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Batch Boasts Big Bites

Clematis Street’s resident Southern restaurant offers new take-out specials and decadent dishes for dine-in

The post Batch Boasts Big Bites appeared first on Palm Beach Illustrated.

The new normal: Distanced dining

As the world eases out of lockdowns, some restaurants are adapting to the new normal in refreshingly inventive ways.

The post The new normal: Distanced dining appeared first on The Peak Magazine.

The new normal: Distanced dining

Distanced Dining Mediamatic Amsterdam

As the world eases out of lockdowns, some restaurants are adapting to the new normal in refreshingly inventive ways.

For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.

Exclusive: A Michelin 3-Star Chef and Master Somm Want You to Join Them for Dinner and a Show

Dominique Crenn, Carlton McCoy and a cast of friends lead this year's (virtual) All-Star Chef Classic.

Exclusive: A First Look at the Luxe Steakhouse Menu in Las Vegas’s First Adults-Only Casino

Whole Maine lobster mac, wagyu, tomahawks and more.

Chateau Dionne Kuala Lumpur – French Fine Dining Restaurant in Damansara Heights

[Premium Dining] With its origins in the Asian megalopolis dubbed the ‘Oriental Paris’ or Paris of the East a.k.a. Shanghai,Continue Reading

New York Restaurants Face a Dire Future—and We’re Partly to Blame

As the weather turns, restaurateurs will bear the brunt of a failed Covid-19 response.

One of America’s Most Esteemed Restaurant Groups Will Lay Off More Than 500 Employees

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A Michelin 3-Star Chef Explains How to Make the Perfect Steak Tartare at Home

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The 5 Best Hong Kong Brunches to Satisfy Your Cravings

Fifty metres underground — this is the depth that local winemakers chose when they decided to store 10,000 wine bottles in the Aven d'Orgnac caves, an underground tourist attraction located at the southern end of the limestone plateau of the Gorges de l'Ardèche.

The experiment began in March 2018, when a new storage facility was specially created in a disused access tunnel to allow wine to mature in what amounts to a highly stable and peaceful environment.

A living product that ages best in undisturbed darkness, the wine will have benefited from ideal conditions: A constant temperature of around 12°C and an all-year-long rate of humidity of over 95%.

On December 12, 1,000 bottles of Côtes du Vivarais "Grand Aven 2017" from this treasure trove will be passed from hand to hand by a chain of human volunteers who will bring them back to the surface after two years underground. Thereafter, they will go under the hammer with a range of other local vintages in an auction with modest reserve prices.

wine underground
The Aven d'Orgnac caves. (Photo: Robert de Joly/ Ludovic Fremondiere/ Aven d'Orgnac Grand Site de France)

Lots on offer will include 150 magnums of Terra Helvorum 2017 starting at 30 euros, 350 bottles of 2015 Terra Helvorum for as little as 15 euros and 350 bottles of Grand Aven 2016 from just 10 euros.

On land and sea

These days, experiments to store wine deep underground are very much in vogue in France. On June 3 of this year, 500 bottles were placed in racks at a depth of 103 metres in caves in Padirac under the watchful eye of Serge Dubs, the Best Sommelier of the World in 1989.

The first of these to return to the surface will be brought up for an initial tasting in the spring of 2021. And let's not forget that this experiment is focused on a very particular wine: A Clos Triguedina Cahors, christened Cuvée Probus, which has been produced to honour the 130-year anniversary of the Padirac Chasm.

wine underground
Ardèche winemakers have stored 10,000 bottles at a depth of 50 metres in the Aven d'Orgnac cave system. (Photo: Vignerons Ardèchois/ AFP)

Surprisingly enough, this new approach to maturing wine was initially inspired by a find at sea. In 2010, divers in the Baltic discovered a wreck containing what turned out to be a cargo of champagne, which was probably on its way to 1840s Russia.

The wave of experimentation that is now ongoing began when the bubbly, which was made by such houses as Veuve Clicquot, Heidsieck and the now defunct Juglar, was discovered to still be delicious after some 170 years under water.

In Saint-Jean-de-Luz in the French Basque country, winemaker Emmanuel Poirmeur has registered a patent for a process that involves vinifying wine in special vats at a depth of 15 metres under water. For its part, Leclerc-Briant set a record when it vinified one of its champagnes at a depth of 60 meters under the Atlantic in 2012, not surprisingly the vintage was christened "Abyss."

The post The 5 Best Hong Kong Brunches to Satisfy Your Cravings appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.

Watch How the Chef Behind NYC’s Meatball Shop Creates Handmade Agnolotti From Scratch

Daniel Holzman shows you it's easier than you think.
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