Categorized | Uncategorized

A Gaucho Thanksgiving – 9,000 Feet Above the World

Posted on 14 November 2020

(Note: Thank you for your support for American businesses like the one below and other businesses sponsoring Gateway Pundit.)

A Gaucho Thanksgiving

Spend This Thanksgiving Out on the Range, 9,000 Feet Above the World,

In Argentina’s Extreme Altitude Calchaqui Valley…

 (without leaving your home)

***

If you enjoy this guide to A Gaucho Thanksgiving, you’ll want some great Argentine malbec to go along with your meal. But most malbec here in the US is cheap, too young, and mostly out of Mendoza.

The best malbec comes from remote vineyards at 9,000 feet, out in Argentina’s extreme altitude Calchaqui Valley.

A vineyard at over 8,000 ft.

These wines can be hard to find in the US. But we just got a shipment in (including a wine from the third highest vineyard in the world at 8,950 ft.). And you can get 53% (plus 50% off shipping) by reserving your malbec today. Simply click here…

***

Step 1: Preparing Your Parilla

An asado is an old Argentine cowboy tradition of spending all Sunday afternoon on a big, lingering meal.

Imagine a little green oasis with a stream of pure snowmelt running through it. You find the shade of a tree (the high altitudes in northwestern Argentina means UV rays are 80% more intense than at sea level), build a fire, then lie back, your head propped on a saddle bag, as you snack on cheese and olives while the main course cooks. A cousin strums on a Spanish guitar. A sibling passes a bottle of wine around.

A pure snowmelt stream out in Argentina’s northwest

The centerpiece of the asado is the grill – the parilla. Build a fire. Toss in some pine cones as a fire starter (try not to use briquettes).

The heat should be enough to char an outer layer of your steak. Don’t worry too much about overcooking. With the right cut, the right prep, and the side accompaniments (sides and wine), you should be fine. Just remember: low and slow.

 

Step 2: Picking Your Meats

Bife de lomo is THE cut in Argentina. That’s tenderloin. But tire de asado, or short ribs, are also popular.

 

Step 3: The Argentine Secret to Ultra-Tender Meat

The Argentine secret to ultra-tender meat is actually quite simple: rock salt.

Coat the meat with rock salt. (Don’t skimp!) Then get it on the grill (the cooking will take a little while).

 

Step 4: Picadas, Salad, and Wine

Here’s where you break out some sharp cheese (gouda), jamon or salami, and olives for snacking.

You’ll also want to open a bottle of malbec here. We recommend a bottle from a high altitude vineyard. The higher the better.  These have more flavor and mouthfeel – think blackberry, dark cherry, and smoke.

 

RECOMMENDED: The 8,950 Ft. Malbec $32 $23 (plus 50% off shipping) (limited production, unfiltered, wild yeast, low sugar) Click here for your discount…

 

At this point, someone in your party should be at work on a salad. Rather than heaps of grilled vegetables, the Argentines have figured out that the best compliment to a steak is a simple mix of fresh lettuce, tomato, and onion drizzled with olive oil and white wine vinegar. (Seriously, the combo with bife tastes delicious.)

(Optional: mashed potatoes and oven roasted carrots. Just don’t overdo it.)

 

Step 5: Throw on a Chorizo and Blood Sausage

The first course to an asado isn’t a light soup or salad (the salad we mentioned above is consumed with the meat), it’s sausage in a French baguette.

Quarter or half sausage per person. Sausage should be the last thing on the grill and the first thing off. You’ll take the chorizo or morcilla and immediately stick it in that piece of baguette.

Don’t use ketchup or mustard. The juices from the sausage will be more than enough.

 

Step 6: A Round of Applause for the Asador

If you must season your meat after it’s off the grill, stick to more salt.

Eaten with the aforementioned salad, you’ll find you don’t need (and, in fact, don’t want) any condiments on your meat. (Just trust us here…)

Keep pouring the malbec (open another bottle if necessary – if you have multiple vintage years, start younger and go older).

 

SEE ALSO: Top Argentine Winemaker’s “Personal Reserve” Malbec. 2016 vintage. 92 points. Only 3,000 cases made. Get 50% off shipping today…

 

When you finally sit down at the table, it is customary for the other diners to give the asador (that’s you) a round of applause.

 

Step 7: When in Doubt, Have These Three Malbecs on Hand

At the Bonner Private Wine Partnership, we’ve sourced thousands of bottles of wine from Argentina – often wines that have never before been imported to the US.

Today, we’re opening up our cellar to offer three malbecs – at 53% off – just in time for the Thanksgiving season.

You’ll find:

A “8,950 ft. Malbec” 2018 vintage from the 3rd highest vineyard in the world (Unfiltered, High Resveratrol Content, Low Sugar)

…A Personal Family Malbec of Argentina’s Top Winemaker, Pepe Galante (Reserve, 2016, 92 pts, Limited Batch)

…A “Mile High Malbec” from Argentina’s High Mountain Oasis (2017, 93 pts, Limited Batch)

If you order today, you’ll not only get a huge discount, you’ll also get 50% off shipping.

With Thanksgiving approaching fast, we do ask that you act today if you are interested.

These wines are small batch and will sell out fast.

Simply click here to view our inventory…

 

The post A Gaucho Thanksgiving – 9,000 Feet Above the World appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.