A Landmark pinot noir

We have missed our friend Matt and we want him to know how special he is to us.

So, we invite him to our house for dinner. No fatted calf mooing in the pantry. So, I’ll make filet mignon. With bacon, baby.

And for a special friend, I decant a special wine, the 2010 Grand Detour pinot noir from Landmark Vineyards in Sonoma, an elegant shift from the beefy Zinfandel or hefty Cab you might expect with filet. This thoughtfully crafted pinot plays perfectly with the salad as well as the beef, carrying us happily home to a dessert of lush, ripe strawberries and blueberries.

Expect a well-balanced blend of berries and plums. The wine is soft and round, with pleasing, earthy and slightly spicy notes. The finish is silky and lingering. Hmm. This also would be luscious with lamb.

Grand Detour gets a big thumbs up from my husband and Matt, too. Expect to pay about $35 for a bottle for this approachable, food-friendly special-occasion red. (Don’t forget, a special occasion can happen at any time!)

Written off red meat? Grand Detour would swim nicely with wild salmon or an assertive mushroom dish.

If you fancy a white, Landmark’s 2010 Overlook Chardonnay is a classy choice, with notes of fresh bread, citrus, vanilla and peach. Expect creamy tones, not too much oak and a huggable price point of about $20.

Trader Joe’s slices the hassle of making fresh pizza dough

We love home-made pizza. Frozen pies tend to taste like the box. And takeout isn’t always consistent.

But making our own dough? Not so much fun.

Then my former Courier-Post colleagues Trisch and Brian Ferreira turned us on to Trader Joe’s fresh pizza dough. The dough is priced at a mere $1.19 for a 16-ounce bag. It’s easy as pie to roll out and it tastes great. So why knock yourself out making your own?

Just take the dough out of the fridge about 20 minutes before you are ready to roll it. I lightly flour a large wooden cutting board, then roll out the dough with a rolling pin, also lightly dusted with flour. You can coax the dough into a perfect round pie, but I usually make an oblong crust, more like a flatbread.

So what to top it with? The possibilities are limited only to what is in your fridge, pantry, garden or freezer.

I’ve made flatbread with dollops of fig jam, goat cheese and caramelized onions. The whole wheat dough was the base for a rustic pizza with red peppers, tomatoes, kalamata olives,  rosemary and manchego cheese–essentially bits and pieces from the refrigerator that might otherwise have gotten the heave ho into the garbage within the next day or so.

You also can grill the pizza. Lightly oil the rolled out dough and place it oil-side down on the grill. After it cooks on that side, oil the other side and flip the dough. Top with whatever you have a yen for and finish cooking.

 

Mannie, get your gun! Cabela’s is booming with new stores

What do Rogers, Arkansas, and Christiana, Delaware, have in common?

Both locales are getting new Cabela’s, the iconic destination for hunting, fishing and camping gear.

Even though I have never so much as caught a fish, I have always enjoyed browsing at Cabela’s store in Hamburg, Pa. All those rods and reels. Meat grinders. Big beds for hunting dogs. A cafeteria that serves buffalo. (The meat, that is, not the big, shaggy beast.)

Closer to home, Nebraska-born Cabela’s is building a 110,000-square-foot stone-and-log stand-alone emporium to manliness at Christiana Mall, just north of Nordstrom. Ideal for his and her shopping! Customers can start hunting for buys there in 2014.

Founded in 1961, Cabela’s is in growth mode, with stores opening this year in Arkansas and Washington State. The Cabela herd will expand with seven stores in 2013.

Tonic and gin, please. Fever-Tree

It isn’t just about the gin. It isn’t all about the vodka. A first-class mixed drink is about the mixer, too. That’s why they call it a mixed drink.

At a very civilized bar in the UK, a server asked me which tonic I wanted with my sublime Plymouth Gin. Hmm. You mean there’s a choice?

Indeed. And on both sides of the pond, my choice is Fever-Tree, a premium line of all natural mixers. Ginger from Nigeria, the Ivory Coast and India. Expect the purest quality quinine from the Congo, which will keep your head cool and your palate pleased. Flavors are crisp, happy and straightforward, dear chap. No artificial aftertaste. No phony colors.

Fever-Tree is so impressive you just might start ordering a tonic and gin instead of a gin a tonic.

The brand was developed by Charles Rolls, former managing director of Plymouth Gin, and Tim Warrillow, who was steeped in premium teas and coffees before entering the beverage market.

In addition to Fever-Tree’s flagship Indian Tonic Water, there are six other labels: Naturally Light Tonic Water (only 40 calories!), Bitter Lemon, Club Soda, Ginger Ale, Ginger Beer and, the latest, Mediterranean Tonic Water, a floral mixer designed to play nice with vodka.

And now you need not head to your favorite upscale waterhole to indulge. You can buy Fever-Tree through Amazon and other outlets for your enjoyment at home. Suggested retail price: $5.99 for a four-pack of 200ml bottles; 500 ml bottles for $2.99.

Decorating tips at Pottery Barn

The frost is not on the pumpkin. In fact, the pumpkin isn’t even ripe yet.

But autumnal decorating ideas are sprouting at Pottery Barn, the retailer who wants to sell you just about everything you need to furnish, accessorize and stock your nest.

Stores are offering free classes on fluffing your home for fall using such seasonal accessories as pumpkins formed from rustic ceramic or shimmering mercury glass and colorful wreaths and garlands crafted from faux leaves. No raking required.

Class is in session at 10 a.m. Aug. 19 at a Pottery Barn near you. Busy that Sunday? The class also will be held on Sept. 16 at 10 a.m. Call your local store to reserve a space.

In addition to design tips, attendees will get a 10% discount on selected merchandise.

Upcoming events include: Make Over Your Living Room (Sept. 23) and How to Entertain With Style (Oct. 21).

A plug for pluggz, a kicky flip flop

While the world was flipping for flip flops, I was looking for any casual footwear that didn’t have that uncomfortable thong between my toes.

Then the folks from pluggz asked me to give their earthy-but-hip flip flops a try. The soul of this iconic summer fave is its sole, which includes a carbon and rubber plug. The inventor says the plug acts as a conduit for electrons to flow from the earth to our bodies, thus neutralizing free radicals.

“The mostly synthetic materials that are used in today’s footwear break the flow of energy between the earth and our bodies,” says Sharon Whiteley, founder and CEO of LISTEN Brands and a hottie in Entrepreneur Land. “As I understood this connection, the product created itself for me.”

Flip flops that are good for you? That is a lot to expect from beach brogues.

OK, OK, I thought. I’ll give ‘em a test schlep — and then report what I think.

Will I flip for pluggz? Or declare them a flop?

When I opened the box and beheld the pluggz I was concerned about the plug. It looked downright uncomfortable. I have a large closet filled with shoes—from Ferragamo loafers to towering Badgley Mischka stilettos—and not a one has a plug embedded in its sole.

Still, pluggz has aesthetic appeal. I don’t see the satiny finish on these flip flops at the discount store. Ditto for the embellishment, the stylish little disk on the side. Pluggz come in three classic colors: gold, silver and black. Full sizes run from 5 to 11.

But what about the feel? Are they worth the $39 price tag? I slipped on my pluggz and sauntered out to my yard. As I strolled on the grass, the pluggz felt darn good, although I confess I did not discern an enhanced flow of electrons.

The next weekend, I traveled out of town for a friend’s party. I packed my pluggz and put them on as I headed to the hotel pool. They were very comfy on the concrete decking around the pool. No worries about slipping with the 100% rubber sole. They looked nice with my swim suit. No tugging between my toes. What more can you ask from flip flops?

Now that I have plugged into pluggz, I am wearing flip flops more often. On the patio. In the bathroom. In the garden.

But what to do when the weather turns nippy?

Not to worry. This fall, pluggz is coming out with a new line of adorable Mary Janes and ballet flats.

Extra! Extra! The Scotsman delivers good news for guests

The Scotsman, a luxury hotel sited in a Victorian era newspaper building, is good news for travelers to Edinburgh.

It’s so close to the Royal Mile of museums, shops and restaurants that a newsboy could easily hurl a Sunday paper there.

Extra! Extra! In addition to location, The Scotsman offers friendly, efficient service and such vintage charms as a coal fire glowing in the lobby grate. The magnificent Italian marble staircase, which the brass used to climb to the executive offices, remains in place.

I am upgraded to an editor’s suite, which features a bay window and an antique desk that might have been around when The Scotsman published its first newspaper at the site in 1905. Closets and the TV are behind raised-panel doors crafted from the deep, rich wood you would expect to find in the library of a country house in an Agatha Christie mystery novel. The windows are dressed with heavy, tweed curtains. The bathroom is large and well-appointed with a huge tub, heated towel rack and a radiator so efficient it will dry hastily rinsed socks in an hour flat.

The Scotsman also stocks Highland Aromatics, the best darn shampoos, lotions and soaps I have ever enjoyed on my travels. (More on the line in a future post.)

The hotel is part of Connoisseurs Scotland, an association for unique luxury properties throughout the country. Like a daily newspaper delivered to your doorstep, The Scotsman focuses on every-day courtesies. There is a chute in the entry way to the suite, where room service can deliver food and drink. I place my shoes in the chute for a complimentary shine. The next morning I find what appear to be new shoes. But, no! They are the same, serviceable Mary Janes, splendidly cleaned and polished.

There’s also the North Bridge Brasserie, the hotel restaurant, which focuses on traditional Scottish fare and locally sourced produce, meats and fish. A few nibbles from a recent menu: roasted North Sea squid with smoked Shetland mussel fritters; Loch Lomond Arctic char with a warm salad of Ayrshire new potatoes and grilled leeks; and Chef Paul Hart’s twist on traditional Scottish haggis, topped with Glenfiddich single malt whisky jelly.

With his piercing blue eyes and bristle of white hair, Ivor, the affable and efficient doorman, looks a lot like my grandfather, Allan Sinclair II, whose father hailed from Scotland. Ivor, who donned his kilt when the hotel opened in 2001, is grandfatherly in his helpfulness, patiently giving directions to the spa through The Scotsman’s warren of corridors.

The cavernous space that once accommodated the presses is now home to a stainless steel swimming pool. The pool is surrounded by other aquatic amenities, including a steam room, hot and cold shower heads and a whirlpool spa.

Both the pool and fitness center are open to local members, which gives guests an opportunity to mingle with Edinburgh natives. Chatting with the locals in a bubbling whirlpool is a decidedly civilized way to gather shopping tips.

Prices start at around $250 for a studio room, including VAT, full Scottish breakfast and spa access. Expect a copy of The Scotsman at your door, bright and early.

 

Vera Bradley on the Promenade

The Adorableness Factor just got even higher at the Promenade at Sagemore, favored shopping destination of Jersey girls.

Vera Bradley is open, offering a parade of colorful bags, luggage and accessories. It’s a happy line that appeals to multiple generations. In fact, both my mom (she will be 82 on Aug. 18) and my former intern (a 22-year-old hottie) carry Vera Bradley bags.
Lots of visitors to the store’s website hail from Cherry Hill, Medford and other South Jersey ‘burbs so a location on Route 73 in Marlton was a natural match for the trendy retailer, says Melissa Schenkel, Vera Bradley public relations manager.

It’s a super cute boutique, 1,600 square feet of feminine indulgence.

Personally, I am fond of Vera Bradley’s hard cases for smartphones. My iPhone is wearing the Va Va Bloom case, which features a vibrant swirl of pink flowers. It is so unabashedly girly that I will never have to worry about my husband picking up my phone by mistake. That pop of pink helps me to immediately spot the phone in my purse.

Thanks, Vera!