by Jenise » Sat Dec 22, 2007 1:20 pm
Years ago when I had to "dress for success", because of a relatively rare shoe size it was easier for me to buy first the shoes then an outfit to match vs. the normal other-way-around. Some wines are like that.
And if I had a second bottle of 1989 Chante Perdrix Chateauneuf du Pape, which I don't, I would allow it to be served with nothing other than Chicken Mirabella, a braised dish I know of but had never had where the chicken is soaked in a prune and olive marinade for a day or three before it goes in the oven.
Never had before Friday night, that is, when the dish was made by our good friend Vic Kritz, and we were the lucky ones invited to dinner. I took three bottles of wine because this CdP was a leaker and it would have been folly to leave home without a backup, and because the likelihood of needing a backup was high I took a backup for the backup. What didn't get opened, I would leave with our host.
And the CdP turned out to be more than okay, even if not a pristeen bottle--no oxidated or 'off' flavors. The cork came out whole but was saturated.
Obviously, since I chose that bottle I thought that any decent aged CdP would be a pretty good match for the dish as I understood it to be. But this was way beyond good, it was the kind of food-wine match you only get maybe once every couple of years, it was perfect, it was sublime, it was seamless: the savory meat and olives (green & black), the sweet mustiness of the prunes with the age of the wine--it was all there both on the plate and in the glass.
I will aspire to serve my best CdP's with this dish in the future.
Now would be the point where I should post a recipe, but I don't have Vic's exact recipe to post. He did, however, say he found dozens of copies on the internet and little variation between versions. Nearly all were attributed to the Silver Palate Cookbook. It's easy to find, in other words, and it's reliable.
Last edited by Jenise on Sun Dec 23, 2007 2:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.