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Thursday, December 15th, 2011
Written by Chef Jim Shirley
 Sparkling wines mentioned by Jim Shirley in his wine column include Marques Gelido, Graham Beck Brut and Francois Montand Rose. / News Journal
Wine Time – Special to The Pensacola News Journal
It’s time to think about stocking the wine box for the holidays. I recommend having a spread of three wines when entertaining a squad. A sauvignon blanc or light chardonnay will keep the white wine faction happy, a pinot noir is a nice touch for the red wine faction, and to prove it is a celebration, let’s bring in some bubbles.
On the easy to drink and easy on the pocketbook team is Francois Montand from the Loire valley. Their rosé is always a wine-festival award winner, and for about $11, it can be a winner at your event. And Cava, from Marquis de Gelida, is a standout, receiving ratings like wines that cost three times as much. New (to our area) is Graham Beck non-vintage from South Africa, a light, yeasty brut made from pinot noir and chardonnay. Both the Gelida and the Graham Beck can be picked up locally for about $12.
Tags: America, Chef Jim Shirley, Fish House Posted in Celebrity Chefs, Chef Jim Shirley, Holiday, The Fish House, party planning, wine | No Comments »
Monday, October 31st, 2011
Special to The Pensacola News Journal
 MOMA salad by Jim Shirley of The Fish House. / Bruce Graner/bgraner@pnj.com
Written by Chef Jim Shirley
Funny how things get their names. You’re flipping through a menu and find a name that makes you pause and wonder how that happened. An example would be one of my favorite salads, the MOMA. Here’s how that came about.
A few years back — in the late ’90s — I had a spot called Stella’s Bistro in the Pensacola Cultural Center. It was a casual little place where all the sandwiches were named for theaters and all the salads were named for museums. This little jewel of a salad, made with applewood-smoked bacon, Gorgonzola cheese, toasted walnuts, caramelized pears and a Gorgonzola vinaigrette, was named the MOMA after the Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan. The salad came with me to The Fish House and has resisted efforts to be renamed. We’d rather have you come to us, but if you’re cooking at home, here’s the recipe.
MOMA salad
8 slices applewood-smoked bacon
2 cups Gorgonzola (divided)
4 hearts of romaine lettuce
2 Bosc pears, cored, peeled and quartered
1 tablespoon butter
2 tablespoons brown sugar
3 ounces white balsamic vinegar
1/2 cup walnuts
1 tablespoon minced garlic
1/2 teaspoon onion powder
2 teaspoons dried parsley
1 cup olive oil
2 teaspoons Fish House hot sauce
1 pinch white pepper
1 pinch sea salt
First pop a bottle of Ponga sauvignon blanc, a crisp adult beverage from New Zealand winemaker Alan Scott. This will help you get into a salad-making mode. I follow Hemingway’s lead and drink my sauvignon blanc (his was Sancerre) crackling cold.
Now throw a skillet on the stovetop, crank to medium heat, line up the 8 strips of bacon across the pan, and cook fully. Chop and reserve. Strain off the bacon drippings, and wipe the skillet clean. Put the drippings back in the pan, and add butter and brown sugar. Sauté over medium heat for a minute. Toss in the sliced pears, and cook till lightly browned (about four minutes). Remove from pan and chill.
For the dressing, whisk together 1 cup Gorgonzola, minced garlic, onion powder, white pepper, hot sauce, dried parsley and white balsamic vinegar. When well mixed, slowly whisk in the olive oil. Reserve.
Toast walnuts in a pan for a minute or two, and hit with a pinch of sea salt.
To build the salad, first sip on the wine to calm yourself for the arduous task ahead. Toss lettuce in a bowl with 6 ounces of the dressing. Split into four plates, and cap each with 2 slices of bacon and remaining Gorgonzola (split four ways). Lay the caramelized pears over the top, and sprinkle with walnuts to finish. Pour up the grape and fall to.
The Fish House, 600 S. Barracks St., 470-0003, or visitwww.goodgrits.com.
Tags: America, Chef Jim Shirley, Fish House, Florida, local restaurants, Pensacola, Southern Cooking Posted in Celebrity Chefs, Chef Jim Shirley, Cooking Tips, Southern Cooking, The Fish House | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, October 11th, 2011
Good Grits Girls bake for a good cause. 
Tuesday, October 25, 5:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m., Twelve Good Grits Girls, employees of the Great Southern Restaurant Group (The Fish House, Atlas Oyster House and Jackson’s Steakhouse), will join together on the Fish House Deck to submit over 1000 cupcakes to the public for judging. The winner will be crowned the Great Southern Cupcake Queen. Judges are our own Great Southern pastry chefs Trina Confusione (Fish House) and Miko Franklin (Jackson’s Steakhouse), and Partners/Owners Mrs. Collier (Cate) Merrill and Pensacola Celebrity Chef Jim Shirley.
People’s Choice: The public will pay 5 dollars for a chance to taste all of the cupcakes. Cupcake tasters will receive two voting tickets. After tasting cupcakes at each station, the guests will leave their tickets with their favorite baker. The baker who has the most cards will win people’s choice. Prizes for the winner will be donated by the restaurant.
100% of the tasting fees will be donated to the American Cancer Society.
Judges will announce their choice along with the crowd’s favorite at 6:30 p.m.
Door Prizes: Provided for attending guests by area boutiques and salons such as Style Downtown and Escape Wellness Spa.
Drink Specials: Pomegranate and ginger martinis and pink sparkling wine.
Entertainment: Provided by Lucas Crutchfield.
We are all very competitive when it comes to our baking skills. We frequently bring in a new baking recipe for each other to try. We thought that making it a fun event and tying it to such a cause as breast cancer, particularly during Breast Cancer Awareness Month, would be an ideal way to have fun doing what we love for a cause we believe in. We hope that people will come and enjoy the evening with us. “It’s just a few days before the breast cancer walk on Saturday, so in a way it’s our own little pep rally,” says Lindsey Voorhees, a Fish House manager.
Tags: America, Atlas Oyster House, Chef Jim Shirley, Cocktails, contest, cupcakes, Fish House, Good Grits for a Good Cause, Happy Hour, Jackson's Steak House, Shelley Yates, Things to do, Trina Confusione Posted in Atlas Oyster House, Celebrity Chefs, Charity, Chef Jim Shirley, Cocktails, Employees, Family, Fun, Jackson's Steak House, Pensacola, The Fish House, fund raising | 1 Comment »
Monday, October 3rd, 2011
Pensacola News Journal Article written by Trina Confusione
It’s football season again! Time for tailgating and game parties. Time to come up with ideas for snacks that will be easy to take along with you, and that have not been done over and over again. My favorite snack to take along is these pecan brown-sugar bars. These addictive little bites are always a huge hit. They are easy to make and store and are great by themselves, but one of my favorite ways to eat them is warmed up and served with a scoop of butter-pecan ice cream. Do not plan on having any left over; they are usually the first thing gone. So be sure to keep a few at home for later. (more…)
Tags: America, chef's corner, Cooking Tips, Trina Confusione Posted in Cooking Tips, Recipes, Southern Cooking, quick and easy desserts | 2 Comments »
Monday, October 3rd, 2011
 WIne maker from Willamette Valley Vineyards Don Crank
Written by Chef Jim Shirley
Last week, while visiting my oldest daughter in Oregon, I also had a great visit with Don Crank III, a Willamette Valley Vineyards winemaker. We tasted through a bit of his portfolio, and he invited me to the winery to taste the rest. Fortunately, the winery is located in the beautiful Willamette Valley of Oregon, which is between the airport in Portland and Madison’s choice for college — Oregon State University in Corvallis (not the Ducks).
Rolling hills, cool Pacific fogs and a drizzling rain that never quite requires an umbrella make for a great place to grow the very finicky Pinot Noir grape. (On the white grape side, Pinot Gris and Riesling do very well in this area.)
Crank was pleased to be able to help grow the grapes and make the wine from some of the oldest vines in Oregon (”old vine” generally means more intensely concentrated flavors in the fruit). The Pinot Gris and Riesling were excellent, but the older vines on the South Block produce a Pinot Noir that was my favorite.
(more…)
Tags: America, Chef Jim Shirley, Things to do, Wine Time Posted in Celebrity Chefs, Chef Jim Shirley, wine | No Comments »
Thursday, September 1st, 2011
 Jim Shirley’s of The Fish House presents his version of the fried cauliflower he discovered in New York City in June.
Written by Chef Jim Shirley special to the Pensacola News Journal
Cauliflower is not my friend. That said, we do have some mutual friends that bring us together on occasion. One was on my recent visit to the Big Apple — not the Apple Market (I was there last week), but Manhattan — in late June, cooking with my culinary cronies. When we were not working, we fanned out to track down the best of the city. I found Tamarind over in Gramercy Place. Incredible Indian food. There the special appetizer was cauliflower marinated in lime and ginger, deep-fried and tossed in a spicy tomato sauce. Fantastic! I believe I have replicated most of the flavors in this dish. So let’s all fire up our fryers and make like cauliflower is our friend — and give it a nod.
Ingredients
1 large head cauliflower
4 tablespoons minced ginger (more…)
Tags: America, Chef Jim Shirley, Fish House, indian food, James Beard House, local restaurants, New York City, Recipes Posted in Celebrity Chefs, Chef Jim Shirley, Cooking Tips, Recipes, The Fish House, wine | 1 Comment »
Friday, August 26th, 2011
Written by Chef Jim Shirley special to The Pensacola News Journal
 Viña Borgia is a rich garnacha available for sale by the box.
Would you drink it in a box?
Viña Borgia is a rich garnacha (grenache) from the Aragon-Campo de Borga region of Spain. Full of rich berries and spice, it’s a nice pour for anyone at about $8 a bottle.
They have a new package out — a 3-liter box — four bottles worth for about $19. Same flavors, takes up less space, stays fresh inside a sealed interior bag, smaller carbon footprint, less money. All good, right?
I’m thinking back seven years ago when Stelvin closures (screw caps) began popping up where corks had been before. I recall there was a pretty serious pushback from the wine community then. But we lived through it, and Stelvins are accepted nearly everywhere.
But what about the box?
Would I be happy to be served this wine in a box at a social event? Of course. On the beach where glass is forbidden? Genius. As an option at a small diner that doesn’t sell wine very often? Great wine will stay fresh in this box. As a cooking wine? I’m in — all stainless fermentation and big fruit flavors are great for wine reductions. Serving at my house? Not just yet. Give me few years in group therapy with the other “Wine Time” writers and we can revisit.
Will I drink this boxed wine?
Yes, I will.
Available at Artesana Fine Wines, Seville Quarter Wine and Gift Shoppe, and City Grocery. About $20.
The Fish House, 600 S. Barracks St. 470-0003, or visit www.goodgrits.com.
Tags: America, Chef Jim Shirley, Fish House, Florida, red wine review, wine, wine review Posted in Celebrity Chefs, Chef Jim Shirley, Entertainment, Pensacola, wine | No Comments »
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