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Epcot's
2004 International Food & Wine Festival Food & Wine Pairings |
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Attraction Seating AT
A GLANCE... FUTURE
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Course 1 Insalata
di Verdure e Gamberi Course 2 Gnocchi
Bologna Course 3 Dolce Review Although I'd attended a Lunch and Learn program at last year's Food & Wine Festival, I wasn't quite sure what to expect from the smaller Food & Wine Pairings that are being offered at a number of Epcot venues this year. I'll say up front that I enjoyed this program thoroughly!
Vogel also spent some time explaining the heavy restrictions placed on Italian wineries to ensure quality. Among the rules governing Italian wines are conventions for naming their products. Wines may be named in three different ways: for the region from which they come, for the grape from which they're made, and for a fantasy, or story.
Our second course produced the most wonderful gnocchi I've ever had in my life -- and I've had more than my share. These little potato dumplings were so light, not the lead sinkers you sometimes get, I thought they were going to hover a few inches above my plate. Served with a rich veal-based (as opposed to the traditional ground beef) bolognese sauce, this hearty dish was a fine match with Banfi's blended red wine called Centine (about $15/bottle). The wine, 60 percent Sangiovese, 20 percent Cabernet Sauvignon, and 20 percent Merlot, was an intense red, slightly spicy with a hint of berries, and it stood up well to the pasta dish. When Chef Marchese came out to talk about this course and the painstaking process of making gnocchi and the veal demiglace needed for the sauce, he noted that he had topped the gnocchi with Pecorino Romano cheese. Pungent Pecorino, made with goat milk, rather than regular Parmesan, which is made from cow's milk, further accentuated the character of the wine.
For $35 and about 90 minutes out of your life, I think the Food & Wine Pairing is an exceptional value and experience -- you can talk to a winemaker and a chef in a relaxed setting without breaking the budget, while getting the chance to sample some great foods and wines. And, as Chef Marchese noted as he sent us on our way back out into the Epcot sunshine, "It's always a good time to drink wine!" Le
Cellier Course 1 Spicy lobster
spring roll with a honey and ginger glaze and peach slaw Course 2 Beef confit
with asparagus risotto Course 3 Seared
rare tuna over a grilled mushroom tart with carmelized onions Review The
featured winery was Zaca Mesa from California -- they had two
representatives there to talk about their business and their wines.
Then Chef Brian Piasecki from Le Cellier explained the foods
he chose to go with each wine. We had three courses with three different
wines.
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