Rose Veal

Rose Veal
I must be getting old joke?no not me..lol?

Every Friday night, two elderly couples go out to dinner. The men sit in front of the car.
Roy says to Harold, “Where should we go tonight?”
Harold says, “How about that place we went to a month ago. The Italian place with the
great lasagna.”
Roy says,” I don’t remember it.”
Harold says, “The place with the veal.”
Roy says, “I don’t remember. What’s the name of the place?”
Harold can’t remember. “A flower. Gimme a flower.
“Tulip?” Roy says.
“No, no. A different flower.”
“Magnolia?”
“No, no. A basic flower.”
“Rose?”
“That’s it!” Harold turns to the back seat.
“Rose, what was the name of that restaurant?”

Have I heard that one before?

Rose VealRose Veal
Rose Veal

I Love French Wine and Food – A Rose From Provence

If you are hankering for fine French wine and food, why don’t you should consider the world famous Provence region in southeastern France? You may even find a bargain wine in this sun-drenched ideal tourist location, marred only by the excessive number of tourists. I hope that you’ll have fun on this fact-filled wine education tour of this French candidate for paradise in which we review a local rose wine.

Provence ranks number nine in acreage among France’s eleven wine-growing regions. Over half of Provence wine is rose wine, some excellent and some that leave much to be desired. One of the problems, believe it or not, is excessive sun, which can almost literally bake the grapes much as it bakes your skin. The wine reviewed below is a Cotes de Provence made out of eight grape varieties ranging from the local Rolle (it has other names in Corsica and Italy) to the international Cabernet Sauvignon.

If money is no object you may choose to visit St.Tropez, a Mediterranean port made famous by Brigitte Bardot and to a lesser extent by the French writer Guy de Maupassant and painters including Matisse. I won’t list today’s glitterati often spotted in the area. For a change of pace visit the Musee de l’Annonciade (Annunciation Museum), a Fourteenth Century chapel. Stroll through the old town and stop by the Sixteenth Century Citadelle (Citadel) overlooking the city and the sea. You may even want to play petanque, a local form of bowling. Did I suggest that you bring plenty of money?

Before we review the Cotes de Provence wine and local cheeses, here are some suggestions of what to eat with indigenous wines when touring this beautiful region. Start with Tapenade (Chopped Olives, Capers, Anchovies, and Olive Oil). For your second course savor Gardienne de Taureau (Bull Stew in Red Wine). And as dessert indulge yourself with Clafoutis d’abricot (Apricot Custard).

OUR WINE REVIEW POLICY All wines that we taste and review are purchased at the full retail price.

Wine Reviewed Petale de Rose, Regine Sumeire, Cotes de Provence 2007 13.5% about $15

Let’s start by my sight translation of the marketing materials. Its color reminds one of a low-intensity onion peel. Its aroma is delicate with subtle whiffs of small red fruits and vanilla. Enjoy this dry rose’s good acidity and fairly long finish. Suggested food pairings include stuffed mushrooms, braised ham, lobster stew, grilled salmon, grilled trout, and veal saute.

Before the first meal I sipped some of this wine. It was light, refreshing, and somewhat long. It was summer in a glass. The meal consisted of chicken meatballs slow cooked with soft wheat kernels. The wine tasted of grapefruit. It was feathery with nice acidity and did a great job of cutting the meat’s grease. In the presence of roasted eggplant with lots of garlic (as in Provence) the wine became rounder.

The second tasting involved a barbecued chicken breast, potatoes roasted in chicken fat, and green beans in a tomato sauce. The rose tasted of light cherries. It was softly acidic and nicely long. The word feathery popped up again. I had the feeling that there were some dark red grapes hiding in this wine. I was a little disappointed when the wine was flattened by fruit juice candy.

The final meal consisted of a red pepper and a Portobello mushroom omelet. The rose was sweet, light, refreshingly acidic, and not very fruity. When paired with a high-quality French lemon pie with a buttery crust the wine lost its sweetness. There was a note of citrus in the background but it was clearly overpowered.

The first cheese pairing was with a local Provolone. At first the cheese seemed to flatten the wine. Later it was nicely acidic, round, and light. With a marbled Cheddar the wine was definitely muted. But it did return to normal when I finished the cheese.

Final verdict. I would definitely buy this wine again. I have been reviewing a lot of $10 wines and this one is clearly in a different league. But as so often, it’s important not to waste it on inappropriate food pairings.

About the Author

Levi Reiss has authored or co-authored ten computer and Internet books, but really prefers fine Italian or other wine, with good food and company. He loves teaching computer classes at an Ontario French-language community college. His global wine website www.theworldwidewine.com features a weekly review of $10 wines and new sections writing about and tasting organic and kosher wines. His Italian travel website is www.travelitalytravel.com .

How important is it to have options on your menu?

We are not providing our wedding guests with any options. Our wedding is in Europe (where my partner is from), and apparently it is not the norm there. We are having:

Red snapper and an herbed clafouti/asparagus
Apple sorbet between
Veal with a mushroom sauce, a poached apple, and potatoes anna
A mini creme brulee, a mini chocolate cake thing, and a mini rose/praline cream dessert

There are no vegetarians on my partner’s guest list (or so they told me, and scoffed at the very idea). I have only about 30 people coming from my side, and 2 of them are vegetarians. They said they don’t mind and will just eat the side dishes (plus there’s TONS for the cocktail hour). Is it really terrible not to provide options on the menu? What would you think?
I didn’t mean to add “Dessert” on the end there. The one above IS the dessert. And I meant asparagus + clafouti for the starter.

It is not the norm in Europe to provide options, most places won’t let you and those that do charge an arm and a leg for it however most places do also provide a vegetarian option, no where we looked at didn’t do one also where any other special diets are concerned they will always cater to those as well, ie coeliacs disease. I have a coeliac and a vegetarian in the wedding party. We need to pick one main dish for our venue but then there will also be a vegetarian option that anyone can choose on the day if they wish and we are going to sit down with the chef and go through the options to ensure that the main dish is gluten free. Of course Europe is a very big place with a variety of cultures and attitudes, looking at the menu and the response to vegetarians I’m wondering if your marrying in France, they don’t seem to have a tolerance to difference there, we’ve always found Austria to be a much more tolerant place and easier to feed everyone.

@ CJ’s mummy, although as the person organising the wedding you have a choice your guests would not, I’ve been to plenty of sit down weddings and the bride and groom make the choice for the meal at most venue’s will allow you to choose 2 but would expect exact numbers beforehand for each meal. You do pay extra though to have that choice.

Gordon Ramsay’s Britsh Rose veal with marsala sauce – The F Word

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