic and the writing is lively and often fun.
(One of the creators is a former classmate and editor of mine, whose
appreciation of Esquire’s “Dubious Achievement Awards” shines through some
of the site’s headlines.) Each location’s banner includes an unusual piece
of local trivia (Did you know that Denver’s Colfax Avenue is the longest
continuous street in America?) and a quote that may well prompt a smile.
Don’t let the subscription aspect deter you from a reconnaissance mission:
A standard subscription costs only 2.00 a month; for $1.50 more you can
access a year’s worth of listings, as they accumulate.
Extraordinary Finds at the Fancy Food Show
Great food is a given
at the National Association for the Specialty Food Trade Fancy Food Show, but
this year’s had a higher than normal prevalence of the extraordinary. The
same phrase of astonishment fell from my lips so frequently that I
established a new research category: foods that gave me a religious
experience (a slight paraphrase, in deference to polite company.)
The very first product I sampled set the tone for my experience of this
year’s show: ginger-infused whitefish caviar from
Tsar Nicoulai
Caviar, which erupted with fresh, arresting flavors. Next to it
was another happy surprise, sturgeon jerky with a honey and pepper glaze
that elevates what is normally a humble snack into the realm of delicacy.
Part of the impetus behind the jerky is Tsai Nicoulai’s interest in
environmental responsibility (the company has won renown for sustainable
sturgeon production, not to mention California Estate Osetra caviar of
world-class quality), which has led it to make use of more of its fish
than just the roe, but this jerky has far greater merits than economy.
Basic pantry products had the wow factor in abundance as well.
Purely
Organic, which imports organic and biodynamic products from
small producers in Italy, featured Saba grape syrup, a baking sweetener
with a taste like liquid sun, and a gentle, sweet grape vinegar from
Guerzoni, the vintner behind the wine-quality (but non-alcoholic) grape
juice called Mosto D’Uva. Sharper but just as stunning was Porto, a port
wine vinegar derived from a Napa Valley cabernet turned port, from
O Olive Oil.
A grilling rub stopped me in my tracks at
Cugino’s booth. The star of Cugino’s new
line of rubs, called RUBZ, was garlic butter bud buster, which has an
indulgent richness that should work wonders with even a timid cut of meat.
I lingered over Francis Copppola Brands’
Mammarella pasta sauces, which are based on recipes from the
director’s mother. Arrabiata, pomodoro-basilica and a garlicky puttanesca
impressed with fresh and balanced flavors, but the knockout was an intense
organic porcini marsala, made from tomatoes from the region around Naples.
Dinosaur
Bar-B-Que was introducing sauces of quite a different nature: a
vibrant Creole honey mustard sauce, which begs to be slathered on all
manner of meat, and one-of-a-kind Bar-B-Bleu, in which barbecue sauce
meets French dressing (and bleu cheese) and waits for someone to have the
sense to bring buffalo wings. The true danger at the booth, however, took
the form of potato chips with the flavor of the Dinosaur’s signature
barbecue sauce and white corn chips with its Mojito flavorings. The chips
are produced by Terrell’s Potato Chips (315-437-2786) and distributed, so
far, in the Northeast. (Dino-fans outside upstate New York, take heart:
the low-smoking blues joint is coming to Manhattan -- at last! -- this
fall, near the Fairway at 125th and 12th Ave. Call 888-476-1662 for
updates on the opening.)
Another surprise among the crunchy snack offerings were hand-fried,
preservative-free
Thai 7 Spice potato chips (heavy on
lemongrass and coriander), imported from Britain-based Jack and Ollie’s
Crisps by
Chelsea Market Baskets. Jack and Ollie’s
red onion and gorgonzola crisps were a close second in appeal. Also
inspring repeat visits to the serving bowl were olive fennel black pepper
biscuits from
Salem Baking Co., which deliver a great savory bite with an
exotic hint of fennel.
Packaging in the form of paint cans with a cheerily retro baker on the
label prompted a close inspection of
Flathau’s Fine Foods’ line of cookies, called snaps. The
butterscotch variety snared me with a rolling butter flavor that made me
gasp, turn around and walk back for seconds.
Another sweet that warranted savoring was Canadian ice wine chocolate from
René Rey
Chocolates, pairing semi-sweet chocolate (made from scratch,
in the company president’s Swiss family tradition) with a semi-liquid ice
wine and brandy filling.
Not new to the show, but to me, were two extraordinary confections from
Seattle-based
Fran’s Chocolates: Dark Gray Salt
Caramels, which won the NASFT Outstanding Confection award in 2003, coat
soft caramel with dark chocolate sprinkled with French sea salt. Milk
Smoked Salt Caramels dip the same center into a blend of dark and milk
chocolate dotted with smoked sea salt from Wales.
Cocoa’s
cornucopia of dark, milk and white chocolate bark was uniformly charming,
with two dazzlers: white chocolate bark speckled with bits of old
fashioned hard candy, called Betsey Bark, and a dark chocolate laden with
ginger and pistachios.
And the best of all? To my taste, the medallions of foie gras from
D’Artagnan.
Coincidence or not, they went home with the Outstanding New Product
trophy. And were part of a most amazing breakfast – about which more in
the next issue.
ã Kathy Biehl 2004
