Showing posts with label booze news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label booze news. Show all posts

Friday, April 10, 2009

Casa Noble In Da House

A regal drink in a stylish atmosphere is among my favorite indulgences. So, this week’s tasting with Casa Noble’s own David Ravandi at Maison 140 in Beverly Hills
made my hot-list of to-do’s. One of the unique aspects of this tequila event was the pairing of Mexico’s beloved export with luscious European cheeses.

Casa Noble has been a family-owned distillery since the 1700’s in the town of Tequila, Mexico. The blue agave spirit is triple-distilled and the reposado (rested) and añejo (aged) versions are aged in slightly charred new white French oak casks. Ravandi calls his unaged tequila “crystal” rather than blanco, and feels that it shows off the integrity of the Casa Noble brand. In his opinion, the quality of a tequila should be judged by the least aged tequila.

Our tasting began with the cleanly distilled crystal paired with a creamy goat cheese. The flavorful reposado (aged 364 days) was lovely with a Roquefort, and the layered nuances of the newly released 2-year aged añjeo were wonderful with the Stilton. After the pairing, we sampled the Single Barrel Reposado and Single Barrel Añejo – which we sampled on their own so as not to interrupt the purity of each sip.

In a few weeks, Casa Noble will celebrate its official status (by the USDA) as a Certified Organic product. And, at the 2009 San Francisco World Spirits Competition, Casa Noble’s Single Barrel Añejo was awarded with a “Double Gold” medal in the Best Extra-Añejo Tequila category. While this tequila is lovely on its own, these signature cocktail recipes served at Maison 140 will help you sip dignified Casa Noble tequila drinks in your maison.

Nobelita
2 parts Casa Noble Organic Crystal
3 parts Fresh Pomegranate Juice
1 part Organic Orange Juice
1 lemon wedge

Shake with ice, strain into a champagne flute or martini glass.

Casa 140 (The CN version of a tequila mojito)
1 oz. Casa Noble Organic Crystal
Fresh Mint (plucked from Maison 140’s back garden)
Lime Juice
1 sugar cube

Muddle mint, sugar and mint in the bottom of a wine or Rocks glass. Fill the remainder of the glass with ice cubes and a dash of Sprite

Tuesday, April 07, 2009

Toasting Prohibition with Templeton Rye Whiskey

There was a moment in the history of our fair land, when liquor was outlawed. It now seems inconceivable that the minority of “moral-wielding, self-righteous” extremists could inflict their small-minded views on the rest of the country. (Or does it…? Hmm… Ok, let’s leave that topic for another time). In any case, today, whiskey - along with all of our other distilled friends - is readily available and widely enjoyed from coast-to-coast. But that doesn’t mean we can’t pay tribute to that little period between 1920-1933 when the extreme right had their way.

The resurgence of classic cocktails, speak-easy style bars and the glamorization of Prohibition-era drinking has had an impact on cocktail culture for the last few years. Old-style recipes and how we drink them (carving chunks of ice from frozen blocks in perfectly modern bars, for example) has been at fever pitch among cocktailians and mixologists for a while now. Meanwhile, drinks like the Sazerac and Manhattan are being demanded with rye whiskey at bars – not bourbon or other types of corn whiskey. In turn, these trends influence the spirit companies to return to their old-skool recipes when thinking about new products. This is happening in all kinds of spirits such as genever, and so on. And, it isn’t only popular only among the trendy big-city folk, either.

Templeton Rye whiskey was made in Iowa in small batches when “hooch” went underground. In those days, it sold for the modern-day equivalent of $70 per gallon! The Templeton website attributes Al Capone’s bootlegging gang as helping to distribute the whiskey in cities like Chicago and San Francisco, where it is rumored to have even been smuggled into his cell on Alcactraz.

Today, Templeton is attempting to infiltrate bars everywhere with the return of its old style bottle and cork closure, recalling days of yore. The label boasts “Prohibition Era Recipe,” and the back of the bottle has a hand-written bottling date on it. (Mine was bottled “05-07-2008.” How cool is that?)

Crack it open and take a whiff of the strong and spicy aroma, then prepare your tastebuds for a journey to yesteryear. I have a feeling that what was drunk in the 20’s was as smooth as today’s version, despite the hearkening to authenticity. Templeton Rye is aged in charred oak barrels, and has a rich amber color. It is smooth on its own and would lend itself nicely to a short, chilled whiskey cocktail.

They say that every dark cloud has its silver lining. If Templeton Rye is something good that came from the gloomy Prohibition era, I’ll raise a glass to the law-avoiding citizens who didn’t let Uncle Sam (and the conservative regime of the day) dictate their simple life pleasures.

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

My New Favorite : Red Stag

Ok, all your whiskey snobs out there, get ready to sneer, scoff and fall down in convulsions… yes, there is a flavor-infused bourbon on the market. Black cherry, in fact. It is called Red Stag by Jim Beam. And, I'm diggin' it.

Excuse me while I get a bit sexist on you for a minute… but I have to say that the marketing is quite clever with this one. The label smacks of masculine pastimes: A pair of red antlers (as if they’ve just be carved of some poor buck’s head), bold lettering, no pretty pictures of animals or fruits. The bottle looks true to the Southern Good Old Boys’ bourbon, made at Jim Beam. However, the luscious black cherry-infused, slightly candy-esque elixir might be strong enough for a man (at 80 proof) but it is oh-so made for a woman. If there are any ladies out there who are still too intimidated to cross over to the “dark” side and try the brown spirits, this is your gateway drug.

Red Stag is a no-brainer option for Manhattans and Muddled Old Fashioneds. (Yes, rye-lovers, I said it. Black cherry bourbon in your drink. Open your minds.) Its flavor profile also opens up a million avenues for new bourbon cocktails, considering its high mixability factor. I, personally, cannot wait to start serving some of my new concoctions to friends. Oh screw the friends, I’m making one for myself, this afternoon. Why wait?

The name is a tribute to the red stag elk who were hunted to extinction in the wilds of Kentucky (and surrounding areas) over the last two centuries. However, in 1997 conservationists (otherwise known in the South as freedom-hating liberals from the North) re-introduced the native mammals to the region. The Jim Beam company pays homage to the majestic animal with their fine, new product.

Fight me to the end, whiskey purists everywhere, but I’m giving Red Stag black cherry-infused bourbon 'thumbs up.'