The Pasadena Wine Festival will be held at the Los Angeles County Arboretum on Saturday October 9, 2010 from 2:00 to 10:00 p.m. The main attraction is, of course, the wine - over 125 wines will be poured for your sampling pleasure. California wines from Sonoma to Santa Barbara will be featured, along with special attention to the wines of Australia and Spain. There's even more to look forward to at this annual event.
What's wine without food? Great cheeses will be offered and this year the food trucks will roll out to keep the masses fed. Some of the wildly popular mobile restaurants on hand will be The Grilled Cheese Truck, World Fare, Dosa Truck, Crepe'n Around, Border Grill Truck and Sprinkles Cupcakes.
The lovely grounds of the Arboretum and Botanical Garden will provide a beautiful backdrop for the festivities and a welcome respite awaits those who choose to take a break and stroll around.
You can challenge your friends to a game of bocce ball, pitch some horseshoes, try the ultimate golf challenge or just throw around a Frisbee.
Live music will entertain the festive crowd and you are advised to bring a blanket or beach chair so you can really relax after the sensory overload that's likely to occur. Festival planners also advise you bring some sunscreen for the afternoon.
What's wine without food? Great cheeses will be offered and this year the food trucks will roll out to keep the masses fed. Some of the wildly popular mobile restaurants on hand will be The Grilled Cheese Truck, World Fare, Dosa Truck, Crepe'n Around, Border Grill Truck and Sprinkles Cupcakes.
The lovely grounds of the Arboretum and Botanical Garden will provide a beautiful backdrop for the festivities and a welcome respite awaits those who choose to take a break and stroll around.
You can challenge your friends to a game of bocce ball, pitch some horseshoes, try the ultimate golf challenge or just throw around a Frisbee.
Live music will entertain the festive crowd and you are advised to bring a blanket or beach chair so you can really relax after the sensory overload that's likely to occur. Festival planners also advise you bring some sunscreen for the afternoon.






I attended the Saturday evening (September 25th) Grand Tasting of the American Wine and Food Festival. It was held on the Universal Studios Old Europe backlot. As I pulled up to the festival, on one of the ubiquitous Universal Studios trams, the aroma of roasting meat was a very appropriate welcome to the evening. Inside the festival, just to my right was Floyd Cardoz and his staff from Tabla, from New York City, grilling lobsters. This was just the beginning of an evening of sensory satisfaction.
Everywhere I turned I saw chefs whose careers have been very important to the advancement of my own cooking skills. I was, in all honesty, humbled. It was such a pleasure to have the opportunity to speak with Chef Paul Prudhomme (left), the man responsible for bringing Cajun cuisine into the national and international spotlight. He spoke to me about the struggles in New Orleans, a region still in recovery from Hurricane Katrina and now the Gulf oil disaster. Chef Prudhomme urged me to come back to New Orleans and talked about how the food is as wonderful as it always has been. He, like so many of his fellow New Orleans cooking brothers and sisters, are working so hard to breathe life back into the city. He knows how to use his celebrity for good and found the time to come to Los Angeles to help out our own charities.
Everyone who participated deserves recognition for their contribution. The food, wine, and other beverages served were all deserving of the $300 ticket price. Not one table served up a sub-par meal. I talked to people who raved about the fried clams from Chef Jasper White and Chef Dean Fearing's fried quail. The raw bar at the Bouchon table was very, very popular. I was a little surprised that Nancy Silverton and Mozza decided to go with corn dogs and frozen bananas dipped in chocolate. The more I thought about it, the more I understood the joke. Yes, this was food more appropriate to the Los Angeles County Fair, but it struck a chord with people. It was fun and the frozen bananas were a welcome treat on a sweltering evening.
I think a lot of chefs made last minute changes to their menus based on the hot weather. Chef Amar Santana from Charlie Palmer Bloomingdale’s South Coast Plaza served a cooling avocado gazpacho and a tequila and lychee juice cocktail, El Lychedor. People loved both. Both Chef Santana and Charlie Palmer worked the table. Fiji Water was a big sponsor of this year's festival and Chef Santana used Fiji in the dishes he presented.
Please check out the complete list of chefs who were there at the
Chef Wolfgang Puck was wearing a smile on his faceas he worked the crowd and talked with his friends from the culinaryworld. It was great to watch everyone, including the chefs, (ThomasKeller lobbing beach balls!) having fun. I know setting up and workingin the heat must have exhausted everyone before ticket holders even gotinto their cars to drive to the festival.












