Regional Vino, great NYC restauranter food and Charity!

I sit near the window the first of many humid evenings to come, enjoying a Three Philosophers brew from the Ommegang Brewery in Cooperstown, NY, which I was given by the Union Beer Distributors purveying at the Toast To The Children charity event I attended for the Children of Bellevue (CoB); held this evening at the Mandarin Oriental in Columbus Circle.

CoB is an event I’ve attended for two years now, thanks to several generous friends that have introduced me to the event and the cause that they work with. I’ve always donated since either my participation or fund to the developmental and social needs of pediatric patients at the hospital for which this event inspires. The event itself is an excellent draw of small plate samplings of some of the best restaurants in NY (Per Se, Craft, Hearth, A Voce to name a few), great international wine tastings, locally distributed brews, some jazz entertainment (noted this evening closer to live muzak) and a silent auction which offers everything from trips for the kids, a selection of Cuban cigars, jazz concert tickets, tennis lessons, art, symphony, restaurant gift certs and TV show tickets to local talk shows. It’s been rare that I win something as I’m not the guy that stays till the last minutes to ensure I get the last bid as I see some are serious enough to do so.

This evening some of my favorites were here: A voce had a great rigatoni with a lamb sauce, Craft and one of my top dishes with a pork butt lettus wrap, Tailor had a good pork belly, Perilla had great scallops served in their shell and Hearth offered a thinly shaved octopus app that was excellent as well. This year there were more wines and less beers. I sampled all the wines except the South African’s and found the Italian wines offered a better range, depth and nose (Great Montalcino); and then the French and a very nice Rhone blend Rasteau.

While at the event I bumped into Tom Colicchio, a board member for the cause and one of the purveyors of the best food offered this evening (Craft). He was chatting up Marco Canora, the head chef at Hearth. I found the exchange much friendlier than I perceived Tom from his demeanor on Top Chef (the only “reality” show I watch on cable), until I understood the history.

When Marco was sous chef at Gramercy Tavern, Tom’s first established ventures in NY, Tom pulled Marco to helm Craft in 2001 and soon grew the brand to include Craftsteak, Craftbar, ‘wichcraft and established ventures in Tokyo and Vegas.

Unfortunately I didn’t win any of the auction items this round but I did make friends with the brew masters and took home some samples (to much embarrassment of my fiancee – apparently it’s a faux pas to take home booze from a charity event – it was only getting trashed and how could I let that happen to good beer?!?). The gift bags were a little light this year, with only a few magazines, some pistachio chocolate “bark” and a Tava drink. Last year I received a $500 gift cert to H Stern and some health spa discounts.

The event was fantastic over all, the children will hopefully benefit from the money raised and donated excursions and influx of attention that’s much needed to assist these kids, and my palate and stomach are satisfied with plenty of wine and food from the evening… Looking forward to next year.

Paying more at the Grocer… WTF!!!

Yes, food prices have been driving up here in NY in the last year. Just the other day I noted my Chipotle burrito was now $7.50 instead of the $5.60 I had a little over a year ago. My OJ, now $5 a quart, and apparently all veggies, fruits and now rice are on the rise. Food prices are set to expand 5% this year. All because of fuel costs, shipping costs, a drought in Australia, asian shortages and other factors. At least my street meat is still $3 for carne asada tacos and $1 ny special dirty water dogs…

Sue Simmons of NBC comments more:

Honestly I hope she doesn’t get fired for this. I hear this on a daily basis from every NYer on the street… what ever…

At least she’s not Bill O’Reilly. What a fucking douche bag, asshole. This guy’s barely qualified to do Inside Edition. Watch him blow up for not understanding a simple out take.

No, really O’Reilly. If anything fucking sucks, it’s you.

Mid-town pretension

I don’t spend much time up town. Actually anything above 14th st or Union Sq for non-business reasons doesn’t get much time in for me unless it’s central park, a show, gallery or museum of my calling, or to see the woman. Tonight was one of those nights I was up for business to take some clients out; we met at the hotel bar that takes great care of us: Abboccato. George manages a great restaurant if you’re up for some unique and tasty Italian and Lana a non-drinker, knows her way around Italian wines and grappas.

On recommendation we took our guys up to. BLT Market on Central Park South, next to the Ritz. Already knowing the Ritz’s Star Lounge that connects the hotel and the restaurant, provides the cocktail service, I knew there’d be some pretense (and cost) for the evening heading here. As we walked in, I expected a wait, and greeted well by the hostess staff, they proclaiming we’d be eating in 20 min. Norman was the bartender this night and set us up nicely with some scotch whiskey.

20 minutes pass and then 30 then 40. Despite my own tardiness at times, I feel disrespected as a customer when restaurants don’t seat you at appropriate times. If the wait is 40 say Four-T, not 20 to appease the customer and apologize later.

Apparently it all got worse from there. Laurent Tourondel is New York’s famed French-born chef that is highly praised through out the city, however, this evening, the chefs and service were not executed to precision and made for one of my worst dining experiences in some time. The best part may have been the hot dog appetizers which were served free with the meal. I had a well cooked braised lamb but cod and duck were not cooked well. The service intermittent and being sat closest to the front door was the top irritant of the night.

I may be back but only on the recommendation and someone else’s dime. We spent the rest of the evening back at the hotel participating in grappa tastings and creating today’s hangover…