A SLEEP OVER IN OJAI

Sometimes when spending time in Ojai, I feel as if I’ve stepped into the enchanted valley where Brigadoon was nestled. Ojai Valley is a jewel box filled with gems such as lavender fields, orange and lemon groves, music under the stars and pink moments off the Topa Topa mountains. The people are warm and friendly. The charming town offers fine dining and great shops, all with an artistic flair. But the dazzling, many-faceted diamond amid all these jewels is the Ojai Valley Inn & Spa, an oasis of heavenly beauty and earthly delights.

Recently I shared a birthday with President Obama, and my husband planned a romantic getaway at the Inn. The Inn itself is a stunning reflection of California’s Spanish mission heritage. Our elegant room had a dark wood four-poster covered with lush linens and pillows, a stucco fireplace and luxurious fabrics in yellows and blues. Our large balcony overlooked the Inn’s manicured, 18-hole golf course. A cheese platter with fresh crusty bread and fruit was waiting for us.

After cocktails in the Inn’s pub, we dined under a vine-covered trellis on the terrace of the Inn’s Oak Grill restaurant. Our table faced the Topa Topas and, as we sipped our Cambria chardonnay, we were treated to a fleeting pink moment. For those glorious few seconds, the mountains turned a lovely shade of rose before they subtly turned blue-gray as the sun faded behind the horizon.

Executive chef Jamie West’s menu is comprised of ‘starters’ that are interesting blends of California cuisine and old favorites, from ahi tuna tartar with avocado, crispy wonton and a ginger soy dressing to chilled jumbo shrimp cocktail. His entrees are ‘grill’ favorites with a twist, and range from USDA prime NY steak with mushroom bread pudding, grilled asparagus and a cabernet sauce to oven roasted natural chicken breast with mushroom barley risotto, swiss chard and cider bourbon glaze.

I started with a chilled cantaloupe, mint, pineapple blended soup with lavender infused honey, bits of pineapple and a dollop of crème fraiche. A taste of liquid ‘sherbet’ to tease the palette. My husband chose the farmer’s market salad of greens with Granny Smith apples, candied walnuts, goat cheese, pickled red onions and apple cider vinaigrette. A tangy and fresh combination of tastes and textures.

The sky was dark and the terrace lights glowed, as did the candle on our table when our entrees arrived. Because I had been dreaming of lobster, I chose for my main course the butter-poached Maine lobster tail on a bed of lobster risotto, crisp pork belly and savory cabbage. This was so delicious that lobster and risotto now fill my culinary dreams.

My husband decided to switch his wine choice to a Melville pinot noir when he chose the natural Kurobuto pork loin with a port wine reduction for his entrée. The pork, seared on the grill, came with garlic mashed potatoes, red cabbage and gala apple chutney. When I tasted the dish, I decided I could just pour the port wine sauce in a glass and sip it like, uh, port. Pork Port – the new after dinner ‘aperitif.’

To finish the meal, we shared the crème brulee with that Oak Grill “twist”… a cookie underneath and a bit of cinnamon gelato on top. Delicious.

Back in our room and before crawling into that big four-poster, we curled up on the cushioned bench on our outdoor patio and gazed at the stars. The perfect end to a perfect birthday. Complete with a Brigadoon moon.

ilona

Five Roobis

“My Dinners With Richard & Other Musings”
www.myspace.com/othermusings

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Author:ilona

Hi, I’m Ilona and I love writing about food. Actually, I love writing about nearly anything… I’m one of those few Finnish-Americans not born in a frigid, remote Scandinavian outpost of North Dakota or Wisconsin, but rather the Scandinavian hospital in Brooklyn, New York (though I was raised in Bayside, Queens, Long Island – sadly, a “Finn-less” island) and grew up loving steaks at Peter Luger’s, hot dogs at Nathan’s, burgers at P.J. Clarke’s, Prime Burger or White Castle and stuffed mushrooms at Elaine’s. When work dried up in New York, my husband and I decided to seek our fame and fortune in LA (we’re both tv/film writers – though he produces, as well). One job was as a story/production consultant for A CENTURY OF WOMEN, the 6-hour documentary mini-series that aired on TBS, about the history of American women over the 20th century. Since one of my qualifications was that I’m a woman born in that century, think of all the people I beat out of the job. Besides food and show biz, I love politics and worked as a press liaison for two Democratic National Conventions and ended up being a Deputy Press Secretary in New York for President Carter. Then he lost. However, in the ‘90’s, after moving to LA, I became a speech writer for celebrities on the campaign stump for Clinton-Gore. The rest is history. Well, their history, not mine. Between freelance TV/film work and speech writing, I appear periodically as a guest columnist in newspapers/magazines cross the country (from Teen Beat back ‘in the day’ to the sports section of the NY Daily News). I also finally made use of years of art lessons funded by my mom when I was a kid in Bayside, and became an on-air guest Design Consultant/Decorative Artist on HGTV. Recently, a friend and I started our own home staging business, The HomeDressers. This coincided very nicely with the collapse of the housing market which means I haven’t given up my day job… writing. "My Dinners With Richard & Other Musings" www.myspace.com/othermusings

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