Archive for July, 2010

July Chocolate News and Notes

This month’s newsletter is all about your new Chocolate Lady – Margot Miller! Ta-dah! Margot’s official first day at the helm is August 1st and I am so very excited for her. I asked her some questions – some serious, some goofy, all enlightening – as a sort of icebreaker. I laughed (really hard), I teared up, I even learned something new about hog wrestling – believe me, her responses will endear her to you.

I hope that you all have a chance to meet Margot in person soon! The next time you are in the Deli, please ask for her and say “howdy.” Or if you don’t live in town, send a virtual welcome to mmilleratzingermansdotcom  (mmilleratzingermansdotcom)  . You will be hearing from her soon in the August Chocolate News and Notes, in which she will reveal the much-anticipated (and semi-top-secret) 2010 Fancy Food Show chocolate report!

As for me – It has been a joy to write to you these last few years. Your kind notes and thoughtful responses to this newsletter were always the best part of my day! And for those of you that I’ve had a chance to meet and work with in person – thank you. You better believe that the best part of this job isn’t the chocolate . . . it’s the people. Getting to know you folks has been a great, great privilege. I will miss you! I am doing one last tasting at the Deli on July 15th – it would be fun to see you there.

Wishing you continued choco-adventures! Wishing you continued choco-adventures!
Duff


duffatzingermansdotcom  (duffatzingermansdotcom)  
734-663-5282

INTERVIEW WITH CHOCOLATE LADY MARGOT MILLER
Duff: Where are you from Margot?
Margot: I’m from Austin, Texas. The home of a sweet treat we carry in the Next Door: Cocoa Puro’s Kaka’wa, a.k.a. Nuggets of Joy! Some things I miss include breakfast tacos, Barton Springs Pool, sleepy East Side honky tonks, the amusingly high ratio of coffee shops to population, and the wealth of really good Thai restaurants.

Duff: How did you end up at Zingerman’s?
Margot: Funny you should ask. I was familiar with Zingerman’s only in the most abstract of ways after seeing their Mail Order catalog at a friend’s house in Chicago. Last summer I moved from Austin to Ann Arbor to pursue a Master’s in Architecture. After a semester, I realized that I had reached a pretty miserable state of existence. Now, please understand that I’m a pretty classic type A personality. I don’t quit things. Type As are “stress junkies.” We endure. So I started my second semester but after about 3 days into it, I realized I couldn’t keep up with it. So I quit. I’m pretty sure my best friend back home thought I had lost my mind. I took the next logical step which was to look for a job. Zingerman’s Deli was hiring runners/bussers. So I applied.

Duff: What chocolate bars are you enjoying at the moment?
Patric 70% with Nibs, Michel Cluizel Maralumi, Claudio Corallo 80%, Rogue Hispaniola

Duff: What do you do when you aren’t at the Deli?
Margot: I’m a diehard Texas Longhorn football fan, so during football season Saturdays you can more than likely find me on a couch, yelling at the television. Other hobbies include cooking (Indian food is a favorite! Check out books by Madhur Jaffrey!); some recent forays into baking; miscellaneous creative endeavors big and small (I have a degree in studio art); proofreading; reading nonfiction; and falling asleep with cookbooks on my face.

Duff: Do you have any favorite accessories?
Margot: I live and die by my iPhone. Other things I often have on me include my purse shaped like a rabbit which was previously my Mom’s; a necklace with a teeny coffee cup (the coffee cup is the only thing I’ve ever found with my name on it); a signet ring from the school I attended for 1st through 12th grade; and two small silver bracelets which I had stamped with ‘Have Courage’ and ‘Be of Good Cheer’ – my late Grandpa’s way of signing each and every piece of correspondence.

Duff: OK this one is requisite – how about your top five music albums?
Margot: This question makes me wish I was as cool as Rob Gordon in “High Fidelty.”

Elliott Smith – Either/Or
Big Star – #1 Record
Iron & Wine – The Shepherd’s Dog
David Bowie – Ziggy Stardust
Rilo Kiley – The Execution of All Things

Duff: What is your favorite body of water?
Margot: My mother raised me with a more than healthy fear of the creatures of the deep. We vacationed to the Texas Gulf Coast each year and my shallow dips in the ocean were punctuated by my mother screaming, “SHARKS ARE CAPABLE OF SWIMMING IN LESS THAN THREE FEET OF WATER!” So I’d say that oceans are probably not my favorite body of water. My exception to that that rule would be my favorite body of water: the Mediterranean Sea. I swam and swam and swam in a little rocky cove; the water was so crisp and clear, allowing me to reason that I’d be able to see the sea monsters before they reached me. My slightly more realistic body of water in terms of ever swimming there again would be Barton Springs in Austin; it’s a man-made pool fed by natural, underground springs. It’s home to the Barton Springs Salamander (Eurycea sosorum), an endangered species Austinites fiercely protect.

Duff: Do you have any pets?
Margot: Presently, my parents are acting as parental guardians for my grey tabby, Cass, who is back in Texas. His full name is Cass Gilbert, named for the late 19th/early 20th century architect who designed Sutton Hall and Battle Hall at the University of Texas. He enjoys eating banana chips, jumping to the highest points he can, and riding around on people’s shoulders. My father routinely shaves his face with Cass wrapped around his neck. To be honest, I am not sure I’ll ever get the cat back from my parents. They seem awfully attached. I recently received a CD with a folder of photos of what Cass was up to in Austin.

Duff: Name some sports you love, please.
Margot: I’ve got lots of favorites. I’ve already mentioned my affinity for Longhorn Football. In terms of sports I played, I was the pipsqueak on the varsity basketball team and the smallest goalie in my field hockey conference. ‘Scrappy’ and ‘hustle’ were terms oft-used to describe my technique in both sports.

The aforementioned qualities also, I think, ensured my success in a new sports realm: Hog Wrestling. My friend Lucy and I are the 2004 Bandera Middleweight Champions. We had been in Bandera, Texas with some friends, attending a bar-b-q festival. There was talk of hog wrestling, and ultimately, Lucy and I were badgered into signing up. I guarantee no one thought we would have a chance. The announcer called us city folk and our opponents were as country as they come. Lucy was wearing designer jeans and I had no cowboy boots to my name. To give you a general idea of hog wrestling, you’re left in a large circular pen into which a hog storms. You must catch and bag it, the latter activity being the most trying part. Once bagged, you must drag it across a line in the center of the pen. Lucy and I entered the pen, shook hands with the timekeeper, and tried not to visibly shake in fear. The whistle blew and we were off! 36 seconds later, that hog was caught, bagged, and dragged. In the words of the announcer, “What [we] lacked in size, [we] made up in speed and cunning.”

My sister and I are hoping to attend the Bandera Wild Hog Explosion in the Spring of 2011 so that I may hog wrestle once again.

Duff: What is your most valuable (sentimental value) possession?
Margot: Oh gosh. I’m going to name two. The first is the belt buckle I received for the hog wrestling. It may be the most one of a kind thing I own. The second possession is a Syracuse China creamy colored ironstone mug with a loosely sketched blue eagle crest on it. It’s not particularly old (1978) and probably wasn’t acquired by my family until the early 1990s, but I hold it dear because it was the coffee mug my Grandpa used every day back when we used to have a little country house in East Texas.

Duff: What is the best meal you’ve ever had?
Margot: Outside of Las Terrenas, on the Samaná Peninsula in the Dominican Republic. While walking the shoreline, trying to find the beach the guidebook described as an absolute paradise, I came upon a little shack where a husband had just returned with a small cooler of freshly caught fish. The wife grilled it whole with a simple blend of salt and spices and served it with some beans and rice.

Duff: What vegetables do you love to eat? You can name one for each season, if you want.
Margot: As a vegetable fanatic since I was a baby, I both love and hate this question. So many to choose from! Radishes. Mustard greens. Peppers. Brussels sprouts.

Duff: How about your top two beverages?
Margot: Thanks for allowing me to gush about soda water. I leave a trail of La Croix sparkling water wherever I go.
Number two, morning edition would be a short Americano with room for cream.
Number two, evening edition would be a gin and tonic, always with a twist of lime.

Duff: Where is your favorite vacation spot?
Margot: I have a huge crush on Montreal. I’m itching to get back, especially in a month that’s not freezing cold (The maple syrup lollipops made by pouring fresh syrup into little snowbanks almost made the below freezing temperatures worth it.).
I also love the food culture of New Orleans; my family visited there just about every year when I was growing up. It’s been a little too long since I feasted on beignets and café au lait at Café Du Monde. I think it’s also about time that I visited with a palm reader on the French Quarter.

Duff: What else should we know about you?
Margot: Well I already disclosed the hog wrestling. Let’s think…

1. I have a horrific fear of broken glass and given my track record of glass breaking in my vicinity, my mother is convinced that I emanate an energy that pulls glass objects from where they’re sitting to their shattered demise on the floor.

2. I’m pretty much living the dream right now at Zingerman’s. If I wanted to live the dream in another fashion, I’d be pining for a job with Willet Stained Glass Studios in Philadelphia. They’ve been making and restoring stained glass windows for over 100 years. One person’s job entails searching through their massive collection of glass color chips to find the right color for each part of a window’s design. This is what I’d want to do.

Duff: Can you give us any chocolate sneak peeks for the holiday? Stuff you are excited to bring in later this year?
Margot: Askinosie Chocolate may have a new origin bar for us by the holidays. This new bar is part of a larger project called Cocoa Honors. Since the fall of 2009, Shawn’s been meeting with 15 high schoolers and taking them through the steps involved with sourcing cocoa and developing long-term partnerships with cocoa farmers. Shawn Askinosie & crew have raised the money needed to get their high schoolers to Tanzania this August to visit the woman-run co-op that will be supplying their cacao. I urge you to read more about this remarkable program at their website: http://chocolateuniversity.org/

Vosges Haut-Chocolat continues to excite with 8 new bars! I’ll whet your appetite: Sicilian Marzipan. Just the mention of it provoked a symphony of oohs and ahhs at our most recent Next Door Team Meeting.

I was recently able to taste a number of products by D. Barbero, who makes the Italian hazelnut torrone we carry. They also have a pistachio torrone that is not only a gem to look at, but maintains the same quality of flavor we love in the hazelnut.

I’ll be a little bit coy now and just include a picture from the packaging of a product that pretty much illustrates my giddiness for it. Keep your ears to the ground!

Duff: I’m a nickname girl so I’ve got to ask – do you have any?
Margot: Have I ever. Mar, MarMar, Marge, Margs, Meer, Mkat, Shrimp, Smalls, and Goat.

July Features – Celebrate American Foods from Coast to Coast

Surryano Virginia Country Ham

Really flavorful country ham aged 12 months for us by the Edwards folks in Surry, Virginia. From peanut fed Berkshire hogs, we’ll slice it to order just how you like it, thin for tapas, of thicker for ham steaks.

Cabot Clothbound Cheddar

Fantastic American Cheddar cheese matured in cloth, in the traditional English farmhouse style. Aged 12 months in the Cellars at Jasper Hill in Greensboro, VT. With sweet, caramelly flavors and some nice crystallization, this cheese might give the English a run for their money!

Pleasant Ridge Reserve Cheese

One of our all-time favorite American cheeses. We select only the most exceptional batches of this alpine style raw cow’s milk cheese from Wisconsin to sell year round, and we especially like them at the age they are now: 15 months!

Bayley Hazen Blue

One of our best American Blue cheeses, made from raw cow’s milk at Jasper Hill in Vermont, in the style of English Stilton, dense and fudgy texture and a great, balanced blue cheese flavor!

La Quercia Acorn Edition Prosciutto Americano

Spectacular dry cured ham from one of our favorite American producers, made using happy, acorn-fed, heirloom hogs. Sliced to order by our skilled slicers. We’re only one of two retailers in this country selling this superb ham!

Hillstone Arbequina Olive Oil

A small batch artisan olive oil with a flavor full of personality. It’s pungent in a good way, with notes of artichoke, apple and green herbs. Grown and harvested on a small family farm in Yolo County, CA- see for yourself why it was awarded ‘Best in Show’ at the LA County olive oil competition.

Jaeger Family Olive Oil

The Jaegers are one of the founding families of small batch Californian olive oils. The 2009 harvest is arguably one of the best in years, with a thick, rich mouth-feel and flavors of spicy wild greens. It’ll leave you craving for more….

Katz Rockhill Ranch Olive Oil

With bold aromas of fresh cut grass and artichoke, Katz’s Rockhill Ranch olive oil is a harmony of pleasant green, herbaceous flavors and almonds with a lingering sweet finish. It ends with a pleasant peppery punch that announces its freshness. We think you’ll agree.

Katz Late Harvest Zinfandel Vinegar

‘AgroDolce’ in Italian translates to ‘sweet and sour,’ which is exactly what the Katz family was aiming for with this garnet colored wine vinegar. Plum and fresh berry overtones give way to a pleasant, crisp finish that will be endlessly versatile in your kitchen. They suggest the following uses:
• on all things tomato- caponata, ratatouille, etc
• as a marinade for lamb with rosemary and garlic
• reduce it in a pan and spoon it over fresh figs wrapped in Proscuitto

Katz Gravenstein Apple Cider Vinegar

Gravenstein apples were only recently saved from the brink of extinction, and we’re glad for it. They make a mouth-wateringly delicious vinegar that has become a popular favorite in many peoples kitchens- and no doubt, you’ll love it too.

July Specials

Olive of the Month!
Meski Olives

One of our favorite new olives from Tunisia. The folks at Les Moulins Mahjoub pick these olives half-ripe, and crack them for quicker curing resulting in a crunchy texture and a fresh olive-y bitterness we love!
$12.99/lb

Creamery Cheese of the Month!
Fresh Goat Cheese

This dense, log-shaped cheese is about four inches in diameter and is covered with a thin, white mold. It has a very rich texture with hints of citrus, a mild goat flavor and a touch of mushroom finish.

$24.99/lb

Bread of the Month!
Better than San Francisco Sourdough bread

Classic American bread with a beautifully blistered crust, pleasant sour tang and chewy texture.

$4.50/ea (regular $6.25/ea)

Special Bakes!

Cranberry Pecan bread -every weekend in July
It’s like Christmas in July! Bread fans everywhere wait all year long for this bread! When we sample it, there’s a phenomenon of customers who grab a piece as they’re leaving and come back a few minutes later asking “what did i just eat? that’s amazing!”. This bread is a magic combination of our San Francisco Sourdough, toasty pecans, and dried New England cranberries. Get your fill and stock the freezer, this bread won’t be back until November!

Sandwich of the Month!
The Leonidas 5000

This custom BLT is the favorite sandwich of Deli veteran Leonidas (Leo) Vasquez, who holds the honor of being the best bread slicer we’ve ever had on the Sandwich Line. In fact, Leo loves slicing bread so much that we’ve nicknamed him “The Leonidas 5000” – our bread-slicing machine.

Strips of crispy bacon, thick slices of American cheese, crunchy cucumber, lettuce and tomato piled on buttered and toasted Rustic Italian bread.

$11.99/ea

Cake of the Month!
Buttermilk cake

Buttery yellow cake filled with raspberry butter cream and covered in smooth vanilla swiss butter cream. Please enjoy our cakes at room temperature, your patience will be rewarded!

20% off!

Zingerman’s Coffee Company, Roaster’s Pick!
Mysore Nuggets (Ossoor Estates)

We’ve been a big fan of Indian coffees since we started roasting. This coffee is from the Ossoor Estates in Manjarabad and is a new find for us. This crop is the best Indian coffee we’ve had in 5 years.

It has a wonderfully rich body; hints of sweet and warming spices (think cardamom); and a long clean finish. It is grown between 3,000 and 3,250 feet elevation on a 120 year old farm. The term “nugget” is believed to come from the gold mining that once took place in this region.

$16.99/bag

Vinegar Magic

Wednesday, July 28th, 7-8:30 PM

We are bringing back the vinegar maven for a special night of vinegar magic. There will be no rabbits coming out of a hat or people sawed in half, but what will be done with vinegar and food will be magic to your palette. Walk away with sure-fire ways to amaze your friends and change your cooking forever. Her tastings always sell out so sign up early.

$20/in advance and $25/at the door, Call 734-663-3400 to save a seat!

The Chocolate Lady’s Farewell

Thursday, July 15th, 7-9pm

After five years as the Deli’s Chocolate Lady (aka the best job in the world), Duff is passing the torch to a new chocolate connoisseur. In her last tasting, Duff will give you a briefing of the state of chocolate in the world today, share her Top 10 choco-learnings and reveal her all-time favorite sweets. Does Duff have a favorite chocolate bar? Yes (she travels with it). What is the best confection at the Deli? She’ll tell you (there are actually 3). The tasting list is top-secret but rest assured it will be expansive! There will be sweet and savory, classic and zany, chocolate and candies – all of the treats that our Chocolate Lady can’t live without.

$30/in advance and $35/at the door, Call 734-663-3400 to save a seat!

Bacon Tasting with Ari

Wednesday, July 7th, 7 –9 PM

This is a tasting for the ‘pork’ at heart. Some people call it the fifth food group, others call it the next olive oil- at Zingerman’s we’ll show you that it tastes amazing and can be used in almost anything. We seek out the best bacon there is. Come spend an evening with Ari, tasting, learning and making some bacon history.
Be sure to get your name on the list for this one- it’s not to be missed!

$30/in advance and $35/at the door, Call 734-663-3400 to save a seat!