prime living 2011 july/august "food & wine" issue

84
Blades of Glory rising chefs battle it out in a unique culinary competition Queen of Tarts Life is sweet for confectioner Gesine Bullock-Prado Road Sipping Cruisin’ through California wine country From top toques to divine desserts, sink your teeth into PL’s annual food issue food food glorious TEXAS JULY/AUGUST 2011 The Luxury of Choice

Upload: srg-services-inc

Post on 22-Mar-2016

229 views

Category:

Documents


10 download

DESCRIPTION

PRIME Living 2011 July/August "Food & Wine" issue. Feature story includes: "How Sweet It Is" Inside the sweet life of confectioner Gesine Bullock-Prado

TRANSCRIPT

Blades of Gloryrising chefs battle it out in a unique culinary competition

Queen of TartsLife is sweet for confectioner Gesine Bullock-Prado

Road SippingCruisin’ through California wine country

From top toques to divine desserts, sink your teeth into PL’s annual food issue

food foodglorious

Texasj u ly / a u g u s t 2 0 1 1

The Luxury of Choice

AD FORM

AD FORM

Uniquely situated on the banks of Oak Creek in Sedona’s magnifi cent Red Rock country, L’Auberge de Sedona is a place where magical moments happen. Dine on our creekside patio under the cool canopy of sycamore trees. Take a private

outdoor shower under the starry night sky. Our staff will take every opportunity to delight you. Quite simply, this is a hotel experience unlike any other.

Conde’ Nast Gold List 2011 • Travel + Leisure World’s Best 2011Contact your Virtuoso Travel Specialist to reserve your stay and enjoy exclusive benefi ts including daily resort credits. www.virtuoso.com

Magical Setting Exceptional Experiences

301 L’Auberge Lane • Sedona, AZ 86336 • Phone 1-800-905-5745 • lauberge.com

Find us on Twittertwitter.com/laubergesedona

Like us on Facebook facebook.com/laubergedesedona

july/augusT 2011

2929 a cut above4 chefs + 4 mystery ingredients = culinary genius

59 california dreamin’from yountville to healdsburg, hit the road for a wine country adventure

23

59

It Is

HowsweetInsIde the sweet lIfe of confectIoner

GesIne Bullock-Prado

july/august • 2011 3

78 79

also insidePuBlIsher &

edItor-In-chIefkaryn dean

[email protected]

PuBlIsher terry dean

[email protected]

ManaGInG edItorMichelle Jacoby

[email protected]

edItorIal assIstantsamantha edmondson

[email protected]

art dIrectIon & desIGnsw!tch s t u d i o

Jim nissen, erin loukilicarla rogers

www.switchstudio.com

sales ManaGerdavid spector

[email protected]

account executIvesMarie Brashears

[email protected]

darren [email protected]

MarketInG/events executIve

Jennifer [email protected]

cIrculatIon/dIstrIButIonBrian stavert

[email protected]

contact311 Julie rivers drive

sugar land, texas 77498281.277.2333

edItorIal [email protected]

advertIsInG [email protected]

www.prime-living.comPrime living Magazine is a publication of srG services, Inc., published bi-monthly. copies are mailed and hand-delivered to households and businesses throughout

the greater houston area. this publication may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, without the express prior written permission of the publisher. the publisher assumes no

responsibility to any party for the content of any advertisement in this publication. the

opinions expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the position of the publication.

on the coverHeirloom Tomato and Watermelon Salad created by Chef Jeramie Robison, executive chef of Restaurant CINQ at La Colombe d’Or. Photographed by Mark Lipczynski.Blades of Glory

rising chefs battle it out in a

unique culinary competition

Queen of TartsLife is sweet for confectioner

Gesine Bullock-Prado

Road SippingCruisin’ through

California wine

country

From top toques to divine

desserts, sink your teeth

into PL’s annual food issuefood foodglorious

Texas

j u ly / a u g u s t 2 0 1 1

The Luxury of Choice

thelist

15 9 • cocktails & conversation •

Where to Go, What to DoTune In • Theater al Fresco • Buzz • Keep on Truckin’ • {Not} Just Desserts • Embracing Her Craft • My Life • What’s Cooking

37 • connoisseur • PL’s GuiDe to DiscerninG taste Simply Sublime • Good Eats • Table Talk • Rum on a Roll • White Haute

49 • the gentlemen’s room • For the man Who commanDs the very best Raising the Bar • Trick Trike • Grill of My Dreams • Bone Appétit

64 • pl’s passport • GreetinGs From Destinations near anD FarEnlightened Explorer • Fredricksburg

71 • live well • FeeL GooD, Look GooDSkin Outlook: Sunny • Fashionably Faux • Fit Tips for on the Road

76 • prime list • events, GaLas anD FunDraisersPrime Living’s Women’s Health Symposium • Grand Food & Wine Affair • Mad Hatter Spring Luncheon

39

52

prime-living.com4

publisher’snote

[email protected]

Although this is our annual Food & Wine issue, it really should be called our “get inspired”

issue!karyn deanPublisher & Editor-in-Chief

local event planner recently shared that outdoor entertaining is the fashionable thing to do this summer. Thankfully in Houston (in spite of record heat), humidity, refreshing breezes and a pleasantly surprising absence of mosquitoes has turned many a backyard

into a veritable “garden of Eden” for the perfect soiree.If you’re looking to throw your own summer bash, Prime Living can help you be the talk

of the neighborhood with a few fun summer drink inspirations—recipes and all! Looking to impress your guests with interesting tidbits about the drinks you’re preparing? Check out “Rum on a Roll” on page 44. And don’t forget to scan the QR code for a bit of history worth repeating! We also have more recipes, photos and videos on how to make the perfect summer cocktail at prime-living.com.

Managing editor Michelle Jacoby and I had such a great time with “A Cut Above,” our homage to the Food Network’s popular show “Chopped” on page 33, that we’re seriously thinking about making it an annual event. Watching each chef perform in his own kitchen (here I am giving Jason Chaney, executive chef at the Barbed Rose Steakhouse, an encouraging hug) and witnessing the moment when that creative spark of inspiration hit was, well, amazing. And through this culinary adventure, Michelle and I found out that we’re not ashamed to ask if we can lick the plate!

Speaking of artistic inspiration, creating sugary goodness with Gesine Bullock-Prado was every bit as magical as it appears in “How Sweet it Is” on page 33. Gesine was charming, beautiful and authentic, and kept us captivated as we listened to her stories of delicious inspiration. If you love recipes, then you’ll love her blog, confectionsofamasterbaker.blogspot.com, where she shares some of her favorites.

I was also so inspired by our feature “California Dreamin’” on page 59. So much so that my family and I decided to take a road trip along Highway 29 in northern California’s gorgeous wine country. Whether you’re a regular to the Napa and Sonoma valleys or have never been, we share the top things to see and do.

Although this is our annual Food & Wine issue, it really should be called our “get inspired” issue!

P.S. I hope you’ll join me in helping Gesine reach her goal of raising $64,000 for the American Cancer Society. Her personal ACS page is accessible from her blog. Thank you!

the texas issueSaddle up for our annual celebration of all things Texas, filled with everything we love about the Lone Star State!

coming up

emptynesting

Scan this code to see what the housing experts

are saying!

A

prime-living.com6

THE DESIGN SOURCE

Our talented staff of designers are specialized in transforming interior spaces into the home of your dreams!

Complete InteriorDesign Services

Consultation

Furniture/Rugs

Accessories

Window Treatments

Lighting

Master Planning

New Construction

Remodeling

Staging

3644 Highway 6 South l Sugar Land, TX 77478 l 281.242.3336 visit us at www.dessource.com or on facebook

At least one resident must be 55 years of age or better, a limited number of residents may be younger and no one under 19 years of age. Some residents may be younger than 55. Community Association fees required. Complete offering terms for the homeowner’s association is in an offering plan available from sponsor. Void where prohibited. Prices reflect base prices and are subject to change without notice. Lot premiums may apply. Details available upon request. Photography is for illustrative purposes only and is not intended to be an actual representation of a specific community, neighborhood, or any completed improvements being offered. ©2010 Pulte Home Corporation.

For more of the story visit delwebb.com

Now OpenCome see what active adult living is all about!

New homes from the $140s9 designer decorated models

Just north of Hwy. 59 on FM 762www.delwebb.com/sweetgrass

877-256-0272

Nothing tells the Del Webb story better than a personal visit. Come meet our residents, hear about what life is like here, tour the community, and see if you think the Del Webb lifestyle might be right for you.

Redefining retirement for over 50 years.

AD Form

Titian (Tiziano Vecellio). Diana and Actaeon, 1556 – 1559

july/august • 2011 9

cocktails &conversation.

cocktails &the prime living guide to what's happening now

inside: 10 • prime ten | Tune In11 • night out | TheaTer al Fresco12 • the Buzz | WhaT's neW14 • hot List | Keep on TrucKIn'15 • nostaLgia | (noT) JusT DesserTs16 • arts | embracIng her craFT18 • my Life | Ken palmer 19 • design | WhaT's cooKIng

Story | sally j. clasen Illustration | john s. dykes

“Cake Assistant.” A

low-level pastry chef decorates his way out of the frosting shadows to create his own award-winning fondant in this revealing documentary series.

“Hellcat’s Kitchen.” Co-hosts Rachael

Ray and Paula Deen scratch the homemade “yummos” and “y’alls” in a messy bake-off that promises to be TV’s biggest cooking catfight of the season.

“Bottom Chefs.” Reality cooking show cast-offs

are featured in their new careers, which include everything from cafeteria dishwasher to supermarket stocker.

“Cooking with the Has-Beens.” You won’t

recognize anyone from this so-called list of stars as they compete, recipe-to-recipe, in a desperate attempt to revive a baked entertainment career.

“Get Buzzed Now.” The world’s most

notorious drunks teach viewers how to brew cheap and effective cocktails using simple household ingredients.

“Beef: It’s What’s for Dinner.” Hunky men

with questionable culinary skills work the grill sans aprons and shirts—and no one really cares what’s cooking.

“Tongue vs. Cheek.” Dinner

dates Anthony Bourdain and Gordon Ramsay toss bitter barbs in a beastly battle of food cynicism.

“Recipes from Rehab.” Filmed at

recovery facilities across the country, celebrities take advantage of the self-improvement spotlight to showcase their favorite dysfunctional family recipes.

“No, You Can’t Cook.” Master chefs

make it really clear to culinary wannabes they’ll never chop or sauté anything in this hour-long lesson in kitchen domination. 

“100 Percent Processed.” No one on

this show visits a farmer’s market because everything needed for a tasty—and sustainable—American diet is in the canned or frozen food section. Le

ro

y g

ibb

inS

It’s almost fall, which means a smorgasbord of TV viewing options are cooking. What’s on the burner? Here are 10 shows simmering in food and beverage development.

new cooking show conceptstune in:10

prime-living.com10

cocktails &conversation. prime ten

miller outdoor theatre6000 hermann park dr.

281-373-3386milleroutdoortheatre.com

Story | jean ciampi

Houstonians have been drawn to the Miller Outdoor Theatre like

moths to the stage lights since it began as a permanent bandstand in Hermann Park in 1928. While there is fixed seating for more than 1,700 ticket holders, it’s often the theater’s grassy hillside that is the best seat—or blanket—in the house.

The landmark hill, created from dirt excavated from Fannin Street as the Houston Medical Center expanded, comfortably accommodates 4,500 audience members stretched out with their baskets of delicacies, from crudités and pinot noir, to pizza and beer.

A longtime center for entertainment and culture, Houstonians gathered here to listen to KPRC Radio’s broadcast of the 1925 World Series. They crowded in again in 1941 for the

first Houston Symphony concert (the Summer Symphony Series has been an annual fixture ever since). In 1968, Theatre Under the Stars brought the lights up on their first production “Bells are Ringing” and has continued to entertain thousands each year with Broadway-quality performances. Then-presidential-candidate Richard Nixon even chose the venue for a major campaign speech during a stop in 1968.

Miller Outdoor Theatre proudly claims the title of the largest always-free program of its kind. The schedule includes the Houston Ballet, opera, children’s performances, movies, the Houston Shakespeare Festival and a wide variety of others.

Beginning with this year’s season, ticketed, assigned seating is available in the covered area for

evening events, except for movies and children’s theater shows. While the assigned seating is still free, tickets are only available at the box office from 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. on the day of the performance while supplies last with a limit of four. Remaining tickets are then given out one hour before curtain.

Certainly a seat close to the stage and its 110-ton air conditioning units can be attractive, especially on a muggy, summer night. But it’s hard to top the toes-in-the-grass, blanket-on-the-hill spots when the moon is out and the stars are bright.

Hermann ParkCovering 7.5 wooded acres,

Hermann Park is home to the Houston Zoo, the Museum of Natural Science and the Houston Garden Center.

Sports enthusiasts come for the popular exercise loop

or to hit a round at the golf course. And who doesn’t

treasure their memories of riding the park’s train?

6001 Fannin St.713-524-5876

hermannpark.org

Hotel ZaZa If a hillside picnic doesn’t

quite fit the bill, jump to the other end of the

spectrum with Hotel ZaZa’s Ultimate Ransom Room,

the premier private dining room in downtown Houston.

Spectacular cuisine in an intimate setting is the flourish of fine living and defines the

room’s air of luxury.5701 main St.713-526-1991

hotelzazahouston.com

Houston Center for

PHotograPHyIn the heart of the Museum

District, the Houston Center for Photography offers year-round exhibits, workshops,

lectures and classes for those who believe a picture really is worth a thousand words.

It’s also home to a 2,500-plus photography book library

and a state-of-the-art digital darkroom.

1441 W. Alabama713-529-4755hcponline.org

While you’re in The neighborhood,

check ouT These oTher greaT spoTs:

Ler

oy

gib

bin

S

al frescoTHeaTeR

july/august • 2011 11

cocktails &conversation.night out

LAu

rA

Ho

LLA

nd

er

pH

oTo

gr

Ap

Hy

| d

AV

id p

ec

k |

br

Ad

cA

rr

em

iLy

pLu

mb

eA

n

In L.A. they’re all the rage, and now Houston has a salon for the busy social bee looking for a little pick-me-up for her coif. Located on the

corner of Westheimer and River Oaks Blvd., the Blow dry Bar specializes in a “menu” of blowout styles. The idea is to pick the blow dry according to the occasion. Blow Dry Bar has customers looking their best in around 30 to 45 minutes with a shampoo and blow dry. 3264 Westheimer. 713-522-2068, blowdrybarhouston.com

While on the subject of hairdos, artemis hair studio specializes in custom wigs made with the best human hair available, detailed

made WiTH LoVe

Set to be released in September, “Green Beans and Guacamole” is a new book featuring 50

Houston restaurants, including Sorrento’s, Tony’s and Mockingbird Bistro that will share delicious recipes inspired by the book’s title.

Austin Hanson, who has intellectual disabilities, wanted to throw a party for his mother, Belinda Hillhouse, and insisted green beans and guacamole, her two favorite foods, be on the menu. Inspired by her son’s thoughtfulness, Hillhouse created the book, which will benefit the ARC, a nonprofit organization dedicated to creating opportunities for children and adults with intellectual disabilities. greenbeansandguacamole.com

Atrium is the newest couture boutique to open its doors in the posh River Oaks area. The boutique specializes in designer cocktail and evening gowns, including styles by renowned celebrity designer Prabal Gurung, who’s responsible for dressing everyone from

First Lady Michelle Obama to Hollywood hottie Demi Moore. Created by Luvi Wheelock, owner of Case de Novia wedding boutique, each gown is close to couture as possible with only one size in each design. Atrium is located at 3331 D’Amico, between Waugh and Shepherd.

In other fashion news, famed designer and native Houstonian david peck recently stopped at Tootsie’s to showcase his 2011 spring/summer and fall/winter collections. Peck is the creator of the CrOp Collection, which specializes in sustainable and eco-friendly materials. He’s also become a favorite of singer/songwriter Taylor Swift. Going green never looked so good!

fashion forward

hair today…

cap construction and precise color blending. Customers also can take advantage of comfortable and private fitting rooms, and the expertise of stylist Kitsa Strait to help style their wig. 4950 Bissonnet, Bellaire. 713-667-1283, artemishair.com

Ever heard of a sweet Watermelon-tini? Or how about a Watermelon Keg? Scan this code using your smartphone for unique summer drink recipes perfect for entertaining or just cooling off on a hot summer night.

Backyard Bartender

prime-living.com12

cocktails &conversation. buzz

Club veteran Woody Gould of Guava Lamp has teamed up with Chelsea Grill’s hospitality honcho Tony Gutierrez to open Vue,

Houston’s new dance club located in the River Oaks/Montrose area. This sleek, chic club and lounge offers expansive views of treetops and grassy hills surrounding Buffalo Bayou at Waugh.

Gould and Gutierrez picked 526 Waugh, formerly occupied by The Laff-Stop, because of its 7,000-square-foot spacious interior

that offers a range of areas for customers seeking a variety of experiences, including the “Room with a Vue” for private events of all sizes.

Houston- and New York-based interior designer Michael Stribling of HGTV’s “Design

Star” helped create the “sexy meets urban fabulous” interiors, including 180 artistically placed mirrors and custom seating. Vue is open from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m., Thursday through Sunday. vuehouston.com

LAu

rA

Ho

LLA

nd

er

pH

oTo

gr

Ap

Hy

| d

AV

id p

ec

k |

br

Ad

cA

rr

em

iLy

pLu

mb

eA

n

pl’s app lIstour favorite foodie apps

iphoneYelPThis GPS-enabled app finds you a place to dine no matter where you are in the world.

SNooTH WINe PRoUsing image recognition technology, this app makes searching for those hard-to-find wines as easy as snapping a photo.

Hello VINoGet wine recommendations for meals, pairings, special occasions, gifts and holidays.

PAIR ITA fun and comprehensive food and wine pairing guide for foodies on the go.

android

SWIRlFor the consummate wine connoisseur, this handy app lets you categorize, make notes and even post a snapshot of your favorite wines.

WINe DICTIoNARYGet in the know with this wine glossary filled with hundreds of wine-related terms.

CoRkbINShare what you’re drinking with your friends with this easy-to-use wine journal.

FooD oN THe TAbleWhat’s for dinner? Plan your menu with this stress-free weekly meal planning app using specials from your local grocery store.

The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston has collaborated with the National Galleries

of Scotland, the High Museum of Art, Atlanta and the Minneapolis Institute of Arts to bring amazing works that showcase the grand splendor of Renaissance Venice. “Titian and the Golden age of Venetian painting: masterpieces from the national Galleries of scotland” features 25 masterworks, and includes two of the greatest paintings of the Italian Renaissance: Titian’s “Diana and Actaeon” and “Diana and Callisto” (1556-1559). This is the first time the two paintings have traveled to the United States.

In addition to the “Diana” paintings, the exhibit features 10 other paintings—including Titian’s “Venus Rising from the Sea,” Lorenzo Lotto’s “Virgin and Child with Saints,” Jacopo Tintoretto’s “Christ Carried to the Tomb,” and Jacopo Bassano’s

room wItH a Vue

“Adoration of the Magi”—as well as 13 drawings by Titian, Tintoretto and Veronese, and other Venetian Renaissance artists.

Admission requires a timed-entry ticket that includes general admission to the museum. 713-639-7300, mfah.org

VenetIan renaissance

Titian (Tiziano Vecellio). Diana and Callisto, 1556 – 1559.

july/august • 2011 13

cocktails &conversation.buzz

roseann rogersKnown as Houston’s “Buzz lady,” roseann rogers has been on top of the Houston’s social, fashion and entertainment scene

for nearly 15 years. a regular contributor to prime living, she is also a tV personality, spokesperson and active philanthropist.

ever since the chuck wagon brought grub around to feed hungry cowboys and field hands, the moveable feast has been a way of life for busy Texans on the move. Around Houston, you only have to track the trucks to find top-notch gourmet to go.

Story | jean ciampi Photography | mark lipczynski

mmm cupcaKeHouston hasn’t been the same since husband-and-wife team Michelle Mazoch and Justin Febbo established MMM Cupcake truck. There’s nothing quite like a truck armed with delicious, fresh cupcakes on the go. Choose your cake and frosting for instant yumminess!

832-398-8086mmmcupcake.net

eaTsIe boysFounders and friends Chef Matt Marcus, Ryan Soroka and Alex Vassilakidis roll in for corporate functions, house parties or just to provide lunch to the man on the street. Their gourmet sandwiches or homemade chicken poblano sausage, made from locally sourced ingredients, deserve white table cloths, but thrive on the black top.

845-430-8479eatsieboys.com

bernIe’s burger busIt’s logical that gourmet chef Justin Turner is doing burgers the old-school way, especially since he’s taken up residence in a refurbished yellow school bus. His homemade ketchup, mayo and pickles top off a selection of grass-fed, Black Angus burgers that are easily the top of the class.

281-336-2447berniesburgerbus.com

Keep on truckin’

oh my! pocKeT pIesOh My! Pocket Pies remembers what a home-cooked, farm fresh meal tastes like. They’re packing tasty comfort food with a side of love into flaky dough for the perfect pocket-sized lunch. Find them Wednesday through Saturday in the Heights.

281-902-9820ohmypocketpies.com

green 2 goCommitted to the smallest carbon footprint while providing the biggest value in healthy meals, Green Cuisine 2 Go serves their pastas, sandwiches, crepes, salads and signature hibiscus juice in biodegradable, corn-based containers. Even the truck is made from recycled materials and is partially solar powered. You can eat healthy and be green!

713-204-0407greencuisine2go.com

JuST

in T

ur

ne

r

Am

er

icA

n d

Air

y Q

ue

en

co

rp.

prime-living.com14

cocktails &conversation. hot lIst

Can anyone out there imagine Warren Buffett pulling up to the takeout

window at Dairy Queen and ordering a couple of Blizzards for the road? The notion of the world-renowned billionaire businessman giving himself brain freeze becomes eminently more plausible when you learn that he actually owns the venerable, 60-year-old DQ chain.

Well, at least his company Berkshire Hathaway does.

If indeed Buffett has a taste for DQ’s iconic frozen treats, he’s not alone. In 1985, the first year the popular Blizzard was introduced, DQ sold a cool 175 million of the creamy frappes. But that number pales in comparison to the ice cream franchises’ overall reach. With 5,700 independently owned and operated stores now operating in 22 countries all over the world, it’s safe to say that millions—if not billions—make a regular trek to the familiar red-roofed franchises for a frothy fix.

It all began in 1938 in Kankakee, Ill., when, on a hot summer day, a father and son who ran

the local mixing plant decided to tinker with an ice cream recipe that essentially was the granddaddy of what we now call “soft-serve.” They convinced a buddy of theirs who owned a local ice cream parlor to sell the creamy concoction “all you can eat” for a whopping 10 cents. In what unwittingly might have been the world’s first large-scale focus group, the good people of Kankakee came out in droves for a sample, ultimately offering a rousing “thumbs up” for the sweet, smooth-as-silk dessert that has since become a staple of

American culture. The chain showed

modest growth through the early 1940s, but

Dairy Queen really began to hit its stride after the end of World War II, when returning soldiers and their families were eager to seek out and enjoy the homely comforts they’d left behind. At one point, the chain was just behind McDonald’s in sales figures.

One of the keys to the franchise’s longstanding success has been its deft touch

What makes a Dairy Queen soft-serve cone official? Why, it’s the signature Dairy Queen “curl,” that’s what. And

it’s not as simple as it might seem. With the cone under the dispenser nozzle, a DQ server learns that after he

or she fills the cone, they must shut down the dispenser, count for two or three seconds and then pull it down and

count again. Then by turning off the machine and executing an adroit twist of the wrist, a perfect DQ curl is born. And, by the way, just how cold is that ice cream? When DQ soft-serve

leaves the machine, it’s supposed to be 19 degrees. Icy!

shooTing The (dQ) curl

at introducing new products that become instantly beloved. Decades before the Blizzard took America by storm, the company’s products expanded from simple soft-serve to include malts and milkshakes in 1949, banana splits in 1951, lime-infused “Dilly Bars” in 1955, “Mr. Misty” slush treats in 1961 (they eventually were renamed “Arctic Rush”), and a range of cooked foods, including burgers that were broiled under the trademarked DQ “Brazier” banner in 1958.

Despite its Midwestern genesis, through the years, DQ has established some significant roots in the Lone Star State. With, at last count, nearly 250 locations within its boundaries, Texas can lay rightful claim to being the most Dairy Queen-crazed state in the U.S. Texans everywhere flock to DQ for their exclusive brand of DQ favorites, such as Hung-R Busters, the Dude Chicken Fried Steak Sandwich, and T-Brand Tacos.

At the heart of DQ’s success, though, is the fact that even after 60 years, no American can seem to get enough of what Dairy Queen has always done best: a cool and creamy-smooth cone on a balmy summer night. Now that’s “chill.”

Story | Bruce Farr

Just desserts(not)

JuST

in T

ur

ne

r

Am

er

icA

n d

Air

y Q

ue

en

co

rp.

dairy Queen in 1942.

dairy Queen today.

july/august • 2011 15

cocktails &conversation.nostalgia

There are many excellent reasons to embrace “Port Mortuary” (Putnam,

$27.95), Patricia Cornwell’s 18th adventure built around medical examiner Kay Scarpetta, but none more elemental than her return to Kay as first-person narrator.

The story begins with Kay working with fallen Americans shipped from Iraq and Afghanistan to a real-life military forensic facility in Dover, Md. What’s important, though, is not that we’re intellectually challenged to figure out a series of grisly domestic who-dunnits, but that we’re forced, living inside Kay Scarpetta’s first-person voice, to feel a noose that’s tightening with cruelties from the present, the future and especially from her own past.

Yes, in Scarpetta terms, the gang’s all here. But as they do so often in Cornwell’s books, they’re running from their own demons and/or chasing their own pipe dreams. Kay sees what she sees during those long, detailed autopsies of the seemingly unrelated victims. And it’s pointing her in a direction that puts her at odds with everything and, at times, everybody she knows and loves. – JD

SpoTLigHT: la colombe d’or art galleryEstablished in 2003, La Colombe d’Or Art Gallery has quickly risen to become a must-see for art enthusiasts “hungry” for unique works. Located on the third floor of the historic inn and upscale restaurant, the collection features artists whose works are displayed in museums around the world, including Francesco Carracio and Guy Toubon to name a few. Open daily.

3410 montrose blvd. • 713-469-4750 • lacolombedorhouston.com

A decade ago, Houston decided to gaze beyond its well-established fascination with fine arts to explore an equally, if not even

more, ancient method of self-expression: craft. At the organization born of that commitment, executive director Julie Farr is working overtime to celebrate a milestone birthday while clarifying what awaits and what happens at the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft.

The HCCC is now presenting a show called “Crafting Live(s),” the first alumni exhibition of its Artist Residency Program. Spotlighting a relatively short, yet rich history, the exhibit also speaks of the motivating force behind the institution’s founding in 2001. More than 70 artists have graced the halls and studios of these facilities since then, bringing a dynamic energy to the field of craft and the art of producing it here in Houston.

“Craft is an integral part of countless cultures and in many of them, is still a way of life,” says Farr, who joined HCCC in 2007 after serving as executive director of the Society for Contemporary Craft in Pittsburgh. “We grow up with craft all around us, but Americans don’t necessarily celebrate it. Or else it’s compartmentalized as something apart from daily living.”

A Pennsylvania native, Farr owned a fine art photography business for a dozen years and has

more than seven years experience leading nonprofit arts organizations. Her education ranges from a BA in photography from Penn State to an MA in advertising design from Marywood University.

During her years in Pittsburgh, she not only ran that city’s version of HCCC, but also spent years as executive director of the Greater Pittsburgh Arts Alliance. As such, she did the two things the arts probably need most in Texas: raising awareness about their overall societal impact and advocating art programs in the schools. Her job may have changed from those days with the Arts Alliance; her geography certainly has. But the mission of spreading the arts gospel—and specifically at HCCC the crafts gospel—remains something Farr is inspired by every day.

No fewer than 35 former artists-in-residence have chosen to participate in the current exhibition. They were encouraged to create new work reflecting both their present practices and their overall body of work. “Crafting Live(s)” features a wide variety of media and forms, including installation, sculpture, video, and functional and nonfunctional objects.

“Craft is very accessible art,” says Farr. “Essentially, what we present is processed-based art that is defined by its materials. Everyone can relate in some way to the form or function of the object.”

Story | john demers Photography | mark lipczynski

Her craftembracing

port mortuarypATriciA cornWeLL

review

de

br

A g

ing

ric

H

prime-living.com16

cocktails &conversation. arts

de

br

A g

ing

ric

H

832-434-8312 | www.MillenniumTownCarService.com | [email protected]

The Best Black Car Service In Town

Millennium Town Car Service provides excellent customer service to the entire Greater Houston Metropolitan area. We pride ourselves on professionalism, punctuality and integrity. Customer service is our number one priority. Quality service, fair pricing, steadfast reliability and earned trust – there is simply no better choice in transportation for all corporate and personal needs.

MILLENNIUM TOWN CAR SERVICE“ON TIME, EVERY TIME”

Servicing the Greater Houston Metropolitan Area

AD Form

Elevate your air travel with Executive AirShare’s

regional-based fractional ownership program.

Call 866-946-4900 or visit ExecAirShare.com.

Be ready to take off to land your next big deal in your new Phenom 100. Its BMW-designed interior and familiar pilots take you far above the commercial experience both in comfort and productivity. And it’s based right here in Texas, so you can get there faster to get more business done.

Y O U R W O R L D • Y O U R S C H E D U L EEXECU TIVE AIRSHAREIntroducing a better way to put

your world outside your window.

po

gg

en

po

HL

| m

ieLe

Story | roBin Barr sussman Photography | mark lipczynski

master roaster

keN palmerHouston-based Texas Java Company

really got percolating in 2007 after master coffee roaster Ken Palmer

joined the crew. Founded in 1992 by Richard Colt, the business morphed from a coffee catering outfit to a high-quality specialty coffee roasting company with a new identity: Java Pura. He gained an in-house master roaster, a new partner, and placed his beans in Central Market and restaurants Indika and Pondicheri. Colt’s first Java Pura store-front is next.

“I was working at a coffee roasting plant in Hawaii when I met Alfred Peet of famed Peets Coffee during a coffee cupping festival,” says Palmer. Peet, who was considered the best in the business, inspired Palmer to become a master roaster.

“It took three years for Alfred to teach me roasting techniques and finessing. Soon after, I opened my own coffee shop in Oregon, which I sold, and worked in commercial fishing in Alaska for a while. Then I moved to Houston and met Richard. The rest is coffee history,” says Palmer, a Portland native.

A master roaster is similar to a vintner. “It takes years to learn how to buy the best quality coffee beans. Also roasting is complex—a few seconds give or take makes a difference in the flavor. And then there’s the art of cupping, conducted daily with myriad samples to determine which beans to order,” says Palmer, who is training the staff at Java Pura’s Gulfton facility for his eventual retirement. (For the uninitiated, cupping is roasting and meticulously sampling the final coffee.)

“Just like fine cheese or wine, not all coffees are created equally. Our goal is to elevate the bar on quality and offer the best you can buy,” explains Palmer, who travels extensively to Panama, Costa Rica and Columbia to source top green beans directly from farmers. Purist Palmer convinced Colt to invest in a drum roaster instead of the more common air roaster. “You have more control coaxing flavor from each bean with a drum roaster,” he says.

Speaking of flavor, Java Pura does not sell hazelnut, vanilla or pecan. “No flavored coffee. Real coffee should not taste like Snickerdoodles,” Palmer quips.

prime-living.com18

cocktails &conversation. my lIfe

American kitchens have evolved from simple utilitarian rooms hidden

from view, to intentional gathering spaces that demand attention. Of course, there have been missteps along the way (think mauve Formica counter tops and avocado green appliances). Thankfully, today’s designers have learned from the past and are now creating timeless looks that blend seamlessly with adjoining living spaces. And it all starts with the cabinets.

“Kitchen cabinets are more like furniture pieces today, because the kitchen is part of the living space,” says Tatiana Bacci, interior designer for Poggenpohl Houston. Bacci advises mixing dark woods with high-gloss lacquered finishes that shine a spotlight on select sections of the cabinet system.

“We use white high-gloss and a silver high-gloss called Cubanit that is very popular,” she says.

Neutral-colored walls, such as a clean white, create a backdrop for the cabinets. Dark wood flooring, like walnut or Brazilian teak, adds warmth, while recessed lighting in all the right places is key to creating a dramatic effect.

Nadine Hanselmann, marketing manager for Miele, whose Clean Touch Steel brand is, get this, fingerprint proof.

When it comes to counter surfaces, Bacci says it’s all about quartz. “Granite is natural and so porous. Quartz looks like stone, and you can cut on it and it won’t scratch.”

Current design is as much about function as it is about aesthetics. German-made Poggenpohl cabinets, for instance, are ergonomically designed so they go only as high as you can reach (and there’s a built-in, toe-kick ladder, just in case). Wolf ’s induction cooking surfaces are energy efficient, stylish and fast (you can boil water in 90 seconds), while Miele offers sleek CombiSet cooking systems that combine different heat sources and cooking surfaces, such as an electric boiler and fryer, a cast iron griddle and induction surfaces, among others.

Glass-front refrigerators are also gaining popularity in the high-end market because they make a cool statement and are energy efficient, while insisting you keep the fridge tidy. Sub-Zero offers four different glass-front models. And for the ultimate finishing touch, Bacci suggests putting some money in your faucets.

“Dornbracht faucets are a high-end German brand and very, very expensive,” she says. “They’re worth the investment.”

Bring your kitchen into the 21st century with these ingenious appliance features.

miele’s remotevision connects your appliances to a communication hub to alert you if your appliance needs attention. imagine never having to worry if your refrigerator door is ajar.

For those who miss the dinner bell, a warming drawer keeps your gourmet meal tasting like it just came out of the oven.

miele’s newest espresso machines have everything you need to whip up a cappuccino, including a dispenser that keeps milk fresh for up to eight hours.

A steam oven replaces that extra oven of years past, and makes it easy to prepare healthy meals. in addition, a downdraft ventilation system does its job and then disappears into the counter.

Sub-Zero offers modular refrigeration units for around the house. imagine cool beer and wine tucked away in a cabinet arms reach from the TV.

everything but the kitchen sink

what’s cookinG

Today’s high-end appliances can stand center stage or be disguised behind cabinet systems, as well as other design elements.

“When a refrigerator goes out, it goes out naked, allowing designers to affix anything the client would like,” says Paul Leuthe, marketing manager for Sub-Zero and Wolf, adding that refrigerators have been hidden behind old sanctuary doors from New Orleans, Chinese cabinet doors and French pantry doors. But for homeowners who want their appliances to stand out, they often select the “little black dress” of appliance design.

“Stainless is still a standard for appliances. It’s still No. 1,” says

Story | michael hammeTT

po

gg

en

po

HL

| m

ieLe

july/august • 2011 19

cocktails &conversation.design

Fort BendParkway

johnsondevelopment.com

It’s your tImE.Time to relax and enjoy life. Time to choose the perfect new home for your lifestyle.

Time to choose the perfect master planned community for you. Time for an easiercommute, spacious kitchens, and outdoor entertainment areas. Time for a Darling patio

home in a Johnson Development community.

We build communities with a unique sense of place.At Johnson Development we take pride in designing our communities to foster the active lifestyle of our residents,

while preserving and utilizing the natural beauty of the local landscape. today is your day, your time—live it.

darlinghomes.com

riverstone.comfacebook.com/riverstonecommunity

From US-59 in Sugar Land take Hwy 6 south 3 miles

woodforesttx.comfacebook.com/woodforest

I-45N to FM 1488

Patio homes from the $390s . 2,700 to 3,700 sq.ft.

Patio homes from the $220s . 1,900 to 2,900 sq.ft.

Patio homes from the $230s . 2,100 to 3,000 sq.ft.

Discover Darling Homes in Riverstone, with luxuriouspatio homes on wooded homesites in Nandina. Priced from

the $390s, our homes feature opulent master retreats,grand kitchens and inviting outdoor living spaces—perfect for entertaining and a lifestyle you deserve.

Darling Homes introduces new luxury home sites in the beautiful community of Sienna Plantation. Darling

Homes offers flexible designs ranging from 2,100 to over 3,000 square feet with private master suites, large

secondary bedrooms, gourmet kitchens, media rooms, three-car garages and covered porches.

Darling Homes’ enclave of 17 homesites offers luxurious Patio Homes ranging from 1,900 to 2,900 square feet. Architecturally pleasing designs with brick and stone elevations feature open floor plans and large island

kitchens with room for family seating.

siennaplantation.comfacebook.com/siennaplantation

Sienna Parkway at Hwy. 6

Houston Chronicle’s Top 10 Restaurants

Fort Bend’s only 3 star restaurant

We CaTeR!Missouri City Township281.403.2872 (aURa)

www.aura-restaurant.com

a Fine Food SHaCk For the whole family!

Dine In • Take Out We Cater

Breakfast aLL daY Saturdays & Sundays @ 10:30am+

Sienna Shopping Center281.778.4644 (HoGGS)

**Formerly Meat & Greet Boutique**

Still offering CaTeRed M&G Box Lunches

& The BUTCHeR BLoCk

Complete Hoggs n’ Chicks Menu as well as B’fast Saturday & Sunday

“A Casual Classic” by Chef Frédéric

Missouri City Township281.403.4444

oPen 7 days3 doors down from aURa Restaurant

w w w . h o g g s n c h i c k s . c o m

Open Lunch & Dinner Tuesday - Saturday

Check our website for our Weekly Special Sunset Menu

Chef’s Five-Course Tasting Menu Always Available for only $50 p/p

(wine pairings also available!)

E X P R E S S

H H H H H H H H H H H H H

H H H H H H H H H H H H H

Houston Chronicle’s Top 10 Restaurants

Fort Bend’s only 3 star restaurant

We CaTeR!Missouri City Township281.403.2872 (aURa)

www.aura-restaurant.com

a Fine Food SHaCk For the whole family!

Dine In • Take Out We Cater

Breakfast aLL daY Saturdays & Sundays @ 10:30am+

Sienna Shopping Center281.778.4644 (HoGGS)

**Formerly Meat & Greet Boutique**

Still offering CaTeRed M&G Box Lunches

& The BUTCHeR BLoCk

Complete Hoggs n’ Chicks Menu as well as B’fast Saturday & Sunday

“A Casual Classic” by Chef Frédéric

Missouri City Township281.403.4444

oPen 7 days3 doors down from aURa Restaurant

w w w . h o g g s n c h i c k s . c o m

Open Lunch & Dinner Tuesday - Saturday

Check our website for our Weekly Special Sunset Menu

Chef’s Five-Course Tasting Menu Always Available for only $50 p/p

(wine pairings also available!)

E X P R E S S

H H H H H H H H H H H H H

H H H H H H H H H H H H H

Houston Chronicle’s Top 10 Restaurants

Fort Bend’s only 3 star restaurant

We CaTeR!Missouri City Township281.403.2872 (aURa)

www.aura-restaurant.com

a Fine Food SHaCk For the whole family!

Dine In • Take Out We Cater

Breakfast aLL daY Saturdays & Sundays @ 10:30am+

Sienna Shopping Center281.778.4644 (HoGGS)

**Formerly Meat & Greet Boutique**

Still offering CaTeRed M&G Box Lunches

& The BUTCHeR BLoCk

Complete Hoggs n’ Chicks Menu as well as B’fast Saturday & Sunday

“A Casual Classic” by Chef Frédéric

Missouri City Township281.403.4444

oPen 7 days3 doors down from aURa Restaurant

w w w . h o g g s n c h i c k s . c o m

Open Lunch & Dinner Tuesday - Saturday

Check our website for our Weekly Special Sunset Menu

Chef’s Five-Course Tasting Menu Always Available for only $50 p/p

(wine pairings also available!)

E X P R E S S

H H H H H H H H H H H H H

H H H H H H H H H H H H H

Houston Chronicle’s Top 10 Restaurants

Fort Bend’s only 3 star restaurant

We CaTeR!Missouri City Township281.403.2872 (aURa)

www.aura-restaurant.com

a Fine Food SHaCk For the whole family!

Dine In • Take Out We Cater

Breakfast aLL daY Saturdays & Sundays @ 10:30am+

Sienna Shopping Center281.778.4644 (HoGGS)

**Formerly Meat & Greet Boutique**

Still offering CaTeRed M&G Box Lunches

& The BUTCHeR BLoCk

Complete Hoggs n’ Chicks Menu as well as B’fast Saturday & Sunday

“A Casual Classic” by Chef Frédéric

Missouri City Township281.403.4444

oPen 7 days3 doors down from aURa Restaurant

w w w . h o g g s n c h i c k s . c o m

Open Lunch & Dinner Tuesday - Saturday

Check our website for our Weekly Special Sunset Menu

Chef’s Five-Course Tasting Menu Always Available for only $50 p/p

(wine pairings also available!)

E X P R E S S

H H H H H H H H H H H H H

H H H H H H H H H H H H H

Houston C

hronicle’s Top 10 R

estaurants

For

t B

en

d’s o

nly

3 sta

r r

esta

ur

an

t

We

Ca

TeR

!M

issouri City Tow

nship281.403.2872 (a

UR

a)

ww

w.aura-restaurant.com

a F

ine

Fo

od

SHa

Ck

F

or the whole fam

ily!

Dine In • Take O

ut W

e C

at

er

Breakfast a

LL daY

Saturdays & Sundays @

10:30am+

Sienna Shopping Center

281.778.4644 (Ho

GG

S)

**Formerly

Meat &

Greet B

outique**

Still offering C

aTe

Re

d M

&G

Box Lunches

& The B

UTC

He

R B

LoC

k

Com

plete Hoggs n’ C

hicks Menu as

well as B

’fast Saturday & Sunday

“A C

asual Classic” by C

hef Frédéric

Missouri C

ity Township

281.403.4444o

Pen

7 da

ys

3 doors down from

aU

Ra

Restaurant

ww

w.h

og

gs

nc

hic

ks

.c

om

Open L

unch & D

inner T

uesday - Saturday

Check our w

ebsite for our W

eekly Special Sunset Menu

Chef’s Five-C

ourse Tasting Menu

Alw

ays Available

for only $50 p/p (w

ine pairings also available!)

EX

PR

ES

S

H H

H H

H H

H H

H H

H H

H

H H

H H

H H

H H

H H

H H

H

Houston C

hronicle’s Top 10 R

estaurants

For

t B

en

d’s o

nly

3 sta

r r

esta

ur

an

t

We

Ca

TeR

!M

issouri City Tow

nship281.403.2872 (a

UR

a)

ww

w.aura-restaurant.com

a F

ine

Fo

od

SHa

Ck

F

or the whole fam

ily!

Dine In • Take O

ut W

e C

at

er

Breakfast a

LL daY

Saturdays & Sundays @

10:30am+

Sienna Shopping Center

281.778.4644 (Ho

GG

S)

**Formerly

Meat &

Greet B

outique**

Still offering C

aTe

Re

d M

&G

Box Lunches

& The B

UTC

He

R B

LoC

k

Com

plete Hoggs n’ C

hicks Menu as

well as B

’fast Saturday & Sunday

“A C

asual Classic” by C

hef Frédéric

Missouri C

ity Township

281.403.4444o

Pen

7 da

ys

3 doors down from

aU

Ra

Restaurant

ww

w.h

og

gs

nc

hic

ks

.c

om

Open L

unch & D

inner T

uesday - Saturday

Check our w

ebsite for our W

eekly Special Sunset Menu

Chef’s Five-C

ourse Tasting Menu

Alw

ays Available

for only $50 p/p (w

ine pairings also available!)

EX

PR

ES

S

H H

H H

H H

H H

H H

H H

H

H H

H H

H H

H H

H H

H H

H

Houston Chronicle’s Top 10 Restaurants

Fort Bend’s only 3 star restaurant

We CaTeR!Missouri City Township281.403.2872 (aURa)

www.aura-restaurant.com

a Fine Food SHaCk For the whole family!

Dine In • Take Out We Cater

Breakfast aLL daY Saturdays & Sundays @ 10:30am+

Sienna Shopping Center281.778.4644 (HoGGS)

**Formerly Meat & Greet Boutique**

Still offering CaTeRed M&G Box Lunches

& The BUTCHeR BLoCk

Complete Hoggs n’ Chicks Menu as well as B’fast Saturday & Sunday

“A Casual Classic” by Chef Frédéric

Missouri City Township281.403.4444

oPen 7 days3 doors down from aURa Restaurant

ww

w.hoggsnchicks.com

Open Lunch & Dinner Tuesday - Saturday

Check our website for our Weekly Special Sunset Menu

Chef’s Five-Course Tasting Menu Always Available for only $50 p/p

(wine pairings also available!)EXPRESS

H H H H H H H H H H H H H

H H H H H H H H H H H H H

It Is gesine Bullock-Prado rings up the house phone, sounding more-than-a-

little like her movie star sister Sandra. But that’s not the thing that jumps out at you.

Story | jessica meBane Photography | sarah Wilson Styling | lisa Gleeson

sweetHow

july/august • 2011 23

The first thing you realize is that you’re dealing with a whip-smart, ex-

Hollywood whiz kid, who could eat you for lunch…if only she weren’t so gracious and witty.

It’s with this smart and sassy manner, Bullock-Prado brings candy making to the masses in her delectable new cookbook, “Sugar Baby: Confections, Candies, Cakes & Other Delicious Recipes for Cooking with Sugar.” But how did Bullock-Prado get to the sweet destination she’s at now? With sheer determination driving her along a sugar-caked road, apparently, and all the while hearing her mother’s German-inflected mantra resonating in her head, “Don’t be normal.”

While the greater buying public may be aware of Bullock-

Prado’s rich and famous sibling, it’s only a momentary distraction before the all-ages crowd who has come to watch her cooking demonstration leans in to really listen and learn something. Bullock-Prado begins, waxing poetic about the alchemy of combining sugar, heat and a little luck to make candy, cakes and confections like a pro, and her audience wriggles in their seats like excited children, sensing they are being simultaneously charmed and instructed by a bonafide, Jedi-master level, self-proclaimed sugar freak.

This lovely, soft-spoken expert of the flour arts is currently on her book tour and goodwill mission to raise world consciousness about the life-affirming benefits of making candy. Or, for that matter, pulling

From her earliest, sugar-laden memories of traipsing across ’70s-era Germany, behind her glamorous opera diva mother Helga, Bullock-Prado makes a strong case for herself as a future master of pastry arts. In her first book, a cracking memoir entitled “Confessions of a Master Baker,” she writes in stomach-rumbling detail how she, a huge-eyed brunette slip of a girl in dark braids, fell under the trance of gleaming pastry counters and patisseries that populate German towns in much the same way golden arches leapfrog across America today. She recalls how a simple hike through the German Alps was elevated to gustatory celebration, with strategically located pastry huts stationed at the halfway mark, replete with gingerbread trim, fresh pastry and deliciously cold beer.

Back home in Virginia, Bullock-Prado’s mother always maintained a svelte figure and dietary restrictions in her

taffy, salting caramels, icing cakes and perhaps even making whoopie pies. And because Bullock-Prado is ultimately as good a storyteller as she is confectioner, “Sugar Baby” is more entertaining to read and daydream over than any cookbook has a right to be.

Our story begins in a small town about an hour’s drive from the state capital of Vermont, where Bullock-Prado’s home base for everything confectionary is run under the watchful gaze of a fierce, hollow-eyed owl drawn by her husband Ray, a respected film illustrator, that hangs on the sign out front. Its gimlet stare almost dares you to enter. And, like Hansel and Gretel, the intrepid souls who have sampled Bullock-Prado’s wares are helpless to resist, ordering box after box of rustic macaroons, Starry Starry Nights cookies, and other delicacies sold on her website (gesine.com).

But this bittersweet journey Bullock-Prado now finds herself on actually began in a faraway place (Germany), with a stopover in lands fraught with peril (Hollywood), where the heroine meets a handsome, supportive prince (Ray) among spray-tanned fops and ultimately ends on a happy, hopeful note. Bullock-Prado has made a new life that is as sweet and authentically sound as rock candy, spinning childhood travels and grownup loss into a tale that is sometimes as gothic and twisty as anything the Brothers Grimm ever dreamed up.

PrologueIn the beginning

act oneThe princess discovers

magical lands

ge

sin

e B

ull

oc

k-P

ra

do

gesine (left) and her cousin in the early years.

prime-living.com24

shot on location at the whole foods culinary center in austin, texas.

july/august • 2011 25

Because while her sister was living her dream of stardom and fame in Hollywood, Bullock-Prado stood beside her, running their film and TV production company, Fortis Films, and “hating every minute of it.” Or, if not hating it, allowing herself to become “numbed out” from the fake smiles and tans, and bored senseless during lunches and pitch meetings where the sound of everyone tooting their own horn didn’t drown out the voice inside her. That same little voice seemed to keep asking, “What was the point again?” Until finally one morning around 2 a.m., some time after her mother had died, the voice woke her, chanting, “Goodness and kindness, together as one. Goodness and kindness, together as one.”

In her words, she suddenly realized she didn’t want “more stuff” that Hollywood success brought, but rather to “stop hating people and start understanding. And the only way I knew how to feel like a good and kind person was through baking.”

At this point, Bullock-Prado wasn’t sure where to begin: enroll in culinary school, start a bakery or ramp up an online business. So in true Bullock family, “don’t be normal” fashion, she designed her own recipe for success, self-training as a premier pastry chef through countless hours of practice on

it’s all about the sugar, baby!Scan this code using your smartphone to see gesine in action and to learn more about her book, “Sugar baby.”

her daughter both the joyful appreciation of fine food and sense of individuality, is gone. In 2000, after a lifetime of healthy diet and vigorous exercise, Helga Bullock was diagnosed with colon cancer. She died four years later.

In the wake of her mother’s death, Bullock-Prado consoled herself by baking and in the process, found a new strength of purpose. She decided to “chuck a fabulous career and start over,” taking her baking chops out of the closet to become a full-time baker and pastry master. It didn’t hurt either that Ray always believed in her as someone besides the “movie star’s sister”

own household, but Helga also believed in “everything in moderation,” combined with a keen European sense of occasion.

Bullock-Prado is proud to say her mother ascribed to a day-to-day family diet filled with wheatgrass and tofu cereal, but also broke all her own rules on holidays, using the most decadent Christmas recipes culled from “The Washington Post” (the family grew up near D.C.), as well as secret family recipes and premium ingredients imported from her German relatives.

Which makes it heartbreaking to realize that this larger-than-life woman, who instilled in

AcT TWoHollywood mogul morphs

into a beautiful Sugar Fairy Queen (plums optional)

and encouraged her to get out of La-La Land and pursue her true passion, even if it meant ultimately moving cross-country to Vermont and starting a new career from scratch.

prime-living.com26

epiLogueSweet Ending

The Sugary TruthGesine answers our most burning questions

Q. what five things do you always have in your fridge?

butter, heavy cream, eggs, sugar and sea salt! i’m a

proponent of seasoning sweets. you’ve got to have a

little salty with your sweet.

Q. what’s the most outrageous mistake/baking failure, a la lucy-in-the-candy-factory moment, you’ve had working with sugar? what did it teach you?

i poked hot caramel. i was trying to get hardened

caramel from a sauce pan i needed. i put it over

gentle heat and kept poking it to check to see if it had

loosened up. poke, poke, poke. The last poke had my

hand going straight into a vat of molten caramel and,

in my idiot instant reflex to get the hot candy glove

off my hand, i tried to wipe the stuff off on the back

of my shirt. i hit skin instead, so now i have a caramel

burn scar on my back. not very sexy. Hence, one of the

mottos in the “Sugar baby” flyleaf states clearly: never

poke Hot caramel.

Q. what's on the writing and baking horizon?

“pie it Forward” is my take on…wait for it…pie. There’s no

reason that pie can’t be all things good, from rustic and

homey, to elegant and wedding-perfect. As long as you

have the right elements—the yummy, flaky, buttery crust,

fantastic fillings—there’s no reason you can’t make it a

showpiece. The book is due out April 2012.

i have another work in progress, entitled “running

in circles.” it‘s an ongoing effort that coincides with

my fundraising. The faster i can raise the $64,000, the

sooner i can finish the book (and rest my legs).

Q. would she describe “running in circles” as a runner’s memoir, how-to treatise or a Zen document?

it’s a daughter’s memoir and a pilgrimage story—a

daughter who runs in honor of her mother. That includes

not just me, but all the men and women who have lost

mothers, fathers, husbands, wives, children, siblings and

friends, and find solace through running (and jumping

and swimming and cycling) their hearts out for charity.

Q. what are you reading right now?

“bossypants” by Tina Fey. it makes me deliriously happy

how funny and smart she is, especially since we’re both

university of Virginia alumni from the same class. i’m

hoping some of her talent rubbed off on the rest of us.

centuries-old, meticulous French pastry recipes that regularly make even the sternest male chefs weep. Once confident in her abilities, she and Ray opened a wildly successful bakery in Montpelier, Vt., in 2004, aptly named Gesine’s Bakery.

Why Vermont? Because the verdant, dense forests remind her of her childhood in Germany and, during a trip back to nearby New Hampshire where they revisited Ray’s alma mater for a football game, she says they crossed the western border, also known as the Connecticut River, into the Green Mountain State, where she felt she’d found “home.”

By 2009, Bullock-Prado and her husband had transformed the confectionary into an online-only business model and now split their time between Vermont and Texas. This allows her the freedom to do something she never thought she’d love as a self-described “shy misanthrope:” teach. Bullock-Prado is enthusiastically partnering with King Arthur Flour in two-day classes designed to help aspiring confectioners overcome their fear of the boiling lava that sugar can sometimes resemble during candy making, to turn out sweet, sophisticated bits of magic.

“Sugar Baby” is the culmination of all her hard work in and out of the confectionary classroom, dispelling even the most timid baker’s innate fear of scalding ribbons of sugar and ruined cookware. Even sugar itself plays a supporting role, proclaiming in the book’s introduction, “Will playing with hot sugar be fun? Hell, yes!”

So when all the baked goods are finished, shipped

to customers or eaten, how does a confectioner keep the homemade donuts and fudgy popsicles off her slender frame? Again, Bullock-Prado’s mother’s voice comes back to her, reminding her that exercise will keep her in good stead when the calorie count escalates too far north.

“My mom was a marathon runner for years and after she died at 64, I decided to raise money for American Cancer Society Research through my own marathon efforts,” she says. “I want to raise $1,000 for every year she lived and it makes me unbelievably happy when I’m able to get those $10 and $20 donations toward the cause. You can follow a link on my website to help me reach my goal for American Cancer Society fundraising.”

So whether she’s whipping up a batch of pies in the name of research for her next book “Pie it Forward,” or posting pictures of her “Sugar Baby” disciples’ sweet offerings on her blog, Bullock-Prado seems to have carved a singular niche for herself and found great success along the way. Maybe it’s not the path she thought she’d be on when she joined her sister in Hollywood all those years ago, but it seems to be solidly mapped out and true to the confident and successful woman she’s become.

All fairy tale clichés aside, Bullock-Prado is a confectioner and pastry artist, who emerged from tragedy to do what she was truly meant to do.

“You know, I’m pretty sure I could’ve handled the witch that tried to snag Hansel and Gretel with that house made of candy,” she says. “Who can be afraid of someone that builds with gingerbread and icing?”

Who, indeed.

AcT THreeSugar Fairy Queen waves

her magic candy thermometer over blighted and singed

cooks everywhere

july/august • 2011 27

a cut Above

Because imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, Prime Living took cues from the Food Network’s popular hit show “Chopped”

and created our very own cooking competition. With the help of guest chef Monica Pope, owner of T’afia and a “Top Chef Masters” alum, and Morgan Weber, owner of Revival Market, we rounded up four mystery ingredients and asked four of Houston’s rising chefs to create an original dish using all of the items in just 45 minutes. Here’s what happened...

Photography | mark lipczynski

a cut Above

4 chefs + 4 mystery ingredients =

culinary genius

Red Wattle hog

neck bone

Mustard greens

or kale

Cardamom

Pulparindo (Mexican

tamarind candy)

july/august • 2011 29

jeramie robison

What’s the name of your dish?Wild boar medallions. Tender wild boar, braised kale, cipolin onions, cardamom foam and crunchy candy.

What was your initial reaction to the ingredients?I’m a big fan of kale, so I was excited to see that ingredient. The cardamom is something that I’ve used in a ketchup, but not much else. The boar collar is a protein that I haven’t worked with in the past at all. The candy totally threw me for a loop! I don’t have much of a sweet tooth and, on top of that, the brand and type was the last thing I expected to see.

Which one was the biggest challenge to work with? The candy. Trick or treat!

What was your plan or inspiration for the dish? did it come out the way you wanted?The flavors seem to have come together nicely. Everything was well seasoned, the boar was tender as could be, and the cardamom foam added a nice dimension to the dish.

if there was one thing you could have had that you didn’t, what would it have been and why?I would’ve used the candy in a totally different way. It added a texture that I liked to the medallions, but in hindsight, it could’ve been incorporated better into the dish as a whole.

restaurant cinQ

Wild boar medallions

prime-living.com30

david Grossman

What’s the name of your dish?Tamarind braised pork neck with crispy mustard greens and cardamom crème fraiche.

What was your initial reaction to the ingredients?I was happy to see the tamarind candies. I’m also familiar with the pork neck and mustard greens. I knew cardamom would definitely fit well with those ingredients.

Which one was the biggest challenge to work with?The pork neck.

What was your plan or inspiration for the dish? did it come out the way you wanted?I attempted to make a sorbet from the cardamom, but it didn’t work out. I also underestimated the time that the pork neck would take in the pressure cooker. In short, it didn’t come out the way I had envisioned. I wouldn’t have chosen to braise the pork neck, too risky of a decision in a short amount of time.

if there was one thing you could have had that you didn’t, what would it have been and why?I was actually very pleased with the ingredients. I think that I was overly ambitious with my preparations and it hurt me.

branch Water Tavern

Tamarind braised pork neck

july/august • 2011 31

jason chaney

What’s the name of your dish?Pulparindo braised Red Wattle neck with cardamom-scented sweet potatoes, local mustard green purée and melted local tomato salsa.

What was your initial reaction to the ingredients?I was shocked that I had been given a pork neck to cook in 45 minutes! All the ingredients were groovy, including the Red Wattle neck. The tricky part was combining the neck with a 45-minute cook time.

Which one was the biggest challenge to work with?The Red Wattle neck. Every time I’ve worked with neck in the past, it’s involved a long braise. The slow cooking method breaks down the abundant connective tissue and makes for a piece of fork-tender meat. Obviously, this was not an option in the allotted time frame.

What was your plan or inspiration for the dish? did it come out the way you wanted?Pork and mustard are a typical match, and sweet potatoes are a common companion. It made sense to me to add the cardamom to the potatoes and the pulmarindo to the braising liquid. I also made a quick salsa with local grape tomatoes and chopped cilantro as an homage to the Mexican cooks who would bring the candy to work in their knife rolls and share throughout service. I’m pleased with how the dish came out; so much, in fact, that I can see it making the menu in the not too distant future.

if there was one thing you could have had that you didn’t, what would it have been and why?More time. I prefer a braised piece of meet that is fork-tender, but not falling apart. It’s the way a pork neck should be served. Obviously this is my own opinion, of course.

barbed rose Steakhouse

pulparindo braised red Wattle neck

prime-living.com32

What’s the name of your dish?Pork neck with mustard flowers, tamarind and black cardamom.

What was your initial reaction to the ingredients?“Shit! Pork neck in 45 minutes?”

Which one was the biggest challenge to work with?The candy, since I’ve never had it before.

What was your plan or inspiration for the dish? did it come out the way you wanted?I knew I had to break down the neck and cook the muscles separately. I wanted to use every inch of the protein and showcase the power of so-called economy cuts.

if there was one thing you could have had that you didn’t, what would it have been and why?Nah, we basically cook that way here everyday.

randy rucker

bootsie’s Heritage café

pork neck with mustard Flowers

july/august • 2011 33

cheers!A special thanks to all the players in our special competition. We raise our forks to this great group of people who helped make it all happen.

monica popeT’afia

3701 Travis St.713-524-6922tafia.com

morgan WeberRevival Market

550 Heights Blvd.713-880-8463revivalmarket.com

Jason chaneyBarbed Rose Steakhouse

113 E. Sealy St., Alvin281-585-2272barbedrose.com

david grossmanBranch Water Tavern

510 Shepherd713-863-7777branchwatertavern.com

Jeramie robisonRestaurant CINQLa Colombe d’Or

3410 Montrose Blvd.713-569-4750lacolombedorhouston.com

randy ruckerBootsie’s Heritage Café

112 Commerce St., Tomball281-516-9699bootsiescafe.wordpress.com

Prime Living publisher Karyn Dean and managing editor Michelle Jacoby had the

enviable task of choosing the winner of this unique culinary competition.

After carefully tasting each dish, the decision came down to the last piece. Literally.

“As amazing as all the chefs did, our choice fell to Randy. We knew he was the winner after we found ourselves fighting for the last piece,” Dean says. “Congratulations

and thanks to all our chefs for their culinary genius and and for

being such great sports!”

and the winner is…

randy rucker

bootsie’s Heritage café

prime-living.com34

FindYourMDAnderson.comAppointments Available

My team of experts focused only on me and my cancer. � ey guided me through advanced MD Anderson treatment options including surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, clinical trials,and support services. � ey customized a plan just for me. � ree months a� er I completed treatment, my mom was also diagnosed with cancer. MD Anderson was there for both of us. Having MD Anderson in our community kept me close to my wife and three boys, and my mom close to her grandsons. I chose the MD Anderson close to me. Find Your MD Anderson today.

When I had cancer, the world’s leading care was right here.

I chose theMD Anderson

close to me

Bay Area

Katy

Texas Medical CenterSugar Land

� e Woodlands

- Gary Truver, Jr.

AD Form

A Legend Retirement Corp. Community

Follow us: The Conservatory at Alden Bridge 281.681.3102 6203 Alden Bridge Dr., The Woodlands, Texas 77382

The Conservatory at Champion Forest 281.370.3102 8215 Cypresswood Dr., Spring, Texas 77379

www.ConservatorySeniorLiving.com CWB23269

Inside Conservatory Senior Living you’ll find a refreshing concept in upscale living, one that relieves the burdens of home ownership without sacrificing the finer things in life. Your renewed independence will afford you social activity, fine dining and a peace of mind that will change your image of retirement living.

A NEW LIFESTYLE AWAITS...

VISIT TODAY AND BE THE NEXT TO DISCOVER SENIOR LIVING’S BEST KEPT SECRET!

Fontina, bacon and onion dip with flatbread, benjy’s

july/august • 2011 37

the prime living guide to discerning taste

inside:

connoisseur

38 • main dish | sImply sublIme40 • smaLL Bites | gooD eaTs42 • taBLe taLk | DInIng neWs44 • uncorked | rum on a roll46 • entertain | WhITe hauTe

sublimeStory | holly BereTTo Photography | mark lipczynski

When La Colombe d’Or proprietor Steve Zimmerman gently handed over the operational reigns of his restaurant-cum-auberge last year to his sons Dan and Mark, he told them they could do whatever they liked with the place…as long as they left his rack of lamb alone.

simply

restaurant cinqla colombe d’or

3410 montrose blvd.713-469-4750

lacolombedorhouston.com

The sons abided by their dad’s wishes, but the rest of La Colombe d’Or, the venerable Montrose address that was, in a former life, the mansion home of the Fondren oil family, got something of a facelift. New fixtures light up the mansion’s half-dozen guest suites, and the restaurant was re-imagined as CINQ.

If you want to see how old school and new blood can sit comfortably side by side, complementing each other’s strengths, look no further than CINQ, where wunderkind executive chef Jeramie Robison revamped the menu, adding imaginative contemporary touches, even as he had the solid common sense to keep La Colombe d’Or’s most enduring dishes. The menu is divided into “New Ideas” and “Classics,” each offering ample rewards.

A hot summer evening’s repast should start with Robison’s watermelon salad, a cooling first course combining the zingy acidity of yellow heirloom tomatoes with sweet, refreshing vine-ripened watermelon. Topped with tangy feta and an Asian-inspired rice vinaigrette, this summer salad is a blissful beginning.

For something more old school, the escargots Bourguignon offer up a garlicky, buttery delight. Speaking of classics, the Hudson Valley foie gras is rich and rewarding, served with a grenadine rhubarb and dusted lightly with a balsamic reduction. Another appetizer proving popular with newcomers and old fans alike is Robison’s stuffed calamari, which can only be described as a delight. He stuffs the body of the squid with mushroom and shrimp, then serves it with a huge prawn

and crisped tentacles, alongside kimchi and yuzu sauce.

“It’s my way of combining flavors of the earth and the sea,” he says. “There’s the earthy mushroom and the cabbage of the kimchi, sitting against the ocean flavors of the squid.”

As a main course, you can sample Zimmerman’s beloved baby Colorado rack of lamb, roasted to perfection and topped with a satisfying red wine demi-glace, served with spring vegetables. It’s hard to find a more wonderfully done classic on the menu.

For something new, sample the pan-seared grouper. The simple salt and pepper crust belies the explosion of flavor in this light summer fare. It’s prepared atop a jalapeno polenta, offering a bright, cheesy complement to the fish, and accompanied by a chunky avocado relish that’s a perfect exclamation point on the entrée.

At press time, Robison was still tinkering with the dessert menu, although he insists the Chocolate Marquise will remain. The classically French preparation manifests like a chilled brownie, all dense, rich, creamy chocolate.

If it’s true that the only constant is change, the changes at La Colombe d’Or are the kinds that demonstrate that while there may be something of a generation gap in play, it’s clear that those generations are learning from each other, and having a great time, too.

prime-living.com38

connoisseurmain dish

heirloom TomaTo & WaTermelon

salad

1 vine ripened, seedless watermelon

4 vine ripened heirloom tomatoes

6 oz. feta cheese

1 cup extra virgin olive oil

6 tbsp. rice wine vinegar

1 shallot (minced)

1 bunch tarragon

1 bunch chervil

1 bunch parsley

Salt and pepper

Take the minced shallot and place into a bain-marie. Add the rice wine vinegar and slowly whisk in the olive oil. Season with salt and pepper. Put mixture in a small container and refrigerate. Pick the leaves from the tar-ragon, parsley and chervil. Place the herbs in a damp cloth and re-frigerate. Slice the tomatoes 1/4-inch thick and place on a chilled plate around 8 inches in diameter (three slices per serving). Cut the watermelon into 3-by-3-inch rect-angles. Lay two pieces of melon on the tomatoes and stack two more slices on top of those. Salt the melon and tomatoes. Add the herbs over the entire salad, about five leaves of each herb. Crumble the feta over the salad and finish with a drizzle of the rice wine vinaigrette. Serves 4.

chocolate marquise

baby colorado rack of lamb

Hudson Valley foie gras Stuffed calamari pan-seared grouper

july/august • 2011 39

connoisseurmain dish

Story | holly BereTTo Photography | mark lipczynski

good eATSfor a new take on the well-rounded meal, table-hop these Houston eateries for some of the best tastes in town.

bistro alex at hotel sorella800 w. sam houston pkwy.

713-827-3545bistroalex.com

Seawall boulevard, olivette

summer refresher“This is my take on my father’s recipe,” Bistro Alex executive chef Juan Carlos Gonzalez explains, gesturing to the rich, orange-red, slightly textured concoction on the table, its redness in stark contrast to the bright white of the serving bowl. “There are a million ways to do gazpacho. This was my choice for summer.”

Gonzalez’s dad, who he describes as a “home cook,” shared with his son the secrets of the popular cold soup descended from Spain’s Andalusia, a wide area in that country’s south, where the terrain ranges from high, alpine mountains to hot, stark deserts.

The version the younger Gonzalez has cooked up for Bistro Alex’s summer menu keeps the usual ingredients of tomatoes, bell peppers and garlic, among others, but adds to it a melon trio of watermelon, honeydew and cantaloupe, along with a blend of 15 spices. The result is something at once familiar and surprising. Here are the roasted tomato and heat from red pepper and jalapenos, sitting side-by-side the cooling, sweet melon tones. Then, there’s the creamy blend of basil crème fraiche, adding texture and depth, making the dish a refreshing start to a meal, even as its bold flavors are easily a repast in its own right. Gonzalez’s natural instinct to combine hot, spicy sensations with crisp undertones makes for a sunny, fun take on a classic.

prime-living.com40

connoisseursmall bites

perry’s steakhouse & grillesix houston locationsperryssteakhouse.com

olivette at the houstonian111 n. post oak lane • 713-680-2626 • houstonian.com

les Poissons When Olivette executive chef Neal Cox was about 10 years old, his aunt and uncle took him out for his first dinner at a French restaurant. He ordered bouillabaisse and was delighted when it arrived at the table, a hearty bowl of shrimp, clams and mussels.

“I mean, there was so much for a kid to look at in that dish,” he remembers fondly.Since then, the traditional Provencal seafood stew has become a favorite—something the

chef confesses to ordering whenever he sees it on a menu. It stood to reason then, that he’d add it to his own.

“It took us about two or three months to perfect the recipe,” he says. “And now, people just love it.”

It’s not hard to understand why. The lengthy, two-day preparation that goes into making it is worth every minute, because Cox’s creation is one that’s hearty enough for chilly Houston winters, but easy enough to stand up to the summer’s heat and humidity. Using as much local fish as he can collect, augmented with clams and crab and all presented in a light tomato-saffron broth, this bouillabaisse sings with little shots of lemon and fennel, garlic and wine. It’s a dish that manages to evoke pastoral images of home cooking, even as Cox has elevated it to high art. This is a dish where you beg for extra bread to lop up the remaining broth, where you don’t mind using both a soup spoon and a seafood fork to eat it.

Rich with flavor and tradition, this bouillabaisse will quickly become your new favorite.

ClassiC revamPedYou expect an old-school style at Perry’s Steakhouse & Grille, known for their huge slabs of well-flavored steak. And that translates to old-school desserts, like bananas foster flambéed tableside. While those favorites will never fade away, Perry’s decided it was time for something different.

Enter a dessert menu with three twists on classics. There’s a Candy Bar that looks like a high-end Snickers bar, and a bread pudding that will change your life. But the star of the new trio is the Deconstructed Lemon Meringue Pie, a dessert so appropriately summer, you should definitely save room for it. It begins with a sweet and creamy Meyer lemon curd, gently topped with house-made shortbread crumbles, gingered, candied blueberries and a slightly toasted meringue.

Perry’s was interested in offering diners an alternative to their steakhouse dessert standbys, and succeeds admirably here.

“I wanted desserts with a down-home feel,” says Chris Perry, who took his father Bob’s butcher shop business and expanded it into the restaurant chain it is today, and who is very much involved in the restaurant’s day-to-day operations, including menu development.

The deconstructed lemon meringue is a little like revisiting that neighborhood lemonade stand you set up as a kid, decked out with grown-up garnishes. Light and airy, it’s a perfect exclamation point on an already superlative dining experience.

july/august • 2011 41

cconnoisseursmall bites

Hello & goodbyeTHe lATeST ReSTAURANTS To joIN AND leAVe THe HoUSToN DINING SCeNe

oPeNINGSGreatful TacoUp RestaurantKeeper’s Japanese Restaurant, Sugar Land

CloSINGSSabine River CaféMingaloneCaffe BelloPhil’s Texas BBQ

Jet to California wine country and support worthy non-profits by attending the sonoma Wine country Weekend. Held Sept. 2-4, it’s the state’s epicurean event of the year. Enjoy various vintner lunches and dinners throughout Sonoma, the Sonoma Valley wine auction, and the sophisticated Taste of Sonoma at MacMurray Ranch, home of Kate MacMurry, daughter of the late Fred MacMurray. The Taste lets you sample cuisine from top restaurants and chefs in the area like John Ash, and showcases hundreds of medal-winning Sonoma wines. 800-939-7666, sonomawinecountryweekend.com

robin barr sussmanrobin Barr sussman is a Houston-based freelance writer who specializes in food, wine and travel. Her work has appeared in Texas Monthly, My Table, and Private Clubs magazine.

side sipsWINe eVeNTS YoU DoN’T WANT To MISS

“Better than sex Tex-Mex.” That’s the slogan for Austin-born Vivo, opening any day now in the Big H. Owner Richard Diaz has chosen high-profile chef Paul Petersen to run the kitchen of his chic, casual spot with arty decor. Think bright walls, fun chandelier lighting, flickering candles and whimsical modern art saluting the female form.

Petersen, a San Antonio native, is a CIA Hyde Park grad who worked in acclaimed New York City restaurants such as Union Square Café before moving to West Texas to chef at the Gage Hotel. His signature touches will be marked at Vivo along with traditional

Tex-Mex faves. Also expect healthier twists like California nachos topped with zesty alfalfa sprouts, vegetarian enchiladas, Fiesta salad with chile-lime vinaigrette, and steak Jalisco served with brown rice. 4200 San Felipe. vivo-austin.com

are we still in houston? The chic ambiance and menu channel a Saint-Germain bistro at the newly-opened Brasserie 19. Opened by business partners Charles Clark and Grant Cooper, the bistro is located in the former home of Tony Mandola’s Gulf Coast Kitchen in the River Oaks shopping center.

“I’m very excited because there’s nothing quite like this in Houston as far as design and cuisine,” says partner-executive chef Michael Gaspard, formerly with Chicago’s The Pump Room and Houston’s Pappas Brothers Steakhouse. Although Gaspard’s culinary training was based in French techniques, he says that Houstonians identify with local flavors like Gulf Coast seafood, so the menu also smacks with Americana. Relish it in the cool new glass-enclosed seafood raw bar tucked away in the brasserie featuring lobsters, oysters, poached shrimp, crab claws and other chilled seafood dishes.

Substantial classics like Brasserie 19 cassoulet with house made sausage and dry-aged rib eye intermix with graceful fare, such as handmade chevre-stuffed ravioli with beets and hazelnuts; ricotta crepes with Swiss chard; and charred asparagus with poached egg and Texas cheddar. Expect the affordable, well-crafted wine list Clark and Cooper are known for at Ibiza and Catalan, but with a heavy French accent. 1962 W. Gray. 713-524-1919, brasserie19.com

new noshing

on the patioGrappino di nino, a sophisticated favorite for its enchanting covered patio with gurgling fountains and beautifully landscaped gardens, has a new summer menu and new Italian wine list. The “spuntini,” or small plates, include enticing Tuscan dishes like

stuffed pasta with roasted squash and sage; filet mignon with arugula, hearts of palm and garlic aggresto; and littleneck clams steamed with fresh herbs and Pinot Grigio. 2817 W. Dallas. 713-528-7002, ninos-vincents.com

pAu

L p

eTe

rSo

n |

JA

ck

TH

om

pSo

n

summer lovin’Benjy’s upper Washington unveiled its new summer menu by executive chef Mike Potowski who creates inventive, playful and delicious dishes. Scoop up the cheese, bacon and onion dip with house-made flatbread; purple potato pizza with blue cheese and truffle oil; cumin-scented Canadian salmon with Gunderman farms tomatoes and avocado puree; or seared ahi tuna with kimchi fried rice. Scrumptious new desserts include white chocolate crème brulee with black raspberry mini doughnuts or raspberry cream pie with basil raspberry sorbet and Italian meringue. 5922 Washington Ave. 713-868-1131, benjys.com.

prime-living.com42

connoisseurtaBLe taLk

pAu

L p

eTe

rSo

n |

JA

ck

TH

om

pSo

n

Houston Restaurant Weeks are Coming!Benefiting

Houston Food BankAUGUST 1— 31, 2011

Sign up for the HRW Newsletter at:www.HoustonRestaurantWeeks.com

Follow HRW on Twitter (HouRestaurantWk) and FacebookInformation:

[email protected]

Event includes a three course dinner for $35 per person. Some restaurants may also offer lunch for $20 per person. See Web site for details.

Prime LuxuryEstates

Sherrie Fontenot 281.468.2233Arthur Confait 832.226.8671

[email protected]

RE/MAX Fine Properties | 4500 Hwy 6, Sugar Land, Texas 77478 | 281.265.5533(Each Office Independently Owned & Operated)

John demersCovering food and wine for more than 25 years, John deMers hosts “delicious Mischief” on newsradio 740 KtrH. He recently released Follow the Smoke: 14,783 Miles of Great Texas Barbecue.

think about it, draws us back into that bubbling cauldron of great plantation homes. Hundred-plus years of Captain Jack Sparrow and the rest of his maritime miscreants signed a pirate X across the label of every rum bottle on earth. Here are my thumbnail sketches (maybe love poems is more like it) of my four favorite classic rum cocktails for the long, hot summer.

Daiquiri – Less a single drink than a family of cocktails, this mix of rum, lime juice and sugar hails mainly from Cuba in its golden age as a jetsetter destination, lasting from

Rum is pretty much the Coca-Cola of the islands—as I can attest after recently returning from lecturing

on an 11-night Caribbean cruise. At each stop you make, from Key West on the safe side, to wild, exotic adventures as far away at St. Lucia, Dominica, Haiti and Grenada, somebody will offer you a generous taste and tell you theirs is the finest in the world.

Rum is a byproduct of sugar—or of molasses, to be precise, which itself is a byproduct of sugar and the refining process. And that means that every sip, when we

on a rollruMStory | john demers Photography | mark lipczynski

Prohibition until Castro. Ernest Hemingway put the original drink on the map, swilling too many Papa Dobles at the Floridita Bar in Havana. Daiquiris now tend to be both flavored and frozen. For a thrill, find a real recipe and whip up the original.

Cuba Libre – Yes, this is that “rum and Coke” the Andrews Sisters sang about. It’s a highball made with the two namesake ingredients plus a quick squeeze of lime. The Cuba Libre’s origins are found back at the beginning of the 20th century, when Cuba was fighting for its independence from Spain and Teddy Roosevelt was busy riding rough. The name, obviously, is a shout of political support.

Pina Colada – I drank these all day years ago on a lovely beach in Puerto Rico…until I realized that each drink has approximately the same amount of calories as a Burger King Whopper. But, oh-so good it is! It’s made with rum, pineapple juice and that old caloric offender, cream of coconut (often known by its main brand name, Coco Lopez). The pina colada has been the official beverage of Puerto Rico since 1978, which means they made me drink them all that glorious, fattening day.

Mojito – Another welcome escapee from Cuba, this drink mixes white rum, sugar (originally sugar cane juice, in case you have any of that around your house), lime juice, sparkling water and mint leaves, making it a kind of Caribbean mint julep. The trick here is mashing—or officially, muddling—the sugar with the lime juice and mint. If you don’t know how to “muddle,” knock back a few of these and you’ll discover you’re a natural.

deLiciouS dAiQuiriScan this code using your smartphone to watch drink expert Jeffrey morganthaler make the cocktail made famous by legendary author ernest Hemingway.

prime-living.com44

connoisseuruncorked

Rare and Well DoneRare•and•Well•Done: Phrase 1: Award-winning menu set in comfortable, casual elegance. 2: Hand-selected, USDA prime beef dry aged in-house for 28 days andmouth-wateringly perfect. 3: An incredible dining experience featuring Perry’s famous pork chop, chateaubriand and fl aming desserts – each with a tableside presentation.4: Amazing soups, salads, fresh seafood and more. 5: A spectacular selection ofworld-class wines. 6: The perfect venue for your most important business and personal moments with private dining rooms accommodating six to one hundred guests.

Defi ning a great dining experience!

Champions • Clear Lake • Katy • Memorial City • Sugar Land • The Woodlands PerrysSteakhouse.com

AD Form

White haute

Styling | syma leVy Photography | mark lipczynski

Channel your inner East Coast socialite and celebrate summer Hamptons style with an oh-so stylish “white” party. From fabulous florals to fanciful parting gifts, this unique event will be the highlight of the season.

w is for welcomeGreet your guests to the table with these elegant, die-cut menu cards placed at each place setting.

sweet & sourSpice up the party with a delicious and refreshing Pisco Sour, a South American cocktail made with pisco, lemon or lime juice, egg whites, sugar and bitters.

prime-living.com46

connoisseurentertain

in bloomMake this towering floral arrangement complete with hanging crystal votives the center of attention at your white-themed event.

squeaky cleanFor a unique yet simple takeaway gift, send guests home with fragrant European soaps all wrapped up in a pretty package.

proof is in the puddingGive your Hamptons-style party a taste of the South with this rich and decadent white chocolate bread pudding.

stick to itWhite chocolate candy sticks make for a special remembrance of your sophisticated summer soiree.

event planning & stylingTheme development and

execution, sterling and soap party favors by oulala! What

an event. 713-855-8755, oulalaevents.com

venueTerms of endearment room

at brennan’s of Houston, 3300 Smith St. 713-522-9711,

brennanshouston.com

food & beverageWhite truffle and asparagus soup,

chardonnay-basted blue crab and king oyster mushroom risotto, white chocolate bread pudding, ramos gin Fizz and pisco Sour

provided by brennan’s.

event collateralinvitations, menus and napkin rings by ph design Shop. 713-522-8861, phdesignshop.com

flowerscandelabra floral centerpiece

and linens by plants ‘n petals. 713-840-9191,

plantsnpetalsweddings.com

tablewarechiavari chairs and silver pearl chargers by A Finer event. 713-

699-9911, afinerevent.com

chocolatesAssorted chocolates by mostly

chocolate. 713-446-5826, mostlychocolate.net

models & wardrobeAngie prejean, Angie prejean

designs; cody Sever, m penner. men’s jacket and pants by m penner, 1180-06 uptown park

blvd. 713-527-8200, mpenner.com

THe goods

sparkle & lightMake your table glow with these stunning pearl chargers accented by a crystal candelabra-style centerpiece.

july/august • 2011 47

connoisseurentertain

We are the only dealer in Houston with a

Certified Crestron Master Programmer

Add motion to your movie.

Be Entertained.

281-890-5200 electronicdreams.net6700 S. RICE AVE., BELLAIRE, TEXAS 77401

Providing exclusive products for prime living.

can-Am Spyder roadster

july/august • 2011 49

inside:

for The man who commands the very Best

gentlemen’s room

50 • man cave | raIsIng The bar52 • driver's seat | TrIcK TrIKe54 • high tech | grIll oF my Dreams56 • great outdoors | bone appeTIT

When entertaining friends and family becomes a pastime, there’s no better

way to do it than with your own in-home pub, so we set out to find the ultimate.

About 20 years ago, Craig and Doreen Bierman purchased an early ’70s-style, two-story home in southwest Houston. It was your typical four-bedroom, two-and-a-half-bath with a substantial back yard in a nice neighborhood. But because of the couple’s new-found penchant of gathering antique collectables, space quickly became an issue.

After getting his new, Houston-based Speed and Sport Chrome Plating business off the ground, Bierman took on the challenge of becoming the designer/contractor for a 500-square-foot showplace pub addition. Demolition to portions of the existing house was minimal. By knocking out a couple of windows and a door on

either side of the fireplace, two walkthrough passages were created from the original living area.

The 10-foot ceiling height of the pub addition was determined by the existing home’s roof line, a utility room (that included a small powder room) and a few other structural considerations. An oversized door was designed into the side of the pub to allow larger items to be moved in and out with minimal restrictions.

“Those larger items, like the back bar and large glass showcase, helped establish the size of the room,” Bierman says.

Once the back bar was stripped of decades of repaints, its beautiful oak structure was revealed. That, in turn, dictated the finish of the custom-made front bar, flooring and wall paneling. Keeping with the early 20th-century finishes, a bare tin ceiling was installed as were two antique fans.

Several, narrow glass block windows were included in the design near the top of the room for natural light and enhanced security. Plumbing and electrical service played major roles in the design, as well. Since many of the collectables are electrically

the barraising

Story & Photography don armsTronG

1900s cash register

prime-living.com50

gentlemen’s room man cave

BAck BArThe Biermans found their 1920s-era back bar through an antique ad in a local paper. Professional refinishing cost more than the bar itself, but it set the stage for the rest of the room.

Front BArTo match the oak finish of the back bar, this custom piece was built on-site. The service side accommodates a professional grade refrigerator, ice maker, plumbed sink with instant-on hot water and a dry storage area. On the customer side, clear epoxy lets the beauty of the inlaid oak top to show through. The bar-length foot rail adds to the comfort while sitting on the guitar-shaped bar stools.

reFrigerAtorThe professional grade bar unit features two front doors, one sliding top door and two keg taps.

ice mAkerThis is a must-have for any home pub. Sizes, capacities and dependability vary widely so do your homework.

DécorThemed pubs are the rage. Old-school British, sports, racing, rock ’n roll, and collectible antiques are just a few ideas. It’s gentleman’s choice when it comes to décor.

the essentiAls Outfit your personal pub with these unique design elements

powered, the original 125-amp service had to be increased to 200 amps. And because the bar area was furthest from the original house, new water and sewer lines had to be run, so placement in the foundation was critical.

So were there any regrets? “You bet,” says Bierman. “I

should have used the extra 250 square feet that was available at the back of the house to create an even larger room. I would have also equipped the pub with independent heat and air conditioning instead of tying into the existing unit.”

Entertainment Room Designers, Bierman’s consulting and contracting service, has helped magician David Copperfield, Sterling McCall’s car museum and others bring their ideas to reality and they can help you, too.

Vintage guitar bar stools Hidden pub access John Lennon’s boot

paul mccartney’s signed guitarcustomized money table from the 1920s

july/august • 2011 51

gentlemen’s room man cave

don armstrongdon’s passion for all things automotive is no secret. His popular What’s Don Driving? tV series garnered rave reviews and made him

the new car go-to guy. He is also a member of the texas auto writers association.

bo

mb

Ar

die

r r

ec

re

ATi

on

AL

pr

od

uc

TS in

c.

The popularity of two-wheeled motoring has skyrocketed in the last

couple of decades as more and more novices have been mastering the weekend “ride.” Whether it’s riding by yourself, with a couple of friends, your spouse or with a motorcycle club, it’s about the wind in your face and the special camaraderie that sets this type of weekend recreation apart from other forms of entertainment.

If you’ve watched TV at all in the last six months, you’ve probably seen an ad or two about the Can-Am Spyder Roadster, a three-wheeled motorcycle that is quite different from those that have come before it. In development for 10 years, Can-Am is the newest twist in recreational motorsports.

A recent test drive of the upscale RT Roadster model

large analog speedometer and tachometer, is a large LCD screen that shows various functions like gear selection, turn indicators and audio source. Fingertip audio and intercom controls make communication between the two riders a piece of cake. Heated handle grips benefit both driver and passenger on chilly days. The upscale RT model offers an adjustable windshield that raises or lowers with just the touch of a button.

For 2011, BRP is adding a top‐of‐the‐line Spyder RT Limited package, including an integrated GPS, semi-rigid travel bags for each storage compartment, a dramatic Pearl White color and custom travel cover on top of the already fully‐loaded Spyder RT‐S package. The four available feature packages are: Spyder RT, Spyder RT Audio & Convenience, Spyder RT‐S and Spyder RT Limited.

If the Can-Am’s built-in front and rear storage isn’t enough, perhaps a matching trailer will do the trick. BRP claims it can tote two golf bags and more. Sounds like a road trip to us.

trick proved what district sales manager Bob Ballard touted as “a fun, exhilarating, safe-feeling, car-like ride with the stability of a four-wheeler.”

Built on what parent company BRP calls “Y-architecture” (two-wheels in front, one in back), this three-wheeler incorporates a computer-controlled vehicle stability system (VSS) that integrates antilock brakes, traction control and stability control. The Can-Am handles very much like an ATV, until pre-programmed parameters put the VSS in charge of stabilizing the Can-Am when things go awry.

Powering both the RS and RT models of the Can-Am is a proven and reliable Rotax V-Twin engine that whirrs out an impressive 100 horsepower and 80 lb.-ft. of torque. Both come with either a 5-speed manual or semi-automatic transmission with a reverse gear. Acceleration is phenomenal, beating most cars on the freeway on-ramp, as well as many two-wheelers.

Just ahead of the handlebars, sandwiched between the

Pricing on the entry-level Can-Am RS starts at $16,500 and the full tilt RT begins at $21,399.

If you think parent company BRP and/or Can-Am is some flash in the pan, think again. BRP stands for Bombardier Recreational Products, the same company that manufactures well-known names such as the top-selling Sea-Doo jet-ski, Ski-Doo snowmobile, and Evinrude and Johnson outboard boat motors.

Looks like the Can-Am is here to stay and Mancuso PowerSports has them.

Story | don armsTronG

trike

prime-living.com52

gentlemen’s room driver's seat

bo

mb

Ar

die

r r

ec

re

ATi

on

AL

pr

od

uc

TS in

c.

ENJOY TOGETHER RESPONSIBLY.Bacardi.com©2011 BACARDI AND THE BAT DEVICE ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS AND THE ARCTIC GRAPE DEVICE IS A TRADEMARK OFBACARDI & COMPANY LIMITED. BACARDI U.S.A., INC., CORAL GABLES, FL. RUM SPECIALTY – 35% ALC. BY VOL.ALL OTHER MARKS ARE TRADEMARKS OR REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS.

In a man’s world, summertime means outdoor grilling. One debate about this pastime

used to be charcoal vs. gas grilling. Today, that question includes infrared grills and other technological advances to make cooking time more relaxing and fun while still getting that perfect flavor. Here are some advancements in grilling accessories to make your summer a bit easier and hopefully prevent overdone steaks and chicken.

char-Broil inFrared sTainless Grill

Infrared signals can be found in remote controls, but many high-tech grills utilize a version of the technology. Char-Broil has a large line of infrared grills, but their top-of-line is the Red Series Stainless Four-Burner with Outdoor Stovetop. It puts out 42,000 BTUs on 620 square inches of porcelain-coated cast iron grates. Underneath the grates are infrared surfaces. Fed by flames, these surfaces get super hot quickly, creating an intense heat that sears your food. A rotisserie kit and digital display make this grill the perfect center point of every backyard barbecue. It retails for $999.99 and can be found at larger hardware stores and online.

After you light your grill, there are still many decisions that need to be made like recipes, cooking time and grilling techniques. First download the On the Grill app from Weber at iTunes.com. This $4.99 digital assistant allows iPhones and iPads to be your virtual cooking helper. Browse through 250 recipes and create a shopping list on your device, or watch one of the many instructional videos that make it a snap to learn how to prep the food and grill.

TalkinG remoTe meaT ThermomeTer

My one “beef” with grilling is that I have to constantly stand over the grill to monitor the food. If I step away, I’m afraid the meat will go up in flames. But now that I have the handy Grill Alert Remote Thermometer, I can enjoy my guests while ensuring the food will be perfect. Just insert the stainless steel probes in the center of the meat and select the type of meat and how you’d like it done. A wireless

moTorized GrillinG Brush

Probably the least favorite thing about grilling is cleaning up. It can get tough scraping off charred pieces of food if you don’t have the correct utensils. Fortunately, for easy cleanup, pop in a few batteries in this motorized grilling brush and a powerful motor with two brass-bristle rotary brushes quickly strips away cooked-on food residue. A built-in stainless steel scraper lets you work on extra-tough buildup, while a push button located on top of the handle makes for no scrubbing and no elbow grease. Plus, no chemicals are needed for a clean grill every time. At $20, this also makes a great gift when visiting others who plan to grill for you.

WeBer’s on The Grill appNeed to grill? There’s an app for that, of course.

LCD receiver unit with a belt clip shows target and current cooking temperatures, while a bar graph tracks cooking progress. A wireless transmitter sends the information from the grill to the receiver up to 300 feet away. And just like a personal butler, a voice prompt will alert you when your entree is “Almost Ready” and “Ready.” Happy grilling!

Story | michael GarField

of my dreams

grill

cH

Ar

-br

oiL

| b

ro

ok

STo

ne

prime-living.com54

gentlemen’s room high tech

michael garfieldKnown as “the High-tech texan®” to audiences nationwide, Michael hosts technology and issue-oriented talk radio shows

six days a week on the 9-5-0. see what he’s up to at Hightechtexan.com.

cH

Ar

-br

oiL

| b

ro

ok

STo

ne

C

M

Y

CM

MY

CY

CMY

K

annex_PRIME.pdf 6/13/11 9:00:18 AM

Any trip to the Bahamas can be made better by a day—or week—chasing

bonefish. Most days, being hooked by a fly fisherman is the best thing that can happen for a bonefish and for the angler who made the accurate cast.

Bonefish are torpedo-shaped, chrome-plated bottle rockets that developed their speed over centuries of running from sharks and barracudas. Per pound (average weight in the Bahamas is three and change), no fish accelerates faster or sprints across a flat with more style. These super-charged fish are plentiful,

island attractions. Andros South is an outpost seldom visited other than by anglers and delivery boats. From any reputable Bahamian bonefish lodge, fishing will be extraordinary.

“I’ve caught some huge bonefish around Grand Bahama,” Packmore says, “and once you leave the dock at H2O, you’d never know you were near a luxury resort.”

Andros South is already (and deliberately) distanced from spas and linen tablecloths. It is remote

by design. In addition to unpressured fish, Packmore says, Andros South’s rates include all gear, individual guest rooms and emergency medical evacuation, which, interestingly, is what

keeps a bonefish alive day to day. Their sole defense from big predators is speed, and they’ll hit the gas at the drop of a hat (or sunglasses or cell phone) onto the deck of a flats boat.

I missed a toad of a bonefish off Walker’s Cay years ago when a horsefly bit so viciously into my foot that blood rolled onto the deck. I slapped fly and foot and deck with my cap. The

bonefish turned inside out and may still be swimming.

Newcomers should know that a good lodge can teach basic skills in a few hours and that there are plenty of willing fish to chase across clear water, sometimes barely deep enough to cover a wading bootie. Beginners should opt for quantity over quality. Schools of 2-pound bonefish are less finicky and willing to overlook rookie mistakes. Once you become addicted—and you will after a few 100-yard, sizzling runs and point-blank encounters with marine life on the flats—you can set loftier angling goals.

Expect disappointments, but call them lessons. If you miss a fish, utter whatever words roll comfortably off your tongue, then set about finding another. Bahamian bonefish are as spooky as bones anywhere. They have to be. But there will always be another.

doug pikedoug has traveled the world to satisfy his passion for the outdoors. during his career, he has won 100-plus state and

national awards for writing, broadcast and photography.

but access to prime, Bahamian bonefish water isn’t free. Then again, neither are most of the island nation’s finer pleasures.

The Bahamas offer bonefishing experiences to suit any level of expertise, enthusiasm and expectation, says Andy Packmore of Travelin’ Angler, an in-house outfitting service at Fishing Tackle Unlimited in Houston.

H2O Bonefishing on Grand Bahama is strictly upscale, based in a boutique hotel and within walking distance of shopping, fine dining and other traditional

geAring upIf you tote your own, make it an 8- or 9-wt with a

bonefish-taper floating line and at least 150 yards of 20-pound backing on the reel. A second rod should be

heavier and rigged for bigger fish. Carry ample terminal tackle, but don’t overdo it; fishing lodges have fishing tackle. In addition to bones, the flats are also home to

tarpon, permit, barracuda, mutton snapper, two species of jacks and a variety of sharks. Other fish can fill gaps between prime tides and, on occasion, save a trip. Ask

your outfitter what’s “hot” when you book, and ask your guide the same question dockside.

bone appétit

Story | douG pike

gr

eg

Vin

ce

nT

| H

2o b

on

eFi

SHin

g

prime-living.com56

gentlemen’s room outdoors

gr

eg

Vin

ce

nT

| H

2o b

on

eFi

SHin

g

KicK bacK, relax & enjoya specially priced three-coursedinner for two, featured wines

& live music in the bar.

StarterS Choose one per guest

Chilled AspArAgus Bisque iCeBerg lettuCe Wedge summer mixed greens CAesAr sAlAd

entréeS Choose one per guest

Filet mignon 8oz.

sAlmon FilletroAsted ChiCken CrAB-stuFFed shrimp

SideS Choose one per guest

horserAdish mAshed potAtoes CrAB-Fried riCe · green BeAns steAmed AspArAgus skillet steAk mushroom CAps

deSSert Choose one per guest

BAnAnAs Foster BreAd pudding key lime pie · ChoColAte mousseneW york-style CheeseCAke

Featured wineS By the bottle

White Sartori Pinot Grigio, Veneto $30

red 14 Hands Cabernet Sauvignon, Washington $45

4608 Westheimer Road Houston, Texas 77027r e s e r va t i o n s [email protected] www. s u l l i va n s s t e a k h o u s e . com

l u n C h & d i n n e r • h A ppy h o u r • l i v e m u s i C n i g h t ly • pr i vAt e d i n i n gh A n d - Cu t Ag e d s t e A k s • F r e s h s e A F o o d • AWA r d -W i n n i n g W i n e l i s t

Menu available through September 5, 2011. Price does not include tax or gratuity. Please, no substitutions. Not available for private functions.

$79 t h r e e - C o u r s e d i n n e r F o r t W o

AD FORM

There is still time...

What do I want to be when I grow up?

www.prime-living.com

Get inspired.

Subscriptions available online

PLgrowup9x10.875.indd 1 4/12/11 10:22:52 AM

California dreamin’

Story | roBin Barr sussman

We’re taking the top down for a weekend whirl through California wine country. From Highway 29 in the Napa Valley for world-class wines, scrumptious noshing and chic shopping, north to the Alexander Valley via Highway 128 and Healdsburg for olive oil tasting, antiques, bucolic vineyard vistas and more gold-medal wine tasting. The crisp summer weather couldn’t be more wondrous. Won’t you join us?

yountville

july/august • 2011 59

escape

Start your long weekend in the walk-able hamlet of Yountville. Foodies have every reason to visit this town boasting

more Michelin stars per capita than anywhere on the planet. Located within walking distance of the town’s small luxury inns and hotels, premium wineries, arts and shopping, indulge in a romantic dinner, a leisurely lunch overlooking a vineyard, or a cappuccino and French croissant curbside…all within a 4-square mile radius.

Consider lodging at the new, contemporary Bardessono (bardessono.com), the most ecologically green luxury hotel in the area. Vibrant gardens and sculptures dot the walking path around the property, while guest rooms are naturally posh with heavenly beds and huge bathrooms with dreamy sunken tubs overlooking each private patio. The cool rooftop pool deck with cabanas and snappy drink service overlooking the valley is a prime hidden oasis.

Renowned Meadowood Resort (meadowood.com) is just down the road north on Highway 29 if

you seek something more classic, like first-class, New England-style cottages and a croquet field on a sprawling estate.

Hungry? Don’t count on a table at the storied French Laundry Restaurant unless you booked six months in advance. Try Bouchon (bouchonbistro.com), a charming French-

yountvilleoakville grocery

modelbakery

welcome to

escape

style bistro, sister to the highly recommended Bouchon bakery in downtown Yountville, part of the Keller restaurant group. At lunch, set out on foot for Food Network celebrity chef Michael Chiarello’s newest, always-bustling restaurant, Bottega (botteganapavalley.com) featuring irresistible California

twists on Italian cuisine. Shop his NapaStyle store next door for all things epicurean including the Chiarello label wine.

To visit wineries, start the exploration down Highway 29, the justly congested main artery of the Napa Valley. The pretty, Spanish-style Robert Mondavi Winery (robertmondavi.com), the grandfather of tasting rooms, is usually the first to spot on the wine trail.

A pit stop at the original Oakville Grocery (oakvillegrocery.com) is a must for wine-tasting road warriors—it’s a fabled landmark paved in hardwood floors and fine gourmet provisions. Or, grab breakfast, a latte, scone, mouth-watering cookie or lunch at the Model Bakery (themodelbakery.com) in St. Helena, which is known for the best artisan bread in the region and transcending homemade English muffins.

Make a beeline to the Silverado Trail, the path of least

robertmondaviwinery

biL

L r

eiT

Ze

L

ce

SAr

ru

bio

bardessono, yountville

napaStyle, yountvillebottega, yountville

prime-living.com60

clospegase

resistance (traffic), for more wineries with breathtaking views. Restaurateur Pat Kuleto knows good food so it’s no wonder that Kuleto (kuletoestate.com), his extraordinary mountain-top

wine estate overlooking Lake Hennessey, is also a working farm. Tours and tastings with artisan cheeses are by appointment. Historic Joseph Phelps Vineyards, recognized

silverado trail

for Bordeaux varietals including Insignia, also offers expertly run tastings by appointment on the terrace overlooking the valley. Pop in Cliff Lede (cliffledevineyards.com) known for big beautiful reds from the Stags Leap district and its notable art gallery, or nearby PlumpJack winery (plumpjack.com).

Love art, design and wine? Clos Pegase (clospegase.com) is famous for its Michael Graves-designed winery buildings and sculptures incorporated into the gardens; the most remarkable is the oversize bronze thumb, which appears painted into the landscape. Ogle as you drive by the majestic Culinary Institute of America at Greystone (ciachef.edu) or stop

for a look-see of the amazing property with edible gardens and perhaps a bite at the restaurant. Other notable dinner options in the area include Martini House (martinihouse.com), Mustards’s Grill (mustardsgrill.com), and Terra (terrarestaurant.com), in a romantic limestone building.

Zip by the cowboy town of Calistoga off Highway 29 (save it for next time) to the legendary Chateau Montelana (montelena.com), an elegant stone castle built in 1882 with calming Chinese gardens and a lake with swans and ducks. The winery is known for its

kuletoestatewinery

Josephphelpsvineyards

plumpJackwinery

cliffledevineyards

biL

L r

eiT

Ze

L

ce

SAr

ru

bio

Joseph phelps Vineyards, St. Helena

kuleto estate, St. Helena

plumpJack Winery, oakville

july/august • 2011 61

escape

complex Chardonnay, which beat the French in the famous Paris Tasting of 1976.

When you’re ready to head out of Napa Valley, stay on Highway 29, which merges to 128 to the Alexander Valley. You are now in Sonoma country outside the quaint town of Healdsburg, heralded as the epicenter of wine country’s three major wine making AVAs (American viticultural areas): Alexander

Valley, Russian River and Dry Creek Valley. Climb to the small, but lofty Hanna Winery tasting room (hannawinery.com) at the top of a knoll overlooking Alexander Valley with stunning views. It’s an ideal first stop in the region, where medal-winning Sauvignon Blanc, Rosé and other red varietals can be casually sampled at a long copper-topped bar.

Pause for lunch, a snack, or a picnic at the nearby Jimtown Store (jimtown.com), a darling country throw-back with

quirky gifts, antiques and iconic California wine country grub. Expect more beautiful scenery with vegetable and flower gardens at the new earthy Medlock Ames tasting room (medlockames.com) next door to Jimtown. Enjoy the creative small-batch wine and food pairings, or stop by on the weekend for live music in the gorgeous patio gardens

and wood-fired pizza from the outdoor oven. Special canned relishes and jams brighten the architecturally striking tasting room shelves.

While still in Alexander Valley, book a tour and tasting at the spectacular Jordan Winery (jordanwinery.com), a hidden gem resembling an authentic European manor sans the Disneyland bells or whistles you’ll

medlockameswinery

alexander valley

hannawinery

Jordanwinery

chateau montelena Winery, calistoga

chateaumontelanacastle

Jimtownstore

escape

prime-living.com62

experience at some wineries. (Just don’t drive by too fast or you’ll miss the subtle entrance sign.) Enjoy the cheese and wine pairing and even an olive oil tasting of estate-bottled nectar. Jordan only produces Chardonnay and Cabernet: both sublime.

Check into chic Hotel Healdsburg (hotelhealdsburg.com) on the tiny town plaza, home of celebrity chef Charlie Palmer’s Dry Creek Kitchen, and

Jtasting room

winery

take a dip in the inviting pool or visit the luxurious spa. Its sister location next door, the new hip H2 Hotel, is another terrific lodging option. Palmer’s wife owns the adjacent Lime Stone,

which enchants with stylish wine country décor, gifts and accessories.

Plan lunch or dinner at sophisticated Bistro Ralph (bistroralph.com) for French-meets-Cali cuisine, or newer Willi’s Seafood (starkrestaurants.com) featuring a raw bar and inventive small plates. Expect dinner-only at cramped and casual Scopa (scopahealdsburg.com) for fragrant Italian fare par excellence, or the more formal Cyrus Restaurant, sometimes referred to as “other French Laundry,” housed in the grand European-style Les Mars (hotellesmars.com), the fanciest hotel in the area. Stroll around the charming town plaza with its myriad cheese shops, wine tasting rooms and clothing boutiques. Start or end at hip Barndiva (barndiva.com), a mod towering architectural wonder—think high-end barn—for witty cocktails and artsy interiors. Anticipate a colorful bar scene

and exquisite garden patio with contemporary water fountains and lounging couches.

Thirsty for more? Don’t miss nearby Chalk Hill Estate Vineyards (chalkhill.com) for an unforgettable off-the-beaten-path wine experience. The hilly culinary tour of extensive organic gardens culminates in a tasting of wines and small plates prepared by Chef Didier, which is served in the Pavilion overlooking the Chalk Hill Equestrian Center with panoramic views of Chalk Hill valley. Chalk Hill’s guided trail rides or equestrian tastings are a horseback thrill.

Heading out of Healdsburg on Highway 101 toward San Francisco, sparkling wine lovers will be tempted by the inviting J Tasting Room (jwine.com) with its Bubble Room and impressive Russian River valley wine and food pairings. It’s a bubbly way to say “so long, wine country.”

chalkhill estate vineyards

healdsburgwelcome to

hotelhealdsburg

bistro ralph

barndiva

Hotel Les mars, Healdsburg

Hotel Healdsburg

chalk Hill, Healdsburg

Jordan Vineyard & Winery, Healdsburg

limestone july/august • 2011 63

escape

The waves belong only to you…or so it would seem at the anantara kihavah Villas, a new five-star, Green Globe-

certified resort in the Maldives. Above-water and beachfront villas—complete with their own private infinity pools, sun decks, indoor and outdoor baths, and a personal butler—offer stunning views of the Indian Ocean and Baa Atoll.

To catch a glimpse beneath the turquoise waters, venture no further than your villa’s glass-bottom bathtub. Or dine “under the sea” at Sea.Fire.Salt.Sky, the resort’s underwater wine cellar

and restaurant featuring a gourmet menu that includes more than 6,500 bottles of wine from 14 countries.

The resort also offers an Anantara spa, as well as a plethora of opportunities to snorkel, scuba dive and sail; take part in cultural activities like Maldivian cooking or dance lessons; or simply drink in the sun on a white sandy beach. Once you arrive at this atoll paradise located only 35 minutes by sea plane from Malé, you decide the pace of your day...or the rhythm of your wave, so to speak. kihavah-maldives.anantara.com

Wine, dine, bikeYou don’t have to travel by car to get

a taste of the unique varietals that the celebrated Napa Valley region of

California has to offer. With napa Valley Bike Tours, you can set off at a casual pace to explore wine country under your own steam. The Ride, Wine & Dine Bike Tour visits three to four boutique wineries, while the Cycling “IN” the Vineyards Tour offers a unique off-road tour through a private vineyard that borders bird-filled marshlands of the San Francisco Bay. These full-day, guided options include a catered lunch overlooking the vineyards and all equipment is provided. Half-day and self-guided options are also available. napavalleybiketours.com

FreSH WATer, AnyWHere Want great-tasting water on the go? pack a camelbak groove filter bottle. This durable, spill-proof bottle includes a plant-based carbon filter, which can be used up to three months before replacing. Though not designed to filter water from unsafe sources, it reduces the chlorine taste and odors found in tap water. Available in stainless steel or bpA-free plastic. camelbak.com

lagoon lIVIng

An

An

TAr

A H

oTe

LS, r

eSo

rTS

& S

pAS

| n

ApA

VA

LLe

y b

ike

To

ur

S |

cA

me

LbA

k

prime-living.com64

enlightened explorerescape

An

An

TAr

A H

oTe

LS, r

eSo

rTS

& S

pAS

| n

ApA

VA

LLe

y b

ike

To

ur

S |

cA

me

LbA

k

Board me?Perish the thought.

Need to get away? Can’t bring your beloved pet?A Pet Lover’s Sitting Service provides in-home pet services

so you can come home to a healthy and happy pet! Call us for more information or a no-obligation service quote.

Serving the Katy Area • Fully Insured

281.394.2867 | lovepetsitting.com | [email protected]

When it comes to Quality, We don’t

Beat around the Bush.

Services Offered:Year-Round Lawn MaintenanceIrrigation SystemsLandscape design and InstallationDecks, Patios & FencesOutdoor Landscape LightingTree Service

MBayouScapes.com832.788.2186

[email protected]

July 9parker county peach festival (weatherford)peachfestivaltx.com

June 30 to July 31texas shakespeare fest (kilgore)Texasshakespeare.com

aug. 3-771st texas international fishing tournament (south padre island)tift.org

aug. 5-7hunters extravaganza (houston)ttha.com

aug. 5-7, 12-14harvest wine trail (texas hill country)texaswinetrail.com

aug. 13austin ice cream festivalicecreamfestival.org

aug. 13chappell hill lavender and wine fest (brenham)chappellhilllavender.com

aug. 19-26north texas state fair & rodeo (denton)northtexasstatefair.com

aug. 27hotter’n hell hundred (wichita falls)hh100.org

TexAS FeSTS

Where can you go to spot a sea lion, fish for halibut and trout, and

get up close and personal with Sitka spruce and giant glaciers? Alaska, of course. And with The Boat company, you can travel green without the crowds. This nonprofit, luxury eco-cruise is partially tax deductible and one-of-a-kind, with a ratio of

one crew member for every two guests. On the seven-day journey between Sitka and Juneau, there are opportunities to venture off the boat to hike, fish, canoe and kayak in the company of trained naturalist guides. All meals are prepared fresh by the on-board chef, who will even cook up your catch for a true taste of the wilderness. theboatcompany.org

kathryn hunterKathryn Hunter is an austin-based freelance writer whose work has appeared in “texas parks and wildlife Magazine.”

ArT, HiSTory And A VieW, Too From a late 1800s tent town, to booming city, to all but deserted in the 1950s when its copper mines shut down, jerome, Ariz., is a town rich in legend and lore. Recognized as a National Historic Landmark in 1976, this “ghost town” is now populated by writers, artists, artisans and musicians, and its picturesque streets are lined with more than 30 galleries and studios. Stop by for a stay at the haunted Jerome Grand Hotel, catch a glass blowing demonstration at Raku Gallery, shop and dine, or just take in the views, since this singular getaway is perched atop a hillside 1-mile high. jeromechamber.com

CruIse wItH CHaraCter

er

icA

A d

e F

LAm

An

d

prime-living.com66

enlightened explorerescape

er

icA

A d

e F

LAm

An

d

Innovative.Elegant.

Timeless.

Elegant Jewelers and The Wedemeier family have

been purveyors of fine jewelry for 30 years,

making them one of the oldest jewelers in Sugar Land.

The family’s jeweled archives provide a glimpse into

the history of these iconic designers.

Sugar Land ’s Custom DesignersIf you can Dream it…We can create it….Elegant Jewelers, Inc

Fast, Expert Jewelry and Watch Repair /All Work Done On Premises by Master Jewelers

Watch Batteries (While You Wait)

Appraisals (Certified Gemologist On Staff)

3376 Highway 6 | Sugar Land, Texas 77478

281-980-5599

The total beauty of a home is dependent upon the quality of its finishes.

WWe deliver high quality painting, wallpapering, wall repairs and remodeling that will refresh your home and meet your eveyour every expectation.

Beauty is only Skin Deep.

Estimates: 832.788.2186HoustonHousePainting.comcustomercare@HoustonHousePainting.com

Houston House

Painting

ke

LLy

Ay

er

S |

Fr

ed

er

ick

Sbu

rg

co

nV

en

Tio

n &

ViS

iTo

r b

ur

eA

u

fredricksburg

Dear Prime Living,

Looking for the perfect weekend

getaway? Fredericksburg,

an authentic Texas German

community located in the heart

of the Texas Hill Country, is

just the place! Think dramatic

landscapes, fields of brightly

colored wildflowers, unique

shops and more. Oh, and did I

mention the wine? Also check

out the town’s newest spa at

the Frederiksberg Herb Farm. It’s

chic and cozy, and there’s a little

something for everyone. If that

doesn’t sound like perfection, I

don’t know what does. See y’all

there! – Samantha

PRIME Living 311 Julie RiversSugar Land, TX 77498

rockbox theaterThis live music theater in

downtown Fredericksburg always has something to offer. With a different show every

weekend, it’s the perfect way enjoy everything from live music to family-friendly

comedy.109 n. llano st. 866-349-6688

rockboxtheater.com

the olive oil shopif you love to cook, this is a

must-stop for you. With more than 40 types of extra virgin olive oil imported from italy, Spain, Argentina, Australia,

greece and Tunisia, and balsamic vinegars from italy,

you’ll be in heaven. 224 w. Main st. 830-992-3747

theoliveoilshops.com

lyndon b. Johnson state park

in honor of the 37th president of the united

States, this beautiful historic site is the perfect place to enjoy history and nature

studies, picnicking, fishing and swimming. you might even

get a glimpse of the majestic Texas longhorn cattle.

Hwy. 290 east at park road 52, stonewall830-644-2252

tpwd.state.tx.us

see & do

If you’ve experienced Fredericksburg before, you’ll definitely want to experience it again. Nestled in the heart of the Texas Hill Country, this quaint

German town is known for its peaches and a huge pink granite structure known as Enchanted Rock.

New offerings, however, have invigorated the town like never before, including Nature’s Spa at the Fredericksburg Herb Farm (830-997-8615, fredericksburgherbfarm.com). The perfect place to relax and escape, this destination spa offers body therapies, hand and foot rituals, and signature treatments such as the Blissful Wellness, a three-part holistic treatment that uses herbs to treat physical and emotional wellness.

In addition to the spa, the Farm also features Rock House Bistro and 14 additional cottages. After you’ve had your ultra-deluxe spa treatment, stroll over to the restaurant and dine on seasonal and fresh offerings created by executive chef Asa Thornton. Inside and outside dining areas are available with beautiful garden views.

If you’re looking to venture out, the Farm is conveniently located close to the hustle and bustle of Main Street. With more than 200 shops and boutiques to choose from, there is definitely something to peak everyone’s interest. From books, collectibles and art, to furniture, antiques and one-of-a-kind finds, the list goes on and on.

When the excitement of shopping has come and gone, and the car is packed tightly with your new treasures, it’s time for a drink…or two. Head to Fredericksburg Wine Road 290 (wineroad290.com), an association of nine Texas wineries along US Highway 290. In addition to ongoing activities, the wineries often team up with local restaurants for food and wine pairings. Each winery has something different to offer its visitors, from cellar tours and picnics in the vineyards, to tastings and events.

A weekend getaway to Fredericksburg provides more than enough time to experience vines and vistas of this beautiful Hill Country destination. Happy trails!

nature's Spa

Fredericksburg Herb Farm

national museum of the pacific War

prime-living.com68

cardspost

ke

LLy

Ay

er

S |

Fr

ed

er

ick

Sbu

rg

co

nV

en

Tio

n &

ViS

iTo

r b

ur

eA

u

The Cessna Corvalis TT

www.DevonAviation.com

The Cessna Stationair

David Wayne Hooks Airport | 7708 Eagle Lane, Spring, Texas 77379 | 877.251.5170

FLIGHT PLAN:In Style, on YourTerms.|

Chem-Tech Termite and Pest Control Services119 FM 1463, Katy, Texas 77494281-391-0333 | chemtech-bugs.com

Let Chem-Tech install a fully automated misting system to take the worry out of going outdoors. Our system uses Pyrethrum, a natural insecticide extracted from Chrysanthemum flowers which is extremely effective in eliminating mosquitoes and other biting or stinging insects, including spiders, wasps, flies, fleas and ticks.

Don’t let mosquitos ruin your backyard environment

again this summer.

9th Annual AUGUST 27 28&Waterway Marriott Hotel & Convention Center

$1 OFFshow admission

ONLINE ONLY!

Dr. LoriThis is her first appearance in The Woodlands! Appearing on Lifetime Television,Dr. Lori is a Ph.D. art and antiques appraiser, award winning TV personality and host,and nationally syndicated columnist.

FREE antique appraisals will be a part of Dr. Lori’s show.Visit website for more info.

Show Hours: Saturday 9 am - 7 pm • Sunday 10 am - 6 pm

Ticket Prices:Adults $9 • Seniors $7 • 12 and under Free

Visit with over 200suburban North Houston home

improvement professionals exhibiting theirnew home products and services.

A Market of Arts & FoodsShowcasing Unique Artisans!

FIRST TIMEA T T H E SHOW!

SPONSORS

SHOW HIGHLIGHTS

Free COVERED Parking!

Kate SmithNationally renowned color expert and author. See her presentations on colortrends for Fall 2011 and visit with herone-on-one!

WoodlandsShows.com

WoodlandsShows.com

AD Form

masa STUDIO, Architects, pc m a r k a t k i n s , a i afull service architecture & design for discriminating clients

www.masastudio.net 713.592.6700 [email protected]

7 0 2 6 O l d K a t y R o a d S u i t e 1 5 1 H o u s t o n , Te x a s 7 7 0 2 4P h o n e : 7 1 3 . 5 2 3 . 5 2 6 7 • Fa x : 7 1 3 . 8 6 8 . 5 8 8 4

w w w. l i g h t i n g t r e a s u r e s . c o m

Houston’s finestin restoration and shade selection

7 0 2 6 O l d K a t y R o a d S u i t e 1 5 1 H o u s t o n , Te x a s 7 7 0 2 4P h o n e : 7 1 3 . 5 2 3 . 5 2 6 7 • Fa x : 7 1 3 . 8 6 8 . 5 8 8 4

w w w. l i g h t i n g t r e a s u r e s . c o m

Houston’s finestin restoration and shade selectionin restoration and shade selection

skin ouTlook:

sunny

the temperature is rising and, unfortunately, so is your risk for exposure to the elements. During the

summer months, your skin becomes an unhealthy target for all the fun in the sun.

A major concern is sun damage, the leading cause of cancer in the United States. More than 90 percent of non-melanoma skin cancers occur from regular exposure to ultraviolet radiation from the sun or tanning lights. Boomers are automatically at risk for skin cancer due to being unprotected in the sun as children. Plus, with age, your skin cancer risk increases.

According to Medical News Today, those in their 60s and 70s are five times more likely to be diagnosed with malignant melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer.

Skin cancer can appear as a mole, spot, sore, lesion or any other abnormality, so it’s important to monitor changes. Wrinkles, fine lines, dryness and other skin conditions commonly attributed to aging are actually signs of sun damage that might predict skin cancer. If you notice significant changes in your skin, see your dermatologist for an evaluation.

The worst sun damage occurs from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., when ultraviolet rays are strongest. If you must venture out, sunscreen manufacturers keep you protected with diverse options, particularly in the natural product category. Several offer broad-based UVA and UVB coverage with chemical-free titanium dioxide and zinc oxide rather than synthetic ingredients, such as parabens,

Story | sally j. clasen

oxybenzone, PABA and retinyl palmitate. Some studies indicate these artificial substances are harmful because they may increase the risk for cancer and estrogen accumulation in the body.  

Sunscreen makers are also adding organic and plant-based ingredients, including cocoa, shea butter, green tea, soybean and sweet almond oil, as well as blends of nature and science, such as hydrolyzed soy protein, to help soothe and moisturize the skin. In addition, several sunscreens boast anti-aging benefits with antioxidant and enzyme properties like vitamin A, C, E, beta carotene and grape seed oil to assist in skin repair and strengthening blood vessels.

Besides sunscreen, an exfoliant is an essential skin tool to combat the effects of summer weather. Exfoliants attack dull and lifeless complexions by dissolving and removing dead skin cells, unblocking pores and stimulating cell turnover, and can help dissolve early abnormal cells that contribute to pre-cancerous and skin cancers.

Fruit-based alpha hydroxy acids (AHAs) continue to be the most popular type of exfoliant on the market, with new “buffered” options that deliver increased results with less irritation. The beauty is that they work well on dry and oily skin and, according to dermatologists and skin care experts, have long-term benefits when used regularly. Regardless of skin type, healthy summer skin is a matter of taking care, even when you’re not covered.

live well

rx for summerit’s impossible to avoid minor scrapes and injuries during the summer months. Here are some first-aid tips to take the sting out of the season:• insect bites and stings – Treat minor

swelling and itching from stings with cool compresses, over the-counter-oral antihistamines or hydrocortisone creams. remove the stinger by scraping (the edge of a credit card works well). don’t use tweezers or fingernails.

• burns – Treat minor burns with cool compresses. After cleansing, apply a mild antibiotic ointment and bandage. do not break blisters. Take anti-inflammatory medication as directed, until redness and soreness subside. Seek medical attention for sunburns with extensive blistering or general symptoms of nausea, vomiting, weakness or chills.

july/august • 2011 71

live well

most trend spotters point a manicured finger at Coco Chanel’s fateful French Riviera trip for the fashionably tan craze. I, however, blame Malibu Barbie, circa 1971.

Role playing with a deeply tanned, platinum blond bombshell made a lasting impression on my moldable mind, and I was among the early adopters to sport my orange QT tan with pride. We’ve come a long way since then (hallelujah!) and today’s faux glow treatments and self-tanners would make even Malibu Barbie slather on the SPF.

faux gLow treatmentsAirbrush tanning – Each custom session includes a face-to-toe spray of DHA, a plant-derived ingredient that creates a brown color on the surface of skin 2 to 6 hours after application. Tans are manually misted on through an airbrush device that at the hands of an spray tanning expert, imparts a natural, sun-kissed hue.

Get it at: Throwing Copper at the Blue Mambo Salon, 8 Chelsea Blvd. 713-859-1085, throwingcoppertanning.com

Mobile airbrush tanning – Tan in the comfy privacy of your own digs? Oh, yes. Mobile airbrush professionals show up with a tanning tent and all the gear for a flawless at-home application. Plus, the more people who tan, the lower the price. Tanning and martinis, anyone?

Get it from: Mobile Tan Houston. 713-499-9032, mobiletanhouston.com

VersaSpa sunless tanning – Step in the high-tech tanning booth and step out coated in bronzed glory. The system starts with the press of a green button prompting precise, automated instructions and a few odorless sprays of a moisturizing treatment, tanning solution and super drying blasts of air—all in about 5 minutes.

Get it at: Glo Sun Spa, 3273 Southwest Freeway, 713-662-9200; 9595 Six Pines Dr., The Woodlands, 281-292-1300, glosunspa.com

FauxStory | lisa kasanicky

fashionablybronZe

in A boTTLe

st. tropeZ self tan bronZing mousseinfused with aloe vera and a trademarked fragrance technology, this velvety mouse gives you subtle color without a hint of self-tanner aroma. $30 at sttropeztan.com.

anthony logistics for men self tanner with anti-aging complex This unisex, fool-proof formula nourishes

skin with antioxidants and fruit acids while building a handsome glow. $30 at sephora.com.

hampton sun sunless tanning gelFor the discriminating sunless worshiper, this rich gel develops into a golden glow while leaving skin smooth and delightfully sniff-able. $32 at hamptonsuncare.com.

Jane iredale tantasia self tannerApply this naturally tinted bronzer on face and body for a surge of hydration and touch of color that illuminates gradually with daily use. $36 at spalook.com.

glowfusion micro-nutrient face and body natural protein tan, sunless self-tannerno streaks, no stains, no odor and no greasy residue, just a rich subtle color that lasts up to two weeks without fading. $58 at glowfusion.net.

we all know how difficult it is to fit in a workout while we’re traveling. We also know how difficult it is

to get back to our fitness routine when we return. If you’re struggling with the home-away-from-home workout, exercise tubing is a great idea for a “no excuses” travel workout that can be done right in your hotel room or on the pool deck. Elastic or latex bands with plastic soft-grip handles

fiT Tips for on the

roadStory | marGie connolly

make a great workout partner while you’re on the road. All it takes is about 15 minutes a day to help you keep those hard-earned buff biceps and triceps.

Almost any exercise you can do in a fitness center can be modified with the tubing. Legs, arms, back, chest and even abs can be worked with this versatile device. Tubing comes in various resistance levels and can be purchased at most sporting goods stores or online.

Margie Connolly is a certified personal trainer and owner of My Personal Fitness, a personal training service. She also produces exercise DVDs for all fitness levels. For more information, visit mypersonalfitness.biz or visit her on Facebook.

prime-living.com72

RESERVE YOUR PLACE IN HISTORYI N H O U S TO N ’ S M O S T B E AU T I F U L C E M E T E RY

Houston’s premier cemetery, Memorial Oaks, is proud to offer a limited number of spaces in its impressive new develop-ment, Reflection Lake Estates. When you purchase an exclusive property within Re-flection Lake Estates for yourself or a loved one, you will have chosen the perfect place for future generations to celebrate your family’s legacy.

Perhaps the most breathtaking area within the new development is Waterfall Estates. These private, gated estates surround the grand Texas Liberty Mausoleum and over-look Reflection Lake and its waterfall. Be-cause of the peaceful waters and striking beauty of the grounds, Waterfall Estates are some of the most sought after properties in any Houston cemetery.

P. 2 8 1 . 4 9 7. 2 2 1 0 | W W W . R E F L E C T I O N L A K E E S TAT E S . C O M

Availability is extremely limited in Waterfall Estates, so advance planning is crucial to securing a private estate for your family. Please call today to schedule a tour.

live well

on any average day, you may spend several hours at the office, pick your kids up from school, stop by

the grocery store, go out to dinner, and much more. Our hands touch a number of surfaces, and each place we go has its own set of unique challenges. Germs seem to be everywhere, and influenza and other infections are easy to catch.

Even if you avoid the flu, a strong immune system is essential to preventing cancer and other diseases. The best way to ensure a healthy future is to take steps now to protect your body’s natural defenses. No matter your age, being proactive instead of reactive will make a world of difference in your health. Here are a few things that you can do to make your immune system stronger.

eat foods that Boost immunityAvocados are filled with vitamins E and C, which help rid your body of free radicals.

Broccoli, also rich in antioxidants, is high in glucosinolates, which boost the body’s immune system, and sulforaphanes, which keep cells from turning cancerous.

Fish is high in Omega 3 fatty acids—just two servings per week will

help ward off upper respiratory infections. And while garlic might not leave your breath fresh, it does wonders for your

immune system thanks to allicin, which helps fight off viruses and bacteria, and has been shown to prevent colorectal and stomach

cancers. Finally, yogurt with lactobacillus

reuteri actually stimulates white blood cells. It’s like a shot of super immunity,

without the painful needle.

get in a good workoutWorking out three times a week has been proven to increase the body’s natural defenses. When we increase our heart rate through physical exercise, chemicals are released in the body that actually reduces the number of mutations. Mutations can turn into cancer, so the fewer the better.

Research proves this theory. Women who exercise more are at a lower risk of developing breast cancer. Studies have shown that athletic women and women who work out regularly are less likely to develop the disease than those that have a sedentary lifestyle. Also, a study at the University of California found that men who have labor-intensive jobs are at a lower risk of developing colon cancer. For those men and women with desk jobs, a gym membership is defiantly in order.

go to the spaNo more guilt over that massage! Going to the spa can actually help increase your immunity.

Our bodies have more than 5 million touch receptors that need to be activated for well-being. Modern research, as well as ancient observations, proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that massage and other treatments are a necessity, not just a luxury.

A good massage will increase blood flow, release endorphins and serotonin, increase the number of T-cells (important for immunity) and increase the function of the lymphatic system. All of these things are important to maintaining good health. Many countries outside of the United States include massage as part of their healing remedies within the hospital.

Staying healthy isn’t that hard, but it does take a conscious effort. Pay attention to any changes in your body and be sure to stay in charge of your health by getting a good yearly physical exam. The best defense is a strong offense when it comes to staying young and living long.

Walter Gaman, MD is the managing a partner of Executive Medicine of Texas and co-author of “Stay Young” 10 Proven Steps to Ultimate Health.” Dr. Gaman is also a co-host of the popular Staying Young Radio Show. To learn more about him and his practice, visit emtexas.com

shopping list Foods that feed your

immune system

avocados

broccoli

chicken soup

fish

garlic

green tea

greek yogurt

shrimp

3 ways to improve

immuniTyStory | WalTer Gaman, md

Looking for more food suggestions?

Scan this Qr code to download the “grocery Store must-Haves” episode of the Staying young radio Show.

prime-living.com74

Houston CityCenter 12848 Queensbury Lane | 832.200.2380

Houston WestAve2800 Kirby Drive | 713.874.1800

Happy Hour Nightly 4:00-7:00Dinner Sunday-Thursday 5:00-10:00, Friday-Saturday 5:00-11:00

EDDIEV.COM

prime-living.com76

the

list

see more phoToS at Prime-LivinG.com

prime Living Women’s health symposiumUniverSiTy of HoUSTon SUgAr LAnd • 5.14.11

On May 14, Prime Living and Memorial Hermann welcomed 300 women to the 2nd Annual Prime Living Women’s Health Symposium. It was a fun-filled day complete with mimosas, shopping, door prizes, swag bags and speaker sessions on topics ranging from detoxification and anti-aging, to improving memory and building relationships. In between sessions, attendees visited an array of vendors offering everything from complimentary chair massages to a fun photo booth. In addition, the Belage Center for Facial Plastic Surgery, and the Sienna and Sugar Land locations of Modern Dentistry hosted a special luncheon featuring a fabulous fashion show and keynote speaker Mary Jo Rapini, who shared insight on how to improve your health and intimate relationships.

Photography | allen V roBerson phoToGraphy

july/august • 2011 77Get on the LiST at [email protected]

the

list

Grand Wine & Food affairSUgAr LAnd • 4.27 to 5.1.11

Local foodies and wine lovers celebrated five days of fantastic events at the 8th Annual Grand Wine & Food Affair. More than 100 wineries and chefs showcased their talents at winemaker lunches, vintner dinners and wine seminars, as well as the Grand Tasting, Sienna Sip & Stroll and Bistro Brunch. This year, the Grand Auction & Raffle raised more than $23,000 for a scholarship endowment for students at the University of Houston’s Conrad N. Hilton College of Hotel and Restaurant Management, one of the leading hospitality education programs in the world.

Photography | Frank casimiro

see more phoToS at Prime-LivinG.com

www.Prime-Living.com

entertaining ideas

healthy living tips

give-aways

specialty guides

events

reviews

exclusive recipes

travel buzz

videos

july/august • 2011 79

the

list

Get on the LiST at [email protected]

mad hatter spring Luncheon & Fashion showSTAfford CenTre • 4.29.11

The 4th Annual Mad Hatter Spring Luncheon & Fashion show held on April 29 was indeed a royal engagement. Houston icon Jim “Mattress Mack” McIngvale gave an exciting introduction to the event’s keynote speaker Bill Stubbs, celebrity host of “A Moment of Luxury,” published author and one of Architectural Digest’s Top 100 Designers & Architects. Year after year, this event continues to generate buzz with its must-see elaborate table decorating contest and a sea of beautiful and ornate hats. The event is an annual fundraiser for Fort Bend Seniors Meals on Wheels and was proudly sponsored by Prime Living luxury media.

Photography | rosWiTha VoGler

prime-living.com80

shotparting

the judges battled it out for the last scrumptious bite of

chef randy rucker's winning entree in our "Chopped"-style

competition. the question is, who licked the plate clean?

photographed by mark Lipczynski on may 11, 2011.

bitelast

POWER COUPLE$99fOR tWO

GEt tOGE thER and EnjOy

a s PEC iaLLy PR iCE d thREE-

COURsE mEnU f OR tWO

Menu available through September 5, 2011. Price does not include tax or gratuity. Please, no substitutions. Not available for private functions.

s t a R t E R Choice of one per guest

Del’s salaD • Caesar salaD

s i d E Choice of one per guest

Chateau Potatoes • sPinaCh suPreme

BakeD Potato • sautéeD mushrooms

VegetaBle of the Day

E n t R é E s For each guest

8 oz. filet mignon

signature CraB Cake

d E s s E R t Choice of one per guest

CheeseCake • BreaD PuDDing

ChoColate mousse

f E a t U R E d W i n E By the bottle

flora sPrings CharDonnay, naPa $40

Benziger CaBernet, sonoma County $60

L U n C h & d i n n E R · U s da P R i m E B E E f f R E s h s E a fO O d · 1 1 0 0 + W i n E s E L E C t i O n WO R L d - C L a s s h O s P i ta L i t y

5061 Westheimer road, suite 8060 · houston, tX 77056 (713) 355-2600 · [email protected] W W W . d E L f R i s C O s . C O m

AD FORM