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MARIANI’S Virtual
Gourmet December
7, 2025
NEWSLETTER ARCHIVE ![]() Coca-Cola Ad (1944)
by Gil Elvgren
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THIS WEEK VISITING WEST POINT By John Mariani NEW YORK CORNER LA DONG By John Mariani HÔTEL ALLEMAGNE CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE By John Mariani NOTES FROM THE WINE CELLAR BARGAIN BURGUNDIES BY GEOFF KALISH ❖❖❖
VISITING, STAYING AND EATING
AROUND WEST POINT By John Mariani ![]() Old
Cadet Chapel
As I watched the second episode of Ken Burns’ new PBS documentary on the American Revolution that concerned how important the fort at West Point on New York’s Hudson River was in stopping the British from sailing down from Canada, I realized that I’d not visited the U.S. Army Military Academy since I was a schoolchild. So, on a cold November Wednesday my wife and I drove 50 miles north of where we live in Westchester County, across the Mario Cuomo Bridge and past Bear Mountain to spend a day and night visiting this quintessential American institution. Would
that we had done it a month ago when the Hudson
Valley was aflame with fall’s colors.
Nevertheless, the sheer majesty of the river
that Henry James once called “our great romantic
stream” showed off its broad and winding beauty
as it made its from its start in Henderson Lake above
Albany. The Academy itself is open to visitors from 10 AM-5 PM, and you can do a walking self-tour or drive-through. Guided tours are also available. To get into the main campus, with its majestic Gothic stone buildings and vast sports stadiums, you must first get a pass from the Visitors Center, a mile south. You’ll need legal ID, and they’ll ask if you have two examples, fill out a form in which you swear not have committed a crime in
the last ten years, then they run you through a
computer to complete the process. Next to the Visitors Center is the Academy’s Museum, which, depending on your fascination with historic uniforms, guns, bayonets and tiny models of the two atomic bombs dropped on Japan, you’ll get your fill here. The real draw here are the grounds and the buildings, always in the process of improvement and additions. Both the monumental Cadet Chapel and Georgian Old Cadet Chapel, the original 1829 Quarters and Taylor Hall have the cast of solidity and civility.
Hotels of any note are
few in the Academy’s town of Highland Falls, but
set right on the campus is the 151-room Thayer
Hotel (left), listed as an
Historic Hotel of America, dating back to 1829
as the West Point Hotel and host to everyone
from Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee to Edgar
Allan Poe and James Whistler. As the Thayer, it
opened in 1926. It is wildly popular for
visiting dignitaries, cadets’ parents, and
weddings. The Thayer was renovated in 2012 but still retains a kind of baronial décor of rafters and American flags. Walls are hung with hundreds of portraits of famous graduates. The lighting in the entrance lobby could brighten up, and the hallways of the rooms are gloomy and the room my wife and I stayed at was dated, with a basic bathroom, modest TV set on a table and little décor of any note. I found the hospitality of the hotel minimal, beginning when I asked the reservationist on the phone if they’d like to match a travel site’s $145 for which the hotel would have to kick back a
10%-30% fee to the site. They said no, instead
charging us
$175 for the same Queen Bed room, plus a
reprehensible “facility charge” of $25
(unmentioned in the booking), which included
“use of the room”––Huh? Bed, sink, towels? We
obviously went
with the site’s price, which actually had
dropped to $120 upon checking out but still had
to pay the facility charge, plus a refundable
$50 holding fee in case we trashed the
furniture.The main dining room called MacArthur’s Riverview, is similarly timbered and set with columns, with low lighting, in a style akin to those large resort hotels that used to offer a Modified American Plan. We were first seated at a table with a large wide scratch of the wood. The dated continental menu is typical of what hotel dining rooms used to serve
fifty years ago. Still, my wife and I had a fair
clam chowder (I had to fish around for the
clams), a good Iceberg wedge salad with blue
cheese dressing, a hearty dish of short ribs,
and seven excellent American lamb chops.
Potatoes gratin came as odd rounds the size of
hockey pucks. For dessert a plump apple tart was
well rendered both in crust and filling.The wine list needs more than the most familiar labels, and wines by the glass are reeled off by grape variety, with no producer’s name. ![]() The next morning upon leaving we tried to ferret out a place to have breakfast and found only one,besides a McDonald’s, open, a two-room eatery named Andy’s, one with a counter, the other barren of décor. But, after a long wait for service, we thoroughly enjoyed a Highland Falls Omelet of three eggs, sausage, bacon, ham and cheese with home fries for $11.75omelette and a stack of moist pancakes with about six slices of bacon for $7.00. Sad, in a state that produces fine maple syrup, that Andy’s serves something labeled “syrup” out of a plastic bottle. There are better restaurant choices in nearby towns like Le Bouchon Brasserie in Cold Spring and Farm in Nyack farther south. And if a one-day trip seems quite enough to visit West Point, head up the Hudson and you’ll be enthralled by all it has to offer, from Saratoga and Yaddo to the Olana arts mansion built by Frederic Church, Woodstock, Rhinebeck and much more that makes the river a natural treasure. NEW YORK CORNER ❖❖❖
LA DONG
11 East 17th Street 917-289-0019 ![]() Compared to the number of the other southeast Asian restaurants in New York, Vietnamese entries haven’t quite the ubiquity of Thai, but those that do exist offer many distinctions from all other Asian cuisines. Despite a thousand years of Chinese rule and the influence of neighboring countries like Laos, Cambodia and Thailand, Vietnamese cooks also readily adopted and adapted the new foods brought from Europe and the Americas, including corn, tomato, potato, peanuts and snow peas. But the major influence of
the 19th and 20th centuries
was under the colonial rule
of France––which called it Indochina––from 1859 to
1954, so much so that Saigon
was once called “the Paris of the Orient,” adding
café au lait, French bread,
butter, cream, yogurt and other foods to the colony.
Given all these culinary
intrusions, Vietnam’s cookery is considerably
lighter than others in Asia or
France, using little oil and preferring sautéing to
deep frying.All of this is evident at La Dong, a charming and colorful spot in Union Square, with the look of a colonial-style house with floating bamboo lotus ceiling lamps, carved wood accents, colored glass windows and a beautiful mural of a Vietnamese woman on a brick wall at the entrance. ![]() We let
ourselves be guided by our lovely waitress to La
Dong’s specialties, beginning
with a refreshing starter of Gỏi
Bưởi Tôm, a Chandler
pomelo salad with lightly grilled shrimp, Cara Cara navel
orange,
lemongrass, Kaffir lime, green Moscato grape,
mint, shallots and
toasted coconut tossed in spicy tamarind dressing.
Nem Nướng
is a grilled meatball wrapped in lettuce
with orange, scallion oil, sweet radish, bean
sprouts, ginger, cucumber and the
ever-present nuoc cham seasoning
sauce. Bánh Xèo was a turmeric-scented
crêpe
filled with sweet shrimp, pork
sausage. A sugarcane skewer pierced a molded paste
of shrimp with lettuce and
plum sauce. Of the main
courses I thoroughly enjoyed was a noodle dish
called Bún Chả Hà Nội of grilled pork
patties and crab-shrimp spring
roll nesting on vermicelli. North Vietnam acquired
its taste for beef from the
Mongols, and the chef’s signature pho is made with
American Wagyu in
a rich, aromatic broth, while Cà Ri Sư
ờn
Bò was
a big portion of braised beef
short ribs in a delicious yellow
curry with potato, carrot and creamy coconut milk
and
served toasted baguette.
I found
the
desserts uninspired.
La
Dong’s owner Jaru Jaruthiphayakhantha
(who
is actually Thai) recently launched an extensive
“Liquor Luck” cocktail menu
showcasing cocktails made with Southeast Asian
ingredients and Vietnamese-made
spirits. La Dong also brews its own Bia Hoi
draft beer. La
Dong shows how the food cultural of in Vietnam is
the result of a melting pot
of many cuisines––Eastern and Western––make this
one of the most enticing new
restaurants in the city right now. Open daily for
lunch and
dinner ❖❖❖
HÔTEL ALLEMAGNE By John Mariani ![]() CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
As she always did when an article was
about to appear, Katie brought pre-publication
copies of McClure’s to David’s house.
It was just about one year since she and David
had gone to France, and the Hudson Valley was
coming into
bloom. The yellow birch, white oak, red
maple were in full foliage, and the Palisades
and eastern side of the river were dotted with
purple hepatica, yellow coltsfoot, white
Dutchman’s breeches and red trillium. Some of
Katie’s happiest moments were when she
delivered the magazines to David’s house near
West Point. She’d drive up the Bronx River
Parkway, veer onto the Sprain then across the
wide Tappan Zee Bridge and up I-87. She had
the top down on her red Alfa Romeo Spider.David always prepared lunch for Katie when he knew she was coming up, and this time it was ricotta gnocchi dumplings with a pesto sauce made with springtime’s newly sprouted basil. He had cooled a bottle of Mâcon in remembrance of Paris. He set the table and took pleasure in looking at the silverware, the wine glasses and the white napkins. It was too early in the day for candles, but he lighted a low fire in the stone fireplace. As he was pushing the logs around, he heard Katie blowing her horn, a weak “beep-beep” characteristic of her car. He looked at himself in the mirror, brushed his hair and noticed he should have gotten a haircut. ![]() Katie arrived with her dog, which David had no use for but had prepared some food to eat and stay outside. Katie and David hugged, and she said, “It really is stunningly beautiful up here. You can smell the flowers by the roadside.” “And I assume you have those sweet-smelling sea breezes coming off the Sound where you live.” “Yep, year-round, but now I can open my windows and smell them. Puts me to sleep in two minutes.” David never asked about the “lawyer guy,” but he’d learned that he was wrapping up his long-term case in Boston, so the prospect of her going to see him was in the offing. As a matter of fact, he noticed Katie had a small suitcase in the back of her car and figured she would be driving from his house up to Boston that afternoon. He didn’t ask. Katie came into the house and David immediately began to boil water for the pasta. They ate lunch before looking at the magazine, a delay that was sort of like a dessert after eating a good meal. David noted that he’d made the gnocchi himself and picked the basil fresh out of the garden. “It’s terrific,” said Katie. “Reminds me of the meals we had in Rome and Naples.” “Boy, does that seem a long time ago.” That had been about five years before when they had gone in search of the gold Al Capone was rumored to have robbed and might have stashed in Italy. That was also the first time their lives were put in severe danger together. Katie removed the dishes. David said, “Leave them, I want to see the article.” The article was the cover story that month, with an historic black-and-white photo of the Hôtel Allemagne taken during the Nazi occupation. They opened to the pages of the article, which was illustrated with photos of all four of the hotels attacked, the culprits apprehended and a head shot of Dr. Judith Baer supplied by the Institute. Then David sat down to read it, while Katie cleaned up the dishes. “It’s as good as anything you’ve ever written, Katie. Very thorough, really fascinating. I’m glad I was along for the ride.” “You did a lot more than tag along, David. As always, I couldn’t have done it without you. And here’s a toast to Catherine Newcombe!” They raised their glasses and drank the last of the wine. Then Katie said she had to be going, because she had a long drive to Boston. David’s heart sank a little, as it always did, and he took her out to her car. Katie told her dog to get in and turned over the ignition, which itself had an identifiable high, whining sound. Katie said, “Well, I’m looking forward to working together again, David. Who knows where?” David said, “I wouldn’t mind going back to Paris, but, hey, anywhere’s good for me. Just dial ‘G’ for Greco and I’m there, kind of like the Bat Signal.” Katie laughed and said, “Maybe you should buy a cape,” and put the car into reverse, turning it around in the driveway. “See you soon.” David waved goodbye, watched the car drive out of sight, then took a deep breath of the spring air.
❖❖❖ NOTES FROM THE WINE CELLAR
BARGAIN BURGUNDIES BY GEOFF KALISH ![]() CHATEAUNEUF-DU-PAPE With single bottles of red from
recent vintages of Domaine de la Romanée Conti La
Tâche selling for over $5,000 and so-called premium
bottles of reds from the Côte d’Or going for upwards
of $250, good red Burgundy is certainly considered
to be quite expensive. The reasons usually given for
the high prices include limited supply because of
small vineyards, vulnerability of the annual crop to
mildew, frost, pests, etc. and meticulous winemaking
techniques, plus high demand. And I suspect that
there’s more than a bit of greed by producers and
merchants figured into the pricing. But rather
than trying to sort out whether upper-end price
bottles are really worth the fee asked, and if so
which ones, over the last few months I decided to
see if I could find top quality bottles of red
Burgundy that are widely available for under $50 and
importantly provide pleasure both alone and with
food. My findings follow:
This wine was made from
whole-clusters of organically-gown Pinot Noir grapes
culled from old vines on 20 different plots in
southern Burgundy. Following fermentation, it was
aged in French oak for a year and shows a fragrant
bouquet and taste of ripe cherries and raspberries
with hints of vanilla and spice in its finish. It
makes a great accompaniment to veal and pork chops
as well as broiled
or grilled swordfish. 2021 Santenay Le Champs
Claude
($49). Fashioned from Pinot Noir
grapes grown on vines over 60-years old, this rather
light easy-drinking red, with a bouquet and taste of
cherries and pomegranate has a lively finish with
notes of white pepper. Mate it with breast of duck
and baked chicken or broiled salmon. 2022 Domaine Donjean
Berthoux Givry Prémier Cru Clos du Cras Long
($42). Albeit rather light and
fruity in bouquet and taste, this wine has memorable
flavors of cherries and ripe plums that can be
enjoyed alone or with appetizers like smoked salmon,
caviar and avocado toast as well as main course
items like roast lamb and pasta with red sauce.
With a pronounced bouquet
and taste of cherries and ripe cranberries, this
medium-bodied wine from Pinot Noir grapes grown
around a village about 7 miles south of Beaune in
Southeast France pairs perfectly with well-aged
cheeses like cheddar and Gouda and livens the flavor
of grilled or baked branzino and trout as well as
roasted chicken and turkey. 2023 Louis Jadot
Marsannay “Clos du Roy” ($43) and 2023 Louis Latour
Marsannay
($43). With grapes hailing from
this most northern region of the Côte de Nuits region of
Burgundy, these two similar wines show a fragrant
bouquet and smooth taste of cherries and
raspberries, with earthy spice in their finish
(perhaps a bit more in the Latour) that mate
harmoniously with a range of sushi as well as duck
pâté and main course items like
coq au vin and hearty cassolettes. 2023 Fréderic Esmonin
Bourgogne Hautes Cȏtes du Beaune ($27). This lush, elegant wine
with a bouquet and taste of ripe cherries and notes
of chocolate in its finish is an ideal mate for
roasted poultry and grilled salmon and even pasta
with red sauce.
2023 Philippe Le Hardi
Bourgogne Pinot Noir Vielles Vignes ($45) Grapes for this wine were
harvested in the Santenay area and following
fermentation the wine was aged in wooden barrels for
12 months. Requiring a few minutes of aeration, this
wine showed a fragrant bouquet and mouth-filling
taste of ripe cherries with hints of thyme and basil in its
finish. It marries well with grilled steak, rack of
lamb and pasta with mushroom sauce. ❖❖❖ THOSE
WACKY POSH PEOPLE!"Another private chef witnessed a client remodel an entire garden for an alfresco dinner party, spending £5,000 on lavender plants. Someone else had fruit flown in by private jet because “it tasted different in Spain”. Another insisted on meals “in tune with the movements of the moon”: foie gras for pets. fasting on a waning crescent; feasting on a full moon; timing her meals to 'align' with lunar energy. One sent lunch back seven times; another had a party with models, naked except for blobs of mayo."––Jack Burke, "Confessions of a private chef," Times (11/25)❖❖❖ Any of John Mariani's books below may be ordered from amazon.com. The Hound in Heaven
(21st Century Lion Books) is a novella, and
for anyone who loves dogs, Christmas, romance,
inspiration, even the supernatural, I hope you'll find
this to be a treasured favorite. The story
concerns how, after a New England teacher, his wife and
their two daughters adopt a stray puppy found in their
barn in northern Maine, their lives seem full of promise.
But when tragedy strikes, their wonderful dog Lazarus and
the spirit of Christmas are the only things that may bring
his master back from the edge of despair. WATCH THE VIDEO! “What a huge surprise turn this story took! I was completely stunned! I truly enjoyed this book and its message.” – Actress Ali MacGraw “He had me at Page One. The amount of heart, human insight, soul searching, and deft literary strength that John Mariani pours into this airtight novella is vertigo-inducing. Perhaps ‘wow’ would be the best comment.” – James Dalessandro, author of Bohemian Heart and 1906. “John Mariani’s Hound in Heaven starts with a well-painted portrayal of an American family, along with the requisite dog. A surprise event flips the action of the novel and captures us for a voyage leading to a hopeful and heart-warming message. A page turning, one sitting read, it’s the perfect antidote for the winter and promotion of holiday celebration.” – Ann Pearlman, author of The Christmas Cookie Club and A Gift for my Sister. “John Mariani’s concise, achingly beautiful novella pulls a literary rabbit out of a hat – a mash-up of the cosmic and the intimate, the tragic and the heart-warming – a Christmas tale for all ages, and all faiths. Read it to your children, read it to yourself… but read it. Early and often. Highly recommended.” – Jay Bonansinga, New York Times bestselling author of Pinkerton’s War, The Sinking of The Eastland, and The Walking Dead: The Road To Woodbury. “Amazing things happen when you open your heart to an animal. The Hound in Heaven delivers a powerful story of healing that is forged in the spiritual relationship between a man and his best friend. The book brings a message of hope that can enrich our images of family, love, and loss.” – Dr. Barbara Royal, author of The Royal Treatment. ❖❖❖
MARIANI'S VIRTUAL GOURMET
NEWSLETTER is published weekly. Publisher: John Mariani. Editor: Walter Bagley. Contributing Writers: Christopher
Mariani, Misha Mariani, John A. Curtas, Gerry Dawes, Geoff Kalish.
Contributing
Photographer: Galina Dargery. Technical
Advisor: Gerry
McLoughlin. If you wish to subscribe to this
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