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My Favorite Foods for the Fourthby Linda Joyce Forristal, CCP, MTAOn the 4th of July each year, Americans celebrate their independence and freedom. The day is filled with parades, backyard barbecues, lakeside picnics and is usually topped off with twilight fireworks--be they a couple of sparklers in the backyard or massive displays on the Mall in Washington, DC. In my opinion, there is no better way to celebrate the day than eating indigenous American species. Here are some of my suggestions. America’s Original Red Meat See also, www.bisontourism.com
In celebration of The Fort’s 40th anniversary, the Arnolds created The Fort Trading Company. Now, in lieu of a trip to Colorado, satisfied restaurant goers and anyone else can order buffalo steaks, rib eyes, NY strips, and much more by calling 1-877-229-2844 or logging on to www.forttradingco.com. All the orders are shipped in a reusable cooler with dry ice. America’s True Blue Berry
If you have more energy, I recommend tackling a Provencal fresh fruit tart. For a great recipe, cruise over to http://www.cuisineprovencale.com/rec_sft.html for the details on how to make a wonderful fresh fruit tart for summer that has a nut crust called a sablée, a crème anglaise filling and is topped with a generous handful of berries—blueberries are perfect. True American Wine
A couple of years ago, I drove out to a vineyard near Middleburg, Virginia to taste a Norton wine at Chrysalis Vineyards. They were not tasting their pure Locksley Reserve Norton priced at $35 a bottle, nor their regular estate-bottled Norton $16, but rather their Sarah’s Patio Red (only $13)—which is 80% Norton and 20% Chardonnay. I liked it, but enjoyed the bottle I took home even more after it was decanted. They also have a wonderful Norton wine jelly. For more nformation, see www.chrysaliswine.com Horton Vineyards, outside Charlottesville claims to be the first vineyard in Virginia to raise the Norton grape since Prohibition. Owner Dennis Horton knew of the grape from his home state of Missouri and knew it had historically been grown in Virginia to some acclaim in the 1800s, when it was called Virginia Claret, so he wanted to give it a try. The rhyming Horton Norton is modestly priced and can to be found in East Coast wine stores as far away as New York. For more info, cruise over to www.hvwine.com. However, the epicenter of Norton wine in America is the German settlement of Hermann, Missouri. Before Prohibition, wineries spread around the hills of Hermann produced more than a million gallons of wine a year and was home to the nation’s second largest winery, Stone Hill Winery. This is the very vineyard that produced the awarding-winning 1873 wine that got such high marks in Vienna. Unfortunately state liquor laws in most states restrict interstate commerce in relation to wine, so you might have to travel to your tasting. To see if Stone Hill can ship to your state, cruise over to www.stonehillwinery.com This article was originally the July 2004 update sent out to my subscribers. I have updated it a bit and posted here, June 21, 2006 just in time for the upcoming 4th of July celebration. Blueberry and bison pictures are courtesy ARS/USDA. Norton grape picture courtesy Stone Hill Winery. |
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