Bubble bubble
Toil and trouble
Money burns and
Pleasure doubles.
(Inspired by William Shakespeare and Fantasia)
Champagne is the consummate Valentine’s Day libation. It oozes romance and lightens one’s wallet in a way that demonstrates a commitment or great expectation to one’s spouse, significant other, or date for the evening. Apropos of Valentine’s Day, Helen Gurley Brown said: “Two warm bodies and one cold bottle of Champagne will produce something more wonderful than would happen without Champagne.”
For this Valentine’s Day Wine Pairing Weekend challenge I guilted Sous Chef into making Champagne and sparkling wine the cornerstone of our Valentine’s Day dinner. And then I made him celebrate Valentine’s Day several days early so I could write about it. Regardless the timing of the dinner or my undue influence on Sous Chef, I had great expectations for this meal as I planned to make Roasted Monkfish with Curried Lobster Sauce from a Daniel Boulud recipe in Chef Daniel Boulud Cooking in New York.
Sous Chef loves monkfish, not because it is the “poor man’s lobster” and he wants to save some coins of the realm, but because it has wonderful texture and taste. So when in Los Angeles recently, we stopped at our favorite meat and seafood supplier: McCall’s Meat & Fish. We bought two gorgeous monkfish tails to accompany the Billecart-Salmon Champagne Brut Rosé and 2011 Schramsberg Brut Rosé that he purchased for the occasion.
During preparation of this special meal things were going along fine. We don’t often prep together since Sous Chef is fast and I am slow and knife challenged. But for once I was keeping up and, consequently, feeling pretty cocky in fact. So much so that I chose to deviate from Daniel Boulud’s fairly complicated recipe and instead of roasting the monkfish as called for in the recipe, I put it in my Sous Vide water oven. Arrogance can be a bad thing and I had just completed a series of Sous Vide meals that left me thinking I had mastered this unique and wonderful cooking tool. But arrogance has its bounds and my cockiness was shattered by the results for this meal. While the components were delicious – the caramelized apples, salpicon and curried lobster sauce– the monkfish was nearly inedible. The texture was off and missing was the depth of flavor you get from roasting. I am certain it was not a product problem and I hope it was not an operator error. But since the lobster that cooked in the Sous Vide for the same duration was perfect, it could be monkfish is not appropriate, or at least a tricky item, for this cooking method.
Fortunately a disappointing meal can be redeemed with a good bottle of Champagne or sparkling wine. As some very famous people have noted about Champagne:
“In success you deserve it and in defeat, you need it.” Winston Churchill
“I drink Champagne when I win, to celebrate . . . and I drink Champagne when I lose, to console myself.” Napoleon Bonaparte
Sage advice and definitely needed in our case. The saving grace of this meal was our taste test comparing the Billecart-Salmon (beel/kahr sahl/moh) to the Schramsberg. Most will say the results were predictable since Billecart-Salmon dates back to 1818 and remains one of the few family owned Champagne houses. Plus its retail price is about twice the Schramsberg’s. But don’t count the Schramsberg short. It dates back to 1862 and three years before Treasure Island was published, Robert Louis Stevenson describes his visit to Schramsberg in Silverado Squatters. Although each is a splendid sparkling wine, I found there is a marked difference. The Schramsberg is fruitier, bolder in flavor, and has very slightly larger bubbles. It is very refreshing and extremely well made, but a little sweeter than the Billecart-Salmon. And by that I don’t mean it is a sweet sparkling wine by any stretch. It is dry and complex, but in comparison the Billecart-Salmon is more refined and subtle in flavor and drier in taste. I noted a suggestion of vanilla and sandalwood on the nose with a subtle hint of raspberry and rose on the palate. Tiny bubbles, beautiful color–this wine is well worth the price.
So for this Valentine’s Day, go ahead and splurge on a bottle of either the Billecart-Salmon or the Schramsberg rosés. Remember what Mark Twain said: “Too much of anything is bad, but too much Champagne is just right.” And never, never be like John Maynard Keynes whose dying words were: “I wish I had drunk more Champagne.”
Join us for a live Twitter chat February 14, 2015 at 11 a.m. ET. on our theme “It’s All About Romance Wine Pairing Weekend # 9 Bloggers. Connect with us on twitter, using hashtag #winePW. We’ll chat for an hour about everything from appetizers to desserts.
Be sure to check out what my fellow bloggers have come up with for the February Wine Pairing Weekend!
- #WinePW Clear to See by Dancing Veggies
- Bubbles & Boulud by Confessions of a CulinaryDiva
- Champagne and Oysters for Valentines’ Day by Enoflyz Wine Blog
- Chocolate Pots de Creme paired with Port Wine by CuriousCuisiniere
- Fettuccine Primavera Avec Mon Coeur by Cooking Chat
- Fizzy Fun at Your Romantic Brunch by Food Wine Click
- Gimme a Man With Mussels: Romantic Pairings from Eola Hills & Oregon’s Coast by TastingPour
- Italian Valentine sweets: Sprisolana & Recioto della Valpolicella by Vino Travels
- Let’s talk Romance by A Day in the Life on the Farm
- Old World Romance for #WinePW 9: Chicken Paprikas and Hungarian Furmint by Pull That Cork
- Recipe for Refueling Romance, Salmon Frittata and Michelle Sparkling Brut Rose by Wild 4 Washington Wine
- Risotto all’Amarone + Masi Campofiorin 2009 by Culinary Adventures with Camilla
- Romancing the Jura: Vin Jaune & Roast Chicken by GirlsGottaDrink
- Wine, Food and Love with #WinePW by Rockin Red Blog
Interested in joining #winePW? Our theme for the March Wine Pairing Weekend, which will focus on “Open That Bottle Night (OTBN)” Pairings on March 14, 2015, #winePW 10, hosted by Cooking Chat.
Well your dish certainly looked lovely. I am sorry that it didn’t turn out as you had hoped and I am glad you had two bottles of bubbly to make things all better.
I appreciate hearing of cooking misadventures as well as successes! Like all the quotes & literary references too. Yes, wine does tend to make food better under any circumstance!
So sorry the dish didn’t turn out the way you hoped. At least there is wine to make everything better!
Bubbly makes it all better! I have never cooked with monkfish myself. But lobster…that’s our favorite celebratory ingredient. Thanks for cooking along with #winePW this month.
If only bubbles could solve all problems. Wait maybe they can!
My new favorite Champagne quote: “a disappointing meal can be redeemed with a good bottle of Champagne” cheers Christy!
Excellent advice. Splurge on Champagne. No regrets. We could all learn from this. Thank you.
Thats unfortunate about the monkfish… I wonder why it didnt turn out as you had hoped! SousVide is tricky so I hope you try it again or research it a bit more 🙂
I have to agree with the champagne! It’s definitely the best to make things better, and I enjoy having a bottle around to nip at from time to time instead of my usual wine 🙂
It’s so cool that you did a side by side with the Schramsberg and the Billecart. I recently had that Schramsberg and really enjoyed it. I had the Billecart when I visited Champagne in the fall. Great stuff. I often tell friends the difference between Champagne and Sparkling wine is typically pretty subtle. The thing is once you come to appreciate the difference, the scale tends to tip in Champagne’s favor I think. Lot’s a great bubbly that offers great QPR and if you poke around a bit you can find lot of wonderful Champers in the $30-40 range. I’ve even found a couple of Rose Champagne in the $40/45 range..Great post!