Wine-ing among the Roses

Why I’m attending WBC2012 and what I hope to get out of it. (A blog post inspired by www.whichwinecooler.com.)

I’m attending the Wine Bloggers Conference 2012 to learn more about this strange territory into which my baby steps have led me. It’s my base camp before the climb.

IMG_7650My mews (muse) at times sleep on the job so I don’t get all the coaching I need at home.

While I’m not new to writing, I’m a novice in blogging. After all it was only a couple years back after retiring from the full-time work world, I stumbled upon the Okanagan Food and Wine Writers Workshop (On twitter @OKFWWWorkshop). I had always vowed that when I retired, I was going to start writing the kind of things that fascinated me. We had just finished building our home on an acreage we had purchased years prior as future retirement property and relocated back to Penticton, having lived here for a brief stint as a reporter/photographer on the local daily newspaper.

An investigative reporter at heart, I was checking out local resources for writers when I came across Jennifer Cockrall-King’s workshop tailored to food and wine writers. I had thought previously I would do some contract writing for former associates in Alberta in fund development, marketing strategy and communications planning and on the side work on a few fun pieces for an audience of one – me. I am, however, passionate about food, wine, other libations and many forms of recreation. The idea of writing about these topics was intriguing so I tried to sign up only to learn the workshop was full.

IMG_2546One of the tough tasting sessions at OKFWWWorkshop

My woeful reaction to rejection must have resonated with Jenn because she agreed to let me subscribe to a number of sessions that could accommodate extra attendees. Those few sessions transformed my thinking. First of all, a market I hadn’t really considered unfolded before me. Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, I learned that blogging wasn’t just an exercise in narcissism. Like a hiker who has only walked in meadows witnessing the new vistas offered in scaling hills, I was pumped to learn more about the medium.

In my investigation I came across the highly talented Allison Markin (On twitter @AllisonMMarkin), who is a social media maven, and stalked her for knowledge. (Okay, so I didn’t really stalk her but I did sign up for her workshop Eat.Drink.Tweet. and I follow her on twitter, Facebook and other social media tools.) It was through Allison, I learned about the Wine Bloggers Conference and that Penticton was bidding to host the event here.

Now, a citizen blogger participant and ready to tweet up #wbc12, I look forward to learning from those who have already scaled the mountain as serious bloggers. You can follow along on tweeter @WineBloggersCon. And in the true spirit of continuous learning, I anticipate I will learn a lot from other novices and I hope that I , too, can bring some value to the discussion (On Twitter @RozDB). If that’s not goal enough for this year’s conference, I also hope to make friends and entice folks to join us next year for #wbc13 in my beautiful Penticton, British Columbia @TravelPenticton and gorgeous Thompson/Okanagan region of Canada. Follow the progress on twitter @wbcokanagan.

I’d like to thank our Portland hosts in advance. Quite frankly it didn’t hurt at all that Portland was hosting this year. It’ll be great to stay in the host hotel Doubletree Portland close to the hub of activities. I love Portland and it’s been many years since I’ve spent some time in Oregon. Portland has always had a “cool” factor for me and to see how citizens are collaborating to create The Portland Plan just reinforces my notion. What makes The City of Roses sweet goes beyond the rose gardens and out to the wineries, breweries, eateries and cycling/pedestrian pathways. I can hardly wait!

To www.whichcooler.com for extending this challenge to vie for two free nights at the host hotel Doubletree Portland, I thank-you for this sweet concept. In this win or lose equation, there’s really no lose because whether or not the blow to my finances is softened by free accommodation, you’ve inspired me to take the time to reflect on why I am attending. Cheers for now, and we’ll be toasting great wines together soon!

IMG_7667At WBC12 I hope to brighten my wine blogging knowledge to match our Penticton sunsets!

A Quick Glimpse of Some Okanagan Wineries

IMG_6910At Tantalus Vineyards Kelowna

IMG_7949 At Poplar Grove Winery Penticton

RBuchanan La Frenz IMG_7680 At La Frenz Penticton

IMG_7555 At Kettle Valley Naramata

IMG_8328 At Bonitas Winery Summerland

IMG_4667At Miradoro at Tinhorn Oliver

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My Birthday is but a Day

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My life of late has been charmed and if at times I seem to taunt the less blessed please understand it is merely a tease. My journey to travel to this place of contentment and joy while not as epic nor heroic as my literary pals, the Tolkien hobbits, was no less fraught with twists, setbacks, galas and times of uncertainty for me.

Let it be a message of joy and triumph that there is a quintessential light at the end of the tunnel. I subscribe to the recurring theme in the poems of the romantic John Keats that there is a duality in life – a down in delight, a bittersweet in sadness. It is his words from Sleep and Poetry

“Stop and consider! Life is but a day;
A fragile dewdrop on its perilous way
From a trees summit”

that fuel my musings on this special day. I agree that my birthday is but a day; a delicate milestone on the path from the mountain’s peak.

Those who know me well know I will seize any opportunity to toast life’s simple pleasures. For those who are not quite so familiar with my approach does it help to point out that my husband and I even have an annual party – sometimes with only ourselves as guests – called the “Snow Going Off the Front Lawn Party”?

In view of that personal philosophy, I am not one of those people who say they never celebrate birthdays. Of course, I’m going to mark the occasion with some sort of celebration. Often it is a round of golf followed by dinner and in my fulltime working years, I almost always figured out a way to take the day off. This year it’s a bit different because Thursday our friend and neighbour, Ed, took Mark and I flying from the Penticton airport to Princeton and looping back. It was a gorgeous flight and an extraordinary gift to have such an expert pilot fly us over our house. Now we have seen our place through the eyes of the eagles, hawks and ravens who soar above us daily.

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Ed Festel (right) takes my husband Mark (left) and I flying in his plane

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Our home through the eyes of eagles, hawks and ravens

We also had our friend, Ron from Alberta, come out for the long weekend so we’ve been celebrating for the past few days. We golfed Friday at Sonora Dunes in Osoyoos, stopped in at Oliver’s Tinhorn Creek Vineyards for a tasting and self-guided tour, lunched on the deck of Twin Lakes Golf Club, joined the Growlers Club at Cannery Brewing, did another tasting at Poplar Grove Winery, feasted on homemade clam linguini and a variety of beverages, and spent some quality time exchanging news in the hot tub. Saturday was almost a “lather, rinse, repeat” except we golfed Penticton’s WOW Golf Club, took in the show and shine of classic cars in Peachland, lunched at the Blind Angler, came home to crack our Cannery Pale Ale growler while hitting a few balls off our home “executive” driving range, blended margaritas, watched Saturday Night Live and hit the hot tub again. Fortified this morning with a homemade breakfast of Belgian Waffles with Mixed Berries in Spiked Syrup, Ron headed home to Calgary.

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Ron Volpi (left) and Mark at Sonora Dunes Golf (Osoyoos)

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View from Tinhorn Creek Vineyards

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Ron Volpi (left) and Mark at Peachland Show & Shine

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Ron Volpi at “executive” driving range with Cannery Brewing Pale Ale Growler Yum!

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Mark’s turn!

I had a lovely birthday phone call from my brother Barry who had taken time out while some of his kids’ families visited for the New Denver May Day Celebration to wish me well. Facebook friends have been generous and gracious in best wishes.

So I’ve moved from the celebratory mode, after the obligatory stripping down the bed, washing sheets and towels, and preparing the guestroom for the next visitors, cleaning the kitchen and sprucing up the place, to the space for introspection.

I am appreciative for the life I have lived. My parents created a comfortable, safe and joyous environment. While making ends meet was often a struggle, our family life was rich in currency far more precious than money. Love permeated our every adventure and even our adolescent misadventures.

My husband is my soul mate and best friend although I must admit sometimes I take it for granted. Like any relationship there is the ebb and flow of emotions and while I routinely tell him that I love him, sometimes I forget to live it. My sister and brother and their wonderful spouses, children and now children’s spouses and grandchildren mean the world to me. We are child-free by choice yet enriched by family. We are also privileged to have such a wonderful extended family of relatives. Our felines, Baja and Floyd, brighten our days, warm our feet at night and offer us another perspective.

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Baja

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Floyd

Our friends are the most amazing folks. So talented in such diverse ways. There are friends from my childhood, school and post-secondary days and career as well as pearls added more recently. Each friend cherished for his or her unique contribution to the symphony of relationships I truly savour. The sentimentality is sincere.

And so, I take Keats’ advice. Today, I “stop and consider” how fragile, and yes, how perpetual. Happy Birthday to me! Thank-you to each and everyone of my dewdrops for nourishing my life.

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Posted in Adventure, agave syrup, Alcohol, Beverages, Drinks, Family, Flying, Food, Golf, Grief, Joy, Learning, Lifestyle, Pets, Restaurants, Tequila, Travel, Wine | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Reflecting on Kettle Valley Winery’s 20th Anniversary Celebrations (2011) as Spring and Easter 2012 Signal a New Season of Growth and Renewal in the Vineyards

Easter and its rich symbolism of rebirth, whether viewed from a pagan or Christian perspective, is suddenly here again. While spring seemed to come slowly to the Okanagan this year, its evidence is apparent in the symphony of songbirds and breaking of buds in the vineyards.

One vineyard on the Naramata Bench I’ll have to drop in on soon is the Kettle Valley Winery. Last season Kettle Valley Winery proudly marked 20 years of winemaking at the family farm and celebrated a diversion gone mainline. It’s time to take a pulse on the next 20 years for this member of the Naramata Bench Wineries.

RBuchanan photo IMG_7555 - Kettle Valley Winery June 2011RBuchanan photo: Kettle Valley Winery tasting June 2011

Third licence granted on the Bench, it is one of the area’s earliest wineries and its name, too, has historic significance as a salute to the Kettle Valley Railroad. Founders, winemakers and brothers-in-law Bob Ferguson and Tim Watts had taken up winemaking as a hobby in a rental apartment. As wine aficionados they were disappointed in the quality they were achieving no matter how they tinkered with the kits. Rather than extinguishing their passion this less than stellar result inspired them to grow their own grapes.

They bought the Naramata property in 1987 and planted blocks of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay while keeping their day jobs – Ferguson as an accountant and Watts as a geologist. The winery opened with the 1992 inaugural harvest, barrelling the first vintage and producing 44 cases of Pinot Noir. The tasting room debuted in 1996 and Kettle Valley Winery now produces 10,000 cases annually from 28 acres on the Naramata Bench and 14 acres in the Cawston/Keremeos area. About two-thirds of the 24 wines offered by Kettle Valley Winery are reds.

At the 20th Anniversary Celebration held last September, they both joked about the early days of trying to clean the wine stains from the carpets of their rental apartment and thinking they’d gone big time in moving the winemaking to a garage. Ferguson joined us at the dinner table and laughed about how naive they were as they loaded their first vintage in the trunk and drove to Vancouver determined to sell it. John Bishop of Bishop’s Restaurant will always have a special place in their hearts because he bought a case making Bishop’s their first official customer.

It was a gorgeous evening for an outdoor celebration that brought together family, friends, neighbours, other BC wineries, winemakers, fans and media. Guests were treated to a rare opportunity to take a historic taste trip of the wines, live music and scrumptious gourmet fare catered by Roger Planiden in his mobile Culinary Adventure’s kitchen. Kettle Valley Winery as exceptional hosts wanted their guests to enjoy the festivities to the fullest and hired Top Cat Tours as designated drivers.

RBuchanan photo IMG_0172 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th via Top Cat ToursRBuchanan photo: Top Cat Tours take guests to Kettle Valley Winery’s 20th Anniversary Celebration

Ferguson and Watts are truly appreciative of the support received from their wives, Colleen and Janet, early fans such as Bishop and Vancouver Playhouse International Wine Festival founder John E. Levine who was responsible for getting their wine into BC restaurants and even the terroir in which their vines grow. The wines have won many awards and in 2009, Kettle Valley Winery was named British Columbia Winery of the Year.

See the Kettle Valley Winery website for more on their wines, where to buy them, and the winery’s history: http://www.kettlevalleywinery.com

Each time I sip one of their fine wines, I think about their story and smile. All hobbies should evolve so exquisitely. Here’s to many more years in the Kettle Valley Winery milestones!

20th Anniversary Celebration September 2011

RBuchanan photo IMG_0223 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0231 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0224 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0225 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th

RBuchanan photo: Kettle Valley Winery 20th Anniversary Celebration September 2011

RBuchanan photo IMG_0237 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0236 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th

RBuchanan photo IMG_0243 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th

RBuchanan photo: Kettle Valley Winery 20th Anniversary Celebration Wines

Roger Planiden’s Culinary Adventure Caters Kettle Valley Winery 20th

RBuchanan photo IMG_0214 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Chef Planiden Culinary AdventureRBuchanan photo IMG_0217 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Chef Planiden Culinary AdventureRBuchanan photo IMG_0220 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Chef Planiden Culinary AdventureRBuchanan photo IMG_0212 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Chef Planiden Culinary Adventure

RBuchanan photo: Behind the scenes Kettle Valley Winery 20th in Culinary Adventure

RBuchanan photo IMG_0221 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Chef Planiden Culinary Adventure

Roger Planiden’s Culinary Adventure Cuisine

RBuchanan photo IMG_0210 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Chef PlanidenRBuchanan photo IMG_0211 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Chef Planiden final touches

RBuchanan photo: Chef Planiden Culinary Adventure final touches

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RBuchanan photo IMG_0189 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th CuisineRBuchanan photo IMG_0194 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th CuisineRBuchanan photo IMG_0195 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th CuisineRBuchanan photo IMG_0197 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Cuisine

RBuchanan photo: Chef Planiden Culinary Adventure worth the wait

RBuchanan photo IMG_0203 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th CuisineRBuchanan photo IMG_0204 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th CuisineRBuchanan photo IMG_0207 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th CuisineRBuchanan photo IMG_0199 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th CuisineRBuchanan photo IMG_0200 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Cuisine

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RBuchanan photo: Chef Planiden Culinary Adventure Mine all mine!

RBuchanan photo IMG_0259 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Anniversary CakeRBuchanan photo IMG_0262 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Anniversary CakeRBuchanan photo IMG_0254 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Anniversary CakeRBuchanan photo IMG_0267 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th Anniversary Cake

RBuchanan photo: Kettle Valley Winery 20th Anniversary Cake

Kettle Valley Winery 20th Celebration – Friends, Music, Food and, of course, Wine

RBuchanan photo IMG_0177 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0188 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0227 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0176 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0233 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0244 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0235 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0238 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0173 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0247 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0248 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0181 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0268 - Kettle Valley Winery 20thRBuchanan photo IMG_0269 - Kettle Valley Winery 20th

RBuchanan photos: Kettle Valley Winery 20th Celebration festivities

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Farewell St. Patrick’s Day: Come Hither Spring Equinox

As St. Patrick’s Day revelry recedes into memory and the spring equinox marks the first day of spring in the Northern Hemisphere, March 20, 2012 at 1:14 a.m. EDT, let me share from islandireland.com, the Celtic blessing:

“Go n-eírí an bóthar leat. May the road rise with you.”

St. Paddy’s Day History

Whether you’re Irish or not, St. Patrick’s Day holds a special place in the calendar and has been celebrated around the world for centuries. It has been an official public holiday in Ireland since 1903 with its first parade in Dublin 1931 – which intrigues me as a Canadian knowing that the Montreal’s first St. Patrick’s Day parade was in 1824 predating its country of origin by many years!

A lot of lore surrounds St. Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland, and sorting out the fact from fiction is just part of the fun. Even the years he lived is a bit of a mystery, however, it is believed he was born 387 in Britain to parents of Scottish descent and died March 17, 461 A.D. It is said that while he spent time in prison he found Christianity and vowed then to convert the Irish to it. He left Ireland apparently walking some 200 miles to the coast to escape to Britain and this is possibly the germination of the myth of him leading the snakes out of Ireland. Apparently, he embarked on religious training for 15 years and when he was ordained as a priest, it is said he had a visitation from an angel instructing him to return to Ireland as a missionary.

Add to this intriguing mix, Celtic customs such as the rebirth of spring symbolized in the shamrock, belief in leprechauns stemming from fairy folklore, and rich tradition of storytelling, poetry, music and other merriment, who wouldn’t want to join in for the luck of the Irish!

Traditions

In my family we always embraced this occasion to celebrate with great enthusiasm. After all, while Mom’s side is steeped in rich Scandinavian heritage of Norwegian and Swedish, Dad’s was Scottish with a peppering of Irish and perhaps a trace of British. Songs like “If You’re Irish Come Into the Parlour” and Bing Crosby’s “When Irish Eyes are Smiling” or “Galway Bay” were common tunes played in our household on any given day and not just St. Paddy’s!

Mark and I continue the tradition of seizing the opportunity to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day. While a Germanic and French Canadian tradition influences his sensibilities, he has always pursued joy enthusiastically. St. Patrick’s has also held special significance for him in celebrating the birthday of Patrick Schmaltz, a pal from his elementary school days who remains a best friend to today.

RBuchanan photo March 15 rainbow over Naramata BenchRBuchanan photo: Rainbow by Penticton, BC over Naramata Bench

On March 15, I had captured a rainbow and used it as the reference for my participation in the Penticton Project – an interactive idea to share a day in the life. It seemed fitting to search for a pot of gold on March 17, however, a spring snowstorm changed the landscape. I joked that a Leprechaun concealed the gold in snow and instead we discovered golden memories for our neighbour’s son Jordan as Dad Dave provided a joyful snowy sleigh ride.

RBuchanan photo Neigbour Dave pauses with Mark from giving son Jordan a sleigh ride   RBuchanan photo: Mark chats to neighbour Dave who is giving his son Jordan a thrilling St. Patrick’s Day sleigh ride

RBuchanan photo Neighbour Jordan gets a sleigh ride

I also enjoyed a walk later on St. Patrick’s Day with my dear friend and neighbour and talented author of Remarkable Yukon Women, Claire Festel. St. Patrick’s Day reminds me to think of Irish and all other blessings bestowed in my life. As I strolled home from our precious time together, I gave thanks to the universe that destiny has delivered me this creative and courageous companion.

RBuchanan photo Neighbour Claire Festel and dog YukonRBuchanan photo: Neighbour Claire Festel and dog Yukon

2012 Food and Libations

Planning our St. Patrick’s Day menu is an opportunity to research some traditional fare and to satisfy some cravings such as the Chicken Pot Pie we opted for this year. Our dear friend Judi Frizzle Stowell, of thelastwonton.com, timely as always, had just passed along a dessert drink recipe of a Shamrock Blizzard from TastyKitchen. I followed the recipe using Jameson Irish Whiskey and a generic peppermint chocolate chip ice cream and added a sprig of Mojito Mint from Roots Organic Inc. of Surrey, BC to garnish it.

RBuchanan photo Shamrock Blizzard a la Tasty KitchenRBuchanan photo: Shamrock Blizzard from TastyKitchen

My main reference for the chicken pot pie was Chicken Pot Pie IX from www.allrecipes.com and Aida Mollenkamp’s Chicken Pot Pie found on www.chow.com and like Tyler Florence’s Ultimate Chicken Pot Pie on www.foodnetwork.com, I prepared my own stockpot chicken for the broth and chopped chicken. Instead of preparing my own pastry, I used some Tenderflake frozen prepared puff pastry shells for a different presentation and to facilitate more time in celebration rather in cooking.

RBuchanan photo Chicken Pot Pie in Puff Pastry ShellRBuchanan photo: Chicken Pot Pie in Puff Pastry Shell

At the BCLB, we bought a lovely Irish Beer Discovery Pack that included two each of Guinness Draught, Kilkenny Irish Cream Ale, Harp Lager and Smithwick’s Premium Irish Ale. And we treated ourselves to Redbreast Single Pot Still Irish Whiskey, Aged 12 Years.

RBuchanan photo Redbreast whiskey to toast St. Patrick'sRBuchanan photo: Redbreast Single Pot Still Irish Whiskey

RBuchanan photo Guinness DraughtRBuchanan photo: Guinness

RBuchanan photo Kilkenny Irish Cream AleRBuchanan photo: Kilkenny

We enjoyed our festivities and look forward to new ones the changing season summons. Whether or not, you choose to grasp these times with the spirit that we do, may you hold close the golden moments.

A Celtic Toast

In closing, I wish you another Celtic blessing:

“May your day be touched
by a bit of Irish luck,
brightened by a song in your heart,
and warmed by the smiles
of the people you love.”

RBuchanan photo Sunset over Penticton St  Patrick's Day 2012RBuchanan photo: Sunset overlooking Naramata Bench toward Summerland at Penticton, BC

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Reminiscing about the Rico Hotel Mountain Lodge and Argentine Grille, Rico Colorado one year later

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel outside look at Argentine Grille  IMG_5360RBuchanan photo – Rico Hotel’s Argentine Grille on a snowy February day, 2011

Built in 1926 as a boarding house for the International Smelting Company, the Rico Hotel is an historic registered site. The warmth of the front lobby area with its high beamed ceiling, huge fireplace, overstuffed leather couches and rustic furniture still welcomes the weary traveler. It was a particularly comforting haven from the storm on the chilly February 2011 day we entered it after a challenging wintry drive over icy roads from Telluride.

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel lobby IMG_5358RBuchanan photo – Rico Hotel’s lobby welcomes on a snowy day

The room was another matter. Worn and showing its age, it was a tight space despite the innkeepers’ attempt to make it cheerful with the bed decorated by a cozy quilt comforter. The attractive headboard refused to keep the pillows in place and we were constantly fishing them out from the floor behind it. The bathroom compared to one you’d find on a small ship or old trailer – just enough room to navigate your way through the door to enter a tiny room with a tin shower, sink and toilet. It was possible to sit on the toilet and brush your teeth at the sink without stretching. I’m not sure how a person of significant size could manage it! Adjusting the heat was a challenge with the main room hot and the washroom freezing. We eventually cracked the mystery by propping the bathroom door open to redistribute the temperature, making the room even smaller but cozy.

I would not return for the room itself. I confess we were trying to economize and went for the hotel’s least expensive. On the other hand, the Rico Hotel held other highlights. It was Super Bowl Sunday so we headed to the lounge and restaurant – the Argentine Grille – hoping to catch the game and enjoy some pub grub. Initially we were concerned because we could not spot a television. Not to worry, our server, Brian, led us upstairs to an area with satellite television and told us we could have dinner there.

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel restaurant  IMG_5346RBuchanan photo – upstairs at the Argentine Grille

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel restaurant IMG_5347RBuchanan photo – table upstairs Argentine Grille

He told us the specials of the day, and from that we quickly selected the potato and leek soup, a three cheese pizza with tomatoes and a couple of Budweiser beer, a beverage choice we felt fit for the game. We weren’t overly hungry so thought we’d choose on the lighter side. In retrospect, we should have read over the menu more thoroughly.

Brian raved about Chef Eamonn O’Hara and assured us we had selected wisely. He wasn’t entirely wrong. We learned Eamonn had worked in the kitchens of the prestigious Hotel Bel Air in Beverly Hills, The Peaks at Telluride, and got his start in Liverpool and Ireland. Then the food arrived.

To start, Brian presented a complimentary basket of homemade bread with a roasted garlic bulb. It was the finest roast garlic we ever had. The delicate fresh thyme leaf on the butter pats hinted of the attention to detail practiced in Eamonn’s kitchen. The roasted garlic had sweetness about it and there was no bitter aftertaste. Even the crisp skin had a crunchy appeal. Later, Eamonn was kind enough to share his technique. Drizzle the whole bulb without cutting off the top with good olive oil and red wine vinegar, wrap it securely in tinfoil and bake it at the lowest heat in your oven for three hours. (I have a garlic roaster and will be experimenting at home with this technique.)

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel roasted garlic IMG_5339RBuchanan photo – Argentine Grille’s roasted garlic with bread

The soup was a beautiful pale orange and tastefully garnished with smoked paprika, bacon and onion bits. Each element was delicately balanced and distinct on the palate. I would not be waxing too poetically to compare it to a New Mexico rugged sunset and it was a large bowl at $9. The pizza may have been the finest I have had. It was a simple execution of good ingredients combined expertly on a lovely wood-fired thin crust. It was a great value at $12 and came with a beer or glass of wine.

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel potato leek soup  IMG_5341RBuchanan photo – Argentine Grille’s potato leek soup

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel pizza IMG_5340RBuchanan photo – Argentine Grille’s wood-fired pizza

While we noshed on these selections watching the big game, we lingered over the menu and learned more about the Rico Hotel chef. We discovered on Sundays as well as weekdays from 5 to 7 pm, small plate selections were available. In questioning Brian about this information, he was apologetic he had not pointed it out. He explained which main courses were offered at half price at roughly half the size.

Now I have to reveal, the food has to be awfully good for us to decide to order one more thing as full as we were. We asked Brian what time the kitchen closed and waited until much later in the game to order one small plate based on the menu’s four-ounce filet.

We had already had a second beer each while watching the game so each ordered a glass of red wine to have with the two-ounce filet. The wine was a Columbia Crest cabernet from Washington and a bit sweeter than we would have preferred. Its price of $9 a glass was the only other unpleasant surprise.

As ordered, the medium rare filet arrived with garlic mashed potatoes, sautéed carrots and zucchini and a rich mahogany reduced sauce. It was a meal that caused regret. No, not regret for ordering it but rather for not knowing who was in the kitchen before we ordered. While all the food was exceptional, there was no doubt in our minds that we should have skipped the beer, ordered a better bottle of wine and gone for two of Chef O’Hara’s main course full plates or four small plates. It was clear anything from his kitchen it would be excellent.

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel steak petite IMG_5350RBuchanan photo – Argentine Grille’s James Ranch petite filet

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel steak petite IMG_5353RBuchanan photo – Argentine Grille’s James Ranch petite filet

The filet was from James Ranch, local beef in keeping with the chef’s philosophy to support exceptional local products. In fact, in Rico there is a strong ethic to help each other out. For example, our server Brian is actually the operator of a local bar that was closes in the low season. It may be cliché to describe a great filet as melt-in-your-mouth tender yet there is just no other way to portray how perfectly this cut was prepared. The outside had a peppery crust and the interior was a perfect pink. We nibbled away at the small plate bounty wanting to savour each tiny morsel. Whatever shortfalls our assigned room had was mitigated by the sheer brilliance of our meal.

The room rate indicated continental breakfast was included at 8 am and based on the dinner we looked forward to whatever muffins or breads were to be presented along with coffee and juice. We awoke to a fine aroma of freshly brewed coffee and mystery items baked fresh that morning. To our surprise so much more was in store.

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel breakfast preserves IMG_5359RBuchanan photo – fresh preserves & bread             Rico Hotel

Attractively laid out were mini boxes of cereal with milk, orange juice, coffee, hot hardboiled eggs and sliced fresh strawberries, cantaloupe and orange. Off to the side was a table with piping hot oatmeal porridge with nuts and raisins to add as wished, breads, banana loaf, home preserve raspberry jam, and a selection of breakfast teas and hot chocolate. Then Eamonn delivered the main event – a golden toasted puffy frittata with potatoes, red onions, tomatoes and bacon. No wonder the place smelled so good! Again it was a relatively simple blend perfectly executed.

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel breakfast frittata IMG_5355RBuchanan photo – Chef Eamonn O’Hara’s Breakfast Frittata at the Rico Hotel

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel breakfast frittata IMG_5357RBuchanan photo – Chef Eamonn O’Hara’s Breakfast Frittata at the Rico Hotel

With the exquisite menu and crackling fire, we could have settled into the leather couches to linger with our coffees for the rest of the day. Our itinerary meant many miles ahead and with the snow falling, we felt we could not delay. While I don’t know just when, we will be back and in the meantime we will spread the news of the artistry in the Argentine Grille of the Rico Hotel.

RBuchanan photo Rico Hotel lobby IMG_5354RBuchanan photo – crackling fire in Rico Hotel’s lobby

Find the Rico Hotel in the spectacular San Juan Mountains of Colorado, about half an hour from Telluride or an hour-and-a-half from Durango.

2012 Update: You know a place is great when you’re still thinking about it 13 months later! Eamonn and his wife Lynda have continued to lovingly refurbish this property within the historic register guidelines since they purchased it. The description of the room in which we stayed may no longer be accurate. After sampling the chef’s creations and considering our complete experience there, we would stay in it again. In fact, as I said in one testimonial, we’d sleep on the floor just to savour Chef O’Hara’s cuisine again!

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