Sunday, August 8, 2010

From Germany to Sicily

Eastside Road, August 8, 2010—
A COUPLE OF FRIENDS VISITED today bringing a couple of bottles of very nice wine, making a perfect aperitif on the patio. Those fine German Rieslings are unique and necessary. Forty years ago we used to buy Rheingaus fairly cheap, say three dollars a bottle. I haven't bought a bottle like these we had today for years; that's not where our money goes; so I'm particularly grateful to friends who share them with us.
Wehlener Sonnenuhr Auslese, Joh. Jos. Prüm, 1990; Riesling Auslese, Josef Rosch, 1999
#alttext#SO AFTER POLISHING OFF the Rieslings we drove into town for something completely different, highly flavored and very nicely executed dishes at one of Healdsburg's most dependable, comfortable, user-friendly restaurants. Here we shared ciabatta and olive oil, a tomato-Romano bean salad, fried arancini, sardines in saor, and a particularly delicious Burrata with roasted eggplant, cherry tomatoes, and arugula. Secondi were rigatoni with peppers and house-made sausage and cheese-stuffed ravioli in an intense tomato sauce. We even split a dessert, the four of us; a dense Sicilian chocolate-and-nut cake. Come to think of it much of the dinner reminded me of Sicily; the wines, idiomatic and full of terroir, came from that island:
Insolia, Valle dell"agate, 2009; Nero d'Avola, Gulfi, Neroibleo, 2006
  • Scopa, 109 Plaza Street, Healdsburg; tel. (707) 433-5282; www.scopahealdsburg.com/
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