男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
USEUROPEAFRICAASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
Travel
Home / Travel / Travel

Days and Knights

By Rebecca Lo | China Daily | Updated: 2012-05-28 17:22

Days and Knights

Clockwise from above: The chapel that gives its name to Jaboulet's best wine La Chapelle; The carrot and orange blossom-jello and carrot mousse brewed yoghurt in Maison Pic; Hotel les 2 Coteaux across Rhone river bridge; Sturdy horses till the rocky soil of Tain l'Hermitage. Photos by Rebecca Lo / China Daily

France's Rhone Valley offers three-Michelin starred dining and a wine that topped the list in the court of Louis XIII. Rebecca Lo loosens her belt to indulge.

'You know that Anne-Sophie Pic is super famous and trendy currently in France?" says my Paris-born friend Caroline. Being the back bacon-loving Canadian that I am, of course I was clueless. But I do know that Pic is warm, friendly and unlike any other French chef I have ever met. It just so happens that she runs Maison Pic, one of the best three-Michelin starred restaurants in the world, and hails from four generations of restaurant owners.

Pic, her grandfather Andre and father Jacques all acquired and retained three-Michelin stars in their lifetimes. Perhaps the only reason her great-grandmother Sophie Pic wasn't starred was because the guide wasn't invented yet when she ran the show.

The point is driven home in subtle ways. At Maison Pic in Valence, there is a long glass ensconced display table that, upon closer inspection, contains all of the Michelin guides ever published in France.

That would be exactly 112 volumes. Pic's family restaurant is featured in more of them than not.

The many intimate portraits and handwritten recipes scattered throughout the establishment illustrate how a successful restaurant is maintained: through hard work by people who care about craftsmanship.

We enjoy an epicurean menu with a few surprises that Pic threw in just to keep things interesting, drinking water out of Baccarat crystal goblets. Wines by Paul Jaboulet Aine match every dish carefully, with Jaboulet's winemaker Caroline Frey joining us for the main course.

She urges us to try two different vintages of La Chapelle, the best of the best from Jaboulet's repertoire.

Even for a wine dummy like myself, I could taste the difference, with the more mature 2004 complementing our venison better than the 2009.

The 1961 La Chapelle has the distinction of being one of Wine Spectator's top 10 Wines of the Century, and retails for 10,000 euro ($12,680) - if you are lucky enough to find a bottle.

Jaboulet's fame is legendary. In the 13th century, during the end of the Albigensian Crusade, a knight returned home and lived out the rest of his days in the hills of Tain l'Hermitage.

Chevalier Gaspard de Sterimberg erected a chapel dedicated to Saint Christopher, the patron saint of travel, to honor him for offering protection during the Crusades.

For his remaining days, De Sterimberg lived as a hermit, tending daily to the transplanted Syrah vine he brought back from his travels.

The perfect storm of solar exposure, rocky granite terroir and careful cultivation soon yielded one of the best wine regions in the world, with the knight's lifestyle choice immortalized in the name of the region: Hermitage. By 1642, Louis XIII made wine from Hermitage a regular item served at court.

De Sterimberg's chapel was acquired by the house of Paul Jaboulet Aine in 1919, though many of the vineyards surrounding it have been parceled up over the years.

After the passing of Gerard Jaboulet, who propelled his family's winery to international acclaim, his heirs couldn't decide on Jaboulet's future direction.

In 2006, Lausanne-based financier Jean-Jacques Frey bought Jaboulet. He installed his eldest daughter, Caroline, as head of a 20 to 30 something-year-old team of horticulturalists and winemakers eager to establish their mark on the next generation of Jaboulet wines.

The mother of toddler Elise, Caroline Frey shuttles back and forth weekly between her winery Chateau La Lagune in Bordeaux, her home in Valence close to Jaboulet's winemaking facilities and Lausanne, where her businessman husband resides.

She usually drives between the three cities across two countries' vastly different terrain, her baby calmly sleeping and her smart phone within easy reach.

The former equestrian champion hails from a family of winery owners; born in Champagne, she was exposed to the management of winemaking from an early age.

She apprenticed under Denis Dubourdieu, one of the most sought-after winemakers by budding Chinese wineries. Frey is known for her remarkable sense of timing, judging by taste when grapes have reached the optimal time for harvesting - almost down to the exact hour.

"Winemaking is like working with horses: I have to be humble and modest," says Frey. "I have to work a lot to manage and understand them, to get the best out of them. Vineyards are the same. I have to be sensitive to small details."

The depth and scope of Jaboulet's wines are apparent throughout its collection of reds and whites.

With acres spanning the entire extent of the Rhone, from Condrieu south of Lyon to Chateauneuf du Pape near Avignon, Jaboulet's central territories in the terraced Hermitage yield Syrah. Meanwhile, nearby pastures in Crozes Hermitage yield predominantly Marsanne and Rousanne.

The 40- to 60-year-old vines that produce the very low-yield grapes for La Chapelle give it complexity and an intense ruby-red color. Its exceptionally long finish lingers with me as we drove away from the restaurant.

By this time, we have acquired a sweet tooth and head to the retail outlet of Valrhona chocolates, made just down the street from our Hotel les 2 Coteaux.

There is also a nearby chocolate school operated by Valrhona that teaches pastry chefs how to work with the product precisely and elegantly.

Considered one of the best chocolate makers in the world, the shop is bustling with pilgrims who kneel at the altar of Valrhona's liquid gold - its hot chocolate bar fills up mugs of the rich, steamy nectar non-stop.

All manner of chocolate and chocolate-related paraphernalia abound. Baking chocolate, gift-wrapped chocolate, coffee beans covered in chocolate, chocolate sticks to dip into espresso, nutty chocolate, fruity chocolate, whisks for incorporating chocolate into batter - you name it, you'll find it.

I was stymied: I really wanted to take home the entire store. After pacing back and forth staring at all the potential calories I could consume, I finally settle upon a kilogram of assorted gift wrapped chocolates to share with family and friends back home, plus a few chocolate covered orange sticks to enjoy at tea time.

Cashing out, the Valrhona clerk fills up the extra space in my bag with chocolate samples - welcome treats as I can then try many of the other products I grudgingly had to pass up.

I decide to end my Rhone Valley experience by exploring the pretty hamlets of Tain l'Hermitage and Touron for the remainder of my time in France - so that I can at least try to fit into my clothes again before boarding my flight home. Well, one can hope.

Days and Knights
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
主站蜘蛛池模板: 佛坪县| 双桥区| 垦利县| 芜湖市| 海原县| 漠河县| 防城港市| 蛟河市| 宜川县| 高雄市| 尉犁县| 西吉县| 马边| 乌兰县| 沧州市| 静海县| 宁城县| 桐庐县| 轮台县| 荣成市| 汽车| 新邵县| 五台县| 视频| 原阳县| 宜兰市| 海兴县| 普兰店市| 当涂县| 金溪县| 象州县| 都江堰市| 永仁县| 石嘴山市| 红河县| 陆河县| 城口县| 宜阳县| 仁寿县| 义马市| 滦南县| 荥经县| 宝山区| 紫云| 温州市| 兰州市| 上饶市| 白朗县| 清徐县| 龙井市| 册亨县| 类乌齐县| 环江| 房产| 酉阳| 鄂托克前旗| 韩城市| 定兴县| 二手房| 锡林浩特市| 凤阳县| 咸阳市| 得荣县| 靖远县| 兰坪| 云浮市| 琼中| 上思县| 焉耆| 商丘市| 满城县| 囊谦县| 保德县| 松阳县| 光山县| 安康市| 洪洞县| 新沂市| 德安县| 成武县| 纳雍县| 福鼎市|