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MARIANI’S Virtual Gourmet January
4, 2026
NEWSLETTER Founded in 1996 ARCHIVE ![]() Brigitte Bardot (1934-2025)
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THIS WEEK A CHILD'S CHRISTMAS IN THE BRONX By John Mariani NEW YORK CORNER SEAFIRE GRILL WESTCHESTER By John Mariani THE BISON CHAPTER FOUR By John Mariani NOTES FROM THE SPIRITS LOCKER IS THE WHISKEY BOOM OVER? By John Mariani ❖❖❖
A CHILD'S
CHRISTMAS IN THE BRONX ![]()
Note: It's become something
of a tradition for me to republish this memoir
each year in Mariani's Virtual Gourmet,
which is in the book Almost Golden I
co-wrote with my older brother Robert and
originally as an article in the New York
Times.
Maybe it didn't
snow for Christmas every year in the Bronx
back in the '50s. But my memory of at least
one perfect snow-bound Christmas Eve makes me
think it did often enough that I still picture
my neighborhood as white as Finland in those
days when I lived along the choppy waters of
the Long Island Sound.
❖❖❖ NEW YORK CORNER
SEAFIRE
GRILL YONKERS
71
Grant Street 914-614-4369 ![]()
The City of Yonkers––less than
ten miles from Manhattan––has in recent
years risen from chronic blight to become
New York’s most vibrant Hudson River town. Its
downtown area near the beautifully restored
train station is called Getty Square, which in
the 19th century was a booming hub
of industrial and civic activity. The Otis
Elevator factory was located here, now home to
the vast new Lionsgate film and TV studio
built for $500 million, whose proximity to New
York has added measurably to media production.
Owner/managers
Benjamin Prelvuka, Victor Dedusha and
Venjamin Sinanaj
The menu is reflective of the Gilded Age when
Yonkers was a major mercantile city and
gentleman merchants and industrialists sat
down to trencherman dinners. So, today you may
begin with a sampling from the raw bar of
oysters, Littleneck clams, lobster, shrimp,
crab and caviar.
As one might expect these days, there are a
few pasta dishes, and the ones I enjoyed were
truffled trophy, macaroni with colossal crab
meat, roasted cherries, a dash of white wine.
The fish differ by season, and at the moment
roasted Nova Scotia halibut comes with lemony
potato gnocchi with fava beans, kale,
chimichurri, and a luscious beurre blanc.
Fresh from the boat, Montauk swordfish is
blackened and served with a tartar sauce and
cool, avocado, mousse. A whole main lobster
weighing in at 2 pounds maybe add simply
steamed or stuffed with crab meat while
Alaskan king crab legs come simply withdrawn
on butter.
Our party skipped the meat courses at this
point except for our two grandchildren who
polished off a 12 ounce fillet mignon with
well cut and quickly fried golden french
fries.
The generosity of portions is shown throughout
the meal, and waiters are adept at serving
each guest some of this dish, perhaps a little
of that, and you may well go home with the
rest. Even more so the
generosity of spirit at Seafire Grill
Westchester is what guides the evening here,
and it is clear that the management intends to
win as many guests up from Manhattan and New
Jersey as it does from Westchester. And since
Metro-North’s Hudson Line stops next door––it
takes 28 minutes from Grand Central––it is as
attractive a place to visit as it is to dine
at.
❖❖❖
THE BISON By John Mariani ![]() Donald Trump, Melania Knauss, Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell
Katie had contacted
Epstein’s publicist to inquire about an
interview.
Epstein
himself started rumors that he was an
intelligence agent. He trafficked with Saudi
Arabians in arms dealing. At Towers Financial
he tried his hand as a corporate raider, but
it turned out to run a Ponzi scheme that lost
its investors over $450 million; Epstein
was never charged. In the
1980s his biggest, most prominent client was Leslie Wexner (below), chairman and CEO of
The Limited, Inc. and Victoria’s Secret,
becoming a director of the Wexner
Foundation and Wexner
Heritage Foundation and president of Wexner's
Property.
In 1996, Epstein set up a tax dodge on St. Thomas named the
Financial Trust Company.
❖❖❖ NOTES FROM THE SPIRITS LOCKER
IS THE WHISKEY BOOM OVER? ![]()
The year 2026 doesn’t look promising for the
American whiskey industry, especially bourbon. The
announcement last week by the giant Kentucky bourbon
producer Jim Beam that it will "pause operations
at its main distillery for an indefinite period
beginning in January 2026,” sent shock waves through
the liquor industry, not only because of Jim Beam’s
heritage, dating back to 1795 but because for the
last two decades bourbon sales have been soaring.
Now owned by Suntory, the distillery in Clermont,
Kentucky, will remain closed while officials “take
the opportunity to invest in site enhancements. We
are always assessing production levels to best meet
consumer demand and recently met with our team to
discuss our volumes for 2026.”
Beam Suntory employs about 1,000 workers in the
state. Talks are ongoing with the United Food and
Commercial Workers union as to how the shutdown
might affect employees. (The company’s smaller Fred
B. Noe craft distillery, also located in Clermont,
as well as one in Boston, Kentucky, will remain open
in 2026.)
The chilling irony is that no one twenty years
ago would have predicted that bourbon—the corn-based
“brown spirit” out of Kentucky—would make a comeback
as the 21st century’s biggest surprise whiskey, with
niche market trophies like 23-Year-Old Pappy
fetching $35,000 for a single bottle at the Art of
Bourbon auction held at Louisville’s Speed Art
Museum. As so often happens in American business, greed fueled the market, creating a bubble of brand new bourbon labels––including some made in Texas, Oregon and New York. Shelves groaned with unknown bourbon labels to the point where spirits authority Fred Minnick, author of Bourbon: The Rise, Fall, and Rebirth of an American Whiskey, posed the question, “Is the Bourbon Boom Over?” by exposing how expansion had been driven by Wall Street rather than a real demand. Niche markets for “small batch,” “reserves” and “special barrels” wrote Minnick, “if not supported by consumers will go away.” ![]() According to the Kentucky Distillers’ Association, he state's distillers currently have an all-time record amount of aging whiskey in stock, with a glut of 16.1 million barrels in storage. But after a sales increase in early 2024 of $5.3 billion, a major drop in exports hit overnight due to the Trump tariffs, which effectively killed off sales to Canada. The overall U.S. whiskey market saw a decline of roughly 4.9% by volume and 5.1% by revenue for the 12 months ending July 2025. (Scotch was off 3%, Irish whiskey 6.5%.) Sales of Bulleit bourbon (right) are down more than 7%, Wild Turkey more than 8% and Brown-Forman, the producer of Jack Daniels Tennessee Whiskey, cut 12% of its work force last year.
By far the most troubling headwind is the fact that
U.S. alcohol consumption declined in 2025 to a
90-year low in drinking rates, a sociological trend
no one in the industry anticipated. Gen Z worldwide
has evidenced a decreased interest in alcohol, even
beer, and, after decades when the medical community
produced studies that indicated a moderate intake of
alcohol might even be beneficial to one’s health,
more recent reports by international health
organizations insist that even a single drop of
alcohol may cause physical damage, announcements
that have put off both younger and older drinkers
from starting or continuing to drink.
There is also the feeling among whiskey producers
that the new, cheaper, easy-to-use weight loss drugs
may decrease an appetite for liquor. The industry
is going through a fast, unforeseen shake-out.
Besides the news from Jim Beam, LMD Holdings, parent
company of Luca Mariano Distillery in Danville,
Kentucky––which claims it is a “farm-to-bottle”
niche label––filed for bankruptcy last August,
citing liabilities between $19 million and $50 million,
with assets between $1
million and $10 million.
The three-year-old A.M. Scott Distillery in
Dayton, Ohio, which made a series of sold-out
small batch
bottlings “uniquely designed to honor the six
branches of United States military,” filed for
Chapter 11 on Dec. 22, as has Devils River
Distillery of San Antonio. So, too,
Stoli Group USA’s Kentucky Owl whiskey brand, which
was planning to open the 420-acre Kentucky Owl Park
(rendering, right), with a distillery,
warehouses, bar, restaurant, hotel and light
railroad, filed for protection, claiming assets of
$100 million to $500 million and liabilities of $50
million to $100 million. Covid had hit the company
hard but then, no one expected that in in August 2024, Stoli Group
USA would be attacked with ransomware that
crippled its IT systems.
Now, at the beginning of 2026, any
prophecies about the future of bourbon or other
spirits rebounding any time soon seem moot. It is
difficult to imagine that people worldwide will
again increase their appetite for hard liquor or
show interest in the same old bourbon in brand new
bottles.
Even if the world’s economy booms, if people are
going to be drinking less, the current glut of
whiskey will not disappear any time soon, and the
thought of producing more in a saturated market
hardly seems to make sense. ❖❖❖ AH, THE
SMELL OF ROSEMARY WAFTING IN THE AIR WITH NINE INCH
NAILS PLAYING "HAPPINESS IN SLAVERY"
"[Babbo]
felt
essential, intoxicating, urgent, the party-crowded bar
area giving way to gracefully spacious dining rooms,
the smell of rosemary and wine in the air, the honeyed
lighting, the soigné service, the irreverent
soundtrack of roaring classic rock.”–– Helen Rosner,
"The New Babbo," The New Yorker (12/25)
❖❖❖ 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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