Posts Tagged ‘General’

d’Arenberg ‘The Dead Arm’ Shiraz 2004 [McLaren Vale] 14.5%

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

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So the Dead Arm Shiraz has a bit of a name for itself. If you don’t know the history of the wine, there is a certain fungi (Eutypa lata) that renders part of the vine dead, hence the ‘dead arm’.  Apparently it also makes the quality of grapes on the remaining half of higher quality. Apparently.

Well in all intents and purposes it DOES deliver a good wine. Though one may achieve this though drought stress, canopy management, fruit thinning to achieve a higher quality crop and thus resulting wine.

The instant character fresh from lively decant is a splattered array of blackcurrant and reduced red fruits. Though over time the nose grows a hairy animal belly and locks itself behind something akin to a leather suit case. Hints of succulent berry do poke though, but you’re going to need your beagle with you to find them. Flavourful and giving on the palate with a good punchy long lasting end. There could have been more fruit sweetness but you can’t have everything in one glass. As expected for the price. RRP $60

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Matilda Bay Brewery ‘Alpha Pale Ale’ [WA]

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

Matilda Bay Brewery has been producing Alpha Pale Ale under a style similar to the American Pale Ale for quite some time now.

It has a distinct hopped aroma, citrus dominant and austere bitterness. Pouring deep golden from the bottle chances are you’ll be taken back by the bitterness that arrives in a slow wave along with a grapefruit aroma. You may as well think you’ve had a bite of a grapefruit because it’s not too dissimilar. I’d err on the side of caution if you don’t like bitter beers and steal a sip from someone who knows this style and enjoys it. Definitely refreshing with a filling wholemeal bread mouth-feel. Good in summer after a long bike ride in the setting sun.

Small Bar Perth – Northbridge (Bar 399)

Monday, July 6th, 2009

For all the council development going on along William St, Northbridge, you’d hope some of the businesses would follow suit. This has happened on an interesting strip of shops, number 399 to be precise. It’s a small bar, cafe, diner eatery thingy which is hard to describe exactly. Call it what you will, the bottom line is it works. Utilising a limited menu (a kind of eat it or starve philosophy), you’ll eat the food – trust me. It works because they change the menu daily and the food is by default, always fresh. The wine list is limited but still well selected. Mulled wine on a winters day? I needed no convincing.

The third shop front next to a Vietnamese Noodle house and another cafe. Decked out in a baroque cum-rustic charm with delicious use of South West timber, Marri if I’m not mistaken. There is a charming little back courtyard complete with solid timber benches and plush cushions. Pull up a chair to the bar, or cozy up in a booth big enough for 6. It’s right in the Asian heart of Northbridge, with the good Yum-Cha scenes a stones throw away. Cafe during the day, small bar at night. Not that you’ll be craving Yum-Cha after a bacon and egg roll and Bloody Mary special ($15) on Sunday. Bloody ripper.

Bar 399. 399 William St, Northbridge.

Mon – Fri 8am to midnight Sat 10am to midnight Sun 10am to 10pm

Find the graffiti art mural and you’re there.



399 Bar on Urbanspoon

Tuckshop

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

A feature of all lunch bars in any industrial area, the plastic tasselled entry curtain suggests one of two things: the presence of flies and other winged insects are not wanted; and at some point during the year, a desire to keep the cold in, or the cold out. Today it was keeping the cold out. But only barely.

I’m standing in one here, in Wangara Industrial area. A market garden-cum-industrial precinct, which in the early 2000s, the greedy demand to service the mining boom, spread its tentacles in Perth.

Graced with only five dollars in my wallet squinting at the chalk board menu, my wet Vollyes squeak on the tiled floor announcing my presence. The moaning drone of an extractor fan from the open planned kitchen provides an auditory cover assuring an otherwise awkward entrance. I smell toasted sandwiches hissing on a hot plate. That kind of caramalised fried bread character, reminiscent of school tuck-shopsbut these tuck-shops now are servicing bigger, hungrier kids.

My lift to pick me up (from dropping off my car for servicing) shan’t be long away. Ten minutes max. Long enough perhaps for a quick redeeming coffee from next door the banana and almonds that formed a slapdash breakfast behind the wheel, failed to shoosh my groaning stomach.

An Asian man with a round face and piercing eyes greets me in his own take of an Australian welcome.

‘Goo-dae Mayte’. He smiles as he ferries fried goods to the bain-marie. His accent is thick Vietnamese.

He glistens under glistening foods under glistening lights. The fried wares include potato scallops, Chiko rolls and those ubiquitous beef cheese sausages that always look desiccated the skin shrunk around a filling turned stubborn in the spotlight of cookery failure. I cringe at the thought of their complexion at the end of a day’s trade. Vomit rises in my mind.

‘G’day’, I casually say. I shiver from the cold and the radiant heat from the heat lamps is an odd but welcome comfort. I espy a coffee machine. It’s an automatic. A one button no-brainer. The kind you always find in delis and quasi ‘café’s’ less able to handle a proper extraction with a reasonably skilled barista.

I figure asking for an espresso would be too exotic, wankerish and probably lost in translation. After all this is a disparate lunch bar. English-as-a-second-language lunch bar owners, in a gruff industrial area like Wangara. Most of the customers are ‘true blue’ it makes Vegemite look like an import. I make no apologies for my assumption that the maxim for coffee around here is probably two, maybe three coffees. Cappuccino, Flat White and Long Black. ‘Can I please get a long black?’

The man gives me a cow eyed backwards stare towards the direction of a woman busying herself arranging patisseries wrapped in clingflim. Dusted with icing sugar, they too will glisten into a syrupy slime and soggy pastry at the end of the day. I imagine their clientele are not as fussy as me. She says something to him in Vietnamese.

‘Loan Blat?’ He says in hope and validation.

Yes, Long Black.

‘Wee Mil?’ She says.

No thanks.

‘Wee shoo-gar?’

No thanks.

‘Velly stlong Cob-bei’. The woman smiles. Her teeth are stained brown and wrinkles make deltas around her eyes.

Yeah, I smile.

I stand there rubbing the back of my neck as if it were stiff from bad posture. I need something to lurch my half slumbered brain from the memory of sleep.

The man stands there feigning to work the machine. I suspect this is a husband and wife team. Their business card I see later on the counter attests to this. She, in typical Asian wife fashion, elbows him off a kitchen apparatus ushering him to busy himself with something he can’t fuck up. A foam cup is placed under the double spout black with patina for one that is used as oft. It makes a hollow ‘tock’ sound. SHORT BLACK button is pressed.

Those automatic coffee machines always make a cascade of ricketing and clanging. It reminds me of an old five CD changer I once had. The cup fills by a steamy third.

Like most lunch bars in industrial areas feeding men with bottomless stomachs, more is ALWAYS better. The generosity of the woman in her smile and demeanour was not going to let me leave with a half filled cup. It will be another five minutes and two more buttons and a whole lot more clanging before the cup brims. I made a few more observations whilst waiting.

I always feel impelled to make small talk about something, anything. But when there is a language barrier, I stand there and sense the other party wants to talk too, but can’t. I just smile like an idiot and feel my shortcomings of only knowing English.

There is a tiny ATM in the corner. By tiny I mean tiny. If you were to put an existing ATM in a cardboard compactor and it had implosive joints this would be the result.

Today’s paper is on sale. Another near air-disaster.

There is a sinister looking marble budda on the counter covered in loose change. He has a one dollar in his mouth which looks like a gold chocolate coin.

In the bain-marie there is something called ‘Wing Dings’. I’m slightly confused as to what part of what animal it has come from.

There are some REALLY fresh fair dinkum Vietnamese spring-rolls. I’m almost tempted but remembering my caveman dietBugger.

–I love the way immigrants bring something from the old country to the new. The shrine in the corner , the ‘prosperity cat’ and above all a desire to own these little shops and eke out a living in fair go Australia. Lots of them work the jobs many Australians ‘can’t be arsed’, then we wonder why we’re not the ones driving around in a new Mercedes.

She over fills the last automatic pour and the crema is lost into the drip tray. Dam, the best part. The husband is out the back flipping the toasted cheese sandwiches which I must admit look appetising. She levels out the coffee and places a firm lid. I pick it up with both hands from hers. It feels like a hot water bottle. The foam is disconcertingly thin.

‘Tree dolla’. Bargain.

I stand outside. The sun has risen behind heavy cloud to the east and thinner bands rise from the south. It gives an otherworldly aura about this place in the light drizzle that I’m cowering to avoid. It’s eerily still and cold as a morgue. I inspect my cup of inspiration. Steam licks my face, whispering my eyelashes in warmth. I take a sip preparing myself for a Coffea draconica.

I’m reasonably impressed.

RIP Michael Jackson

Friday, June 26th, 2009

Unless you have lived your life in a cave chances are you would have danced to a Michael Jackson song in your youth. Like him or not, but Micheal Jackson was the undisputed King of Pop. He was a great entertainer, music producer and trail blazer of the 1980s.

Now I’m not an 80s revivalist, but his music (which I believed peaked in the 80s) was a defining moment of the last century. It’s sad to hear of the sudden passing of this great star.

Michael (although you dangled infants out of hotel room windows, did questionable things with young boys, spent ridiculous amounts of money on facial surgery, changed your skin colour, lived in a theme park, had a chimp as a pet and did questionable things to it, married the King of Rock’s daughter, named your children ‘Princes’, wore a particulate mask in public, pretend to sleep in a hyperbaric chamber and grabbed your crotch mid-dance), you will be missed.

_ _ _ _ _ nce makes the heart grow fonder

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Life certainly has its way of instructing.

At some point in life you’ll learn to control your anger, and perhaps not bust out over road-rage. Or overcome low self esteem and view youself for the true potential that you are.

To find your perfect match in a partner is one of my life’s lessons.

And when I say perfect match I do mean it.

Perfectly complimentary.

She’s got personality, she’s got quirk, and she’s got the radiant aura and eyes that glow like miniature galaxies.

We get along like a house on fire that’s made of pure magnesium.

We both ‘get’ each other in shameless humanity. But as always things are never so easy. Life will instruct. Things are never this easy.

The lesson? Patience.

She’s 6000 kilometres away in Brisbane. She was over here to see me for just 12 days.

They flittered by. Days melted into the next which were dissected with rolls of film.

And it’s that which I rely on to get through the next 6 months before seeing her again.

Till then. It’s one day at a time.

Creatures of Lesiure

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

One of the greatest things about showing someone around your city is you get a chance to view things from a fresh(er) perspective.

Fremantle was revived in the old terraces and quirky shops.

The chilly spikes of morning eased to the rounded lull of a winter sun.

Beer and Kangaroo under an olive tree with great company.

But it’s only going to be for a nine more days, I feel too guilty being a tourist in my own town.


Little Creatures Brewery on Urbanspoon

Welcome

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Welcome to Sandgrouper land, Banana-Bender.

I hope you enjoy your stay.

Clover Hill 2003 – Pipers River [Tasmania]

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

Clover Hill [Pipers River – Tasmania] 2003 13%

Of all the places in Australia, Adelaide hills, Yarra Valley and Tasmania are the best places to produce sparkling. Where would I buy my sparkling from? Probably Tasmania. It’s just blessed with the best climate. End of story.

Clover Hill is a Pipers River sparkling producer who also dabbles in some red table wines. Or it could be the other way around. They dabble in sparkling wine producer because for the price, this sparkling was a little lacklustre.

I guess I was expecting a Janz-esque quality and style. This is made from the age old traditional blend of Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier. Apparently it’s had partial barrel fermentation but I couldn’t really detect anything pass the lifted red apple and biscuit base nose. It’s fresh, wirey with a reasonable amount of zing. Probably not zingy enough for my liking. I want to taste ZING dammit!

Oh yeah, and the ending was a little alcoholic for something at 13%.

Overall, a pricy foray of a Tasmanian sparkling, given the second chance I’ll stick with their table wines.

Destroyed

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

I had recently purchased a new camera. The Canon 5D Mark II and I have made it a habit to shoot in RAW format. RAW are files which are not compressed by the camera thus they contain all the colour information that other programs like Photoshop and Lightroom use to manipulate the images. RAW files also take up lots of space because they are, well, larger files. And I mean BIG. 22 mega bytes per photo, times that by, say, 200 per photo shoot and you have a few GB of material. So it was only a matter of time before my current 250GB harddrive became digitally obese.

Thus I bought a nice new 1 TB external.

I had just successfully transferred all my files over to the 1 TB. <Transfer Complete> it read on my monitor – after the 7hrs that it took, and me hoping the storm raging around me didn’t cut the power. Kind of like one of those bastard power surges that fuck up all your electronics. There was one. I did it myself.

See. Laptop cables and this particular make of external harddrive both share identical cables. Well they look identical when they’re just hooked on the top of the table as you busying yourself with ‘room cleanup-to-make-way-for-the-new-harddrive duties’. And there you have it. It put the wrong chord in and in less than a second all my photos of were gone. To add insult to injury, I had just deleted the previous copy from the old 250GB harddive saying to myself “why on earth would I need two separate copies?”

I now know why.