Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Sampling Piperade's Basque Classics

Alex, Cass and I had a very nice dinner last night at Gerald Hirigoyen’s Piperade. I have never had a bad dish there, and whenever I go I wonder why I don’t go more frequently, especially in the evening when the warm colors of the dining room really stand out.

We started off with glasses of sparkling Cava and some appetizers to share – a mushroom pie, some thinly sliced Serrano ham, and piquillo peppers stuffed with goat cheese and raisins. All very tasty, especially the peppers.

For our main courses, Cass had the sautĂ©ed calamari in an ink sauce (the Basque name is “txipiroa”) – one of the restaurant’s daily “Basque classics” – Alex opted for the duck breast and I chose the grilled lamb chops with sausage, all pictured below.




The lamb was especially good with what seemed to me to be a North African flavor profile including citrus and cumin, reminiscent of the
goat shanks I made a few months back (which included a rub of cinnamon, thyme, lemon peel, coriander, turmeric, salt and pepper).

For our wine, we had a 2001
Beronia Gran Riserva Rioja recommended by our waitress, Mirian.

It had a interesting flavor profile and went very well with all of our dishes. Here’s a tasting note for the wine that seemed right on to me, especially regarding the vanilla notes (and the lamb pairing!).

A blend of 88% Tempranillo, 8% Graciano and 4% Mazuelo. Bright red. Attractive aromas of candied cherry, plum and cedar, with vanilla and clove notes. Sweet, open-knit and nicely focused, offering palate-staining red and dark berry flavors and mounting vanilla and cocoa qualities. A musky herbal quality lingers on the long, sweet, sappy finish. There's a decadent quality to this wine that calls for lamb or a piece of dry-aged steak."- Stephen Tanzer

We have to get back to Piperade again soon.

1 comment:

  1. Thanks for reminding us about Piperade. Gerald is a wonderful cook. But what, no pasta?? Mike, would you e-mail me at fletcher@foodwriter.com? I have a favor to ask.

    ReplyDelete