Alex the Wine Gal Presents ~ Cheap Tuesdays!


Cheapy Tuesdays! I don’t know about you, but I always thought that Tuesdays are the worst day of the week. It is still the beginning of the week and has not yet passed the halfway mark. Tuesdays just make the week seem so much longer! There are of course Cheapy Tuesdays at the movies which makes this day of the week seem a little bit more exciting but I would prefer to spend my Tuesday night with my girlfriend catching up about what we did on the weekend and bitching about our long week ahead over a nice bottle of wine to take off the edge. This is exactly what I did last Tuesday! It just so happens that my good friend Heather and I found out a couple of months ago that Restaurant L’Academie offers 10$ pasta and mussels Sunday through Wednesday evenings!  Well it used to be 10$ anyways, they did hike up their prices to 11, 95$, however your meal does come with soup or salad so I still see it as a good deal considering its byow.  There are many byow  French/Italian restaurants downtown that offer far better selection and taste, however, when I am looking for a good, midweek, last minute restaurant, this is a good dining option. Both my friend Heather and I work in the city, so we meet at the SAQ in the faubourg, pick up a bottle each (no judgment- I did say Tuesdays are quite the brutal day, one bottle is simply not enough) and walk over to l’academie on crescent street. No Hassle! Heather is going through a red phase, so I picked up a bottle of white for myself. Chardonnay/Sauvignon C'est la Vie vin de pays d'Oc 2010

C’est la vie- a French fruity chardonnay/sauvignion wine. A few of my friends always buy the red equivalent and love it. It happened to come in white so I decided to give it a try. Let me tell you, the sweet, fruity taste of the wine paired with my tortellini rose was a great combination. I managed to polish off both very nicely. It was a very giggly evening. And of course what’s a Tuesday night without a movie. Long story short we somehow ended our evening in lovely Lasalle watching the Muppet movie. That story is for another blog another time.   I highly recommend this  byow (Bring Your own Wine) dinner+movie combination to any girl looking for some female bonding time. It definitely livens up your week a little bit. Even if you have an early morning the next day, it would have all been worth it and you will be laughing about the drunk stupidities you and your girlfriend talked about after finishing a bottle of wine each.  On another note, I will be going to Bombay Mahal this Thursday night with some friends and bringing a newbie with me :o ) It shall be a delightful Bombay/Barefoot evening! Love you all… Alex! xo

Friday Night Lights…Indian Cuisine & Barefoot Cellars Pinot Grigio Wine!

Friday Night Lights Review ~ Indian Cuisine & Barefoot Cellars Pinot Grigio Wine! Where? Montreal,Quebec, Canada with Alex the Wine Gal 

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Friday at Bombay! Bombay Mahal, located at 1001 Jean-Talon Ouest, has got to be one of the best indian restaurants Montreal has to offer. Yes, it is perhaps not in the trendiest part of town. Yes, it is perhaps not the most well decorated restaurant in Montreal.However, I can assure that this “hole in the wall” will make you crave indian food on a weekly basis. I first found out about this hidden gem a while back, one of my indian friends recommended it. They had nothing but good things to say and always hired them to do the catering for their special occasions. I don’t know about you, but when someone recommends a restaurant that serves food of the same ethnicity, you know it must be like real home cooked food!
*** Wine from India on Sezmu.com
- Buy Now!

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LA ROUTE DES VINS – THE WINE ROUTE

THE WINE ROUTE OF QUEBEC!
Located near the American border, at fourty minutes south of Montreal, nests the splendid region of Brome-Missisquoi where Quebec’s viticulture adventure begins.In 2003, Quebec’s first signed Wine Route was created.

Spanning 120 kilometres, the region offers its visitors a gigantic trail where interesting and varied finds await discovery.  Past curves, bends and hills, visitors will enjoy great wines, guided tours, local farm products, country picnics, artist workshops, outdoor activities, good restaurants, cozy B&Bs and welcoming local people.  Peruse the Wine Route’s cultural activities and event calendar and discover a multitude of interesting and varied cultural activities at our wineries.  Experience the Wine Route and its wineries four different ways: through our regional cuisine, our local products, the arts or sport and outdoor activities.

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LA ROUTE DES VINS:  Ωhttp://www.laroutedesvins.ca/
Située, sur la frontière américaine,
à quarante minutes au sud de Montréal, c’est dans la splendide région de Brome-Missisquoi que débute l’aventure de la vitiviniculture. Nos vignobles y mettent tout leur art et leur talent à élaborer des vins qui sauront vous surprendre et charmer vos sens.

La première édition de la Route des vins signalisée a vu le jour en 2003. Le principe en est fort simple : la région offre à ses visiteurs, sur ses 120 kilomètres de route, un parcours jalonné d’étapes, tel un gigantesque jeu de piste qui n’aurait d’autre but que de satisfaire tous les sens…

Ainsi, derrière les panneaux de signalisation qui parsèment la route, se cachent de savoureuses haltes au cœur de la région viticole : dégustations de vins, produits du terroir, visites, pique-niques champêtres, ateliers d’artistes, activités de plein air, bons restos, sympathiques auberges, accueillants producteurs… le plaisir de vivre… Profitez aussi de l’excellente programmation culturelle de la Route des vins, vous offrant une multitude d’activités des plus variées et intéressantes.   Juste pour le plaisir, profitez de la Route des vins et ses vignobles, de quatre façons : les bonnes tables, les produits du terroir, les arts et la culture et le plein air.

Congratulates Jamawn Woods & Soul Daddy for winning the America’s Next Great Restaurant competition!

Americas Next Great RestaurantEpisode 1.01 – Clip 1

 

Sezmu.com ~  Congratulates…..Jamawn Woods & Soul Daddy for winning the America’s Next Great Restaurant competition! Sezmu also Congratulates 2 Great Runner-Ups.. Sudhir Kandula – Spice Coast  & Joey Galluzzi – Brooklyn Meatball Company 

1st      Jamawn Woods    WINNER
T-2     Sudhir Kandula     RUNNER-UP
T-2     Joey  Galluzzi       RUNNER-UP

The Final Buzz Build Up!:
The remaining three contestants are to build a mini-restaurant in the former restaurant row area. Although the judges agree that Spice Coast’s food is good, they feel that Sudhir has imitated the Chipotle Mexican Grill concept too much in the number of Tex-Mex style items he has added to his menu. The customers and judges also feel Brooklyn Meatball Company’s food is excellent, but they must wait too long for it, as that restaurant’s problem organizing legible tickets leads to a backup.  Soul Daddy’s food is also a success, though Bobby Flay is disappointed that Jamawn has replaced his fried chicken with baked chicken in order to provide more healthy menu choice, and Lorena feels his food is too rich to eat more than once a week. NBC Episodes: Click Here!

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Congratulates Montrealer Chef Chuck Hughes & new Iron Chef America!

*Update:  
Quebec chef wins Iron Chef with Lobster Poutine
Chuck Hughes beats Bobby Flay to become youngest Canadian champ!
CBC News update
Montreal chef Chuck Hughes of  TV’s “Chuck’s Day Off”, left, and cooking superstar Bobby Flay by:

Montreal chef Chuck Hughes has to keep a lid on the details of his “Iron Chef America” TV battle against cooking giant Bobby Flay ahead of Sunday’s broadcast on Food Network Canada.

But the charismatic, tattooed star of the series “Chuck’s Day Off” does reveal that he adds a Canadian flair to his dishes in the pre-taped episode.  “I’m the eighth Canadian chef to go on ‘Iron Chef,’ but I’m the first Quebecer and I’m the first guy from Montreal, Hughes said in a recent interview.  “I want people to be happy of what they saw and say: ‘We’re proud of this Montrealer and this Canadian and we think he did the best that he could do and he represented us well.’”

At 34, Hughes is the youngest Canadian cook to compete on the series, in which chefs go up against the show’s resident culinary masters to create five gourmet dishes using a secret ingredient. The winner of each episode is determined by a panel of judges.  If Hughes wins, he’ll be just the second Canadian to have his cuisine “reign supreme,” as they say, on “Iron Chef America” (Vancouver’s Rob Feenie was the first).
Other Canadian chefs who’ve battled but lost on the series, a spin-off of a Japanese cult hit, include Michael Smith and Lynn Crawford.


Hughes — who focuses on simple comfort food at his Garde Manger restaurant — said he was asked to be on the series last year and accepted because “it’s a once-in-a-lifetime thing. You’re not going to be invited again.”  New York-born Flay was his first choice to compete against, even though no Canadian chef had beaten the guru of southwestern cuisine on the series before (Toronto’s Susur Lee tied Flay in 2006).
“I chose Bobby Flay because of his record. He doesn’t lose,” said Hughes, whose series airs on Food Network in Canada and on the Cooking Channel in the U.S.

“There’s Emeril (Lagasse) and then there’s Bobby Flay and those guys are like demigods in the cooking world in the U.S. So to have the honour to battle Bobby Flay was amazing.”  Hughes — whose arms are adorned with tattoos of food items, including lobsters, shrimp and bacon — took two of his Garde Manger cooking colleagues to help him in the competition last July in New York City.  Though they’d previously brainstormed on which dishes would work with virtually any secret ingredient (ravioli and risotto were among their ideas), they weren’t married to their concepts, he said.  “The bottom line is that there’s no real way to prepare for this.”  Before entering the Kitchen Stadium studio, Hughes got to meet all the “Iron Chef America” personalities backstage and spent about 10 minutes alone with Flay.

“When I met him I said, ‘Hi Bobby,’ and my voice cracked a bit and I gave him an official (Montreal) Canadiens jersey, to which he replied: ‘Thank you so much — but it’s not going to help,’” Hughes said with a laugh.” He was very polite and very nice and he gave me some great words of encouragement, and not necessarily for the battle but mostly for life.”
Once cameras started rolling and the secret ingredient was revealed, Hughes said he was “pleasantly surprised” with what it was.  “I actually kind of knew exactly where we were going to go with it, so it was kind of a perfect-case scenario.”

Then the heat set in. With every oven, light and burner on full blast, Hughes said he was “sweating buckets” and had to change his shirt during the battle.  Producers, who had warned him ahead of time to bring a second shirt, helped with the wardrobe change behind the scenes.  “They literally send a team like pit-crew style, rip the shirt off you, put another shirt on and say, ‘OK, OK, OK, get back in there,’” he said.
“It’s pretty intense.”

Hughes said he was very vocal during the challenge, talking to the cameras and the show’s commentators as he cooked.  “They’re like, ‘Is this guy for real? He never shuts up,’” he said with a laugh, noting he was “yelling in French” at one point.   “I’m thinking they’re going to keep a little bit of the French in the show. I’m hoping because it’s going to give it that special Quebecois feel.” Though Hughes can’t reveal the outcome, he does admit he was surprised by it.

“It’s weird because the whole time, I never once thought about that. … You don’t think about winning or losing.” The fact is, not to paraphrase Charlie Sheen, but you already think you’re ‘WINNING’ if you’re there.”