Thursday, September 30, 2010

Dining Deals

It has been a busy season for me with weddings and events and haven't had the energy to do much cooking. Therefore my husband and I have been eating out but trying to be cost conscience. We have found some really great deals that I wanted to share with you!

Pizza Papalis- Monday and Tuesdays $1 drafts and a pizza for around $18 easily shared between two people you are set. Bonus - go to the restaurant website you can print off coupons http://pizzapapalis.com/Home.aspx
Note: This is for the location Downtown Toledo.

Bar Louie - 'Tailgate' every football Sunday and get deals on food and drinks: $3.50 drafts and $5 grub menu, plus games to win prizes. Not into football but love a good burger head to Bar Louie on Tuesdays for $1 burgers. http://www.barlouieamerica.com/home/

Zia's Italian Restaurant - Free Pizza! Bring in six people who order a drink at the bar and receive a complimentary pizza. Get your free pizza on Saturday till 6:30pm and Sunday-Thursday till 9pm. www.ziasrestaurant.com

Rosie's Italian Grille - 'Wino Wednesdays': take $10 off any bottle of wine over $28.00. All appetizers and gourmet pizzas are half-off Sunday-Thursday in the bar. www.rosiesitaliangrille.com

Avenue Bistro - Happy Hour runs from 4-7pm Monday - Friday and offers a great selection of appetizers and beverage specials. Bonus - Josh Jardin was just voted 'Best Bartender' in the Toledo City Paper voted by their readers. www.centralavenuebistro.com

So next time you don't feel like cooking check out one of these spots for good food at a good price!

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Applebutter Fest

On Sunday, October 10, 2010, the Historical Society of Grand Rapids will be sponsoring its annual Applebutter Fest from l0AM to 5PM. You, your friends, and your family can spend the day celebrating the harvest season and all of its history, glory and tradition.34 years and hundreds of volunteers can only equal lots and lots of applebutter and plenty of down-home, old fashioned memories for tens of thousands of visitors to the scenic Victorian Canal Town, Grand Rapids, Ohio.

For more information on timing and location go to http://www.applebutterfest.org

This is one of my favorite Fall festivals! If you see an over-friendly goldendoodle licking everyone and two adults hollering "Lola down" that is us!


Photo from last years festival

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Bridging the Gap between Summer and Fall

As we are moving from Summer to Fall I found this fun article in the New York, The Sun by Peter Hellman. I enjoyed it and I hope you do too!

'If San Pellegrino water (with a twist of lime) was wine, I would have been in deep rehab during the waning summer days of late August. Summer is the time when I'm more eager to slice open a perfect Long Island tomato, or husk a just-picked ear of Hudson Valley corn, than to reach for a corkscrew.

But here's an essential fact about wine: Like wardrobes, this liquid has its own seasons. It would be as out-of-kilter to pour a fleshy, alcoholic Chateauneuf-du-Pape or a wham-bang Australian Syrah in the summer as it would be to suit up in wool tweeds. Even a cerebral white wine, such as a minerally Corton-Charlemagne, is off-limits on my table so long as the crickets still chirp loudly in the evening.

But it's now time for what I call "segue" wines, which are the equivalent of cotton sweaters. They're of a class whose duty it is to be not merely refreshing, like summer wines, or to carry weight and richness, like winter wines, but to be somewhere in between. They are the mid-weights that ease us into the season when the crickets become silent and the evenings turn crisp. That's a good time to look beyond the usual suspects, such as cabernet and chardonnay, for offbeat wines of modest profile that deserve more attention than they normally get. Below, I've suggested eight such segue wines, divided between red and white, all available at local shops.

With all due respect to the seasonality of wines, there is one example that effortlessly jumps all divides, and can perk up any hour of the day. It's called Champagne.

WHITES

Robert Mondavi Fumé Blanc Reserve 2004 ($34.89 at Bedford Wine Merchants, bedfordwines.com) — The word "fumé" is a seasonal key, evoking the woodsmoke of vineyard fires made from post-vintage vine cuttings. Mondavi himself coined the term "fumé blanc" in the 1960s, and the winery he founded is still its master. It's not a heavyweight, but barrel fermentation, rather than the usual stainless steel, makes this wine more textured than typical sauvignon blanc. You might even catch a whiff of that smokiness. Perfect with a flavorsome filet of late-summer striped bass.

Perrin Réserve, Côtes du Rhone Blanc 2007 ($9.99 at 67 Wines & Spirits, 67wine.com) — A blend of hot-clime grapes that get no respect on their own: Bourboulenc, Grenache blanc, Marsanne, Roussanne, and the like. They add up to a toothsome and spicy pour with that extra bit of weight appropriate to the season. An un-shy partner to Indian food.

Stadlmann Zierfandler Mandel-Höh 2006 ($26.93 at Crush Wine & Spirits, crushwineco.com) — Unique to the Thermen region south of Vienna, this age-worthy wine is a subtle spice bomb, and more fulsome than typical whites from neighboring Germany. It's more alcoholic, too. As Crush's Austrian specialist, Stephen Bitterolf, points out, Zierfandler's fennel and dark fruit profile is true to summer's end.

Etude Pinot Gris, Carneros 2006 ($23.18 at Cellarbrokers.com) — A wine with more body and presence than its Italian rendition as pinot grigio, this wine expresses late summer nectarine essences propelled by zingy acidity. Etude takes this wine as seriously as it does its pricey pinot noirs, using estate grapes augmented by batches from the esteemed Hyde Vineyards.

REDS

Chinon, Clos des Capucins 2005, Jean-Maurice Raffault ($28.99 at PJ Wine, pjwine.com) — Cabernet franc — the grape of Chinon — can be weedy, even nasty, when it is unripe. In a flawless vintage such as this one, the wine has tang and thrust, yet no great weight. There's a mushroomy undertone to this wine that verges on autumnal.

Lodola Nuova, Vino Nobile di Montepulciano Riserva 2000, Ruffino ($37.95 at Sherry-Lehmann, sherry-lehmann.com) — The scent and savor of this wine reminded me what it's like to deeply inhale while driving by the tobacco aging barns of the Connecticut Valley after harvest. A velvety red with reservoirs of gentle flavor, ready to partner with a root vegetable stew.

Bierzo "Petalos" 2006, Descendientes de J. Palacios ($18.99 at Garnet Wines & Liquors, garnetwine.com) — Much "new wave" Spanish wine is blockbuster in style, but not this Bierzo. Made from Mencia, a distinctive indigenous grape, the wine sends up lavender and leather aromas. Not the least bit heavy, but flavors do spread out generously in the mouth. A bargain.'

http://www.nysun.com/food-drink/bridging-the-gap-between-summer-and-fall-wines/85975/

photo from - caricawines.com