May 17, 2012

Amerigo Restaurant in Cool Springs Offering 18 Wines for $18

Both the Amerigo restaurants in Cool Springs and West End are offering 18 different bottles of wine for $18 each in celebration of their eighteenth year of business in Middle Tennessee. 

Here is the story as reported Chris Chamberlain with the Nashville Scene:

The Wandering Wino-Vespucci Edition

With a name like “The Wandering Wino,” as you’d expect, I drink a lot of wine. Which means I buy a lot of wine from a lot of different wine shoppes. But of course, you know you’re my favorite.

That also means I’m on a lot of email lists, which I encourage you to sign up for with your preferred grape monger. I’ll do my best to distill (heh) them into a more palatable (heh, heh) form for you as a continuing part of this weekly missive.

But first, a restaurant deal that you might want to check out. To celebrate their 18th year in Middle Tennessee, Amerigo is offering full bottles of 18 of their wine offerings at $18.00. This offer is valid at both the West End and Cool Springs locations of Amerigo. Keeping in mind that this price includes the mandatory 24.25% state and local tax, these bottles are at close to retail pricing.

Nationally, many restaurants are experimenting with “wine shoppe pricing” to attract diners during these trying times. Amerigo’s offering includes several nice Tuscan reds as well as a Baroncini Vernaccia di San Gimignano that would go nicely with any of their seafood or chicken pasta entrées. California is also well represented on the 18 for $18 list if you’re worried about tongue-tying Italian appellations.

Fully embracing the new media trend, Amerigo’s West End location has jumped on the FaceBook and Twitter bandwagon. Friend or follow them at @amerigowestend or on that Bookfulla Faces for daily specials and wine tasting announcements. I’m holding out to try their Hot Chicken Pasta Wednesday special some time soon.”

San Rafael Band at Wild Ginger Tonight!

There is a great opportunity to see live music this evening in Cool Springs.  Hands down there is no better choice of events in Cool Springs tonight.  Did I mention there there is no cover and its FREE?  Order a drink or some food to be polite but enjoy the outstanding performance gratis.  The CoolSprings.com pick for tonight is:

San Rafael Trio: 6:30pm at Wild Ginger Restaurant

101 Market Exchange Ct. ( Off Bakers Bridge across from Hyatt)

Franklin, TN 37067

615-778-0081

I have seen the San Rafael Band several times and they are definitely worth venturing out.  Wild Ginger is one of the newer Cool Springs restaurants in the area, offering Asian fusion style cuisine and sushi.  Here is a description and history of the San Rafael Band from their Myspace page:

“Rafael Vasquez was born in San Antonio, Texas — the heart of the Tejanomusic scene. His childhood was spent in San Antonio and California. During his twenties Vasquez performed throughout the Southwest with Little Joe y la Familia, the first Tejanoband to sign witha major label and the first to win a Grammy. He also played with Sunny Ozuna and the Sunliners, another major Tejanoact, and with Augustin Ramírez, who was inducted into the Tejano Hall of Fame in 1997.

Since 1981 Rafael Vasquez has lived in Nashville where he performs regularly withhis band, the San Rafael Band, and his trio, the San Rafael Trio. Vasquez is a talented songwriter, vocalist, and guitarist who is comfortable with a variety of instruments and styles ranging from conjunto’s bajo sexto to jazz to classical to blues and rock. He is also respected as a bandleader by the local music community. The San Rafael Band has played such local events as Cheekwood’s El Dia de los Muertos, Frist Fridays, the 2003 July 4th Celebration at Riverfront Park, Wine on the River, a Taste of Music City, and the Tennessee State Fair. The Band has opened for Michael McDonald and Kevin Eubanks at the Franklin Jazz Festival and for Los Lobos at the Uptown Mix.

In the last few years Vasquez has begun to work withstudents at Belmont University and in the Metro Nashville Public Schools to share his knowledge of music and Hispanic culture. At Belmont he assisted Professor David Herrera with Música Caliente, the first project of the Belmont’s student record label, AcklenRecords. For his work with that project Vasquez received a plaque of appreciation from the Tennessee Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. He also participated in the first Belmont Latino Street Fair held in April 2005. Recently he demonstrated guitar techniques for students at Glencliff High School.

Fluent in both English and Spanish, Rafael Vasquez is a tremendous asset to the Música de la gente – Music of the People program. His professionalism, excellent musicianship, hands-on experiences with Tejano, conjunto, and norteño music, and involvement in the local Latino community make him invaluable.”

Wine & Tapas Tasting at Criallo’s Aug 3

Criallo’s Bistro & Bar, a fine dining Cool Springs restaurant located at 1935 Mallory Lane Franklin TN 37067, is holding a wine and tapas tasting next week.  Details are as follows:

Monday, August 3 at 6:30 pm

$15 per person
Reservations Required – Limited Seating

For reservations or questions, please call 615.771.0101
or email reservation request to: events@criallos.com
Confirmations will be sent via email prior to the event.

Featuring These Italian Wines:

Caposaldo Pinot Grigio with Ceviche
Pighin Pinot Grigio with Prosciotto Wrapped Cantaloupe
Spalletti Chianti with Rissoto Tomato Croquettes
Michele Chiarlo Barbera D’ Asti with Herb Marinated Filet with Sherry Sauce

Taste of Cool Springs at Galleria

Here is the event as described by Taste of Cool Springs:

For one night only, the area’s best chefs unite to raise money for United Way of Williamson County and its partner agencies. The event features samplings of favorite creations from restaurants, caterers and hotels. Ticketholders will meet chefs, sip wine, sample foods and enjoy musical entertainment as they stroll from station to station.
Taste of Cool Springs is brought to you by the Brentwood Cool Springs Chamber of Commerce and Cool Springs Galleria.

Proceeds from this event support programs that are creating opportunities for a better life for all in Williamson County. We all win when a child succeeds in school, when families are financially stable and when people have good health.
Here is the menu provided by participating Cool Springs restaurants:

Swanky’s Taco Shop
Sampling their full catering spread and appetizers
GLACEAU vitaminwater
vitaminwater and vitaminwater10 varieties
Texas Roadhouse
Ribs, mash potatoes, mushrooms, steak and iced tea
Noshville Delicatessen Cool Springs
Oven roasted Turkey Breast and Top Round Roast Beef carving station
Old Hickory Steakhouse at Gaylord Opryland
Char-crusted spinalis steak with a charred onion and fingerling potato salad garnished with pickled ramps and ravigote vinaigrette
Wolfgang Puck Express
Smoked Salmon Pizza with dill cream; Butternut Squash Soup; Mediteranean Vegetable Focaccia bites
Criallo’s Bistro & Bar
Chicken Oscar; Beef Kabobs
Wild Ginger
Stuffed Cremini mushrooms with spicy sausage and kimchi; Asian chicken salad en croute; Sushi
Sweet Dreams Cookie Company
Cheesecake truffles; cookies; cupcakes & cake samples; chess squares and more
Bosco’s
Bruschetta Bar (toasted baguettes with 6 different topping choices); Donut Bread Pudding with glaze and powdered sugar; two craft-brewed Beers for sampling
Chef on Call Catering
(A Little Fancy French with Country Cooking) Pastries and Chocolates; Seafood Dips with chips; Gumbo; Chili
Rainforest Cafe
Rasta Pasta-grilled chicken, penne pasta, walnut pesto, broccoli, red peppers and spinach in alfredo; China Island Salad-crisp greens tossed with potato sticks, toasted sesame seeds, rice noodles, scallions and china dressing
Mellow Mushroom
Pizza, Pizza & Pizza!
Puffy Muffin Inc.
Assorted pastries & chocolates; catering appetizers and other selections from the menu
108 Grille
Beef on Weck; Homemade Chips and Garbage Plate (specialty upstate NY dishes)
Corky’s BBQ
Ribs; Cucumber Salad; Smoked Turkey; Brownies
Nick of Thyme Catering
Dippity-Doo-Da-Day–an assortment of appealing appetizer dips for your party
Lorraine’s at Franklin Marriott-Cool Springs
Our Own Sweet Pea TN Pulled Pork Soup; Blackened Shrimp with mango sauce and cilantro ice cream; Traditional Bread Pudding with Jack Daniels raisin/cranberry sauce
Sperry’s
Selections to be announced
Brothers’ Pizza Co.
Pizza-NY style, hand-tossed; Homemade Lasagna; Meatballs
Gigis Cupcakes
Mini cupcakes
Blue Coast Burrito
Burrito bites; Salsa and Chips
Whole Foods Market-Franklin
Selections from our Prepared Foods, Chef’s Value Meals and Catering Specialties
Golden Corral Buffet & Grill
Selections to be determined
Qdoba Mexican Grill
Naked chicken queso burritos–Cilantro lime rice, black beans, marinated grilled chicken, warm three-sheese queso, fresh hand-made pico de gallo and shredded cheese
Buca di Beppo
Shell Pasta with meat sauce; additional pastas; Tiramisu
Merveilleux Confections
Wonderffuls–a cross between a truffle and the best piece of cake you’ve ever tasted
Arrington Vineyards
AV Award Winning wines
Romano’s Macaroni Grill
Carmela’s Chicken Rigatoni–grilled chicken, mushrooms, caramelized onions, fresh basil and Parmesan cheese tossed with imported rigatoni pasta and creamy Marsala wine sauce; Vodka Rustica–Penne pasta with grilled chicken and smoked prosciutto in a zesty tomato-cream sauce made with SKYY Vodka. Topped with Parmesan cheese and baked until golden.
Krispy Kreme Doughnuts
Mini doughnuts
Panera Bread
Healthy Fruit Smoothies; Broccoli Cheddar Soup in mini bread bowls; assorted mini Pastries and Cookies
Kroger Marketplace Bistro
A variety of catering selections for all occasions
Smoothie King
Cool, thick and creamy Smoothies blended with real fruit, natural juices and our revolutionary enhancers

New Restaurant Swanky’s Taco Shop

A new Tex-Mex restaurant called Swanky’s Taco Shop has opened in the Meridian Boyle development in Cool Springs.  Here is the story as reported by Carrington Fox with the Nashville Scene:

“These days, with the expansion of the greater Nashville dining landscape, culinary nomenclature can get a little murky. Take Eastern food, for example. Is that Euro-Asian cuisine or dinner on the other side of the Cumberland? Or south-of-the-border fare. Is that a fiesta below the Rio Grande, or lunch across the Davidson-Williamson county line?

The answer to the latter question is “both,” if you’re referring to Swanky’s Taco Shop, the sleek Tex-Mex eatery in the Meridian complex in Cool Springs. The newest restaurant to set up shop in the commercial enclave alongside Noshville, Boscos and Nucci’s Italian Ice & Gelato, Swanky’s is the project of Mississippi resident Matthew Wilson, who launched the original Swanky’s in his hometown of Memphis. His longtime friend Clay Maddox and former Memphis employee Dustin Jones oversee the Cool Springs store, which looks like what might result if someone said, “Here’s a Baja Burrito, a San Antonio Taco Co. and a blank check. Go for it.”

That’s not to say that Swanky’s is a derivative of either of the Nashville Tex-Mex landmarks. It’s just that the concept shares some of the best traits of both of those places and delivers them in a package—including an interior design scheme of oversized drum shades suspended from the ceiling and an au courant color scheme of lime green and paprika orange—that is sort of, well, swanky.

Upon entering the ground-floor space of the nondescript office-park building, we were immediately struck by the vibrant activity inside the restaurant. Who knew there were so many people looking for tacos, burritos and chimichangas in Cool Springs?

We merged to the right side of the large room and queued up to place our order. The menu is a little confounding at first, especially if you mistakenly pick up the catering brochure. But once you get the right list, you’re looking at a matrix of burritos, tacos, salads and “bowls,” which Jones describes as “burritos without the tortilla or salads without the lettuce.”

Match your vehicle with a filling—chicken, pulled pork, steak, barbacoa, veggie or ground sirloin—then start down the familiar assembly line, where you point to an array of fresh toppings, including guacamole, black beans, pinto beans, sauces of three levels of heat, corn, salsa, queso and pico de gallo, among other fresh accoutrements. Your meal gets prepared before your eyes, and you carry it away to a table or booth.

Alternatively, you can venture into the menu section of specials from the grill, which get made back in the kitchen and delivered to your table. A basket of house-fried tortilla triangles dusted with a smoky red spice blend of Spanish paprika makes for a worthy nosh as you wait for your food, but the tiny dish of deep-red salsa is a little miserly.

In our ongoing quest for the perfect fish taco, we found Swanky’s version to have several particularly laudable features, including a roasted garlic-cilantro cream, stretchy flour tortillas and, most notably, flaky and buttery planks of tilapia that could stand as an entree in their own right, outside the colorful and fresh wraps.

The $8.99 trio of fish tacos arrived with a side of cilantro-lime rice and a gorgeous bed of julienned and grilled vegetables, including yellow squash, zucchini, snow peas and red bell pepper. If a signature item emerges from Swanky’s menu, it will likely be this colorful tangle of vegetable strings, which accompanied several items.

The chicken chimichanga was a generous, comforting meal with a soft flour tortilla wrapped around tender meat and gently deep-fried to add a delicate crusty texture. Bathed in creamy (if bland) queso and tomatillo sauce with a smoky undertone, the large meal had enough flavors and textures to avoid being a monolithic roll of starch.

Working our way through the upside-down menu, which lists appetizers on the bottom, we ordered a handful of starters. The large bowl of roasted corn soup—with a brothy texture and a sweet hint of caramel, topped with fresh cilantro, shredded white cheese and crisp tortilla strips—would make an ample meal for just $3.99.

Latin wontons were a playful fusion of Asian and Latin fare, with six thick deep-fried wonton pockets stuffed with spicy chorizo, cheese and roasted garlic-cilantro sauce and served on a bed of lettuce with pico de gallo.

A close cousin of that finger food, the taquitos were a half-dozen soft yellow corn tortillas wrapped around a choice of meat, deep-fried and served with pico, spicy ranch dressing and salsa. The crisp cigarillos dripped dark-red grease, and while we enjoyed one or two of them, we agreed an order of six is best for a group of, say, six.

In our two lunchtime visits, we found reliably solicitous service, if perhaps a little overeager, with servers asking every couple of minutes if we needed a drink refill, dessert or to-go boxes. Our food arrived quickly and efficiently, and was hot and pretty. While Swanky’s has the polish of a well-oiled chain restaurant, it doesn’t seem to have bred all the flavor out of its food yet, as we might have expected of a restaurant aspiring to mass appeal. On the contrary, we found some items to be unusually spicy, in a good way. In particular, the tequila shrimp—served with rice and the colorful vegetable medley—was refreshingly piquant, laced with citrus and a consistent glow of pepper.

On the downside of the aggressive flavor profile, we found the food to be highly salty, a fact reinforced by the cashier who sympathetically joked about “all that sodium” on our plates when we asked for cups of water.

By the time our server delivered dessert, we were too saturated with deep-fried tortillas to make a dent in the deep-fried tortilla stuffed with cheesecake and served with strawberries and chocolate drizzle.

As Tex-Mex goes, Swanky’s puts on a fresh, flavorful spread that’s a cut above many similar concepts in terms of creativity and environment. With a full bar and attentive table service after you order at the counter, the restaurant offers a more refined atmosphere than many others of its casual burrito-bearing ilk. If the lunch crowds on our visits were fair indicators, Swanky’s has identified a formula that appeals broadly to the surrounding office crowd and residents of nearby subdivisions, some of whom were stopping in for takeout.

For now, Swanky’s operates just two stores—in Cool Springs and Memphis—but the team is hoping to have a half-dozen taco shops, including a Nashville location, in the next two years. If the team can fine-tune its flavors and maintain the attention to detail, Swanky’s could be a very popular arrival north of the border.”

Noshville Added to Cool Springs Restaurants

The Noshville Deli restaurant opened in Cool Springs this week addding to the already wide variety of food choices available in Franklin TN.  Noshville is located within the Meridian Boyle Development in Cool Springs.  Here is the story reported by The Nashville Business Journal:

Noshville deli opens in Cool Springs, airport location to open soon

Noshville New York-style delicatessen has opened its new location in Cool Springs at 1000 Meridian Boulevard.

It’s the third Noshville Delicatessen in the area.

Owners are moving forward with plans to open a fourth Noshville location at Nashville International Airport, expected to open later this month.

“We are very excited to be in Cool Springs where we can introduce more people to Noshville,” said Tom Loventhal, co-owner.

Noshville in Cool Springs operates seven days a week for breakfast and lunch. Hours are Monday through Friday, 6:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from 7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

Melissa Hall, most recently the general manager at Noshville in Green Hills, has been named the general manager for the Cool Springs location.

The original Noshville at 1918 Broadway in Nashville opened in December 1996.”