Our weeks-long heatwave finally broke early this morning with
a cool downpour. Heavenly. The rain didn’t last long, and the heat is going to
climb back up, but it was lovely to have a respite. To celebrate, and to bring
us into the weekend in good shape, I hit the wine store attached to the Whole
Foods on Columbus. I love that place. Wine stores in New York tend to be small
and cluttered and limited—everything’s small here, there’s just no room to
sprawl—but the Whole Foods one is roomy and calm, with a wide selection. In
general, I’m not a huge Whole Foods buff (the prices make me shake my head
sadly), but I’ll go out of my way for that wine store.
We’ve had the Hess Cabernet before. I have an anecdote about
it, but first I’m going to have to back up and explain the concept of
Kilimanjaro Coffee: A few years back, for her fortieth birthday, my friend
Heather decided to climb Mt. Kilimanjaro. It was, as you’d imagine, a test of
will and strength and internal fortitude, filled with injuries, sickness, exhaustion
and hallucinations, the usual. After the descent, Heather and her fellow
climbers stopped in a village in rural Tanzania, where she was given the best
cup of coffee she’d ever had in her life: grown from local beans, immaculately
roasted, ground by hand, exquisitely brewed. A rich, flavorful elixir. Sick and
weary, Heather rebounded from drinking this coffee. It was magical. Eager to share the magic with her husband, she purchased a
few pounds and took them back to the States with her.
And… well, back home in Los Angeles, the coffee was no good.
In fact, it was bloody awful. It was only the experience of drinking it under
those particular circumstances, in the shadow of Kilimanjaro following the
grueling, life-changing experience of the climb, that had made it taste so glorious.
So after Heather’s experience, Ingrid and I coined the term “Kilimanjaro coffee”,
which we use as a verbal shorthand to describe anything that was great in the
moment due to a special set of circumstances, but is disappointing when you try
to recapture that original magic.
We’d thought the Hess Cabernet might turn out to be
Kilimanjaro Coffee. See, we first had it in January, on the last day of our most
recent visit to Los Angeles. It’d been a bit of a stressful trip—I’m still
carrying around a great deal of emotional baggage about Los Angeles, a city
that I like more than it likes me—made worse by our hotel, which was a… I’m
trying to find the best way to describe it, and I think I’m going to go with “shithole.”
Yes. It was a shithole. I mean, in some ways it was a classic old-school Hollywood
dive motel—picture hard-bitten women in bathrobes sitting in lawn chairs and
chain-smoking in the courtyard, where the swimming pool had long ago been filled
in and covered with Astroturf—which is entertaining in a Raymond Chandler kind
of way, but our room was just depressing. The plastic-wrapped mattresses had large
brown bloodstains on them, the bathroom was covered in spidery tendrils of
black mold, and the radiator filled the room with the stench of old urine whenever
we turned it on. We’re pretty unflappable when it comes to scuzzy hotels, but
that one taxed our patience. Anyway, we had an early flight home, so we’d
booked a room at a very nice hotel near LAX for our final night. We walked to a
nearby Trader Joe’s for bread, Boursin, salad, raspberries, and the bottle of
Hess, then hid inside our quiet, calm, nice-smelling room and unwound while
sipping the wine from chunky glass tumblers. And it was the best bottle of wine
we’d had in a very, very long time.
So when we returned to New York, we thought this might be a
case of Kilimanjaro Coffee—in other words, that the Hess Cabernet only tasted
that good because we were so relieved to be away from our dive hotel. I found
it at Whole Foods a few months back and picked it up… and it was great the
second time. It’s just a very good wine, smooth and rich and robust. Late
summer isn’t the best time of the year for a strong red wine, but if it stays
coolish tonight, maybe we’ll crack it open.
As for my other two purchases… That cava was $5.99, so
really, I’m just aiming for “drinkable”. Or at least “drinkable when mixed with fresh
orange juice to make a nice mimosa”. The Riesling is from the Max Ferd. Richter
vineyard in Mülheim; I picked it up because we’ve been experimenting more with
Rieslings for summer, and also because it had “Richter” on the label in a fancy
German font.
Ingrid and I saw Star
Trek Beyond last weekend and enjoyed it, which was a relief; we both really
liked the 2009 Star Trek reboot, then
absolutely hated Star Trek Into Darkness,
which was less of a movie and more an unending string of bad creative decisions.
Anyway, Star Trek Beyond has already
drifted almost entirely out of my memory cells, leaving behind only a hazy but
pleasant feeling of enjoyment. That’s all I require from my big summer movies.
Here’s a video to take you into the weekend: Orchestral
Manoeuvers in the Dark with “Enola Gay”. Kind of a terrible video, but it is very eighties, and I like the song:
Bonus video! Yazoo (aka Yaz) with “Don’t Go”, which was a song I entirely forgot existed until it came up in YouTube suggestions just now and which, like “Enola Gay”, has a damn catchy synth line:
Enjoy the weekend, and stay out of direct sunlight.
Comments
Glad you got even a small respite from the heat. Waiting for it to drop out here.
Just curious, but are you going to make a sequel to 'Lonely'? I've made it to chapter six, and I think the world setting is very rich. I'm really into it.
ST:B didn't strike me as a movie, but more like an extended TV episode. Fun, and I'm glad my faith in Simon Pegg's writing was not misplaced. Him being one of the writers for this movie was the only reason I went to see it. I was so mad after Into Darkness, they could have scrapped the whole thing then and there as far as I was concerned. The fan service and wink/nudge moments in ID are absolutely eye-rollingly bad.
Illesdan -- No sequel planned for Lonely Satellite, but it's really good to hear you're enjoying it! Yeah, Star Trek Beyond seemed a lot like an episode, which turned out to be a good thing. You're exactly right, the fan service in Into Darkness just about killed it (and I say that as someone who adores Wrath of Khan and was looking forward to seeing how they re-imagined that storyline). This was a big step up. Thanks, Simon Pegg! We owe you one.