Check, Please! Bay Area Season 12 reviews: Jannah-Baghdad by the Bay, Kin Khao, El Aguila Mexican Cuisine
Publisher |
KQED
Media Type |
video
Podknife tags |
Bay Area
Food
Restaurants
Reviews
Categories Via RSS |
Arts
Food
Publication Date |
May 18, 2017
Episode Duration |
00:28:00
Check, Please! Bay Area reviews an Iraqi restaurant in San Francisco, a spot serving Thai home-style cooking in San Francisco, and an eatery offering up farm-to-table freshness combined with Southern Mexican cuisine in Pleasant Hill.
Check, Please! Bay Area Season 12 episode 6 airs Thursday, May 18 at 7:30pm on KQED 9. See other television airtimes. And never miss an episode by subscribing to the video podcast. Stop at a hidden gem and experience flavors from Arabian nights and desert sands at an Iraqi spot called Jannah - Baghdad by the Bay in San Francisco. Next, we stay in the city to taste the fiery Thai home-style cooking at Kin Khao. Finally, it's time to visit a Pleasant Hill strip mall where farm-to-table freshness joins Southern Mexican sauces and stews at El Aguila Mexican Cuisine. Host Leslie Sbrocco and guests having fun on the set of season 12 episode 6. (Wendy Goodfriend) Get Restaurant Information: * Jannah - Baghdad by the Bay (San Francisco) * Kin Khao (San Francisco) * El Aguila Mexican Cuisine (Pleasant Hill) Host Leslie Sbrocco tasting wine. (Wendy Goodfriend) My name is Leslie Sbrocco and I'm the host of Check, Please! Bay Area. Each week, I will be sharing my tasting notes about the wine, beer, and spirits the guests and I drank on set during the taping of the show. I will also share some wine, beer and spirits tips with each episode. This week I discuss: Size does matter! About the different sizes of wine bottles. 2015 von Schubert, Maximin Grünhäuser Abtsberg Riesling Spätlese, Mosel-Saar-Ruwer, Germany $29 On my first trip to Germany, I had the fortune of visiting the bucolic winery, Weingut Maximin Grünhaus, and meeting Carl von Schubert, a legend in Riesling. The von Schubert family estate stretches as far as the eye can see up the steep slopes of the river valley and includes three famed vineyards: the Abtsberg, the Herrenberg, and the Bruderberg. All unique, each vineyard produces wines of distinction. I have a personal love for the Abtsberg, which refers to its history the place grapes were grown for the Abbey of St. Maximin. Vines have been planted in the blue slate soils for nearly 1,000 years. With just 7.5 percent alcohol, this ethereal, aromatic white smells of peaches and orange blossoms. The mouthfeel is delicate with a medium-sweet finish making it a wine to pair alongside fiery, spicy fare or fruit-based desserts. This is Riesling at its best. 2015 Martin Ray, Pinot Noir, Green Valley of Russian River Valley, Sonoma County, California $40 Martin Ray has a legacy as a California winemaking pioneer. Though the brand began in the Santa Cruz Mountains decades ago, it’s now based in one of the state's oldest continually-working wineries in Sonoma county. This fleshy yet perfumed Pinot Noir showcases the effects of growing grapes in the rich Gold Ridge soil of Russian River Valley’s special Green Valley. Here the fog lingers keeping temperatures cool, which ultimately creates wines of elegance and style. A beautiful red that will surprise and impress. 2015 “19 Crimes” Red Wine, South Eastern Australia $12

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