Humble Steward

Humble Steward Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Humble Steward, Norfolk, VA.

Jim Raper writes about wine, food and travel, some of it influenced by his home away from home in Port Vendres/Collioure, France, on the Med at the Spanish border.

06/26/2023

Sorry folks. I'm in Facebook pergatory, or maybe hell. My regular page has been blocked and now all I can access is my old Humble Steward page. This Humble Steward page is the one I dropped a few years ago because Facebook blocked so many posts because I refused to pay $30 a month for a commercial page. I've never touted any wine or food or product and never considered Humble Steward a commercial post. Facebook deserves our outrage and pity.

08/26/2020

For reasons I don't understand, Facebook has blocked Humble Steward posts with photos. Please see my Jim R***r page for new posts.

07/15/2020

Test

Sent by a friend who knows my taste in masks!
06/28/2020

Sent by a friend who knows my taste in masks!

For more than 25 years I’ve been drinking wines in Spain’s Catalonia from a large producer west of Barcelona called Raim...
06/26/2020

For more than 25 years I’ve been drinking wines in Spain’s Catalonia from a large producer west of Barcelona called Raimat. This winery has a massive network of vineyards in what once was an arid wasteland. Thank canals and irrigation for making the land suitable for grapegrowing. Raimat is so large/influential it has its own Raimat subset of the Costers del Segre DO. Wines I’ve had from the producer have ranged from satisfactory to very good, and I’ve seldom paid more than the equivalent of $10 for a bottle at retail in Spain. Here, the bottles I’ve occasionally found have been more expensive, but never over $20. The other day I received a bottle of the Raimat Rosada 2018 from the winery’s marketing firm in the US, and I was impressed. It is made from cabernet sauvignon and tempranillo, and has flavors you might expect from those grapes, tangy red fruit. But it’s not a heavy rose, like so many I’ve had from northern Spain. At about $15, it’s a rose to search for.

I see that our friends at La Tienda in Williamsburg have padron peppers -- famous fried in olive oil and sea salt in Spa...
06/18/2020

I see that our friends at La Tienda in Williamsburg have padron peppers -- famous fried in olive oil and sea salt in Spain and parts of France. These are the "roulette" peppers, mostly sweet, but once in a while hot. We can buy them in Port Vendres for 7 or 8 bucks a pound. Once they get to this side of the Atlantic, these Spanish peppers cost $24 a pound at La Tienda. But they are the Cadillac of frying peppers. Just now in my garden I have Italian Frying Peppers, Shish*to, and Cubanelle just starting to produce, and I look forward to a fine summer of fried and grilled peppers. Photo is from La Tienda

D and I sure would love to be back on Tenerife eating the wonderful seafood there. Pepe and Pete entertained us six mont...
06/10/2020

D and I sure would love to be back on Tenerife eating the wonderful seafood there. Pepe and Pete entertained us six months ago and we hope to go back one of these days. The guys went to one of their favorite restaurants the other day and sent us these photos. That big plate of a variety of fish and seafood is a parrillada that you'll see for 28 euros on the menu. Remember, the price of the meal always includes tax and tip, and sometimes a carafe of wine. That's Pete finishing up. They were at a restaurant in Arona, which is home to some great white wines.

Remember the Frescobaldi (Tuscany) and Robert Mondavi (California) partnership from some years back that brought us the ...
06/08/2020

Remember the Frescobaldi (Tuscany) and Robert Mondavi (California) partnership from some years back that brought us the Tenuta Luce wines? The brand is still humming along in Tuscany (Montalcino) producing a premium Super Tuscan called Luce from sangiovese and merlot that costs $100. A second wine, Lucente, is more approachable in taste and price ($30). It’s made from sangiovese and merlot, as well, mostly from younger vines on the Luce estate. We had a bottle of the 2017 the other night and I liked it very much. Leaning toward full bodied, with blackberry and raspberry highlights on an earthy and warm frame.

Wineries in Alto Adige in northern Italy were hit pretty hard by the economic collapse there caused by the pandemic. So ...
06/07/2020

Wineries in Alto Adige in northern Italy were hit pretty hard by the economic collapse there caused by the pandemic. So we’re rooting for them to recover soon, and can point out these two wines as reasons why we should help them recover. The Tramin Kellerei Moriz Pinot Blanco 2018 ($22) is a mineral and lemon delight. The Castelfeder Pinot Nero (pinot noir) Burgum Novum 2016 Riserva ($45) has delicate pinot black cherry, loam and beetroot flavors. A great food red.

I haven't tasted Mojama Tuna, much less tried to prepare it myself. It's dry cured yellow fin tuna loin, almost as chewy...
06/04/2020

I haven't tasted Mojama Tuna, much less tried to prepare it myself. It's dry cured yellow fin tuna loin, almost as chewy as ham. Friends in France taught me how to dry cure a duck breast, which makes daggone good dry ham-like meat, served in very thin slices. I'm told Mojama Tuna can be cut into thin slices and served on toasts, or cubed and put into green salads. I'm sure there are other ways to eat it, too. I'm assuming La Tienda in Williamsburg, which sells Mojama for about $70 a pound, gets it from Spain. But you never know. La Tienda is selling Iberico pork from Texas these days. The photo is courtesy of La Tienda's web site.How about serving this tuna with a garnacha red.

When we were visiting the island of Tenerife in the Canaries late last year, where we dined on some of the best restaura...
05/30/2020

When we were visiting the island of Tenerife in the Canaries late last year, where we dined on some of the best restaurant food I’ve had anywhere, my wife ordered at one of our 3 p.m. lunches a grilled “secreto” Iberico pork cutlet. It was remarkably tasty. I wasn’t familiar with this cut and I’ve done research since. Unfortunately, secreto pork cuts are so secret that there is no agreement about what it is. The best I can tell, good butchers usually know where to find secretive thin strips of pork that are tender enough to be cooked quickly on the grill and served still pink inside. You find butchers who say it’s a pork skirt steak, bottom of the belly, or top blade, a tasty triangle under the shoulder blade, etc. Whatever, it’s very good and very expensive. I noticed that our friends at La Tienda in Williamsburg have a sale just now on 1 pound secreto Iberico (acorn and herb fed pigs from southern Spain) pork cutlet for $45. That’s the sale price. But I do believe this stuff is better than almost any beef steak you could buy, and $45 a pound isn’t outlandish for the best beef. Grill up a secreto cutlet and pop the cork on a prime red, say, from Jumilla.

I’m a big fan of furikake. I used it, purchased from international grocery stores, for years without knowing its Japanes...
05/29/2020

I’m a big fan of furikake. I used it, purchased from international grocery stores, for years without knowing its Japanese name. I just called it Japanese rice seasoning. I have used it, however, in many ways, especially sprinkled over fish filets and in salads and soups made with rice noodles. Note the photo (which I apologize for; concoction tasted better than it looks here). The other night I had about six ounces of a side of salmon left in the fridge and cut it into inch squares and slathered them with a curry glaze before smoking/cooking them on the grill. Got the pieces firm and caramelized at the edges. Served the hunks of salmon over rice and snow peas and scallions (plus some slivers of seaweed) in a bowl with green tea and bonito broth. On top of that I sprinkled furikake. This mixture, in my experience, usually includes sesame seeds, seaweed, dried leafy veggies such as spinach, egg yolk powder, corn/potato starch, soy sauce powder and rice wine powder. The two kinds shown in the photo are anchored by bonito and dried shrimp. A very nutritious addition to rice! Yes, it’s a bit expensive, but worth it. A little goes a long way. I have also made my own, using most of the ingredients above dried in a slow oven. Wine? Maybe sake is best, but I like champagne or unoaked chard with most furikake dishes.

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