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Check, Please! Bay Area: Season 2: Pat Kuleto Special Episode (294)
Publisher |
KQED
Media Type |
video
Podknife tags |
Bay Area
Food
Restaurants
Reviews
Categories Via RSS |
Arts
Food
Publication Date |
Sep 21, 2007
Episode Duration |
Unknown
Bay Area restaurants profiled and reviewed: 1) Maria Manso World Cuisine : | restaurant information | reviews | recipe | [CLOSED] 2) Canto do Brasil: | restaurant information | reviews | recipe 3) Sociale: | restaurant information | reviews | recipe1 | recipe 2 |
Check, Please! Bay Area’s second season Pat Kuleto Special episode (294) profiles and reviews these three Bay Area restaurants: 1) Maria Manso World Cuisine : | restaurant information | reviews | recipe | [CLOSED] 2) Canto do Brasil: | restaurant information | reviews | recipe [now Mina’s Brazilian] 3) Sociale: | restaurant information | reviews | recipe1 | recipe 2 | Watch episode online (and on video iPod): Download episode (requires iTunes or QuickTime) Subscribe to Video Podcast View photo gallery (flickr.com) Maria Manso World Cuisine’s Pulled Pork Cabbage Roll; Canto do Brasil’s Seafood Tropical; Sociale’s Goat Cheese and Pear Galette My name is Leslie Sbrocco and I’m the host of Check, Please! Bay Area. Wines and cocktails highlighted on the show: When Pat Kuleto and I opened the show, we started by sipping a specialty Brazilian cocktail named a Caipirinha. It’s a delicious (and deceptively strong) concoction of freshly squeezed, or muddled, limes with a dash of sugar and cachaça. Cachaça is the Brazilian rum-like spirit made from sugar cane. Since we have both recently been to Brazil, we drank to the memories. Wine was also flowing as we chatted about Pat’s life as America’s foremost restaurant designer. With such star spots as Boulevard, Farallon, and Jardinière, his resume is impressive. But Pat is also a vintner, having started Kuleto Estate Family Winery high in the hills above Napa Valley in 1992. Kuleto Estate’s roster of wines includes Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Syrah, Sangiovese, and two wines we imbibed on set — his lovely Rosato and Pinot Noir. The pink sapphire-hued 2006 Kuleto Estate Rosato is seriously fun to drink. Bursting with watermelon and berry flavors, it’s a dry pink with style. Kuleto Estate’s 2004 Pinot Noir would give any other wine pinot envy. Made with grapes grown at over 1,000 feet elevation in Napa, it’s lush yet racy with a silky texture. Packed with rich fruit notes, the Pinot is a wine to enjoy with dishes from fish to meat. Other wines we showcased included a favorite of mine, the 2006 Eroica Riesling from Washington State. The lightly-sweet, floral-scented white is one of the best versions of Riesling produced in America. A partnership between Washington’s oldest winery, Chateau Ste. Michelle and the famous Dr. Loosen winery in Germany, it’s a winner with spicy fare. To wrap up our half hour together, I poured some “stickies” for Pat. The Aussies dub their sweet wines “stickies,” though I call them bellybutton sippers as these sexy wines induce romance. Our first bottle was the 2005 Yalumba Late Harvest Viognier from Australia. Yalumba is a top-notch producer who ranks among the best Viognier makers in the world. This succulent sweetie is like drinking peaches. Our wine pièce de résistance, however, was the rare Gypsy Canyon Ancient Vine “Angelica”.

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