A GLOBALISED GUIDE TO THE BEST IN FOOD: COOKING IT, EATING IT AND ENJOYING IT!

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Numan's Salad



Back in the UK I live in a small, slightly pleased with itself little market town called Hitchin. For many years (sadly no longer), it was home to a Turkish/French restaurant called The Mange Tout. Run with a deft touch for regulars by the heavy-lidded Jamal, it featured two menus and while its Turkish food was a real treat, the French stuff was pretty good too. One feature of the Mange Tout's regular offerings was 'Numan's Salad', named after Numan the Turkish waiter.

And this is it. As simple as you like and something that'll stay with you once you've tried it. Give it a whirl with chicken sticks, some freshly cooked plain basmati rice and a dollop of mayonnaise.

Ingredients


1 cucumber, finely diced
1 iceberg lettuce, finely shredded
6 plum tomatoes, deseeded and finely diced

Dressing
4 tbsp vinegar
1 tsp salt
2 tbsp olive oil

Mix the salad, add the dressing and toss to combine. Ta daaa!!

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Chohitos



You must have heard of a mohito, or ‘Momo’ cocktail. The traditional mohito mixes Bacardi with a muddle of lime and mint, lots of crushed ice and sugar syrup and then a finish of cointreau and/or just soda. It’s one of the classic cocktails: long, wicked and moreish.

One variation is made by Dubai’s Park Hyatt Hotel at its excellent Thai Kitchen Restaurant: the ThaiHito mixes dodgy Thai whisky, cointreau, crushed ice, limes, mint and chilis with soda. And it’s an amazing drink for all that!

But now we’ve (at considerable cost to our own health, I can tell you) researched a new cocktail of substantial weight. I give you... the Chohito.

A Chohito is a drink for madder people altogether. A Chohito is just plain wrong and is for those with no sense of responsibility at all. And it goes like this: the ingredients and method for one single Chohito...

Ingredients
  • 2 measures Bacardi
  • 2 limes, quartered
  • 1 fistful fresh mint leaves
  • 2 tsp sugar dissolved in 2 tbsp water
  • Brut or extra brut champagne
  • A lot of crushed ice

Put the cut limes and mint into the glass and give it all a good pounding to create a ‘muddle’. Ideally, use a pestle and mortar and several willing slaves. Otherwise a tall Collins glass and a wooden spoon will have to do. Slam in the Bacardi (don’t be niggardly about those measures, either) and then the sugar syrup. Stir, then add the crushed ice and top up with dry, dry champagne. Top with a sprig of mint (you can sugar the glass edge if you like by dipping it in lime juice and then a plate of sugar) and then serve. Drink a lot of them. Stop when your face freezes.

Notes
Don’t kill yourself using the best champagne in the world, but do use something dry. In fact, please don’t use a great champagne, it’s a terrible waste. But if you can get a dry pop, then this is a way better awful thing to do than a Kir Royale, which is just precious and, well, boring.

BTW...
A Kir Royale is brut or extra brut champagne mixed with crème de cassis or blackcurrant cordial. To make the ideal Kir Royale, swirl a splash of the cassis in a flute and discard all but a coating of the sweet cordial, then top up with champagne. A blanc des blancs would be good for this. Do not on any account make a kir that has a stronger colour than a rosé champagne: it should blush like a young girl not be rouged like an aged drab. If that helps...

This is, I swear, the last post about champagne on this blog for a long, long time. Promise!!!

.

CHAMPAGNE CHARLIE



Here’s a guide to champagne which we hope most will find useful at some level. It’s the result of a week’s madly obsessive holiday in Champagne, together with a lifetime fondness for the fizzy glass of which Marie Antoinette apparently said, “It is the only drink that makes a lady more attractive once she has taken it”.

It’s been put together in a series of five posts, including this one:

The stuff you really want to know without all the stuff that boring people want to tell you. At least, that’s how it was meant to come across...

A review of the tours offered by some of the region’s top champagne houses – useful if you ever decide to go there yourself, but also a glimpse at the operations behind the fizz.

Some of the champagnes you’ve never heard of, but that are really worth trying!

The top champagne tips from the widest, most unscientific and maddest taste-test ever! Our team of steely-eyed experts takes a whole load of champagne and drinks it so that you don’t have to! (No, no. Don’t thank us!)


Enjoy!!!

BTW - If you do, for any mad reason, want to get any more champagne fixes, then I heartily commend this most excellent blog - Peter's pretty much on the money as far as I'm concerned, even if he does tend to go further down the 'Pastel shades of morel and hedgehog nostril on the palate' road than I'm perhaps personally comfortable with!! >;0)

BBTW: And if you should find yourself near Epernay and want to get a great grounding in the smaller local producers of the region, visit Comme Champagne at 8, Rue Gambetta in Epernay. It's a great shop with a cellar full of some of the best small producer champagnes - including the excellent Colin and Lamiable. Give it a whirl!

The Fat Expat Five

One of The Fat Expat's expert, and of course deeply refined, tasting team. Note detritus...

After tasting over 50 champagnes from small houses and big name brands, recommended and discovered alike, we came up with the following ‘top five’. Each champagne was tasted by our group of six expert tasters (oops, sorry – Fat Expats) and notes were taken by the Worryingly Precise Josephine. Our group consisted of a journalist, a photographer, a PR, two teachers and an Emirates First Class Purser. As usual with everything that goes on with The Fat Expat, we’re not experts. We’re just the punters with the moolah that the producers want to extract from us. So we think our opinion’s just as valid as the next man’s. If perhaps a little more obsessive than average, at least we're not banging on about touches of peach, straw and perhaps a tapenade rounding into a creosote in the finish...

But we were all amazed at how the experience refined our palates. We all learned to enjoy champagne warmer than we had in the past – this is where the wine starts to truly please. We all had our previous conceptions and preferences totally overturned by the experience. And we all came away from the whole silly week with a definite preference for certain champagnes and a great deal more respect for the drink itself.

And yes, we enjoyed it all just fine, thank you...

TheFat Expat Five

Dom Perignon 2000
Veuve Cliquot Vintage Rich Reserve 2002,
Moet et Chandon Grand Vintage Rose 2000,
Mercier Vendange 2003
Lanson Brut 1997

We broke our 'nothing over 50 Euro' for the DP 2000, which weighed in a over double that. Other than that, these wines are all at roughly comparable prices.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Undiscovered Treasures - the little guys


LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton is the Unilever of champagne. This uber-conglomerate owns a slew of top brands including Moet et Chandon, Castellane, Mercier, Dom Perignon and Veuve Clicquot. In fact, LVMH takes something like 20% of the global champagne market. All of the above are separate houses, however, with the sole exception of Dom Perignon, which is the ‘high end’ brand of Moet et Chandon: the relationship appears to be solely at the holding company level, as each of these houses (as you’ll see later) have a distinctly different heritage, approach and product. And of course from Perrier Jouet, through Bollinger to Ruinart and Gosset, there are a good many great houses that aren’t owned by the LVMH leviathan.

Alongside these ‘great’ houses, Champagne contains thousands of smaller producers as well as co-operatives and a good number of first class family businesses (like the highly recommended Canard-Duchêne). And despite the effort that the ‘posh’ houses put into telling everyone about their hundreds of grands crus, most champagne contains a good wallop of co-operative sourced wines as well as the ‘special stuff’ from those prized chalky, hillside crus. Many people who own crus just as grand as those belonging to the Moets and Jouets also make their own wines, which means there’s actually an amazing variety of champagnes to be had out there - and often at great value and with that added delight of having discovered something closed to the vast majority of people. It's a bit like going back to the days when you got to wander around the sweetshop with your pocket money clasped in a grubby mitt...

There are some great little champagnes to be had outside the beaten brand name path and at prices that provide distinct relief compared to UK high street (let alone MMI!) prices - €16-20 for vintage grand cru wines of quality and distinction from smaller houses is money well spent. Sure, there are some second rate wines on offer out there, but sorting the wheat from the chaff is part of the fun...

These days, you can even buy champagnes from smaller producers online thanks to the wonders of the Internet. After a huge amount of assiduous travel around the region and many tasting sessions, here are some Fat Expat recommendations from some less mainstream producers. Do note that the names are links to websites apart from Clouet, which doesn't seem to have one:


Canard-Duchêne

Among the largest of the small producers, or even possibly one of the smaller large producers, Canard-Duchêne is big enough to have a funky website but small enough to still be family owned and friendly to visitors. It’s a little off the beaten track, nestled in the vineyard-rich vales south of Reims in the village of Ludes, but it’s worth the detour because Canard-Duchêne produces some truly exceptional champagnes. The brut is excellent and the Millésime Vintage 2002 is a little slice of luxury, fruity and aromatic on the palate, fizzy and fresh. The company also produces a blanc de blancs a blanc de noirs and a rosé, the latter having been thoroughly enjoyed when we visited.


Colin


The Colin family enjoy a significant heritage in viticulture and wine and champagne making that stretches back to 1829. But it was only recently that the ‘bloody minded’ owner took the decision to go it completely alone and leave the local co-operative to focus solely on producing his own champagnes. With a relatively recent expansion of the family’s facilities, Champagne Colin produces some remarkable champagnes, including the delicious Blanche de Castille, a blanc de blancs that impressed us so much that we set off to find the house behind the wine. Nestled in the southern, chardonnay-dominated area of Champagne (the cote des blancs, south of Epernay), in the village of Vertus, Colin’s name provided us endless childish amusement (a champagne called ‘Colin’ – it’s like a rabbit called ‘Keith’ or a piece of fine jewellery called ‘George’) but sitting down with Delphine Colin to taste a selection of the cuvées that Colin produces was no laughing matter – they’re excellent value and can be magnificent. The brut and rosé are good stuff, but it’s when you start getting to the Cuvée Coup de Coeur de Vertus Extra Brut Blanc de Blancs Premier Cru Millésimé that you start getting a whole lot of champagne for your money (it’s easier to drink than it is to say!). Colin also produces a delicious ratafia – a fortified sweet wine made by a number of champagne makers.


Lamiable

Just in case you’re interested, Lamiable is one of the few producers to have moved across to a new type of synthetic cork called Mytik Diamant, which binds treated cork to give a corky cork that’s not a cork, but which stops your cork corking your pop. The yeasty ‘on the edge’ taste of corked champagne is something we encountered a couple of times when tasting wines from smaller houses and Lamiable certainly didn’t suffer from that. Their extra brut was a true adventure into excellence, avoiding the trap of being simply sour, but with a dryness that gave way to floral tastes and a depth that was surprising and a delight – it was one of the wines that we ended up taking back home with us. We also tried the Cuvée Meslaines millésime 2004 , a vintage blanc de noirs which didn’t have the same sheer impact on us as the extra brut. If you ever see a Lamiable champagne, however, I can only suggest that you snap it up – particularly the amazing extra brut.


Andre Clouet
Phone: +33 326570082 Fax: +33 326516513

Andre Clouet is a small producer in the village of, wait for it, Bouzy but with a strong and growing international reputation among champagne buffs, snobs, poseurs and nose-wrinklers. We tried the brut rosé and liked it a lot, enjoying a fine champagne with smallish bubbles and a deliciously fruity, dry taste – Clouet produces in the Pinot Noir growing region but we completely failed to find Clouet’s place in Bouzy itself. We’d recommend this wine heartily – Clouet’s labels are instantly recognisable, busy and intricately designed, they’re a remarkable counterpart to the often humdrum labels on small producer Champagnes. Clouet is well known for his ‘1911’ wine, a limited production of 1911 bottles of wine blended from specific years’ production and also for his ‘silver brut’ which has no dosage added. We didn’t get to try those, though!

Monday, August 25, 2008

Tasting, trying and touring

Oddly enough, Champagne is not packed out with tourists and is amazingly unspoilt country for the interested wanderer. Despite this, most champagne producers will hold degustations of their wines on the premises at a pretty nominal charge and a good number will also offer tours of their facilities: ‘visites des caves’. There are also a number of shops in Epernay, Reims and elsewhere that aggregate selections of the big name producers and some of the more distinguished smaller names and offer advice and even degustation, although you’re often starting to approach bar prices for a glass of pop.

The best way to get a good grounding in what’s going on, however, is to visit a couple of the larger houses and ‘do the tour’. Here’s a look at what you might expect from some of the bigger brands around. Do bear in mind we did these throughout a week of pleasing ourselves, wandering around the region, dropping into small producers, sampling wines and generally rooting around. If you did these tour things all one after the other you’d go mad. At the end, I’ll tell you how you can save a few hours and a good few Euro to boot...

Perhaps fascinatingly, we found that the character and nature of each tour was reflected pretty much in the champagne that ended it: from the impeccable uber-corporate style and efficiency of Moet to the appalling FU Taittinger, we found that the wine was like the place, people and public relations. So you can also read these write-ups as tasting notes!!!


Moet - Fancy a quick slurp, sir?

Moet et Chandon

This is the slickest, classiest tour of the lot – an experience that starts as you make your way across the gravel driveway up the grey steps past the decorative bay trees and through into the light, airy and stylish visitors reception at Moet et Chandon's Rue de Champagne megalopolis. You have three options (bare naked, with vintage or vintage aplenty happy ending) and, slightly tackily, get handed a voucher denoting your ‘class’ of degustation. You’re then met by a slick, crisp young thing in a suit (ours was called Rupert) and escorted to the video room: a white and glass cream and black affair with square lines, cream linen drapes and a free-standing plasma screen on a black obelisk and surround sound speakers mounted on the walls. There you are drawn cleverly into a corporate video that is slicker than Slick McSlick the Turkish oil wrestling champion, all calligraphy on vellum, fat grapes, oaken barrels and fine bubbly moments in iridescent glass: classical music and a deep, calming voice-over talking with authority and gravitas. From there, it’s down to the cellars and a walk around the cleverly lit and arranged stacks of bottles that one suspects are set aside just for the tours. Rupert is arch, starched, coldly amused (and amusing) and has definitely been fitted out with a high quality rectally inserted glass rod.

The trip around the cellars is informative, impressive and impeccably conducted. There’s barely a glimpse of the industrial scale operation that must power the output of some 60 million bottles a year from the LVMH cellars – and that’s precisely because we’re being subjected (having paid our €25 for the pleasure) to a totally on-brand experience.

At the end we’re met with Rupert’s three sharp-suited colleagues who pour out trays of the product, each group of voucher holders getting to approach their respective trays. We’re flying at the front and tasting a 2000 vintage brut and a 2000 vintage rosé. Both are spectacular wines, fruity, deep and yet dry and clean, the two providing a delightful contrast and finishing a thoroughly stylish, crisp and enjoyable tour of Ernst Stavro Blofeld’s champagne world domination experience.


Castellane - a gloves-off tour of the industrial process and a refreshingly honest experience!

Castellane

There could be no greater counterpoint to Moet’s tour than that offered by Castellane which is, in fact, owned by LVMH anyway. However, the relationship is definitely at the balance sheet level alone as the two houses, their tours and products could hardly be different.

Visitors enter a large hall that has more in common with a slightly dodgy bier keller than a champagne house: tacky barrel bottom tables are scattered around the high-roofed reception area: there are smashing posters on the walls from old Castellane campaigns – but on asking if they were on sale we were directed to a small poster selector which had four or five of the third rate designs in tatty, scratched plastic covering. We gave poster art a miss. Oddly, only Mercier sells any poster art and that a limited range – yet most of these companies have long produced stunning, defining poster art.

One strange bonus at Castellane is the museum at the back of the reception area – you can take a wander around this as you wait for your tour to be called out and it’s got some amazing things in it, including a pristine example of the first ever telegraph, with its original pre-QWERTY keyboard and an old hot metal composition station. Amazing finds for the historically minded geek.

At Castellane, you begin the cellar tour with an introduction to the region and the grapes, led by a young lady with an almost impenetrable French accent. She’s perfectly pleasant, but after Rupert’s Teutonic efficiency, she seems bumbling. The tour proper is commenced by entering the tackiest doorway in champagne: a barrel. Feeling not unlike Bilbo Baggins, you drop down to the first production level, the gigantic steel vats containing the wines, the honest clean-room tiled walls and industrial pumps at least leaving us feeling that champagne was actually being produced here in tenable volumes. From there it’s down again to the cellars, an impressive walk around and the usual introduction to remouage and the like before climbing back up to sample the output of Maison Castellane.

The champagne itself is disappointing, it lacks definition or character, doesn’t surprise or delight. It’s an ordinary old brut, no vintages to be had here. We asked about the ‘Commodore’, the most expensive wine sold in the shop – it had an interesting name and a different bottle shape – was there perhaps some nautical connotation? Our guide didn’t know. We bought a bottle anyway and took it home to try it. Again, not a wine that stood out in any way from the sort of glug you’d expect to be doled out at a corporate day out done on the cheap.

Castellane gets full credit for being a genuine tour around a full production environment, and I would say it was worth doing it for the museum alone, but it didn’t produce any wows or insights. At €8.50, it also didn’t produce a champagne that deserved attention.


Mercier - A great tour for Thomas The Tank Engine fans...

Mercier

This is the Dubai of Epernay’s Avenue de Champagne: Mercier is modern, slick and polished.
Even the toilets are fully automatic, sculpted and mood-lit. Visitors wait for their tour to start in an airy, tiled reception area decorated with the huge champagne barrel that was originally used to cart champagne to the world’s fair in Paris or some such gumpf. Apparently the barrel caused more fuss than the Eiffel Tower, which sounded like a load of old tut to me.

Interestingly, old man Mercier was something of a PR guru – the barrel stunt was followed by other attention-getters, including exclusive tastings held in hot air balloons over Paris.

The Mercier tour starts with a video played across three screens in a darkened room. It’s a bit ‘in your face’ after Moet’s slick plasma screen exclusive preview style experience; the images come too fast and there’s text in English and French as well as a voice over to deal with. It’s all too much information and too little content, the video feels like a sort of multimedia version of a Chinese takeaway: there's a huge rush of intense things going on, but two minutes afterwards you just feel empty and unfulfilled.

And then to the brushed steel lifts (another Dubai moment) and an achingly slow journey down past a series of champagne-themed tableaux that Fodor’s called ‘excruciating’ – an adjective that won Fodor’s my eternal respect (incidentally, we found the Fodor’s Guide pretty much bang on the money throughout and would recommend it heartily). 32 metres (and some awful papier mache tack) later and the multinational group of slightly bewildered-looking tourists were led to a train.

Yes, a train.

It doesn’ t run on rails, but it’s like a ride in a kids’ amusement park: guided by light, our fibreglass cars take us along the cellars as our guide tells us how champagne is made. By now, we’ve sort of heard it all before, but amuse ourselves taking photographs and enjoying the strange majesty of all those bottles laid out over kilometres of cellars (the longest of the lot is Moet at 17 miles of chalk cellars: Mercier sports a 1km stretch at one point. It’s all pretty impressive underground storage, really).

And then we stop and are disgorged into the tasting area cum shop at the end of the ‘experience’. Oddly enough, the champagne’s great – again we opted for the full-on happy ending three-glass experience and sample Mercier’s brut, an excellent vintage rose and the 2004 Vendange, which I was subsequently compelled to buy because it was just, well, plain good. A fine champagne, not particularly heart-stopping or complex, but just fine. The Mercier brut is, however, averagely average. In an average sort of way – a triumph, perhaps, of marketing over content.


Veuve - an excellent experience

Veuve Clicquot

Veuve Clicquot is an appointment-only experience and we have to book two days ahead because
they’re full. So our 10am appointment in Reims becomes something of an issue when we only manage to leave our delightful gite in Baye, 20 minutes south of Epernay, easily an hour away from Reims, at 9.20am. We’re lucky, driving two fast cars and able to make Epernay in a record 20 minutes. Then we hit the red lights, the diversion, the grannies and the Sunday drivers. We get lost and it turns into a running gag, a sitcom race to get to the Holy Grail of champagne on time, a true white-knuckle ride. There’s no second chance – it’s this slot or nothing.

We leave Epernay, finally on the right road, at 9.45. We call ahead – yes, they can delay for us but only a little while as there are other people booked for the same time. They can wait until 10.20am maximum. Recriminations, directions, explosions and frustrations follow. Every lorry in France has decided to drive in front of us. It’s an awful, John Cleese Clockwise trip: we get to Reims and try to find the right road first time: 12 Rue Temple. And then, miraculously, at 10.15am precisely we’re there, driving into the gorgeous paved frontage that is Veuve Clicquot at Reims, sweetie darling. We’re exhilarated, punching the air, dancing up the impressive stairs to reception. We smile at the friendly but efficient-looking receptionist in the light, stylish reception area. She explains that this is head office. The tour takes place ten minutes away at the caves, the other side of Reims.

This is not a good moment.

For the first time, we curse the stupid sods at Fodor’s, who give the wrong address for the tour at Veuve Clicquot. We race out again, imploring the girl at reception to call ahead for us. In an amazing feat of driving and navigation, we make it over to the ‘other’ Veuve Clicqout in less than five minutes.

“Forgive us: we’re English, stupid and late” I gasp in French as we all burst into reception.

The guy at reception grins: “Well, that’s not a bad start, is it?” he says in English, and then sorts everything out like a Bollywood hero dealing with the last minute slew of baddies between him and Jagantha, his childhood love. We join the tour, which has been delayed but eventually gone ahead without us. They all hate us, but we don’t care. We made it.

The guide is gushy, gawky, nervous and giggly, a little like Safi’s Chinese girlfriend in AbFab. She’d be the stuff of pastiche and cruel comedy except you quickly realise that she’s informative, engaging and passionate about her subject. The cellars are marvellous, working cellars but nevertheless lit in ‘on brand’ orange and white mood lighting. The stairs down are a purposefully grand entrance, a marvellous trip down into the cavernous, cool, damp chalk corridors below.
Just in case you didn’t know, veuve is French for widow – the house of Veuve Clicquot was founded by the Widow Clicquot and it was she who invented the process of remouage or riddling that is used to clear champagne of the lees, or sediment from the second fermentation that takes place in the bottle. Prior to her riddling rack, other methods such as turning the bottles upside down in sand were tried, but were unreliable and led to huge burst rates (and no, we’re not talking bandwidth optimisation here) . The Veuve was ahead of the curve in more ways that one – it was she who got the Russian Tsar to break his normal habit of toasting victories and the like with vodka and use champagne instead. The industry never looked back – since that day, champagne has been the drink of celebration of dukes and dustmen, dictators and democrats.

Genuine, passionate and engaged, our guide actually cares about this stuff. And it’s glorious. No question phases her, no technicality wrong-foots her. She’s way on top of her game and desperately helpful, too. It’s a slightly unnerving combination, but a delight all the same. We end the visit on a magnum of Veuve vintage rose, complicated, deep and delicious, floral and berry-laden, brilliant on the tongue and grin-inducing - there’s not a great deal that’s wrong with the world – we all buy a lot of vintage stuff from Veuve Clicquot and all agree we will always have a preference for this finest of champagnes.

Buy the 2002 rose. Buy the 1995 Brut. And if you are feeling utterly wicked, buy the 1990. And if you see a bottle of Veuve Brut rich, give it a try – it’s a slightly sweeter brut, but not a demi-sec and it’s a marvellous wine. We like Veuve.


Bring a bottle would you? Storage at Taittinger.

Taittinger


The girl at reception’s cold as ice, her smile is pure switch-on, switch-off. The tour’s at four, so get your tickets at €10 each and come back then. The usual mish-mash of slightly confused looking Koreans, a few loud Yanks and some shuffling Dutch – they’re all waiting on the sofas, wondering what’s going to happen next, what indignities are going to be heaped on their dumb, sheep-like heads in the name of champagne tourism. And then in she glides, our guide: a vision from the makeup counter at Debenhams with a violent slash of pink lipstick splashed across her indifferent features, all hairspray, tight skirt and utterly inappropriate pointy-toed shoes. We all hate her from the start but nobody can remember her name. Even during the tour.

We’re led, shuffling, into a semi-dark room and sat on squeaky seats. Is that a tin of Cyclon B I see in the corner, just before the lights are extinguished? Nothing happens, and then after a squeaky –seated eternity, a crap video plays. It does add the historical footnote that the Chardonnay grape was brought to France from Palestine by the Crusaders, but precious little else. And then the screen suddenly reads PanasonicVideoInput3NoInput and the long, pregnant, silent (punctuated by the occasional squeaky seat) pause ends with the clipclop of expensively shod feet and the neon lights flickering on as our tour guide leads us out of the room.

Baaa.

She drags us down flights of spiral stairs to the cellars where we’re shuffled around before being mumbled at. We shuffle along to another place where we’re mumbled at some more. There’s lots of monotone drone, French-accented lazy language, inprecise enough to be irritating, just on the verge of comprehensible. This is one tour too many for us and we’re inattentive and failing to hang on her every rote word. And she loathes us for it, throwing us the odd dirty look and getting grins back.

We will none of us forgive Taittinger for this awful drag around their lacklustre cellars, some photogenic bottle stacks interspersed by the drone of mademoiselle indifferente – a secretary turned PR gimp, a begrudging guide to something she doesn’t care a flying fuck about for people she holds in obvious contempt.

The champagne’s as indifferent as she is – served up for the animals to come and get a gulp in a large, uncomfortable room with no displays, care or character to it whatsoever. There’s a price list up on the wall and a hatchet-faced woman behind a counter taking orders. This isn’t a happy place and we drink up quickly as frog-features stands obviously talking to her friend about us all. We leave without buying a thing. There’s nothing here we want. I will never forgive Taittinger.


Saving money


Save your money. Book an appointment at Veuve Clicquot with plenty of advance warning. If you want to, swing by Moet et Chandon as well. Both are excellent and come highly recommended. If you feel like being a little different, then we’d suggest taking a quick trip off the beaten track and taking a tour at small independent producer Canard Duchane, which you’ll find just south of Reims.

But don’t do more than two champagne tours in total and, ideally, space them a few days apart – do one at the beginning of your time in champagne and one towards the end. In between, drop into the many shops and independent producers in the region and get chatting to people, sampling the drink and asking your questions of the actual producers. Be inquisitive and searching – people tend to respond really well to genuine interest and even the daftest questions are handled politely and with as much gravity as if they came from experienced oenologists.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

A Champagne Moment


It’s the stuff of legend, taken by dukes and dustmen; it’s the libation of celebration. Smashed against ships, poured by the gallon down the throats of Hollyood starlets and gangster rappers, it’s drunk warm in girlie joints and ordered in outré bars by self-obsessed nouveau riche flatheads in sparkler-decorated magnums.

It’s pop, fizz, shampoo, bubbly and even champers. And it’s a five billion dollar global multi-brand luxury products industry built chiefly around two cities in France’s Champagne region, Epernay and Riems. Both are nestled in the centre of thousands of acres of sleepy hillside vineyards growing a mixture of pinot noir, pinot meunier and chardonnay grapes. Each vineyard (or Cru) yields a different quality of grape – hence the use of terms such as Premier Cru, Grand Cru and Grand Cru Classé – Grand Cru is the tip-top quality. Each Cru, particularly the tip-top ones, can be pretty small and Champagne’s hillsides are dotted with what are effectively strip farms, each strip carrying a stone marker on behalf of its owner.

Each cru is marked

The grapes are harvested in September and the juice yielded from the first pressing of grapes from each cru is separately fermented to make a wine. It takes, incidentally, some 1.8kg of grapes to make a bottle of champagne. These wines are then blended together – wines from anything up to 200-300 individual crus being combined by oenologists to make a single champagne. The blend will typically contain a mix of previous years’ wines to ensure consistency – but exceptional years allow the production of a champagne made from that years’ crop alone, a vintage, which carries the year on the bottle.

Champagnes can be made out of a blend of the three grapes (the pinot noir and pinot meunier are black grapes and so only the first pressing of white juice is used to make champagne), out of pure chardonnay (blanc de blancs), or out of pure black grape (blanc de noir). Rosé, incidentally, is typically made by leaving the wine in contact with the red skins for two days or so.

Once the first fermentation is completed, the wines are blended and then bottled in especially strong, thick-walled bottles with the addition of a little yeast to spark a second fermentation – this is where the bubbles come into it.

Capped like lemonade...

The bottles are capped with metal caps and then stored in cellars so that the second fermentation can run its course. As a ‘live’ wine, these bottles can happily spend years down in the cellars ‘on their lees’ – the lees is the sedimentary by-product of the fermentation process. Once the sediment is removed, the wine has only got so long to live – it’s pretty pointless keeping champagne because it doesn’t change its character one jot with age and, in fact, is slowly and inexorably going down the road to vinegar city.

Riddling racks - the bottles are twisted to force the sediment into the neck

Getting rid of that sediment is something of a mission – a process ‘invented’ by a certain madame Clicquot, a widow, who, along with Dom Perignon, is one of the great ‘names’ of champagne. She eventually solved the problem of safely getting rid of the lees by angling the bottles in racks and twisting them to encourage the lees to move down the bottle to the neck. This process, which takes place when the champagne has matured, is called ‘riddling’ or ‘remouage’ and can take months, each bottle turned one quarter turn a day by specialist riddlers, who can do the twist anything up to 50-60,000 bottles a day. Don’t ever, ever ask them how the day went at work. Although modern ‘vibro-pallets’ automate the process and cut down the time it takes to a little over one week, many producers still riddle their premier products manually.

At the end of the process, there’s a little plug of sediment left in the neck of the bottle. This is dipped into a freezing cold solution so that the plug freezes: the cap is knocked off, the plug pops out under the natural pressure of the gas in the bottle and a little slug of sugar and wine, the ‘dosage’, is added before the bottle is corked with the distinctive champagne cork and then secured using a wire mesh ‘basket’. The bottle’s returned to the cellars for six months or so to allow the dosage to mix in and settle and then it’s cleaned, labelled and packed for shipment. From this point, you’ve got from 5 (brut) to 15 (vintage) years to get it poured and away before it starts to go downhill. The market for multi-thousand dollar bottles of ancient vintage champagne is, by the way, a matter of pure vanity – the contents of those old bottles are undrinkable.

Brutal

The sweetness of the champagne is set by the dosage: you’ll typically find Extra Brut, Brut and Demi-Sec on offer. The majority of the natural sugar in the champagne has already been consumed by the yeast, so a little extra sugar does rather help the medicine to go down. The amount of sugar sets the character of the champagne: extra brut is a brave move – few of the large houses make an extra brut, in which a minimal amount of sugar is added. If you love the absolute dryness of champagne, extra brut is worth a try but it’s gotta be good stuff - like the little girl with the little curl, when it’s good it’s very, very good – the true flavour of the wine comes through unmasked by added sugars. But when it’s bad... well, an extra brut can easily slip over the wall into sourness, scouring your taste buds like battery acid.

The most common variety of champagne offered is brut – more sugar is added than in an extra brut but the wine is still a dry one – originally designed as such for the British market, apparently. Demi-sec is a sweeter wine altogether, not quite as soft and rich as, say, a viognier but certainly taking a trip down that path. A purely subjective view is that demi-sec can be more accessible, but sacrifices complexity and depth for that accessibility. Everyone who writes about champagne gives figures for the amount of sugar in each class of champagne and its dosage, but I can’t for the life of me see why. If this type of geek information is critical to you, don’t hesitate to take a peek at Wikipedia!


To be served cooled but not frozen...

Service

Champagne should ideally be served at 6 degrees, not fresh out of the freezer. It should be cool, but not chilled to the point where the glass is frosted. It’s only as the wine warms a little that you’ll get the fullness of the bouquet, the floral notes and the other stuff that will allow you to pontificate like a proper pretentious jerk. A curved flute is ideal, the lip closing in from the bowl to concentrate the bouquet of the wine. Everyone who’s anyone in Champagne is a little sniffy about coupes, which is a shame as I’m a great fan of them and it’s certain that they’ve long been a favourite receptacle for the old fizz – in fact, it’s rumoured that a standard coupe is modelled on Marie Antoinette’s breasts. I did go to the Palace of Versailles to verify this but, tragically, didn’t find any ‘gear out’ statues that would provide a proper comparison.

Great

Champagne must be the most abused luxury item of the lot. Sloshed down in beery toasts, sat warming as a trophy accessory in night clubs, smashed against ships or sprayed over crowds, it seems as if very few people actually stop for a second to enjoy the drink itself. Which is a shame, as good champagne is a wonderful thing indeed: complex, characterful and beguiling, its effervescence charms and invariably lifts the mood. Behind the fizz comes the wine itself, the fruits and flavours that cut through the dryness. Save the good champagne for a quiet moment, for when the crowds have gone home and you can afford to savour a few moments of peaceful, relaxed celebration together...

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Baked Mushrooms with Mustard Tarragon Butter





And here is another fabulously easy mushroom recipe. This is great to serve as a starter with chunks of good bread to mop up the herby garlicky sauces.


You will need:

8 large portobella mushrooms
125g soft butter
2 cloves garlic crushed
2 tbsp Dijon mustard
8 tarragon stems, pull the leaves off and chop
Juice of ½ lemon
EV Olive oil


And then you need to:

Preheat an oven to 200C/400F.

Mix the butter with the garlic, the mustard, the tarragon, the lemon juice and a little salt and pepper.

Wipe the mushrooms and then smear the butter mixture over them all. Drizzle with a little olive oil.

Put mushrooms into a roasting tin, cover with foil and place in the oven for 25 minutes. It really couldn’t be easier!

Monday, August 18, 2008

Grilled Mushroom Salad with Tahini Sauce




My lovely wife adores mushrooms so I am forever on the lookout for new things to do with them. I stumbled on this one in a magazine recently and it was a bit of a hit.

You will need:

8 large portobella mushrooms
1 tbsp chilli infused oil if you have any
6 tbsp EV olive oil
Juice of 1 lemon
2 cloves garlic, chopped fine
Big handful flat leaf parsley chopped
3 heads of chicory
3 tbsp pine nuts, toasted
2 tsp balsamic vinegar
4 tbsp tahini paste



And then you need to:

Give the mushrooms a wipe and place on a foil covered baking tray.

Mix the chilli oil with 3 tbsp olive oil and brush over the mushrooms. Season with salt and pepper and grill under a high flame for about 5 mins each side. Squeeze half the lemon juice over them when you turn them.

Place the mushrooms in a large bowl with any juices, toss the mushrooms with 1 clove of garlic, half the parsley and the balsamic. Add a little more olive oil if they look dry.

In another bowl add the tahini paste and add the rest of the garlic. Add the rest of the lemon juice and give it a good stir. Don’t worry when it separates. Add 3 tbsp warm water (or double cream if you prefer) and stir until you have a smooth paste.

Separate the chicory leaves and tear the larger ones into 2 or 3 pieces. Arrange on a platter with the mushrooms, sprinkle the rest of the parsley, and then drizzle the dressing all over. Scatter the pine nuts on top and serve.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Tea Smoked Chicken Breasts




This is a great dinner party recipe, everybody always ooohs and ahhhs over it. This recipe really should be done with duck but unfortunately duck breasts are so expensive here in Dubai that we never buy them. However, if you can, go duck.

How I serve it is to have a large platter of beautiful yellow and aromatic pilau rice, then slice the smoked chicken up, spread over the top of the rice, spoon the satay sauce on the top and sprinkle with coriander leaves and chopped spring onions.

This is great stuff let me tell you!

In order to smoke the chicken you will need a wok with a lid and a wire rack that can sit above off the bottom of the wok. I have a round cooling rack at home that is just the right size and fits about half way up the inside of the wok.


You will need:

For the smoking:

50g Tea leaves
50g Uncooked rice
3 tbsp Brown Sugar

You can add to the smoking mixture:

Chopped lemongrass,
Cinnamon pieces
Coriander seeds

For the chicken marinade:

2 tsp dried thyme
1 tsp salt
2 tsp brown sugar
1 tsp ground five pepper mixture (black, white, pink, green and allspice)





And then you need to:

Line the wok and the lid with silver foil. Put the smoking ingredients on top of the foil at the bottom of the wok.

Combine the marinade ingredients and sprinkle the mixture on the chicken breasts. Cover with clingfilm and leave to sit for about 4 hours or more.

Put the wire rack in the wok and place the chicken fillets on top. Put on the lid, making sure you have a very tight seal. Turn on heat to about medium and leave for 30mins. No peeking!

The tea will burn and smoke gently, the chicken will brown nicely and will taste yummy!

Once cooked, slice the chicken and serve.

Satay Sauce




This sauce is wonderful with the tea smoked chicken.

You will need:

3 heaped tbsp peanut butter
2 tbsp mirin or sherry
1 tbsp rice wine vinegar
6 tbsp chicken stock

And then you need to:

Combine all ingredients in a pan and gently bring to the boil stirring vigorously to make sure all mixed. Cook for about 10 minutes.

Viola!

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Pasta con la Mollica






This a Calabrian recipe and the paucity of the ingredients is illustrative of the poverty that used to exist in that region of the south of Italy.

I know that most of you will look at this recipe and think what a strange combination but I really do urge you to try it. This makes a fantastic, very quick and very satisfying lunch dish and it really is quite delicious.

Breadcrumbs is another odd thing that I always seem have bags of in the freezer. If any bread in the bin has gone stale I throw it in the whizzer and stick it in the freezer. It keeps for absolutely ages and you just never know when it might come in handy!


You will need:

360g spaghetti
75g white breadcrumbs
8 anchovy fillets, drained
4 tbsp chopped flat leaf parsley
100ml good quality EV olive oil
2 garlic cloves, chopped fine
½ to 1 tsp dried chilli flakes.
Salt

And then you need to:

Bring a big pot of salted water to a rolling boil and throw the pasta in. Cook as per instructions but probably for around 10 minutes.

Heat half the oil in a large frying pan over medium heat and chuck in the garlic, half the parsley and the chilli flakes.

Cook for only about 30 secs and add the breadcrumbs and a pinch of salt. As soon as the oil has been absorbed and the breadcrumbs started to colour add the anchovy fillets and mash them against the bottom of the pan to break them down.

Drain the spaghetti and throw it in the frying pan. Add the rest of the oil and stir fry it for about 2 minutes to make sure it is properly coated with the dressing.

Tip into a big bowl, or four individual bowls, sprinkle with the remaining parsley and serve straightaway.

Salute!

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Chicken Saltimbocca




The classic version of this delicious Italian dish calls for veal, but it is pretty damn good with chicken. I have also used flattened pork fillets and it worked well.

The Real Nick can probably tell us what the name of the dish means if we ask him nicely!

There is something incredibly satisfying eating a luscious roll of golden chicken with cheese oozing out and a sweet, strong thick sauce. This is great wholesome fare.


You will need:

4 chicken breasts (or veal or pork)
4 slices prosciutto or parma ham
100g fresh mozzarella or gruyere cheese.
8 sage leaves
2 tbsp plain flour
2 tbsp EV olive oil
25g butter
50ml marsala sherry
100ml white wine
50ml good chicken stock


And then you need to:

Lay the chicken breasts one at a time on a wooden board, cover with a sheet of clingfilm and using a rolling pin flatten it out by giving it a damn good beating. Ohh yeesssss!

Sorry, where was I?

Then lay a slice or prosciutto and a quarter of the cheese on top and press it down. Lay 2 sage leaves on top and gently roll up the fillet so that the cheese/ham is on the inside. If you need to ‘pin’ it closed with a cocktail stick.

Put the flour on a flat plate and season it with a good grind of sea salt and black pepper.

Roll the fillets in the seasoned flour.

Heat a frying pan over medium heat. Add the butter and the oil. When hot add the chicken and cook for about 3 mins on each side until golden. Add the marsala, stock and wine and cook for about 5mins until the chicken is cooked through. You can add 1 tbsp of double cream as well if you want an even richer sauce.

Remove the chicken fillets and place on warmed plates. Turn up the heat to quickly reduce the liquid left until you have quite a thick sauce. Pour over the chicken fillets and serve with mashed potatoes.

What I quite like to do is place a dollop of basic tomato sauce in the middle of a warmed plate, then put the chicken on top and then spoon over the sauce. The tomato sauce really brings a wonderful addition to the flavours.

Enjoy!

Monday, August 11, 2008

Steak au Poivre




Here is a fantastic retro dish that was all the rage in the 80’s and seems to have fallen off the menu somewhat.

It goes without saying that you need to buy the best quality steak you can for this dish. My personal preference would be for rib-eye, I just like the taste of more fat through my steak, but tradition demands a good sirloin.

You will need:

4 sirloin steaks
2 tbsp mixed peppercorns (black, red and green)
1 tsp butter
2 tbsp brandy
2 tbsp red wine
4 tbsp double thick cream


And then you need to:

Crush the peppercorns in a mortar and pestle and then press the peppercorns into both sides of each steak.

Heat a large frying pan (or a cast iron griddle if you have one) over a medium high heat and add the butter. It will foam pretty much immediately. Throw in the steaks and cook them for 3 minutes on each side. Depending on thickness this will likely give you medium rare steaks.

Pour in the brandy, hold a lighted match over the pan and stand well back.

FLAMBE!!!!

Put on extractor fan to remove smell of singed eyebrows and remove steaks and put on a warmed plate.

Add the wine to the pan, scraping up all the crispy bits. Add the cream and stir. If it looks like it is curdling add a little water and stir vigorously, it’ll be fine.

Let it bubble and thicken a little, and then pour gently over each of the steaks. Serve with my fantastic pomme frites and some crisp green salad leaves.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Roasted Red Pepper Pesto



Following exactly the same principles as ordinary pesto this is a delicious alternative and is fabulous stirred through pasta and also as a dressing on either steamed or roasted vegetables.

I adore versatile stuff like this, I always seem to have little pots of it lurking somewhere around. It takes literally two minutes to put together once the peppers are cooked and without any fuss or bother you have a wonderful, flavoursome sauce to make a lovely dish with.

You will need:

4 red peppers
65g ground almonds
1 tsp Lemon zest, chopped fine
4 tbsp EV Olive oil
1 clove garlic, peeled
2 tsp balsamic vinegar
50g grated parmesan

And then you need to:

Line a baking tray with foil, put peppers on top and roast in an oven at 200C/400F for about 25 mins. Turn once during that time. Remove from oven, wrap foil around them into a sealed parcel and leave aside to cool.

Once cool enough to handle remove skin and the seeds and pith from inside the peppers. Try and keep the juices that will accumulate.

Put the peeled and seeded peppers, their juices and all the rest of the ingredients into a processor and whizz until blended and thick. Adjust seasoning.

This pesto will last three or four days in a sealed container in the fridge no problem.

Thursday, August 7, 2008

The Crown Inn


View Larger Map

The Crown Inn
Polstead Street,
Stoke by Nayland
Suffolk
Tel: +44 (0)1206 262 001







Stoke by Nayland is a quintessentially English village set in the heart of ‘Constable Country’ in Suffolk and being perched on a small hilltop has the most incredible views over the famed Dedham Vale and the Stour Valley.

The historical wealth of the area, all from the production of wool, is best demonstrated by the magnificent and imposing fifteenth century church that dominates the skyline and the village. In the Middle Ages, the wool trade was the main source of commercial wealth in England, and tradition has it that the woolsack was introduced in the House of Lords to symbolize the importance of wool in the commerce of the realm. In the wool trade no area was more important than East Anglia.

Stoke-by-Nayland is home to two incredibly good pubs, both have acquired a great reputation and people travel from all over the area to visit and eat at them. The first is The Angel Inn and the second is The Crown.

The Crown has a range of local beers but where it really shines is with an extraordinarily eclectic and huge wine list. Rather cleverly their menu has wine suggestions beside each of the dishes and they are not trying to push the upper end wines either.

The food here is fabulous, they use as much local produce as is available and their Daily Special’s change as often as the weather, which is to say very regularly!

The seafood is all local East Coast and all fresh, and the blackboard keeps tabs on how many dishes are left. The crab is from Cromer, the pork is organic from a local farm well known in the area and the duck free range from just over the border in Norfolk. This is exactly what an English village pub should be doing; showcasing the very best of produce from the area and only serving food in season.

The Crown has a large terrace at the back with a huge fenced in garden for the children to run around in, which is fantastic if you want to have an undisturbed lunch.

Inside light woods on the floor have lifted the usual darkness of country pubs and with big open spaces and the French doors onto the terrace you have a very pleasant light and airy atmosphere.

If you ever find yourself in this part of the world I thoroughly recommend a trip to both Stoke by Nayland and to the Crown. You will not be disappointed by either. This is The Fat Expat's pledge to you!

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Melanzane alla Parmigiano




This makes a wonderful side dish to roast lamb and is incredibly easy to throw together. Both aubergine and lamb are still in season so get out and there and make the most of it.

If you want to jazz this up a little and make it a bit posh serve it individually by layering the aubergines, tomatoes etc in a ramekin dish. It’s the little touches you know.



You will need:

2 good sized aubergines
4 plum tomatoes
100ml basic tomato sauce
200g fresh mozzarella
50g fresh parmesan, grated
Small handful fresh basil shredded.
Seasoning


And then you need to:

Slice the aubergine into quite thin rounds and then dry fry them in a frying pan until browned on both sides.

Slice the tomatoes into rounds

Wipe the bottom of a medium-sized baking dish with olive oil and then layer the cooked aubergine on the bottom. Next layer the sliced tomatoes. Spoon over the tomato sauce, sprinkle over the basil.

Chop the fresh mozzarella into little pieces and sprinkle over the top and then sprinkle the grated parmesan.

If you are serving this individually in ramekins try and make two layers of each.

Cook in a medium hot oven (180C/370F) for about ten or fifteen minutes until cheese has melted and browned slightly.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Pasta all’Arrabiata



(The spelling of the title of this recipe has been amended under instruction from The Real Nick . I hope now that it passes muster.)

This is another fantastically easy and incredibly quick recipe, especially if you have done what I have suggested and have bags of tomato sauce in the freezer. You have, haven’t you?

A spicy, tomato-ey, herby bowl of pasta, big pile of parmesan shavings and a big glass of red wine; just heavenly!

You can play around with this recipe I often add pancetta but adding good quality pork sausages (chopped up before cooking) is also great. How about a spicy fishy stew? Add a couple of anchovy fillets with the onions and garlic, and then add some cooked prawns at the end.

You will need:

1 portion of basic tomato sauce
360g penne pasta
1 large onion chopped fine
2 cloves of garlic chopped fine
1 Thai red chilli chopped fine. Or more if you like
100g pancetta cubes (optional)
Small handful of fresh basil, torn into big shreds
Pinch of dried oregano
Fresh leaf parsley, chopped fine. For garnish
Parmesan cheese


And then you need to:

Bring a large pot of salted water to a rolling boil. Add the pasta and cook per instructions, but probably for about ten minutes.

In a large pan over a low heat gently fry onions, garlic and chilli (and pancetta if using) in about 1 tbsp EV olive oil. Cook for about 5 minutes and then add the basil leaves. Cook for a further 2 or 3 minutes until the onions are soft and translucent but not coloured.

Add the basic tomato sauce and the dried oregano and heat through.

When the pasta is cooked drain it in a colander and then tip the pasta into the pan with the sauce. Stir to make sure it is all coated and spoon into four bowls. Sprinkle with chopped parsley, a good grind of fresh black pepper and serve with a small bowl of freshly grated parmesan cheese.

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Basic Tomato Sauce




I use this sauce for all sorts of things and have bags of the stuff in the freezer at all times. Its great as a pizza topping, fantastic stirred into pasta (with some fresh herbs thrown in), I add it to casseroles, anything I can think of really. So what you need to do is quadruple this recipe, make up a huge batch, divide it into four portions in freezer bags and use it as and when required.

The amount below makes about enough to use as a pasta sauce for four people.


You will need:

1 large onion, chopped fine
4 cloves of garlic, chopped fine
1 carrot, peeled and grated
1 tin chopped tomatoes
1 tbsp tomato puree
1 tsp sugar
100ml red wine
1 tbsp balsamic vinegar
Seasoning

And then you need to:

In a large pan over a low flame heat a good glug of EV olive oil and then gently fry the onions, garlic and grated carrot.

After about ten minutes but before the onions start to colour add the rest of the ingredients and simmer very gently for a further 20 minutes until it has thickened quite nicely. You should have a pan full of very deep dark red yumminess.

Pour into a food processor and whizz to a very fine sauce.

Couldn't be easier!