Every couple of months my Bride gets together with some of her school friends, one going back to elementary school, and the husbands all tag along. The group no longer live in the old neighborhood, so there is always logistics that take place in deciding the next venue.

We were meeting at Zingerman’s Roadhouse on the western edge of Ann Arbor. Zingerman’s began as a delicatessen in 1982 in an historic building near the Ann Arbor Farmers Market, within walking distance of the famous university in the city. It was started by two friends and Zingerman’s became an entity of it’s own, with assorted secondary businesses and has become a legend in the area, and very well respected. My Bride and I were the first to get there, and we were trying to figure out what business was there before it became the Roadhouse. The room our party’s table was in, revealed the name, as they moved the old sign from the parking lot and installed it above the fireplace. It used to be Bill Knapp’s Restaurant. Bill Knapp’s was a regional chain that began in Battle Creek, Michigan in 1948 and ended up in five states, before the company went into bankruptcy and total closure in 2002. I would venture to say that every “boomer” has had at least one encounter with the chain. They were famous for their chocolate cake, which was a gift to the table, if you came in on your birthday, and the cakes are still being made today. The other thing that they were famous for, was that if you came in on your birthday, you received your “age” as a discount for your meal.

There were five couples, so I will just mention what we had. My Bride naturally went with Herb-Crusted Whitefish (from the Great Lakes) crusted with Dijon Mustard, herbs and breadcrumbs, and served with Carolina Gold rice and Sautéed Spinach. I went with Niman Ranch South Carolina BBQ Ribs, smoked for nine hours with a Mustard BBQ sauce, along with Anson Mills’ heirloom grits, and some Mustard Slaw. We also shared an order of Pimento Cheese & Bacon Macaroni, with Nueske bacon, house made Pimento Cheese and their Bechamel Sauce caramelized with Mancini pasta. We had a bottle of Carol Shelton “Wild Thing” Damiano Vineyard Viognier Placer County 2023. Carol Shelton began her career in 1981 working for Rodney Strong and Windsor Vineyards. In 2000, she and her husband created their own winery, starting small and actually began the second year by selling futures, for the business to keep going, and some of the original investors are still with her. Placer County is in the heart of California’s Sierra Foothills wine region, once the home of some of the largest wine industries during the Gold Rush, then abandoned and now recently re-discovered by some boutique wineries. The soil is mostly decomposed granite and loam. Most wineries use the more recognizable appellation of Sierra Foothills. The vineyard is in the Gold Country town of Auburn, and the fruit is picked slightly less ripe to ensure citrus and aromatics. The wine is ninety-four percent Viognier and six percent Chardonnay. The fruit is destemmed to press and cold settled, then it is barrel fermented (neutral barrels), stirred weekly sur lie for five months, with no Malolactic Fermentation to keep the wine crisp. This pale-golden colored wine offered notes of jasmine, gardenia and honeysuckle along with grapefruit and orange zest. On the palate this light-bodied, well-balanced wine displayed tones of peaches, nectarines, orange-cream and ending with a mouth-watering slight tart, medium-count finish of fruit, florals and granite.

For dessert we shared an order of “Ari’s Donut Sundae” which is a house made Dutch donut topped with Vanilla Gelato, Bourbon Caramel sauce, Virginia peanuts, and a Woodford Reserve Cherry. She was happy that she had a decaf Cappuccino and I had a wee dram of extra dessert. I went with The Rare Wine Co. Historic Series Madeira Savannah Verdelho Special Reserve NV, produced by Barbeito; and they have the longest brand name known to man or woman. Verdelho is one of the drier and fresher (high acid) of the four varietally labeled, fortified wines of Madeira: Sercial, Bual, Malvasia and Verdelho. Verdelho Madeira now represents a wine style, as much as the varietal. After the phylloxera devastation of the 1860’s, Verdelho Madeira almost disappeared as they began using a resistant hybrid Jacquet, now outlawed, and Tinta Negra Mole, but in 1993, legislation was introduced that stipulated at least eighty-five percent of the variety must be used, if it is on the label. Madeira Verdelho historically is a relatively dry, very fresh, fortified, oxidized white wine. This wine was released in April 2010 and is still available. This tawny-amber colored wine offered notes of orange zest, shortbread, ginger, milk chocolate, and almonds. On the palate this medium-bodied, well-balanced wine is lightly sweet and displayed tones of candied citrus, ginger, and some spicy honey that ends with a delightfully long finish of spice and citrus sweetness.


























