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Visits
and Visitors
It is almost always possible for
visiting members to attend Triangle Bailliage events and for Triangle Bailliage
members to attend an event elsewhere. Its a great way
to add something special to your
travels while meeting people who share your interests. Locating the events on websites or by direct contact is
easy and all you have to do is ask the Bailli for an
invitation! This page records visitors to Triangle
Bailliage events and attendance by Triangle members at events elsewhere or
visits to Chaine establishments. Triangle members,
please
send
me a note so I can include your visit here.
Chambellan Provincial Miller Performs Induction
Sept 26, 2004
Chambellan Provincial John Miller
and Chargée de Presse Provincial Sandi Miller came
from their home base in Charlotte so John could perform the Induction at Treyburn
that saw four members receive ribbons. John obviously takes his ceremonial
duties seriously because he used the longest sword ever
seen at an Induction. The blade was an Imperial German Artillery Sword of
1913 vintage and was wielded with sufficient skill (and only modest amounts of
champagne) that all inductees kept their ears. Don Davis and Al Swanstrom
were inducted with the rank of Chevalier. Professional Members Sarah
Warden and Adrian Taylor received their ribbons as Professionnel du Vin and
Maître de Table Restaurateur, respectively. Triangle Vice Chargé de Presse
Paul Winter received a Bronze Star of Excellence award for his Gastronome and
website work. The most significant award at the event was the Officier
Commandeur badge awarded to Bailli Mel Levine recognizing his 30 years of Chaine
membership. There are not a lot of these awards currently held and Mel is young
enough that he may someday get to collect an award that doesn't yet exist, the
one for 50 years of membership service.

Chaine on St. Maarten, a Visit by Paul and Tina
Winter Dec 20-27, 2003
St. Maarten is east of Puerto Rico and toward the northern
end of the chain of Caribbean islands. It has both a French and Dutch
side, but nothing that inhibits free passage between the two sides. It has hundreds of restaurants and a
reputation as one of the best places to dine in the Caribbean. It also has
an active Chaine,
Bailliage
des Caraibes, that includes other islands of the Netherlands Antilles such
as Curacao and Bonaire. Their excellent website has all the contact
information one needs to plan a more complete exploration of Chaine
establishments on those islands than our one week visit could permit. We
took the opportunity to dine at two establishments that have hosted Chaine
events. We had a late lunch in Marigot (the main town on the west side of
the French part of the island) at Le Claude Mini Club, looking at Marigot harbor
and Ft. Marigot, where Maître de
Table Claudine Pont and her staff prepared a superb lobster soufflé. We
enjoyed a dinner at
Le Cottage in Grand Case (also on the French side) where the
main street is mostly restaurants that provide a wide range of choices.
The typical French dinner included foie gras and local seafood while our
chosen street side table provided us an arms length view of the local Christmas
parade. Both establishments (and many others on the island) have
excellent, unpretentious wine lists that emphasize French wine. At both,
we selected a red Loire valley wine made from Pinot Noir grapes. These
wines have clean, fruity Pinot Noir flavors and are best drunk young and
chilled; its too bad we rarely see them in the U.S. because they would go very
well with many of our North Carolina summer menus and are excellent values
compared to Pinot Noirs from Burgundy and California.

We also spent two days on nearby
pristine Saba, where gorgeous scenery, arduous hikes up paths into the cloud
forest, and scuba diving are the only tourist pursuits (no sand beaches at all
and only 1400 inhabitants). No Chaine there, just local food and the
homemade local rum concoction, Saba Spice.

Chicago Member Richard Groh Visits DuBose House Event
Sept 28, 2003
The DuBose
House event, Consummate Concomitant Consommés, had
a visitor from the Chicago Bailliage, Chevalier Richard N. Groh. Richard
is retired and has been touring in the southeast, doing the things one doesn't
have time to do when working, including visiting our event. Immediately
prior to coming to our event, he was in Charleston, SC. His Chicago
Bailliage runs a very active schedule that you can see by visiting the
Chicago Bailliage website. Richard reported that he learned about
DuBose House event from this website and used it to contact Mel for an
invitation.

Triangle Members Visit Charlotte Regional
Assemblage Jan 31-Feb2, 2003
Vice Chancelier-Argentier
Barbara Levine, Vice Chargé de Presse Paul Winter and Tina Winter represented
the Triangle Bailliage at the Regional Assemblage in Charlotte, NC on Jan 31 -
Feb 2, 2003. The regional event provided an opportunity to meet national
and regional officers, members of the Charlotte Bailliage, and representatives
from other bailliages in our region. Of course, it also provided an opportunity
to attend a reception, two dinners, a business meeting, a luncheon, and a
Sommelier Competition, the winner of which will
represent our region in the national competition later in the year. The Friday
night reception and
Saturday morning business meeting were held in the historic
Dunhill Hotel on Tryon Street where
out of town visitors stayed. Its location right in downtown allows
convenient walking to many points of interest. Plenty of good wine, with an
emphasis on Burgundy, was poured at the events and our Charlotte hosts
thoughtfully provided a shuttle to take us to and from the events. The
Friday dinner at Bonterra and the
Saturday luncheon at Bijoux
provided ample evidence that gastronomic progress is continuing in Charlotte and
that the energetic Charlotte Bailliage membership, led by Chambellan Provincial
/ Bailli John Miller, is an
active participant.
The Saturday dinner event at the Myers Park Country Club also included an
Induction conducted by Bailli Provincial Karl Kunisch. On Sunday, Triangle
attendees were the guests of Conseiller des Bailliages National Hon. Jack Stewman
and Officier Ann Stewman for brunch at the Charlotte Country Club. Details
of the weekend will be published in a 2-3 page article in Gastronome, including photographs by Paul Winter who assisted Chargée
de Presse Provincial Sandi Miller and L'Ordre Mondial Editor Bill Wortman with
the weekend coverage. The focus of the business meeting was on continued
improvement of our organization. Paul had an opportunity to meet Golden Isles
Vice Conseiller Gastronomique Jim Timmons
who helped make our Triangle Bailliage website possible. Regional and national events are open to all members
to attend as much or as little of the scheduled festivities as they wish - we
had a great time with "old" friends and new friends in Charlotte!
Visit
the Charlotte Bailliage website


Paul
and Tina Winter Visit Maui Nov 30, 2002
We obtained an invitation from Maui
Bailli Mitch Kysar to attend their Induction Dinner at the Maui Prince
Hotel. The theme was "Frozen in Time, A Festive Winter
Occasion". The spectacular event was attended by 86 people and
received lavish attention from the hotel, other host sponsors, and members of
other Hawaii Bailliages. We met many of the Bailliage members who gave us
vacation tips specific to our interests and Maui/ Pacific Isles
officers including Bailli Provincial Robert C. Lee, Jr. who presided at the
Induction. We also met professional
members representing establishments in Hawaii. Those meetings led us to
some great meals in the two weeks we spent on Oahu and Maui at places like
Sansei, A Saigon Café, Alan Wong's, Chef Mavro, L'Uraku, and Roy's.
Gastronome 2003 Volume 2 has a full report on this event that featured a
lavish menu (6 tins of beluga, sevruga and osetra were only part of the opening) with many local
items, entire serving tables made from ice, classical music, framed photographs
of each couple attending as gifts, and after dinner cigars with an
assortment of older vintage Ports served while jazz entertainment was
provided. Thanks to Mitch and his enthusiastic group for making us
welcome at an outstanding event.
Visit the Maui
Bailliage website


A series of recent Chaîne events in Hawaii have honored US military services,
with personnel of all ranks invited as guests. In 2003, a "Salute to the Navy", sponsored by the Honolulu Bailliage, will
be held at the Admiral's Quarters on Ford Island, that was also used to film the
opening dance scenes of the John Wayne film, In Harm's Way. You may
recognize the control tower above from the recent movie, Pearl Harbor. The Missouri, on which the Japanese surrender ended WWII, was recently made a
museum ship and berthed next to the Arizona Memorial on Battleship Row, Ford
Island where direct US involvement in WWII started. The Admiral's Quarters are
just behind Battleship Row, not far from the two palm trees at the extreme right
of the above photo.
Brooks
Firestone Presides at Triangle Induction Nov 17, 2002
Hey, our Bailli Mel Levine must be
"in good" with the big guys! Bailli Délégué Brooks Firestone himself flew
in direct from another event in Arizona to preside at the Triangle Bailliage
Induction Ceremony, arriving just in time. (I only got about 10 phone
calls from Bambi while I was driving Brooks in from the airport!) Much to
the satisfaction of our 16 prospective members (and hopefully with no surprise
to any of the spouses) Brooks found all to be "worthy" and inducted each
in the prescribed manner, using swords flown in from NY headquarters.
Brooks also updated the members on recent international organization
developments. Our Triangle Bailliage special thanks go to Brooks for making his tight schedule
work for our benefit.


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