Spent the week afore the Fourth in
Austin for the USFA Summer Nationals. As usual, good food,
good wine, and great friends were an integral part of the
trip. I had solicited recs from WCWN & WLDG afore the
trip, so had a wealth of restaurants to choose from. Sunday
night (6/29/03); my fencing teammate, Jack Stafurik, and
I met Paul Levy (Judge, NJ Supreme Court), another of our
Veteran fencing colleagues who enjoys food & wine as
much as Jack and I, at Zoot Restaurant. The
manager and wine guy here is Gary Thompson, whom I had met
on my previous trip to Austin for Summer Nationals several
yrs ago. Zoot is a fairly new restaurant West of downtown
owned by the same two guys who run Wink, another highly
regarded restaurant. He also does the Wink wine list as
well. Better yet, the Chef is Michael Hall, who also is
the fencing coach at the Texas Fencing Academy. The cusine
at Zoot would be described as, I guess, New American Bistro,
with emphasis on fresh ingredients. The wine list is extensive,
very reasonably priced, and incredibly well-selected; there
were quite a few things on there I'd have loved to try.
But, since the next day was a heavy- fencing day, moderation
was the call this night. The wines:
- Kuentz-Bas GWT Eichberg Vnyd 1989: Med.dark gold
color; rather fragrant spicy/complex slight cinammon light
GWT/lychee nose; soft/smooth/elegant dry light lychee some
spicy/nutmeg flavor; very long/smooth/elegant spicy/floral
finish. This was from my archives and I was expecting a
bit more power and intensity. It should be drunk soon afore
it slips into senility, but a very well-aged/elegant/delicate
mature Alsatian GWT.
- Lin Court Santa Barbara County Lincourt Vnyd Pinot
Noir 2001: Med. color; lovely fragrant/floral/Pinot/
violets slight dusty rather toasty/pencilly/oak nose; tart
smooth/round light floral/violets/ Pinot rather toasty/smokey/Fr.oak
flavor w/ light tannins; a very drinkable elegant example
of SantaBarbara Pinot at a very attractive price.
Gary took wonderful care of us and the food was absolutely first
rate, as good as anything you can get in the Nation. Michael
came out afterwards & we talked both wine, food, and swords
for quite awhile. A highly recommended restaurant with an outstanding
wine list.
After a very heavy day on the strip (finished in the top
25% of Div II Men's Epee, the middle- level Epee competition;
not bad w/ all the kids there and being the oldest one in
that field); I met some Austin friends who used to be part
of my Los Alamos wine group, Betsy & Barry. Barry gave
up his physics career and went over to the dark side, becomming
an attourney specializing in intellectual property cases.
They had been dying to try, so we went to dinner at Zoot's
sister restaurant, Wink. I was expecting the
wine list to be nearly identical to Zoot's, but it was totally
different; though still very well-selected and very reasonably
priced. The food, as I expected, was exceptional. The wine
was an Alsatian Tokay/PinotGris from a producer I was not
familar with. Quite rich and maybe off-dry, it had a bracing
acidity that made it quite good. The Pinot by the glass (forget
the producer) was wonderful with the oven-roasted sweetbreads
(I'm easy target when the menu has entrees from obscure nether
regions of the animal. The dessert was a stunner: Chocolate
Soup w/ MilkChocolate/Ginger Mousse. The Franz Haas Moscoto
Rosa AltoAdige 2000 was the perfect match for this amazing
dessert. Batting 2/2 thus far in Austin.
Tuesday was an off-day for me so did a bit of shopping at
Central Market (bought a can of Tea Oil, something I'd never
seen/heard of before) and mostly hanging out at the fencing
venue to cheer on my teammates and visit w/ friends (if you
think wine-geek talk can get a bit tedious at times..... you
should spend some time w/ the fencing crowd!!). That night,
Jack & I head up the street for dinner at La Traviata.
The owner, Marion Gillcrist, is a long time friend from her
days cheffing in SantaFe and her sis, Joan, owns my favorite
Italian restaurant in SantaFe, Andiamo. The food is mostly
rustic/peasant Italian fare and very similar to the Andiamo
one. Needing to carb-up for the next day's fencing, I had
the Spaghetti Carbonara. The presentation was most unusual.
Served steaming hot in a dome-shaped mound, it had a raw egg
yolk perched in a niche on top and the idea was to stir it
into the pasta. Clever idea, I thought. The wine was a Lagrein
from the AltoAdige from a producer I didn't know. Another
great meal; now batting 3 for 3, with one night to go.
Wednesday (7/2/03) was my last competition, Veteran's Men's
Epee. It didn't start until 4:00pm in the afternoon (guess
they figure the old guys can't get it out of bed that early!!),
so spend most of the day at the venue cheering on my teammates.
For that night, Jack, Paul, & I had planned on dinner
at another Italian restaurant, Vespaio after
our Veteran's event. Alas, the event started an hour late
and I had a very good day, medaling out for a Bronze w/ a
6'th place finish, so had to stay around for the awards presentation
and didn't finish at the venue until after 10:00 pm. So a
bunch of us grizzled Veterans headed up Fourth Street to Sullivan's,
a steak house that was open until 11:00pm. Poor choice. My
smoked pork chops were very good, but everything else was
rather pedestrian. And a dumb and very over-priced wine list.
The Chave St. Joseph Offerus '00, at $52 was the intelligent
choice. And the Jewel Petie Sirah '01, at $31, was
a reasonable 2'nd choice. So 3-for-4 (well.... I wasn't the
one that chose Sullivans, though) in Austin this trip. Back
to the real world bright & early the next morning.
For anyone headed to Austin; I cannot give enough praise
to the quality of both the food and the wine at both Zoot
and Wink. I wasn't expecting something this good and this
reasonably priced in the Land of the Big Caddys and the Big
Hair. Both highly recommended.
TomHill
The restaurant recommendation list I circulated to the fencers
I know is below:
Austin Dining Recs
Below are some dining recs I solicited from some of my wine
friends in Austin. La Traviata is the only one I can vouch
for from personal experience. My food preferences lean toward
Italian and contemporary/American/eclectic/innovative cusine.
The wine is, of course, important. So Spanish/Mexican/TexMex/BarBQue
cusine doesn't score a touch on me. WebSite: http://www.austinchronicle.com/issues/dispatch/deep_focus/cuisines_austinrestaurants.html
My First Choices
Zoot (509 Hearn St, 512/477-6535): American
bistro/fresh/contemporary cusine. The Chef de Cuisine is Michael
Hall, a local fencer and fencing instructor. Front man is
Gary Thompson, a very knowledgeable wine friend, so the wine
list should be terrific. Owned by same people who started
Wink.
La Travita (314 Congress Ave, 512/479-8131):
Seasonal/rustic/contemporary Italian cuisine. Owner/chef is
Marion Gillcrist, a long time friend from her SantaFe days.
Wink (1014 N.Lamar, 512/482-8868): Calif/fresh/contemporary/international
cusine. Former chefs from Brio Vista (now defunct) went here.
Less Information
- Jean-Luc's Bistro (705 Colorado St ,
512/494-0033): French/bistro cuisine.
- Jeffrey's (1204 W. Lynn St; 512/477-5584):
American/SouthWest/Continental/Eclectic cuisine.
- Hoovers (2002 Manor Rd; 512/479-5006):
Southern/Texas-style Roadhouse cusine. Here the debate
gets hotter. Some folks recommend Threadgill's as
the classic Austin experience, but the feeling is that
they've gone downhill and Hoover's is much better.
- Threadgill's (6416 N. Lamar; 512/451-5450):
A classic Austin/Texas experience; funky roadhouse cusine.
- Iron Works BBQ : As always, BBQ generates
a lot of heated discussion/take-no-prisoners approach.
This funky spot is right next to the convention centre.
Dinner recommended here.
- House Park BBQ (900 W. 12'th St.; 512/472-9621):
Recommended for lunch.
- Las Manitas Cafe (512/472-9357): Mexican/Honduras
cusine.
- Maudie's (2608 W. 7'th St; 512/832-0900): Tex-Mex
cusine
- Driskill Grill (604 Brazos St; 512/474-5911):
World-class/contemporary cusine. Regarded by some as Austin's
hottest new restaurant. High-end.
- Madam Mam's: Thai cusine.
- Mirabelle (8127 Mesa Dr; 512/346-7900): New
American/International cusine.
- East Side Cafe (2113 Manor; 512/476-5858): Ecclectic/international
cusine.
- Mother's Cafe: Vegetarian cusine
- Central Market: Gourmet grocery store/carry-out.
Gary Thompson is their wine-buyer and one of the best
selections in town.
- Chez Zee (5406 Balcones; 512/454-2666): Casual/American/Eclectic
- Chez Nous (510 Neches; 473-2413): Informal/French
cusine.
- Vespaio (1610 S. Congress; 512/441-6100): Regional
Italian/pasta/pizza cusine. Wood-fired oven.
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