Come along with me, Clarisse LaGrone, your San Francisco blogger, as I throw on my pumps with the Bay Area as my catwalk. Together we will discover the newest hot spots and trends to hit the Bay Area.

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Dessert Wine Notes: Hardys 2003 Botrytis Semillon


Hardys 2003 Botrytis Semillon is 11.5% abv. and packaged in 375 ml. bottles. The wine is 18.2 brix at harvest and the wine has residual sugar of 210 grams per liter. The Hardys Winery in South Eastern Australia was established in 1853 and they have been making fine wines, including dessert wines, what the Aussies call 'stickies' for over 150 years. Their wines are made from premium grapes sourced from and grown in diverse areas and multiple vineyards then blended and crushed together depending upon the type and style of wine. This is the second vintage of Botrytis Semillon released in the US by Hardys, following the 2005 launch of their 2002 Botrytis Semillon. In the near future I will do a vertical tasting of the two and compare them. The color of the wine is a medium golden yellow, with a medium to full body with a nice, slightly syrupy mouth feel. It has that classic Australian "stickie" feel in your mouth, like many other fine dessert wines. The aroma is that of a combination of a young dessert wine type of fruits, like green apple and one of the sweeter pineapple varieties such as a 'Gold' or a South African 'Victoria'; and more mature wine flavors like golden sultana raisins. The taste is a melange of both young and mature wines, again with the afore mentioned pineapple and golden sultanas; as well as dried apricots, hints of figs, and honey, with a nice presence of botrytis, and carried by some slight oak. The finish is medium to long lasting and very complex as all the flavors meld together. This in excellent wine and at an approximate cost of $14.99 for 375 ml. it's a bargain as well.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

5A5 Steak Lounge



This modern and elegant American-Japanese steakhouse effectively blends classic with contemporary---as evinced by its enormous overhead focal point, a saucer-shaped light fixture outfitted with swirls of red and orange tinted recessed lighting. The adjacent lounge, comprised of sleek and stylish leather booths and ottomans, is a hip spot for after-work cocktails and bar bites.

This is one of my favorite happy hour spot in the entire financial district! My friend invited me over to a happy hour gathering a few weeks back and now I'm hooked. I love their happy hour specials for drinks and appetizers. Highly recommend their $1 oysters (Wednesdays), hamachi shooters (delicious!), and shishito peppers (best bargain). I've also come here for dinner a few times and tried their steaks.

My favorite is the buffalo steak, well done. Absolutely perfect! And, of course, you can't leave without trying their desserts. Bread pudding here was out of this world. Can't wait to go back and try more... and I still need to try their signature kobe A5 steak. My friends keep raving about it, so I'm saving up my money for that one.

Promotions
:

Happy Hour:
Mon – Sun: 5-7:30p (in front lounge)
HH Specials – 5@5 & Daily $2 bites

5@5
$5 wines, cocktails, beers and appetizers
Chicken Yakitori Skewers
Truffle Fries
2 Shooters for $5 (hamachi, oyster, salmon)

Daily $2 bites
Mondays -
seafood ceviche shooter

Tuesdays -
beef kebab with ikari aioli

Wednesdays/Thursdays -
$1 oysters on the half shell (min 6)

Fridays -
lobster bites with savory soy broth

H

Dinner:

Mondays -

50% off bottles from our wine list

Wednesdays
'Steak Tasting' Night
3- 4oz filet steaks $60
* Australian Kobe
* American Certified Angus Beef
* Buffalo


5A5 Steak Lounge
244 Jackson St. (Battery St. )
San Francisco, CA 94111
415-989-2539

Monday, March 15, 2010

Dark-chocolate and pomegranate



Pomegranates have become the new "it" food, the foodie equivalent of the latest Hollywood starlet. Loaded with almost three times the anti-oxidant properties of green tea or red wine, pomegranates are being used as ingredients in everything from juices to brownies to ice cream. Meanwhile, chocolate has long been known to be a mood lifter, and dark chocolate (in moderation) has more recently been touted as a health food with magical plant flavonoids that reduce the risk of blood clots and clogged arteries. So, what better than to combine mood-enhancing, healthy dark chocolate with another healthy food like pomegranates to create the ultimate super food? In 2009, chocolate without guilt is no longer an oxymoron!

Comfort foods with a twist


Think any comfort food from your childhood upgraded to an adult food with one or two key ingredients switcheroos. For instance, instead of using American cheese for your grilled cheese sandwich, you might use gouda or sharp cheddar, add hoisin sauce and hot Asian mustard (see photo), or grill your sandwich in a pannini press. For meatloaf, you might add some chipotle chiles for a nice flavor kick or sub ground turkey for the beef to make it heart healthier. When times are tough, comfort food is always, well... comforting, and let's face it, times are tough. Even President Obama says so.