Zhadi's Den

Random essays on wine, writing, moving to San Francisco, surfing, cats (exotic and otherwise) and zombies...depending on my mood.

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Packing with cats

Is it just my animals, or does anybody else's pets act out when you pack a suitcase? Tsavo, my ginger pumpkin brat of a cat, sits as still as a statue and stares at me with a look so bleak, so accusatory, that he's just gotta know I'm getting ready to leave him for more than a day. And he'll sit like that for ages. If he blinks, I never catch him at it. Just sits and stares...no doubt plotting some sort of retaliatory mischief when my back is turned. Or when my front is facing him, for that matter. He has been known to pee in my suitcase if I leave it open half-packed. A pile of leather boots has been the target of his whizzing wrath. Both times I was in the room and I swear he waited until he had my attention before doing his business. Try getting the smell of cat urine out of leather without ruining it.

Maddie, while she's never peed on anything except cat litter, is equally adept at turning the guilt screws. She'll wander in while I'm packing, look from suitcase to me, give a mournful little chirrup, and then run from the room. Beezle has the same M.O., but substitute the chirrup with the feline equivalent of a stricken expression. Mouche hides under the bed, while Foster...well, he just purrs and rolls on his back to get his tummy rubbed, good natured sumo-kitty that he is. He knows I'll be back. And in the meantime, sleep is good and there will always be someone around to rub his belly. Life is very simple for Foster. No fear of abandonment going on in his bobble brain.

Mouche, Maddie and Beezle now...they get upset if I'm in a different room. Their favorite game is to go into the stairwell and cry mournfully until I call their name (yes, I can tell their meows apart). Then whoever is the culprit will come running at top speed to find me, as if they had NO idea that I was in the bedroom or living room. Even though they'd just seen me five minutes earlier. I think they might just like the way the sound of their voices echo in the stairwell.

I'm off to San Diego for the weekend for some surfing with Jim, to celebrate the holidays with Mom & Bill, and hang out with Maureen. We plan on eating our way through our favorite haunts in La Jolla in celebration of our birthdays. I have a bottle of very good Bliss Cabernet Sauvignan to share. I'm hoping to see my new niece. Mom is making homemade tacos for dinner. Dave is coming with me and I know I'll have a good time. And when I get home, I know I'll find all five cats in a pile on the bed, happy to see me and content with life, until the next time I pull out that evil suitcase...

And in the meantime, if anyone knows how to get the small of cat pee out of leather...I'm open to suggestions.

Monday, January 16, 2006

Bringing in 2006


New Year's Collage by Chris








The Centerpiece of the Meal, a double magnum of 1983 Chateau Latour



I'm telling you, 2005 was one hell of a year. One year of hell, for that matter. Oh, it wasn't all bad. There were bright spots of fun, optimism, love, and lots of beach walks scattered throughout. But all in all I could not wait to see the end of it.

Now, I am not a big fan of New Year's Eve parties. For the last 10 or so years, my idea of a good way to bring in January 1st was to stay at home with Brian, watch movies, have champagne and snacks. I'd invariably fall asleep before midnight, wake up for one drowsy toast as the clock struck 12:00 (or the digital equivalent of 'struck'), and then fall back asleep. And this year, my first Christmas and New Year's without Brian in almost two decades, I just wanted to sleep through the whole transition into 2006. Okay, I wanted a glass of champagne too. But basically I just wanted 2005 and all the weirdness and stress of relocation and loss out the door and out of my life. Me and Dave

Then I received an email from Billy B, my favorite gourmet cook and wine expert, inviting me and Dave down to his annual New Year's Eve dinner held at his mother's house in Pasadena. I'd heard legends of these dinners, the culinary equivalent of the treasure of Sierra Madre. My sister had been describing them in glowing, restaurant reviewesque detail for years.

I thought about it. It would be a totally new experience for New Year's Eve. I'd get to see some family for at least part of the actual holidays, not to mention hang out with Billy, who I hadn't seen since our wine weekend (which I haven't finished writing about...BAD blogger!). And the food and wine was bound to be fantastic. We would spend the night at Billy's, so no breathalizer tests on the side of the road after the party. I could say one last goodbye to the house in Glendale (Brian was leaving January 4th), we could spend the night at Lisa's, maybe watch some Buffy or old Star Trek, then drive home Monday morning. Somehow it just seemed like the right thing to do, the perfect anecdote to my holiday blues. I asked if we could bring anything. Billy said just show some cleavage. I assumed he meant me, not Dave, so I packed accordingly.

The only downside was that both Southern and Northern California were expecting the 'worst winter storms in years!' all New Year's weekend.


Decanter on a stick

Eh. Big deal. I've driven in rain before, I thought as Dave and I left San Francisco Saturday morning.

Ah, foolish me. It was the worst weather I've ever experienced while behind the wheel of a car. The tumbleweeds alone turned the drive into a bizarre version of Centipede, trying to


avoid them as they scooted across I-99. I finally just drove into 'em rather than risk skidding out in the rain. I mean...c'mon, let's get real here. Que es mas macho? A tumbleweed? Or an SL2 Saturn? Although some of those tumbleweeds were mighty big. We saw one the size of a refrigerator plastered to the front of an SUV like some bizarre hunting trophy. The ones that made it across traffic then lined up along the median and rolled down along the concrete as if they had someplace VERY important to go. Like on the other side of the freeway, waiting for us on the return drive...I kept thinking of the Outer Limits episode with the sentient tumbleweeds.

Eight hydro-planing, wheel vibrating, tree-limb and tumbleweed dodging, white-knuckled hours later, we pulled up in front of Billy's house in Pasadena, one of the spacious, quiet older neighborhoods. The door was opened by Chris, wine aficianado and all around great gal. She had a glass of Schramsberg Blanc de Blanc in one hand. Things were definitely looking up.

Dana and Friend, above, with Tess and Billy, right

A half hour later, Dave and I were cleaned up, drinking bubbly with Billy and Chris, and, wonder of wonders, I was relaxed. We'd safely made it to our destination, I was dressed for a party (the required cleavage was present), and had seen the centerpiece to the dinner; a double magnum of 1983 Chateau Latour. This is the kind of wine I'd read about, the kind that wine snobs talk about, and something I never dreamed I'd get to try. It would be served at dinner, with one of Billy's famous roasted slabs of red meat.

Chris, Wine expert and Sharer of Decanter on a Stick



Chris opened a bottle of 1987 Grgich Hills Cabernet. We tried a sip and decided it needed some breathing room. She pulled out the glasses she had brought for Billy as a present: two huge crystal bowls on improbably thin stems. She and Billy had traveled to Tuscany together where they'd had glasses like these, dubbed 'decanters on a stick.' Yes, size really does matter, folks. The Cab smelled good in a regular wine glass, but the nose was incredible when the Grgich was poured into one of the decanters on a stick. Chris let me share her glass -- and the enriched wine drinking experience -- through the evening, which was extremely generous of her. Like a good sister, I made sure to pour a bit of the Grgich Hills Cab in a glass so that Lisa, due shortly, would be sure to get some.

Other guests, including Lisa, started arriving shortly thereafter. They included: Tess, a longtime friend of Billy's of whom I've heard many nice things; Tess's husband John, who brought the Latour; Mark, a classic Star Trek fan (that was good enough for me); and Other Dana, a friend of Tess's. It was a very convivial group, presided over by Billy as host and chef.



Mark, above, and Lisa with a glass of Haut Brion


We went on a tour of the wine closet and wine cellar...Madre de dios, the legends were true!

I could have spent hours examining all the bottles and their labels, wallowing in an extensieclecticclectic collection of wines collected over the years. We opened a 1973 Haut Brion and a non-vintage Chateau Palmer Margeaux, comparing the nose and flavor of the same wines poured in regular wine glasses and the decanters on sticks. All of the wines were delicious, but the older wines were definitely subtle. If a person was looking for a big, lush fruit bomb, these were not wines they'd appreciate. The Haut Brion was the richest of the wines I tasted and reminded me of dusty blackberries. The topics of conversation ranged from classic Star Trek (a party was planned at Lisa's house the following night) to stories of Billy's adventures with Chris in Tuscany. Everyone was pleasantly and mildly inebriated in a very genteel way, that sort of gauzy glow that surrounds you. You know, kinda like Cybil Sheppard had on "Moonlighting" when they used vasoline on the lens to make her look younger?

At any rate, we were all happy and ready to eat by the time dinner rolled around. And what a dinner...


Huge slabs of rare roasted meat, homemade Yorkshire pudding, and mashed potatoes with truffles were included in the feast laid out before us. Billy fretted because the meat, to his mind, was 'hideously overcooked' (it was pinkish red, oozing with juices). Evidently part of the New Year's tradition is bemoaning the fact that he'd overcooked the meat while everyone else protests that it looks (and tastes) wonderful. I've never had Yorkshire pudding before, just read about it British mysteries and A Christmas Carol. It was golden and crispy on the outside; savory, yummy on the inside.


Master Chef Billy at work

I'd be more descriptive, but I was too busy enjoying it to take more detailed notes. Same goes for the mashed potatoes. If you've never had a dish infused with truffles, it's hard to describe the subtle, almost musky flavor that it adds. Suffice it to say that I ate enough of 'em to destroy a month's worth of Atkins style dieting. And it was so worth it!


The Latour was decanted into four separate decanters to allow it to breathe and reduce the sediment when poured into glasses. The color was surprisingly dark; I'd expected it to have that slightly brownish orange tinge around the edge that comes with older wines. The flavors were very subtle, earthy and tinged with a hint of green pepper and spice. It complimented the meat wonderfully. And there was just also the 'ain't this cool?' factor of drinking a $1500 bottle of wine from one of the most famous wine houses and terroirs in the world.



Other Dana, elegant for the evening

Dinner ended. Stuffed full of food and drink, I decided to take a nap until midnight. What can I say? I'm a woman who needs some traditions...and who needs naps after rich food and drink. Evidently it's a family trait 'cause Lisa did the same thing. I curled up in a back room and snoozed happily until a few minutes before midnight, when Dave woke me up for a champagne toast to ring in the new year. Everyone convened on the back patio with a glass of Veuve Cliquot (otherwise known as 'The Widow), and raised a glass to 2006.

All in all, I'd say that the legends ARE true. Thank you, Billy, for a wonderful time. It was truly the perfect bridge between the old and the new, an optimistic end to a bad year, and a marvelous beginning to what I hope will be a stellar 2006!



Several glasses of wine into the evening!











Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Dogzilla


Boska
Originally uploaded by zhadi.
ONE more gratuitous animal photo before a real post...This one of Boska, now known as Dogzilla because she loves to stomp through and destroy sandcastles when we walk on the beach. Old ones, ones in progress...it doesn't matter to Dogzilla. She even stole a bag of goldfish crackers from a young castle builder before knocking the sand structure down. Shameless hound...

Thursday, January 05, 2006

Yin&Yang


Yin&Yang
Originally uploaded by zhadi.
A moment of truce between the Stay-Puff Marshmallow cat, Foster, and Beezle, Lord of the Flies...

I'm gearing up to write about one of the best New Year's Eve parties I've ever attended. And those of you who've been reading my blog know that my way to gear up for writing is to post cute pictures of animals! I'll have an honest to goodness post by the end of the weekend!

In the meantime, take your insulin against the diabetic shock brought on by the overload of cute! Be glad I'm not posting baby panda pictures!

We are not amused...


We are not amused...
Originally uploaded by zhadi.
And the view from pillowside...Nothing like a big furry orange butt staring ya in the face to start the day...or end it.

Covered in fur


Covered in fur
Originally uploaded by zhadi.
And people wonder why cats got the reputation of being little furry, life-sucking vampires...
 
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