Match of the week

Foie gras and white Hermitage
Those of you who remember the post I wrote 10 years or so ago about why I wasn’t going to eat foie gras any more might reasonably ask how come it’s appearing in this match of the week?
I can’t really defend it other than to say I I never order it. If I’m asked before a meal if there’s anything I don’t eat I say foie gras but if it turns up on a menu at an event at which I’m being hosted like the Diner 4 Etoiles I attended at Tain l'Ermitage last week I take the rather weak-minded view that it would be rude to send it back. Which is how I’ve discovered what a great match it is with white Hermitage.
It also happened to be in the fabulous form of an artichoke and foie gras terrine, a signature dish from the two-Michelin-starred La Mère Brazier in Lyons. You’d think with the artichokes that might be tricky with wine but not at all. The richness of the Hermitage (I tried a couple with it including the 2013 Les Vins de Vienne La Bachole Blanc) offset it to perfection.
It bears out a theory I’ve held for a while that Sauternes, while a classic match, is not the perfect pairing for foie gras because it’s hard to kick off a meal with a sweet wine. A rich white like Hermitage, especially an older vintage is a better if somewhat more expensive option. The same would apply to a lush white burgundy or white Chateauneuf-du-Pape too.
I attended the dinner as a guest of Inter-Rhône.

Roast turbot with wild mushrooms and white Minervois
I spent last week in the Languedoc where we visit quite regularly so there weren’t many new food and wine discoveries to be made but I think the most thought-provoking match was a main course dish of roast turbot with girolles and a bottle of Château Cabezac 'Alice' 2008 from the Minervois I had at a restaurant in Agde called Le Bistrot d’Hervé.
Turbot is a fine fish and this was by no means a major wine but it was in the right register. It was an unoaked blend of Grenache Blanc, Muscat and Bourboulenc - earthy rather than fruity - which suited the slightly meaty texture of the fish and richness of the accompanying mushrooms. A better match would have been a fine white Rhône such as a Hermitage or Châteauneuf-du-Pâpe, a white burgundy (or similar cool climate Chardonnay), a traditional oak-aged white Rioja or a bottle of Champagne which, by coincidence, was what the table next door were drinking with their turbot (Pol Roger, to be precise).
I bet they paid a fair bit for it. I like the food at this restaurant but the mark-ups are excessive, even allowing for the exchange rate. The Cabezac ‘Alice’ sells at €5.50 from the domaine and they’re selling it for 21€, almost four times as much.
Starters are pricey too for a bistro - between 12€ and 16€ and there’s no set menu on a weekend evening. It seems that bistrots, spelt with a ‘t’ are as little related to bistros as gastropubs are to pubs these days. Even in a small town in France.
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