Ellenville's Number 1 Trip Advisor Restaurant!

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Scadlis Brut Prestige, A Gift for You!



We have a very successful Beer Club at Aroma Thyme Bistro in Ellenville NY. We give great prizes at each milestone you reach.

Check out the prize for drinking your 100th beer!!!!! This beer sells on our list for $65.

Drink Great Craft Beers
Get Great Stuff
Learn what beer you like


Drink 50
Get an Aroma Thyme T-Shirt

Drink 75
Get an Aroma Thyme Pilsner Glass

Drink 100
Get a bottle Scaldis Brut Prestige
To share with your friends at Aroma Thyme

Drink 150
Get a Diploma Plaque on our wall
& a $50 gift certificate

Alaskan True Cod at Aroma Thyme Bistro


In for a limited time, Pacific Cod!


All Cod is not equal. We just got a Fed-Ex shipment from Alaska of Pacific True Cod. This fish is moist, delicate & flaky. It has become Courtney & Justin's, our children, new favorite fish. In fact I delivered an order to school for Courtney's lunch.


This fish will be featured on our menu while supplies last.

Aroma Thyme Bistro makes every effort to serve the safest and cleanest seafood.

Here is the stats on all the Cod
from the Monterey Bay Aquarium
©B. Guild Gillespie/www.chartingnature.com
SEAFOODRATINGMARKET NAMESWHERE CAUGHTHOW CAUGHT
Atlantic Cod Avoid: Avoid these products for now. These fish come from sources that are overfished or fished or farmed in ways that harm the environment. Scrod, Whitefish U.S. Atlantic wild-caught
Pacific Cod Best Choice: These fish are abundant, well managed and fished or farmed in environmentally friendly ways. Alaska Cod, True Cod, Grey Cod U.S. Pacific longline, jig and trap
Pacific Cod Good Alternative: These are good alternatives to the best choices column. There are some concerns with how they are fished or farmed – or with the health of their habitats due to other human impacts. Alaska Cod, True Cod, Gray Cod U.S. Pacific trawl-caught




Atlantic Cod


Avoid Atlantic cod from North America; it has been fished heavily for the past 50 years, resulting in massive population declines. Scientists agree that we are now fishing the last 10% of this population.

Summary
Despite strict management in the U.S. and Canada, cod populations remain overfished. Canadian populations are so low, that some are listed as endangered or threatened.

Most cod populations in the Northeast Atlantic are in extremely poor condition, with the exception of Icelandic and Barents Sea cod - which are a good alternative - when caught without trawl gear. Cod from these fisheries also have relatively better population levels.

Atlantic cod are groundfish, living along the seafloor at depths up to 1,312 feet (400 meters) on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. Fishermen often catch cod with bottom trawl gear, which involves dragging large nets across the seafloor. Trawling damages marine habitats and accidentally catches other marine life, that is then discarded as unwanted catch.

“My Restaurant Will Never Serve Atlantic Salmon” Says Chef Marcus Guiliano Of Aroma Thyme Bistro, Ellenville, New York



Aroma Thyme Bistro, Chef Marcus’s restaurant in the Catskills, serves only wild Pacific Salmon, primarily Alaskan Salmon.

1888PressRelease) September 26, 2007 - Why?

“It’s farmed salmon, and that’s unhealthy salmon. It’s caged, it’s fed dye and anti-biotics. I will never use it.”

Aroma Thyme Bistro, Chef Marcus’s restaurant in the Catskills, serves only wild Pacific Salmon, primarily Alaskan Salmon.

“It’s a lot of work, just getting the fish, but it’s worth it. We follow the rivers, and we switch back and forth between the top Salmon as the season progresses. That means King Salmon whenever possible, and Coho and Sockeye now and then.”

The best areas?

“Yukon River. When a fish has to swim 2,300 miles to spawn that’s a mighty fish. Before they set off up the river those salmon build themselves up. They feed on krill and small fish until they’re in tip-top condition, and then they charge up that river. We also look for Taku, Stikine, Copper and other river run fish as well as ocean caught from Kenai, Kodiak, Sitka and Cooks Inlet.”

The result?

“That’s the best tasting salmon there is. There’s no comparison with the farmed stuff. The texture is incredible, the flavor is fantastic.”

How does he get it?

“Wild Alaskan Salmon runs from spring to the fall, river by river. As a buyer, though, you just never know for sure what species is available in any given week. That means you don’t just call up your supplier and order salmon! You really work the phones! You really have to play the market if you’re going to be serious about providing the best quality, by which I mean the healthiest, best tasting salmon for your restaurant. One thing that’s tricky is that you never know the price until you call and it varies widely, based on the area being fished, the quantity available and the method of fishing.”

What’s the best method then?

“Trolling, line fishing basically. It avoids the terrible wastage problem with any commercial netting fishery. But it adds $3 to $5 a pound to the fish. I would rather pay that then contribute to tons of bycatch, other fish that is caught and thrown away by net fishermen.”

And finally, how do you like to cook them?

“When the fat content is relatively low, like with Coho Salmon, I like to cook them with Asian sauces. The lower fat content allows the use of many sauces and interesting flavors. But the high fat content of the big King Salmon should be left alone. That fish is perfect as it is. I love a piece of grilled King Salmon with a little touch of lemon and sea salt, and of course, the char marks from the grill.”

Chef Marcus Guiliano Biography

Marcus Guiliano discovered his calling in 1999 after 8 years culinary experience. He was already a seasoned, veteran Chef, with stints at such famous resorts as The Greenbrier Resort and the Broadmoor Resort, plus a stint working at Pierre Koffman’s La Tante Claire in London, which was a coveted Michelin Three Star restaurant at the time. But, something was wrong. “

All this experience taught me how to cook great tasting food which was slowly killing me,” he explains. “I was overweight, I had high cholesterol, high blood pressure, asthma and I was facing an operation for acid reflux.” Then he just happened to catch Gary Null promoting “Get Healthy Now: A Complete Guide to Prevention, Treatment, and Healthy Living (1999) on public television. Marcus rushed to a health food store for a copy and read it immediately. (He subsequently contributed numerous recipes to Null's recently released “The Power of Aging.” )
“The principles I discovered, from Null and others, changed everything. I learned about detoxifying, about the need for exercise and, most important of all, about whole foods and a diet based on whole foods alone. It’s no exaggeration to say that it changed my life. Having saved himself, Chef Marcus, together with his wife Jamie, turned to helping the rest of us. The first step was the opening of Aroma Thyme Bistro on New Year’s Eve 2003.

Aroma Thyme Bistro offers an innovative menu of focused, natural cuisine that reflects balance and well-being. Guiliano's consistent objective is to create meals that achieve impact through focusing on pure ingredients and limiting manipulation. To achieve this objective, Aroma Thyme Bistro avoids refined white flour, sugar and butter and heavy dairy products. These are the traditional ways of masking food’s natural flavors and Chef Marcus realized that they are not only unnecessary, but they contribute massively to poor health.

Chef Marcus credits his culinary style to major health changes he experienced from the impact of diet including the use of Essential Oils, and raw foods. His restaurant, Aroma Thyme Bistro, has been described as “a miracle in the Catskills” among other things. The Bistro has been a regular recipient of an Award of Excellence from Wine Spectator and Zagat rated 25 for food. Marcus was recently featured in a National Public Radio Labor Day" 2007 special on healthy living, which can be heard at www.joebev.com .

“Who says healthy cuisine has its limitations”, says Chef Guiliano. The menu blends healthy, pasture-raised meats, sustainable seafood and vegan options, while the wine list runs to 300 selections and the beer list to 120.
Now in its fifth year of operation, Aroma Thyme Bistro has established itself as one of the best small restaurants in the Hudson Valley. Aroma Thyme Bistro 165 Canal St, Ellenville NY 12428 tel: 845.647.3000 www.aromathymebistro.com

AROMA THYME BISTRO 165 CANAL ST. ELLENVILLE NEW YORK
“A miracle” in the Catskills.
Best of the Hudson Valley 5 years in a row.
Astonishing wine and beer list.

###

Absinthe Dinner at Aroma Thyme Bistro in Ellenville NY



Many of you have requested an Absinthe Dinner at Aroma Thyme, and here is the official menu.
Every Course is paired with Absinthe Cocktails. It is shocking how many Absinthe Cocktails recipes are around. We are in the process of experimenting and finalizing the drinks. And of course will demonstrate how to make the classic sugar cube preparation.

And yes, Cheryl Lins, owner and distiller, Delaware Phoenix Distillery in Walton, New York will be present to talk about absinthe and share her first two absinthe brands: Walton Waters and Meadow of Love.

Both are classic absinthe vertes (green absinthes, naturally colored with herbs) based on the core distilled herbs of grand wormwood, anise, fennel and the coloring herbs roman wormwood, hyssop, and lemon balm. Each recipe uses a different, additional herb to send the flavors in a new direction.

Saturday March 7th
$49 Per Person
Reservations 845-647-3000
165 Canal St
Ellenville NY 12428

Roasted Fennel, Potato & Pea Salad
Mild Curry Dressing

Potato Gnocchi, Mushrooms & Lobster
Pernod Sauce

Pork Tenderloin Medallion
Creamy Corn Sauce

Roasted Pineapple ala a mode
St. George Absinthe


Here is a list of the Absinthe that we will be featuring that night:
St George Vert
Kubler
Mata Hari
Grande

Here is the rundown on Absinthe from Wikipedia:

Absinthe is historically described as a distilled, highly alcoholic (45%-74% ABV) beverage. It is an anise-flavored spirit derived from herbs, including the flowers and leaves of the herb Artemisia absinthium, commonly referred to as "grande wormwood". Absinthe traditionally has a natural green color but can also be colorless. It is commonly referred to in historical literature as "la fée verte" (the Green Fairy).

Although it is sometimes mistakenly called a liqueur, absinthe was not bottled with added sugar and is therefore classified as a liquor.Absinthe is unusual among spirits in that it is bottled at a very high proof but is normally diluted with water when drunk.

Absinthe originated in the canton of Neuchâtel in Switzerland. It achieved great popularity as an alcoholic drink in late 19th- and early 20th-century France, particularly among Parisian artists and writers. Due in part to its association with bohemian culture, absinthe was opposed by social conservatives and prohibitionists. Charles Baudelaire, Paul Verlaine, Arthur Rimbaud, Vincent van Gogh, Oscar Wilde, and Aleister Crowley were all notorious bad men of that day who were (or were thought to be) devotees of the Green Fairy.

Absinthe was portrayed as a dangerously addictive psychoactive drug. The chemical thujone, present in small quantities, was singled out and blamed for its alleged harmful effects. By 1915, absinthe had been banned in the United States and in most European countries except the United Kingdom, Sweden, Spain, Portugal, and the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Although absinthe was vilified, no evidence has shown it to be any more dangerous than ordinary liquor. Its psychoactive properties, apart from those of alcohol, had been much exaggerated.

A revival of absinthe began in the 1990s, when countries in the European Union began to reauthorize its manufacture and sale. As of February 2008, nearly 200 brands of absinthe were being produced in a dozen countries, most notably in France, Switzerland, Spain, and the Czech Republic. Commercial distillation of absinthe in the United States resumed in 2007.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Craft Beer Keeps Growing



I have seen a growth in craft beer drinkers at Aroma Thyme Bistro in Ellenville over the last five years. And our beer list has grown to accommodate craft beer lovers. Our first year we offered around 4o different beers. The response was great. After seeing what other restaurants were doing all over the country we decided expand the list. I was amazed that nice restaurants such as Cafe D'Alsace in NYC, part of the Tour de France Group, had great wine and great beer ist. In fact they even had a beer sommelier on staff. I thought that was an awesome idea.


Now Aroma Thyme offers over 150 craft beers, monthly beer dinners & a beer club that has great prizes.

Marcus Guiliano Aroma Thyme Bistro Ellenville NY 12428

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:
Julia Herz
303.447.0816, x 113
julia@brewersassociation.org
www.beertown.org

Craft Brewer Sales Continue To Soar Past Other Segments

Brewers Association Announces Retail Sales Up 16 Percent

Boulder, CO – Thursday, February 28, 2008 – In what has become a true American success story, the craft beer market again grew by double digits in 2007, leading all other segments in the beer category. The Brewers Association reports estimated sales by independent craft brewers up 12 percent by volume and 16 percent in dollars for 2007. Craft brewers' share of the beer category is 3.8 percent of production and 5.9 percent of retail sales.

The Brewers Association annually polls the country’s craft brewers to estimate the total volume of beer sold by brewpubs, microbreweries, and regional craft breweries in the United States, and uses scan data to estimate sales. Results show that the U.S. had 1,449 total breweries in operation in the U.S. during 2007, including 1,406 small, independent, and traditional craft brewers¹. Nearly 70 percent of craft breweries are brewpubs that sell most or all of their beer on-premises.

“Since 2004, dollar sales by craft brewers have increased 58 percent,” said Paul Gatza, Director of the Brewers Association. “The strength of this correlates with the American trend of buying local products and a preference for more flavorful foods and beers.”

Download a high resolution version of this image.

The Brewers Association estimates the actual dollar sales figures from craft brewers at more than $5.74 billion, up from $4.95 billion in 2006. Sales in barrels equaled 8,011,141 (one barrel is 31 U.S. gallons) up from 7,147,050 barrels in 2006². The 2007 increase totals 864,091 barrels, which is the equivalent of 11.9 million cases or 285 million 12-ounce bottles of beer.

For more statistics visit the updated 2007 Craft Beer Industry Statistics Web page. A more extensive analysis will be released April 17 during the Craft Brewers Conference in San Diego, California. The Association's full 2007 industry analysis, which shows regional trends and sales by individual brewery, is published in the May/June issue of The New Brewer.

1. The definition of a craft brewer as stated by the Brewers Association: An American craft brewer is small, independent, and traditional. Small: Annual production of beer less than 2 million barrels. Beer production is attributed to a brewer according to the rules of alternating proprietorships. Flavored malt beverages are not considered beer for purposes of this definition. Independent: Less than 25% of the craft brewery is owned or controlled (or equivalent economic interest) by an alcoholic beverage industry member who is not themselves a craft brewer. Traditional: A brewer who has either an all malt flagship (the beer which represents the greatest volume among that brewers brands) or has at least 50% of its volume in either all malt beers or in beers which use adjuncts to enhance rather than lighten flavor.

2. Note: 2006 adjusted to include Carlos Alvarez/Gambrinus companies (Spoetzl, BridgePort, Pete's, Trumer), Ommegang, Ramapo Valley, adding 411k bbls to 2006 total.

# # #

Based in Boulder, Colo., U.S.A., the Brewers Association (BA) is the not-for-profit trade and education association for American craft brewers and the community of beer enthusiasts. Visit the website:www.beertown.org to learn more. The association’s activities include events and publishing: World Beer Cup®; Great American Beer Festival sm ; Craft Brewers Conference and BrewExpo America®; National Homebrewers Conference; National Homebrew Competition; American Craft Beer Week (May); Zymurgy magazine; The New Brewer magazine; and books on beer and brewing. The Brewers Association has an additional membership division of 15,000+ homebrewers: American Homebrewers Association.

The Biggest Biodynamic Wine Tasting of the Year!

I recently attended a great Biodynamic wine tasting in New York City on February 23rd 2009. I was fortunate to have a one on one conversation with Nicolas Joly, the pioneer in the Biodynamic World.

Nicolas did a great talk on manure and animals on the farm. The way he explained it was to analyze each animal. For instance the pig eats from the ground so the pigs manure is needed to strengthen the plants roots. A horse will eat leaves, so the manure from a horse will aid in the plants leaves. He even went to explain the behavior of such animals as well. A cow is slow moving and calm. So the cow's manure will contribute to long gently change on a farm.

Nicolas was very passionate that the good and bad organisms must live in harmony on the farm. And healthy environment will keep everything in balance including the bad organisms.

To me this sounds like how I look at my body. So I asked do you treat your body on the same level as your farm. As I thought, he explained that the body works just as the farm.



Return to Terroir/Renaissance des Appellations is a group founded by Nicolas Joly in 2001. All the participating wine-growers recognize that the relationship between soil and climate has a different "face" everywhere on earth and strive to express the unique characteristics of their special terroirs. The group adheres to a strict Quality Charter concerning vineyard and cellar practices. The members of Return to Terroir/Renaissance des Appellations have applied biodynamic or organic vineyard practices on their entire domaines for at least 3 years - organic or biodynamic certification is required - and the exceptional quality of their wines meets the standards set by the founder and the directors of the group (N. Joly, O. Humbrecht, D. Léclapart, A.-C. Leflaive, P. Morey, Ph. du Roy de Blicquy, Raimond de Villeneuve).

WINEGROWERS

AUSTRIA
Nikolaihof Wachau
Weingut Geyerhof
Meinklang
Weingut Schoenberger

AUSTRALIA
Castagna Vineyard
Ngeringa Vineyard

FRANCE

Alsace
Domaine Marcel Deiss
Domaine Zind Humbrecht
Domaine Martin Schaetzel
Domaine Marc Tempé
Domaine Ostertag
Domaine Kreydenweiss
Domaine Josmeyer
Domaine Valentin Zusslin

Bordeaux
Château Le Puy
Château Fonroque
Château Moulin du Cadet
Château Falfas
Château La Grolet - Château Peybonhomme

Bourgogne
Domaine Derain
Domaine de Villaine
Domaine Montchovet
Domaine Leflaive
Domaine Morey
Domaine Emmanuel Giboulot

Champagne
Champagne Bedel
Champagne Fleury

Jura
Domaine André et Mireille Tissot

Languedoc - Roussillon
Domaine du Traginer
Domaine Cazes
Domaine Beauthorey

Loire
Château Tour Grise
Coulée de Serrant
Domaine Saint-Nicolas
Domaine Mosse
Domaine des Sablonnettes
Domaine Cousin-Leduc

Provence
Château Sainte Anne
Château Romanin
Domaine Hauvette
Domaine de Trevallon
Domaine Milan

Rhone
Domaine du Coulet
Domaine de Villeneuve
Clos du Joncuas
Domaine Pierre André
Montirius
Maison Chapoutier
Domaine les Aphillantes

Sud Ouest
Domaine du Pech
Domaine de Souch

GERMANY
Weingut Wittman

ITALY
Agricola dei Tre Poggi
Cosimo Maria Masini
Loacker Tenute
Az. Agr. Campinuovi
Montesecondo
Cascina Degli Ulivi
Tenuta di Valgiano
Podere Concori

NEW ZEALAND
The Millton Vineyard

PORTUGAL
Quinta de Covela

SLOVENIA
Movia

SOUTH AMERICA
Vina Antiyal
Vinedos Santa Emiliana

SPAIN
Albet i Noya
Compañia de Vinos Telmo Rodriguez
Dominio de Pingus
Mas Estela

UNITED STATES
Benziger Family Winery
Frog's Leap Winery
Bonterra McNab Ranch
Paul Dolan Vineyards
Tres Sabores
Coturri Winery
Robert Sinskey Vineyards
Cayuse Vineyard


Saturday, February 21, 2009

More Dangerous Food

I can't say enough great things about Mike Adams, the Health Ranger from Natural News.com. His website is packed with tons of life changing information. Here is a another great article.
Aroma Thyme Bistro now has a Nitrate FREE bacon. So if you do eat bacon, Aroma Thyme in Ellenville NY is your place.

Food manufacturers hide dangerous ingredients in everyday foods by using confusing terms on the label


Food manufacturers hide dangerous ingredients in everyday foods by using confusing terms on the label
Tuesday, July 27, 2004 by: Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor
Key concepts: Food, Sodium nitrite and Dangerous ingredients

The Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act will take effect in January 2006 and will require food companies to use common names for eight food allergens such as milk, shellfish, eggs, peanuts, fish, wheat, and soy. There has been a lot of press about this Consumer Protection Act, but very little discussion about the other ingredients hidden in foods by food manufacturers that pose a legitimate health risk to all consumers, not just those with specific food allergens.

As a good example of the kind of ingredients that are hidden on food labels, let's take a look at MSG, also called monosodium glutamate. MSG is an excitotoxin -- an ingredient known to cause nerve damage by overexciting nerves. This is exactly how MSG enhances the taste of foods: by overexciting the taste buds on your tongue. While MSG is sometimes listed directly on the label, it is more frequently hidden in other ingredients, such as yeast extract, autolyzed vegetable protein, or hydrolyzed vegetable protein. All three of these ingredients contain monosodium glutamate, and yet they are designed to mislead consumers by avoiding mentioning MSG directly on the label.

Other ingredients may be misleading without necessarily being dangerous. One such ingredient is carmine -- a red coloring frequently used in yogurt, candies, fruit drinks and sweets. Carmine is actually made from the dead, ground-up husks of female red beetles. These beetles, which are typically raised in the Canary Islands, are dried and ground up to create a red paste. This red paste is then exported to the United States and other countries where food is produced. It is added to foods to give them a rose-like color, something similar to a strawberry color. It's listed on the label as "carmine", not as "ground-up red beetles." And while carmine doesn't necessarily pose a health risk to American consumers, it is still an example of dishonest labeling, because people have the right to know when ground-up insects are being used in their foods. There are probably 100 items in your grocery store right now with carmine listed right on the label. You can go to your store right now and check it out, and verify that what I'm relating here is true. (Pick up practically any strawberry yogurt...)

There are other ingredients used on food labels that are, in fact, extremely toxic to the human body, and yet are not listed with appropriate descriptors. One such ingredient is sodium nitrite. Sodium nitrite is added to most packaged meat products found in a grocery store, and even in health food stores. To most people, sodium nitrite simply sounds like a form of salt, but, in fact, this ingredient is extremely carcinogenic. When combined with your saliva and digestive enzymes, sodium nitrite creates cancer-causing compounds known as nitrosamines. These nitrosamines are so toxic to biological systems that they are actually used to give lab rats cancerbrain tumors, leukemia, and cancers of the digestive tract. Yet this ingredient carries absolutely no warning on food labels, and in fact, seems to sound like a perfectly safe ingredient, like sodium. As with carmine, you can go to your grocery store and find hundreds, if not thousands, of products using sodium nitrite. Look for it on bacon, ham, pepperoni, and other packaged meat products. In fact, it's almost impossible to find a packaged meat product that isn't made with sodium nitrite. This ingredient is especially prevalent in hot dogs and lunch meats. It has been clinically proven to cause leukemia, brain tumors and other forms of cancer. in laboratory tests. In humans, the consumption of sodium nitrite has been strongly correlated with

By the way, if sodium nitrite is so dangerous, why do food manufacturers use it? Because it adds red color to meat products that would otherwise appear to be a putrid gray color. By making them look red with the help of this color additive sodium nitrite, these meat products look more delicious and fresh, even though they are not. Some of these products have the shelf life of several months, which is far longer than any normal piece of meat would last without looking rather undesirable.

The three ingredients mentioned here are only small examples of the kind of ingredients used by food manufacturers that pose potential harm to consumers and yet are not appropriately described on the food labels. Food labeling is frequently a con game, where the food manufacturer attempts to put ingredients into foods that benefit the manufacturer and yet harm the consumer. Of course, the manufacturer does not want the consumer to be aware that these ingredients are harmful, or that they are even present in the foods, so they rely on confusing names or innocent-sounding names, like "carmine", in order to avoid the chance that consumers might be concerned.

Taken as a whole, this demonstrates the high level of dishonesty and lack of integrity at food manufacturing companies. Many such companies in the business of manufacturing the cheapest, most profitable processed foods that consumers will buy, regardless of how healthy they may be. And as we can see from manufacturing practices today (and examples throughout the history of modern food), food manufacturers will use practically any ingredient they can get away with, including ones that are well-known to cause chronic disease. In modern times, such ingredients include hydrogenated oils and homogenized milk fats, which are found in virtually all cow's milk products.

The bottom line to all this is that the new Act requiring accurate labeling of food allergens is certainly a small step in the right direction for protecting consumers from food manufacturing companies, but it barely scratches the surface of the kind of labeling requirements that need to be enforced in order to prevent consumers from being exposed to other ingredients that promote chronic disease.

Not only are the Grapes Green in Wine

Green wines are the big thing in the last few years. But wineries are expanding it much beyond the grapes. They are now looking at the packaging and overall production resources used at the winery. This is a very good thing. At Aroma Thyme Bistro in Ellenville NY, we recycle all wine bottles. And we even reuse some wine bottles for other uses which is far superior than recycling.
Here the latest efforts by the J. Lohr Winery in California.
Marcus Guiliano
The Guru of Healthy Foods
Aroma Thyme Bistro
165 Canal St
Ellenville NY 12428
California Winery Turns Three Acres Over to Solar Power
PASO ROBLES, California, February 19, 2009 (ENS) - J. Lohr Vineyards & Wines unveiled the largest solar tracking array in the North American wine industry on Wednesday at its Paso Robles winery.

The ground-mounted installation is made up of 4,320 single-axis solar modules that track the Sun to optimize production of solar power. Covering three acres, the 756 kilowatt solar photovoltaic system is designed to offset 75 percent of the winery's energy usage

"With numerous sunny days, Paso Robles isn't just ideal for producing rich and flavorful Bordeaux and Rhône-style wines," said Steve Lohr, senior vice president of planning and development with J. Lohr. "It is also perfect for producing clean, renewable energy."

"Owning our own solar tracking array is another important step in our commitment to environmentally-conscious practices," said Lohr. "In our own way, we are working to protect the very climate that nurtures our grapes, while contributing to efforts that reduce the need for drilling off our spectacular coast," he said.

The energy generated from J. Lohr's system will reduce emissions of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide by 29,887 tons over 25 years, the company estimates.

Tracking solar array is planted amidst the grape vines at J. Lohr's Paso Robles winery. (Photo courtesy Conergy)

The new solar array is part of the company's broader program of sustainable winegrowing and winemaking techniques. Lohr uses organic soil amendments, limits its use of chemicals, controls erosion, conserves water, and practices composting and materials recycling.

Allison Jordan, executive director for the California Sustainable Winegrowing Alliance, said the company is helping the entire California wine industry to make operations easier on the environment.

"J. Lohr has an impressive track record of environmental responsibility, and by both adopting sustainable practices and being willing to share its experience with others, is helping to expand the California wine industry's widespread sustainability movement," she said.

The tracking solar system was designed and installed by Conergy, which is involved in one in 10 of the world's solar photovoltaic projects.

"With a strong, credible voice among industry professionals and a powerful commitment to environmental stewardship, J. Lohr recognized the importance of setting an example for the wine industry, for other energy-intensive businesses, and the public at large," said Conergy product developer Michael DeSousa.

"By investing in this bellwether system, J. Lohr becomes more energy independent and will enjoy more predictable energy costs for decades to come," he said.

Founded more than 30 years ago by Jerry Lohr, J. Lohr Vineyards & Wines operates 3,000 acres of estate vineyards in Paso Robles, Monterey County, and the Napa Valley.

Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2009. All rights reserved.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Special Lecture at Sam's Point! Eastern Cougars



EASTERN COUGARS

Sunday, February 22 2:00 PM

Sam's Point Conservation Center

The search for the eastern cougar is fraught with controversy. Thousands of sightings from Maine to Georgia and west to the Mississippi River over the previous generation have produced only a dozen or so confirmations.

The Eastern Cougar Foundation (ECF) has solicited these reports for ten years, including running trailcam surveys sanctioned by state and federal wildlife agencies, without producing a single piece of confirmed evidence. Fresh from conducting a year-long study at Minnewaska State Park Preserve, ECF President Christopher Spatz will explain why sightings don't produce evidence, and why the ECF is now advocating for reintroductions of this magnificent predator to its former eastern range.

Please call Heidi Wagner at 845-647-7989 ext.101 or email hwagner@tnc.org

The Microbrewery Behind ‘Hop Obama’

Robert Wright for The New York Times Shane C. Welch of Sixpoint Craft Ales.

We all know the saying "There is no such thing as bad publicity".

I have not tried this beer yet, and it looks like I won't. But Aroma Thyme Bistro did get two kegs of ObamaGang from Ommegang. And that was a great coffee rich stout that became a bistro favorite. But like the Hop Obama the ObamaGang was one time deal.

I don't know the laws about marketing beer with politicians, but most patrons loved the clever names. The name ObamaGang was enough to sell the beer.

Marcus Guiliano
The Guru of Healthy Foods
Aroma Thyme Bistro
Ellenville NY 12428



FEBRUARY 20, 2009, 7:30 AM
The Microbrewery Behind ‘Hop Obama’

By JAKE MOONEY
Robert Wright for The New York Times Shane C. Welch of Sixpoint Craft Ales.
With a pair of fourth-anniversary parties on consecutive Tuesdays, February was shaping up to be a busy month for Brooklyn’s Sixpoint Craft Ales even before the microbrewery’s brush with media notoriety last week.

But for one day, last Thursday, the level of activity at the Red Hook-based business got truly crazy. That morning, word trickled out from Sixpoint’s Facebook page that the federal government had ordered an end to production of Hop Obama, a beer named after Barack Obama last year when he was an underdog presidential candidate.

The story spread quickly, to neighborhood blogs, political sites and eventually the tabloids .

As it turned out, Sixpoint had stopped production of the beer before Election Day — weeks before the letter’s arrival — for unrelated logistical reasons.

When I checked in with the Sixpoint people on Tuesday, for the Dispatches feature in this weekend’s City section, they seemed a bit jarred by all the belated attention. By this time, though, life had mostly settled back down, and they were free to enjoy their party, at Williamsburg’s Barcade, and celebrate the fourth year of the business’s somewhat improbable existence.

Shane Welch, the Sixpoint founder and brewmaster, had been homebrewing for years, and had apprenticed at a microbrewery in Madison, Wisc., when he resolved to move to Brooklyn and start his own brewery. The choice of Brooklyn, as Mr. Welch told it Tuesday, had to do with his and his partner’s aspirations to do creative things with their beer and be around an artistic community.

“I thought, you couldn’t do that in, like, Wichita, Kansas,” he said.

Brooklyn was not easy either: “We were hemmhoraging money,” Mr. Welch, now 29, said.

Parties at local bars, he said, would draw one or two people. Over time, though, the brewery’s beers began to catch on among connoisseurs known affectionately as “beer geeks” — people who, faced with a choice, would prefer something called Diesel Stout or Emasculator over Bud Light.

One key to this popularity, Mr. Welch said, is that Sixpoint’s beer is not bottled, but sold only from kegs — or in stores like Bierkraft, in Park Slope, which will fill a 64-oz bottle from their own keg. This, he said, ensures that all of the brewery’s products are consumed in social situations. It is also, not insignificantly, cheaper for the brewery than bottling and packaging the beer.

None of this put Sixpoint, sales-wise, into the same league as Brooklyn Brewery, the reigning king of beer in the borough — let alone bygone giants like Schaefer or Rheingold that once made Brooklyn a hub of beer-making. Still, the beer geeks were happy, and this was the environment that Hop Obama was born into. The Obama connection, to the Sixpoint people, seemed natural.

“Our fans were his fans,” Sixpoint spokesman Jeff Gorlechen said. “They liked our beer already. It’s not like nobody was buying our beer.”

Paul Kermizian, the co-owner of Barcade, said Sixpoint beers are always good sellers at his bar, which specializes in American craft beers and vintage video games. (“We get beer geeks and we get video game geeks,” he said. “Surprisingly, there’s a lot of crossover.”) But Mr. Kermizian, who produced and directed the documentary ”American Beer,” said that Hop Obama was a hot commodity from the beginning.

“We did have it, before the craze,” he said. But now all the kegs were gone, he said, adding, a little ruefully, “I wish we had kept one.”

As consolation for Sixpoint partisans at the party, the bar did have 17 other beers from the brewery on tap.

Mr. Gorlechen, who was drinking the brewery’s carob porter after a long struggle to get a bartender’s attention amid the hundreds of partygoers, said the beer formerly known as Hop Obama will likely be back under a new name. In fact, he said, “We have a name. But I don’t want to tell you.”

Whatever the name is, it will have to gain the approval of the U.S. Treasury Department’s Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau — the same agency that rejected Hop Obama.

Actually, agency spokesman Art Resnick said, it approved the name in February 2008, in an apparent oversight that was discovered, and reversed, in a review after Mr. Obama was elected president.

“We handle like 130,000 of these on a yearly basis,” Mr. Resnick said, “so it’s not unusual that one gets out on occasion that shouldn’t.”

The rule that applies in the Hop Obama case, he said, holds that no alcoholic beverage can be named after a public figure without a letter from that person granting permission to use the name. Its aim is to keep producers from improperly implying that a well-known person has endorsed a drink, or was involved in making it.

Interestingly, Mr. Resnick could not think of such a rule applying to people who aren’t public figures. In other words, in a purely hypothetical situation, could a brewer pick a random, catchy name out of the phone book, and name a beer with it?

“It is a hypothetical,” Mr. Resnick said. “And when we renewed that label we would have to take a look at it on a case by case basis.”

Such a scenario does, admittedly, sound improbable. Still, Mr. Resnick said, “We have a million and a half to two million labels on record in the system, so it’s hard to say that it has never happened.”

There is a long list of prohibited practices governing malt beverages like beer, and there are others for wines and distilled spirits. One constant, Mr. Resnick said, is that the rules are constantly being tested.

“People are always pressing the line and stretching the envelope, trying to get things approved one way or another,” he said.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

We Got Another Mention on James Molesworth's Wine Spectator Blog!



Senior editor James Molesworth joined Wine Spectator in 1997. He reviews the wines of Argentina, Chile, the Loire Valley, the Rhône Valley and South Africa.


An Unusual French White
Bott-Geyl Pinot d'Alsace Alsace 2005
James Molesworth

Posted: Friday, February 20, 2009

This is a really fun white from France. It's also a bit of an oddity for Alsace, as it's made from a blend of both white and red grapes: 35 percent Pinot Blanc, 35 percent Pinot d'Auxerrois, 20 percent Pinot Gris and 10 percent Pinot Noir.

I find Bott-Geyl's wines to be a bit inconsistent—sometimes they're really pure and fresh, but occasional bottles show overtly yeasty and beery notes and lack freshness. This was one of the better ones, showing a lightly sweet profile, with fresh, fine underlying acidity carrying the flavors of pear, fig, apricot, brioche and bitter orange. A lanolin feel checks in on the finish, which has nice length. 88 points, non-blind.

At $39 on the wine list at Aroma Thyme Bistro in Ellenville, N.Y., (an Award of Excellence winner), it was the perfect starter wine for the table, considering the range of food we had ordered, from Cajun grilled tiger prawns to cumin pappadoms.


Cajun Band & Food Specials for February 20th to 22nd, 2009



Aroma Thyme in Ellenville has some great Cajun Specials for the weekend. And to add to the Cajun theme Cleoma's Ghost will be playing Saturday at 8pm.

Here are our Cajun Specials:

Crawfish, Shrimp & Chorizo Etouffee

Blackened Chicken, Artichoke & Mushroom Pizza

Shrimp & Grits

Blackened Catfish, Cumin Mayo

Plus more other great specials

About Cleomas Ghost:
We are a traditional Cajun folk duo (Roger Weiss on fiddle and vocals, Buffy Lewis on guitar and vocals) that has been playing Cajun music in one form or another (big dance band, little duo) for the past 10years.

We have played such venues as: Blues 2000, Dance Flurry, North East Folk Festival, Grass Roots festival, Pori Folk Festival in Finland, Liberty Theatre in Eunice, Louisiana, Springtime Cajun and Zydeco Family Reunion and regionally in clubs, restaurants, for weddings, dances and numerous cultural and educational events and benefits (not to mention our faisdodo in Woodstock NY).

Cleoma's Ghost is proud to announce the following nominations by the CFMA (Cajun French Music Association)

Buffy Lewis was nominated in 2005 for Best Female Cajun Vocalist (you go girrrrl)

Cleoma's Ghost CD "Mon Coeur est Avec Toi" was nominated in 2006 for the Prix Dehors De Nous Award (best Cajun band outside of Louisiana)

We are extremely honored by these nominations ... Thank you CFMA.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Earth Day, Ellenville NY



165 Canal Street ♦ Ellenville ♦ NY 12428 ♦ Contact Marcus Guiliano ♦ 845-647-3000

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

An Earth Day Menu to Make a Difference

Ellenville, NY ⎯ Can you enjoy a delicious gourmet meal, and reduce your carbon footprint,
all at once?

At Aroma Thyme Bistro in Ellenville, New York, Chef Marcus Guiliano proves that it’s entirely possible.

On Earth Day 2009 ⎯ Wednesday, April 22nd ⎯ Chef Guiliano presents a five-course raw food menu requiring no cooking whatsoever, thus minimizing energy usage. Local valley cheese will also be featured. And we will be serving great wines and beers from the local Hudson Valley area, dramatically reducing energy used in transportation.

To help dinner guests grasp the significance of their extraordinary meal, they will be treated to presentations on the benefits of drinking local beverages, including spring water, and selecting regional foods, both farmed and wild. Guest speakers that night will feature a local farmer, wine maker, forager and brewer.

Aroma Thyme, the only “Green Certified” restaurant in the Hudson Valley, will demonstrate how cutting down as much as possible on energy used for both cooking and transportation can be achieved without giving up the high culinary standard for which Aroma Thyme has become famous.

Among the planned menu offerings will be Celery Root, Apple and Truffle Soup, and a delicious and surprising Romaine Tacos, with a filling created from sunflower seeds, walnuts and sun-dried tomatoes.

The prix fixe dinner is priced at $50, plus tax and gratuity. Reservations are suggested.

Chef Guiliano’s popular vegan dishes have already shown that healthy food can also be gourmet food. Now, he takes his philosophy of cooking a step further, introducing raw foods as the newest gastronomic choices.

“For health, weight loss, fitness and energy savings, there is nothing like raw food,” says Guiliano. “Why shouldn’t the best-tasting foods also be the healthiest?”

At Aroma Thyme Bistro, vegan and raw foods will always be just one part of the regular extensive menu. Fish and seafood, meat and poultry, all stemming from sustainable and organic sources, are treated with equal care and ingenuity.

For Earth Day, the restaurant once again leads the way in the Hudson Valley to new, exciting, healthy and fun food experiences. The Bistro is committed to not only the best in food, but also quality wine and beer. The wine list offers 250 selections, while the rich diversity of beers has made this a destination for devotees.

There’s no better way to celebrate Earth Day this year than with an energy conscious, gourmet meal, says Chef Guiliano. “Don’t think of raw food as uncooked vegetables,” he says. “Those days are behind us. Today’s raw food is a modern and magnificent culinary experience.”

# # #

South African Wine Dinner at Aroma Thyme



South African Wine Dinner February 27th, 7pm $59


Celebrate 350 years of South African wine making. Yes 350 years of South African wine history, that’s longer than some areas in France.

So we have planned a six course dinner with South African Wines & foods. And here is the best part of the deal, we have lowered our price of wine dinners to $59.

We are using recipes from the famous The Africa Cafe.


Cameron Groundnut Puffs
Mulderbosh Rose

Angolan Shrimp
Bramptom Sauvignon Blanc

Nigerian Vegetable Kebobs
Buitenverwachting Reisling

Ethiopian Doro Wat Chicken
Excelsior Sauvignon Blanc

Tzaneen Orange & Walnut Dessert
Kanu Late Harvest

Call today to make reservations
845-647-3000
Aroma Thyme Bistro
Ellenville NY

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

New York Times, Italian Wines Unknowns, From $10 to $20


I love reading the New Times every Wednesday. It's the Dining & Wine Section that gets my attention. So I am posting the wine article "Italian Unknowns, From $10 to $20". I was just at a huge Italian Wine tasting two weeks ago in New York City and found tons of great value wines from small impoerters and small wineries. I love finding wine that are limited. It makes the customers experience at Aroma Thyme Bistro interesting. I know I can pick a wine for them that they have never had before, unless they have been here before.

In stock at Aroma Thyme:
Ocone Aglianico del Taburno 2004
Earth, minerals and musk — dark and delicious.

Marcus Guiliano
The Guru of Green Healthy Foods
Aroma Thyme Bistro
Ellenville NY 12428



February 11, 2009
THE POUR
Italian Unknowns, From $10 to $20

By ERIC ASIMOV
IF you are satisfied with a wine that is palatable and goes down easy, you will never go thirsty spending less than $10 on a bottle.

But for just a few dollars more, a world opens wide, revealing all sorts of distinctive and delicious wines that speak of culture and history rather than communicating mere commerce.

Few places offer a wider selection of singular wines in the $10 to $20 price range — the sweet spot for great wine values — than Italy.

From the Alpine hillsides of Alto Adige and the Valle d’Aosta to the languid Mediterranean climes of Sicily, Italy is awash in wines that will sometimes challenge and occasionally confound but will almost always reward the adventurous palate.

Those who have persuaded themselves that diversity is a thing of the past can find ample evidence in Italy that the wine world is becoming one globalized, homogenized vendor of generic taste-alike red and white wines. But to leap from observation to conclusion would be to ignore the myriad wonderful little-known bottles sitting in good wine shops around the world.

For example, consider a white wine that makes a beautiful aperitif, produced by a cooperative in the Valle d’Aosta, a region so close to France that French is the common tongue. It goes by the ungainly name Cave du Vin Blanc de Morgex et de La Salle, and the wine is light, dry and perfumed with floral aromas, made from a grape that is alternately called blanc de Morgex or prié blanc. The grapes grow in gorgeous vineyards planted at elevations higher than almost anywhere else in Europe, and are found practically nowhere else in the world. In my neighborhood, I found a bottle for $16.

From the other end of Italy, Sicily, comes Cerasuolo di Vittoria, a red wine of which I’ve become a huge fan. This wine blends the fresh liveliness of the frappato grape with the deeper, plusher flavors of the nero d’Avola for a combination that is bright and spicy. The best version of this wine that I’ve found, Pithos from Cos, runs around $40, but Valle dell’Acate’s 2005 Cerasuolo di Vittoria Classico, for around $16, is absolutely delicious.

While Italy is rife with wines awaiting discovery, it is also full of wines ready to be rediscovered. In the 1970s and ’80s, lambrusco became infamous in the United States as the fizzy semisweet soda pop of wines.

Genuine lambrusco, on the other hand, is the everyday wine of Emilia-Romagna. It can be sweet, yes — a good, balanced dolce lambrusco can be a marvelous thing with fruit. But more typical is a dry, fresh and frothy red, wonderfully refreshing but with an earthy tang that makes it irresistible with salumi, lasagna and hard Italian cheeses. Good brands like Vini, Villa di Carlo or Medici Ermete are almost always under $20. I found a bone-dry lambrusco from Cleto Chiarli that went beautifully with a baked ham.

What about Soave, for so long a standard-bearer for the banality of Italian whites? That’s so 1970s! Insipid Soaves may still be prevalent, but Soave Classico from a good producer is altogether different, dry and tangy, with a mineral and herbal presence that can actually be reminiscent of Chablis. Soaves from producers like Coffele, Prà and Monte Tondo are regularly in the $15 range.

And what about Valpolicella, Soave’s red neighbor in the Veneto and onetime partner in vapidity? Valpolicellas today are a far cry from the wishy-washy wines of yore. A good example from a serious small producer, like a 2007 Valpolicella Classico from Vaona, about $14, is a delicate, subtle wine with an intensity that can surprise.

Italian whites have come a long way since the days of the fish-shaped bottle. Wines from the ribolla gialla grape, grown in the Collio region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia, can be lively and electrifying. A 2007 ribolla gialla from Dorigo, around $18, had lovely aromas and lingering flavors of lime, minerals and herbs.

The Campania region in southern Italy is now a source for consistently good whites, like a 2007 from Ocone, made from the falanghina grape, which offered delicious smoky, citrus flavors.

And again, there are those exciting discoveries. I loved a 2007 Telusiano Falerio from Rio Maggio, a producer I’d never heard of from the Marches. This wine was full of floral and mineral aromas and went perfectly with tortellini dressed in olive oil, salt, pepper and oregano.

Be careful not to serve these Italian whites straight from the refrigerator. The cold simply masks all the wonderful aromas and flavors, so give them no more than a slight chilling.

Of course, Italy is far better known for its reds, but even a famous red can be a great value. For $17.99 I had an excellent Chianti Classico from Rodáno, light and graceful. A 2006 rosso di Montalcino from La Palazzetta, a younger sibling of brunello di Montalcino, was lovely in its purity and mineral earthiness.

I love aglianico, the leading red grape from Campania and Basilicata, and Ocone makes a wonderful aglianico del Taburno, a wine of deep, dark flavors, more earth, musk and tar than bright fruit but absolutely delicious. For a wine more redolent of cherry fruit, try a Montepulciano d’Abruzzo from a producer like Valle Reale, Ciavolich or Dino Illuminati, all $20 or less.

The Piedmont region is home to the noble and expensive Barolos and Barbarescos. Nonetheless, myriad inexpensive reds are still available. Of the everyday reds, I generally prefer the tart, raspy barberas, like a 2007 from Renato Ratti and a 2006 from Oddero, to the pleasingly bitter dolcettos.

Sometimes, though, nothing takes the place of nebbiolo, the grape of Barolo and Barbaresco. At a time when practically unknown nebbiolo wines from Valtellina generally cost $25 to $30, it’s astounding to me that Produttori del Barbaresco, a great cooperative, can produce a nebbiolo wine for $19. But yes, its 2006 Langhe nebbiolo, made from young vines or lesser grapes, is just $19. It doesn’t have the stuffing of a Barbaresco, but it’s all there in a most pleasant microcosm.

For dessert, perhaps a light and frothy moscato d’Asti? G. D. Vajra, a good Barolo producer, makes an exceptionally delicious, sweet and peachy version for about $19.

Italian wine buffs will easily cite omissions in my short survey of affordable bottles. But that’s the beauty of ancient wine cultures like Italy’s. A wine that nobody thought worth noting, simply because it had been satisfying only the locals for, oh, a thousand years or so, is tasted by an enterprising young importer. Suddenly bottles of this wine appear in stores in Los Angeles or Nashville or New York, and they are ignored because, well, because nobody’s ever heard of the wine.

It happens, thankfully, again and again. That, my friends, is real opportunity.

Eric Asimov’s Italian Treasures Under $20

By ERIC ASIMOV
Eric Asimov’s Italian treasures under $20, listed alphabetically:

Cantina Terlan Alto Adige Pinot Bianco 2007

$17.99

Fresh and clean with aromas of anise, citrus, flowers and minerals. (Importer: Banville & Jones Wine Merchants, North Bergen, N.J.)

Cave du Vin Blanc de Morgex et de La Salle Valle d’Aosta 2007

$15.99

Lovely, delicate, dry and floral. (Polaner Selections, Mount Kisco, N.Y.)

Cleto Chiarli Lambrusco “Enrico Cialdini”

$17.99

Grasparossa di Castelvetro Secco NV Coffele Soave Classico 2006

Rich, red and frothy, full of fruit but bone dry. (Frederick Wildman & Sons, New York)

$15.99

Dry, tangy and refreshing with flavors of herbs, citrus, minerals and flowers. (Bacchanal Wine Imports, New York)

Dorigo Ribolla Gialla 2007 Colli Orientali del Friuli

$17.99

Beautiful aromas and long, lingering flavors of lime, minerals and herbs. (Panebianco, New York)

G. D. Vajra Moscato d’Asti 2007

$18.99

Gently bubbly, joyous and delightful with fragrances of peach and apple. (Martin Scott Wines, Lake Success, N.Y.)

La Palazzetta Rosso di Montalcino 2006

$19.99

Pure and dry with flavors of minerals and dried cherries. (T. Edward Wines, New York)

Ocone Aglianico del Taburno 2004

$16.99

Earth, minerals and musk — dark and delicious. (Polaner Selections)

Ocone Taburno Falanghina 2007

$15.99

Delicious smoky, citrus and mineral flavors. (Polaner Selections)

Oddero Barbera d’Alba 2006

$13.99

Balanced and compact with aromas of cherries and a touch of chocolate. (Vinifera Imports, Ronkonkoma, N.Y.)

Produttori del Barbaresco 2006 Langhe Nebbiolo

$18.99


A baby Barbaresco to satisfy a nebbiolo yearning. (Vias Imports, New York)

Renato Ratti 2007 Barbera d’Alba Torriglione

$16.99

Taut and spicy with tart cherry flavors. (Dreyfus, Ashby & Company, New York)

Rio Maggio Telusiano Falerio 2007

$19.99

Dry and crisp with aromas of flowers and minerals. (T. Edward Wines)

Rodáno Chianti Classico 2004

$17.99

Graceful and pure with flavors of dried cherries and minerals. (Polaner Selections)

Valle dell’Acate 2005 Cerasuolo di Vittoria Classico

$16.49

Bright and refreshing, with lively, breezy fruit flavors. (Panebianco)

Vaona Valpolicella Classico 2007

$14.49

Delicate and subtle, with floral, berry and herb aromas and flavors. (Acid Inc. Selections, New York)

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Eco-Friendly Beer



Eco-Friendly Breweries

Sierra Nevada to Turn Beer Waste Into Ethanol With the Efuel100 Micro Fuele
Sourced from Trendsetter Magazine

Last May, we wrote about the E-Fuel’s innovative Efuel100 Micro Fueler, which turns alcohol into ethanol. Southern California brewery Sierra Nevada has announced a partnership with E-Fuel to turn their beer waste into ethanol using the Efuel100 Micro Fueler.

The ethanol will primarily be used to power the on-site vehicles at Sierra Nevada, but it’s possible that the ethanol would be made available for employees or the general public.

Sierra Nevada has already done quite a bit for the environment. According to Tree Hugger, Sierra Nevada sells 1.6 million gallons of beer waste to farmers annually to use as dairy feed.

Aroma Thyme's Comments:
Pretty cool stuff from a brewery. It makes you want to drink their beer, and they have great beer. We have a have had several on our list over the years. And we will have more in the future.

Marcus Guiliano
The Guru of Healthy Foods
Aroma Thyme Bistro
Ellenville NY 12428

Splenda, We Don't Serve It & You Should Not Eat It!


Splenda, We Don't Serve It & You Should Not Eat It! PERIOD

Here is more evidence about the DANGERS of Splenda. Aroma Thyme Bistro in Ellenville has never supported it. We like healthy customers and healthy customers like us.

I just got this e-mail from from Dr. Mercola, he has a very informative daily e-mail.

New Study of Splenda Reveals Shocking Information About Potential Harmful Effects


James Turner, the chairman of the national consumer education group Citizens for Health, has expressed shock and outrage after reading a new report from scientists outlining the dangers of the artificial sweetener Splenda (sucralose).

In animals examined for the study, Splenda reduced the amount of good bacteria in the intestines by 50 percent, increased the pH level in the intestines, contributed to increases in body weight and affected P-glycoprotein (P-gp) levels in such a way that crucial health-related drugs could be rejected.

The P-gp effect could result in medications used in chemotherapy, AIDS treatment and treatments for heart conditions being shunted back into the intestines, rather than being absorbed by the body.

According to Turner, "The report makes it clear that the artificial sweetener Splenda and its key component sucralose pose a threat to the people who consume the product. Hundreds of consumers have complained to us about side effects from using Splenda and this study ... confirms that the chemicals in the little yellow package should carry a big red warning label."


Sources:
Globe Newswire September 28, 2008
Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health Part A 2008;71(21):1415-29

More facts from Truth About Splenda website

Splenda is not natural; it is a chlorinated artificial sweetener. There have been no long-term human studies on the safety of Splenda; however, issues have been raised about Splenda in a new study from Duke University.

According to the study, Splenda “suppresses beneficial bacteria and directly affects the expression of the transporter P-gp and cytochrome P-450 isozymes that are known to interfere with the bioavailability of drugs and nutrients. Furthermore, these effects occur at Splenda doses that contain sucralose levels that are approved by the FDA for use in the food supply.

For more information on the Duke University study, click here.



Marcus Guiliano
Guru of Healthy Foods

Monday, February 9, 2009

Craft Beer Drinkers in the Hudson Valley



Juylian Gilman recently drank his 5oth beer on Aroma Thymes Beer Tour. Aroma Thyme Bistro in Ellenville offers a beer menu with over 150 different selections. So if you are a beer lover then this is your place. Beer drinkers get cool stuff for drinking beer here. There are prizes for drinking 25, 50, 75 and 100.

"This is a great way to experiement with beer. Lots of people finally realize what style of beer they actually like", says Marcus Guiliano the Bistro's owner.

Trappist Beer Dinner in the Hudon Valley at Aroma Thyme Bistro




Our next Beer Dinner at Aroma Thyme is featuring great Trappist Beers.
Reservations 845-647-3000
February 20th, 2009


Achel Brune 8%
Creamy Gorgonzola Polenta & Grilled Chorizo Sausage

Chimay Cinq Cents 8 %
Baby Spinach Salad, Roasted Fennel

Orval 6.9%
Ivory King Salmon, Sauteed Mushrooms

Westmalle Dubbel 7%
Slow Braised Pot Roast, Ginger & Orange Essence

Rochefort Ten 11.3%
Chocolate

A Trappist beer is a beer brewed by or under control of Trappist monks. Of the world's 171 Trappist monasteries (as of April 2005), seven produce beer (six in Belgium and one in The Netherlands). Only these seven breweries are authorized to label their beers with the Authentic Trappist Product logo that indicates a compliance to various rules edicted by the International Trappist Association.

The Trappist order originated in the Cistercian monastery of La Trappe, France. Various Cistercian congregations existed for many years, and by 1664 the Abbot of La Trappe felt that the Cistercians were becoming too liberal. He introduced strict new rules in the abbey and the Strict Observance was born. Since this time, many of the rules have been relaxed. However, a fundamental tenet, that monasteries should be self-supporting, is still maintained by these groups.

Monastery brewhouses, from different religious orders, existed all over Europe, since the middle-age. From the very beginning, beer was brewed in French cistercian monasteries following the Strict Observance. For example, the monastery of La Trappe in Soligny, already had its own brewery in 1685. Breweries were only later introduced in monasteries of other countries, following the extension of the trappist order from France to the rest of Europe. The Trappists, like many other religious people, originally brewed beer as to feed the community, in a perspective of self-sufficiency. Nowadays, trappist breweries also brew beer to fund their works, and for good causes. Many of the trappist monasteries and breweries were destroyed during the French Revolution and the World Wars. Among the monastic breweries, the Trappists were certainly the most active brewers: in the last 300 years, there were at least eight Trappist breweries in France, six in Belgium, two in the Netherlands, one in Germany, one in Austria, one in Bosnia and possibly other countries.

Today, seven trappist breweries remain active, in Belgium and the Netherlands.

In the twentieth century, the growing popularity of Trappist beers drew some unscrupulous brewers with no connection to the order to label their beers as "Trappist". After unsuccessful trials, monks finally sued one such brewer in 1962 in Ghent, Belgium.

Restaurant Expands Craft Beer Menu


Craft beer drinkers are on the rise. Marcus Guiliano of Aroma Thyme Bistro in Ellenville totally agrees with those words. The Bistro which already has 150 beers on their list is making room for more.
"We have a beer club or more like a beer tour at Aroma Thyme, which encourages people to drink their way through our beer list". says Marcus. "And boy are people drinking".

So Marcus decided to add more selection to give these beer nuts more choices.

So next time you are at Aroma Thyme Bistro just ask what's new on the craft beer list.

Here are some of the new craft beer just added:
Boulder Beer, Mojo India Pale Ale
Great Divide, Titan IPA
Weyerbacher, Blithering Idiot Barley Wine Style Ale
Green Flash,Triple
Green Flash, West Coast IPA
South Hampton, Imperial Porter
Rogue, Mocha Porter
Anderson Valley, Barney Flats Oatmeal Stout
Troegs, Troegenator Double Bock
Stone, Smoked Porter
South Hampton, IPA
Stone, Old Guardian Barley Wine Ale
Dogfish, Chicory Stout
Smuttynose, Robust Porter
Smuttynose, IPA
Middle Ages, IPA


If you like beer then take a look at FoamingHead.com

What Does That Organic Label Mean?



Natural Medicine: What do organic food labels mean?

Organic food labeling can be confusing. "100 percent organic." "Organic." "Made with organic ingredients." "Contains organic ingredients." Which is better, a package of pancake mix "made with organic ingredients" or one that "contains organic ingredients?" What do all of these different labels mean?

The USDA's National Organics Program regulates the labeling of organic food products. Although "100 percent organic" and "Organic" may seem to mean the same thing to the average grocery shopper, they mean different things. Organics labels do not provide an explanation on the package, so the educated organics consumer must know the following to make informed decisions.

There are four separate and distinct organics labels:

"100 percent organic" refers to single ingredient foods, such as fruits and vegetables, meat, milk and cheese. This may bear the USDA Organic Seal.
"Organic" refers to multiple-ingredient foods (such as packaged foods) of which 95 to 100 percent are organic by weight. This also may bear the USDA Organic Seal.
"Made with organic ingredients" refers to multiple-ingredient foods of which 70 percent or more of the ingredients are organic. This claim may be printed on the front of the package, listing the specific organic ingredients, but may not bear the USDA Organic Seal.
"Contains organic ingredients" is a claim that may not be put on the front of a package and refers to a product that has less than 70 percent organic ingredients. It may not bear the USDA Organic Seal.
Armed with knowledge about organics labels, you can feel confident in making the food choices most appropriate for you and your family. For more information, go to the USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service Web site at ams.usda.gov and click on "National Organic Program."

-- Jaimie Morgan, dietetic intern, and Debra Boutin, M.S., R.D. dietetic internship director and associate professor at Bastyr University

Nonprofit, accredited Bastyr University (bastyr.edu) offers multiple degrees in the natural health sciences, and clinical training at Bastyr Center for Natural Health (bastyrcenter.org), the region's largest natural medicine clinic.

Friday, February 6, 2009

I Don't Eat Farmed Salmon



I don't know how many more times I can say don't eat farmed salmon. And to further that Aroma Thyme Bistro will never serve farmed salmon. We only serve WILD ALASKAN SALMON, that's it! Not even farmed organic Salmon.

Farmed Salmon has been criticized for well over 10 years for how most farms produce the fish. The fish has way to many chemicals, contaminants and disease. In fact some of this farmed salmon has more dioxins and PCB's than the gov't says is safe to eat in a month in as little as a half of portion.

Doctors always say to eat salmon. They just say eat Salmon for the hearth healthy fats. Well they should be saying eat ONLY wild Alaskan Salmon if you choose to consume fish for heart healthy oil.

Aroma Thyme now has a link on their website so you can search your favorite fishes safety rating.
Here is the lastest article to once again stay away from farmed Salmon.
Marcus Guiliano, Chef Advocate
Ellenville NY

Pew Claims Chilean Salmon Producers Use Banned Chemicals

SeaFood Business
February 6, 2009 - By James Wright, SeaFood Business associate editor
The Pew Environment Group announced yesterday that it has acquired U.S. Food and Drug Administration documents that show three of the largest Chilean salmon producers use a number of chemicals banned by the U.S. government.

The chemicals include the antibiotics flumequine and oxolinic acid and the pesticide emamectin benzoate, a sea lice deterrent commonly known as SLICE - a chemical that the FDA has previously allowed in limited amounts. Pew says the documents show that the farmed salmon containing residues of unapproved chemicals were destined for the U.S. market.

Pew says the documents show that Norway-based Marine Harvest and AquaChile, the two largest farmed salmon producers in Chile, are among the offenders. In the documents, obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request, the FDA says that "if the drug is not listed in the approved drugs list … [Chilean companies] are not allowed to use the drug to treat salmon destined to be distributed in the United States, not even if they meet withdrawal periods and no tissue residue can be detected."

"We applaud the FDA for telling these companies that they can no longer use these chemicals in fish that are to be exported to the U.S.," said Andrea Kavanagh, manager of the Salmon Aquaculture Reform Campaign at the Pew Environment Group. "We now hope that the FDA will enforce this directive and protect American consumers and the environment."

Pew is urging the FDA to conduct more tests on farmed salmon imports and to impose an import alert on Chilean salmon, similar to the agency's action against five species of farmed seafood from China in 2007.

"Standards and enforcement should be the same for Chile as they are for China," said Kavanagh. "If the Chilean companies do not comply with instructions to stop using these chemicals then the FDA should consider taking similar action as it did with China."

A New York Times report on Wednesday said that Chile's government and industry officials have not grasped the need for the reforms to protect consumers, the environment and "one of Chile's most important industries from itself."

The Times reported that Donald Kraemer, the FDA's deputy advisor in the office for food safety, verified the documents obtained by Pew, which the group shared with the Times. Kraemer told the newspaper that an import alert was indeed issued last year against three companies - Cultivadores de Salmones Linao Ltda. (owned by Marine Harvest), Empresas Aquachile and Alimentos Cuisine Solutions. The alert has since been lifted.

Salmon of the Americas, an association representing farmed salmon producers in Chile, Canada and the United States, says the article is the latest in a series of misleading New York Times reports about the industry's food safety track record.

"The article's statement that the industry struggles to comply with regulations set by other countries is especially misleading, considering the successful exportation of farmed salmon over the last 25 years into countries with strenuous regulations and safety standards," said SOTA.

A service of YellowBrix, Inc.
We would never expect you to eat this shrimp, nor do we serve farmed Asian shrimp

One Awesome Blender