Andrew Harper's Spring Social

April 19, 2012
Commodore Perry Estate
Austin, Texas

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Andrew Harper members and travel enthusiasts alike gathered to celebrate the onset of spring, including the launch of Andrew Harper’s Paris app, with a special evening at the Commodore Perry Estate in Austin, Texas. More than 150 guests enjoyed lively conversation with Andrew Harper travel consultants and partners, wine tastings with winemaker Luc Morlet and wine concierge Hal Oates of Porthos, competitive silent auction bidding, and more. Guests sipped signature cocktails courtesy of Paula’s Texas Orange, Dripping Springs Vodka and Treaty Oak Rum, and dined on delicious bites from 34th Street Café. Lexus of Austin proudly displayed its amazing new LFA and GS vehicles for guests to admire as they arrived.

Enjoy a few of the event highlights by exploring the links below:

Notable April Events

Historic Garden Week

Historic Garden Week, Virginia

April 8: Numerous cities around the world celebrate Easter in grand style, particularly in predominantly Catholic countries. In San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, two weeks of festivities climax with the “Firing of the Judases,” when giant effigies of various unpopular historical personalities, public figures and Judas himself are summarily exploded in a hail of firecrackers. Florence, Italy, also celebrates with pyrotechnics, shooting the sacred dove-shaped Colombina rocket out the front doors of the Duomo into the piazza, igniting the Carro, a giant, fireworks-laden wooden cart. Antigua, Guatemala — a gorgeous colonial city any day of the year — is at its loveliest on Easter, when the streets are carpeted with intricate designs made from flower petals and colored sawdust.

April 11-15: Jazz musicians from around the world converge on Christchurch for the annual New Zealand International Jazz & Blues Festival. Canceled in 2011 because of the earthquake, the festival this year promises to be particularly memorable, with performances by James Morrison, Klaus Doldinger and local singer/songwriter Annie Crummer.

April 14: Inhabitants of the Greek island of Chios ensure that Greek Orthodox Easter arrives with a bang. Each year during Rouketopolemos, rival parishes in the otherwise idyllic town of Vrontados engage in a “rocket war,” firing some 60,000 rockets at each other’s churches. Priests attempt to hold services during the noisy barrage, but the most spectacular (and safest) views are to be had from the hill overlooking town.

April 15: Soak up some small-town California charm along with world-class guacamole at the Fallbrook Avocado Festival, an easy drive from Harper-recommended hotels in La Jolla, Rancho Santa Fe and Laguna Beach. In addition to strolling among the 300-some food, craft and art vendors, festival attendees can enjoy cooking demonstrations, performances and quirky competitions such as the “Avocado 500,” a race of model cars constructed primarily from this surprisingly versatile fruit.

April 19-22: Held in the soaring National Building Museum, the 30th annual Smithsonian Craft Show assembles a juried collection of some of America’s finest handiwork, ranging from textiles, leather and jewelry to woodwork, ceramics and glass. All proceeds benefit the Smithsonian.

April 21-28: The rolling, vineyard-clad countryside of Virginia bursts with spring flowers during the annual Historic Garden Week. Arguably America’s most underappreciated wine region, Virginia’s Albemarle County is home to two Harper-recommended resorts, Jefferson’s Monticello Estate and several world-class wineries. The finest gardens in this county open their gates to the public on April 22 and 23.

April 23 – May 3: One of Asia’s great culinary destinations, Singapore brings together an array of Michelin-starred chefs for the annual World Gourmet Summit. In addition to various industry workshops, top restaurants in the city host master classes and wine dinners available to any gastronome.

April 26 – May 1: In Paris’s Place de la Bastille, where the infamous prison once stood, more than 500 artists display their works during the Grand Marché d’Art Contemporain. Here, collectors can purchase cutting-edge artworks directly from the artists, with no galleries marking up the prices.

April 28: Denizens of Munich stay up late for the Long Night of Music, when more than 400 concerts, cabarets and dance performances take place in 120 venues around this charming city. One €15 ticket allows access to all the events, as well as a shuttle bus running among key locations.

Berliners get in on the fun with their own Long Night of Opera and Theater, encompassing some 150 performances in 56 venues, including a program of children’s theater productions. As in Munich, one ticket of €15 permits entry into all the plays, operas and cabarets.

Leap Day Savings at Luxury Hotels

One of the few quadrennials in addition to the World Cup, the Summer and Winter Olympics and presidential elections is leap year, in which February has 29 instead of the usual 28 days.

The reason for this extra 24 hours?  Despite what we have been led to believe, the Earth actually takes a little over 365 days to orbit the sun each year, leaving us with around a quarter-day error each calendar year. To make up for this, and to realign the Gregorian calendar with our seasons, an extra day is added every four years.

Arguably, when we aren’t inundated with events every year, they are more enjoyable.  Take these specials from our recommended hotels — offering the unique opportunity to celebrate leap day with incredible savings.

Trump Hotel Collection

The Andrew Harper-recommended Trump Hotel Collection properties in Chicago and Panama are offering 29% off all suites booked on February 29, 2012, for stays between March 1 and April 30, 2012.

Tasteful, contemporary 339-room hotel occupying first 28 floors of a soaring 92-floor stainless-steel-and-glass tower. Spacious rooms with 10-foot floor-to-ceiling windows afford spectacular city views. – AH

 

Opus Hotel in Vancouver

The recommended Opus Hotel in Vancouver is extending a leap year special that offers a room rate of 29 cents with stays of three nights or longer.

Fashionable 96-room boutique hotel in the exuberant Yaletown area. The rooms are decorated in vibrant colors, with dark wood furniture and modern art. Chic bar, plus new contemporary restaurant, One Hundred Nights. – AH

 

Four Seasons St. Louis

Four Seasons St. Louis is encouraging guests to “take the leap” today only, with $29 off spa treatments of $100 or more in celebration of leap year.

New 200-room hotel near the riverfront, minutes from the central business district. Spacious rooms feature king beds or two double beds, writing desks, 42-inch plasma-screen TVs and views of the Gateway Arch and the Mississippi River. Marble baths include soaking tubs and separate rainfall showers. – AH

Where will you be spending your extra 24 hours this year? Let us know in the comments section, below.

Austin Food & Wine Festival


The Austin Food & Wine Festival recently announced a panel of celebrity chefs and restaurateurs from around the country, establishing itself as one of the most prominent events for foodies and gourmands in the area.

Like the Aspen Food & Wine Classic, the collaboration between Food & Wine magazine and C3 Presents (the company behind Austin City Limits Music Festival) features a schedule of top-tier chefs and James Beard Foundation Award winners and nominees, and promises to draw a host of food and wine aficionados to the festival.

The event will be held April 27-29, 2012, and will take place primarily at downtown Austin’s Republic Square Park and Auditorium Shores on Lady Bird Lake.

VIP tickets are $850 and include an exclusive Friday evening VIP kickoff event with singer Lucinda Williams, reserved access to cooking demos and wine seminars, VIP lounge access, preferred seating and parking, private tastings and a Celebrity Chef VIP event.

Top names include Masaharu Morimoto, Gail Simmons, Andrew Zimmern, Marcus Samuelsson and Jonathan Waxman, who are all holding cooking workshops or teaching seminars throughout the weekend.

A nationally recognized panel of Texas chefs and restaurateurs will be on hand, including Tyson Cole, owner/chef of Uchi and Uchiko in Austin and Tim Love, Iron Chef champion and owner/chef of The Lonesome Dove Western Bistro and The Love Shack in Fort Worth.  Other local names include David Bull (Congress), Paul Qui (Uchiko, Top Chef), Bryce Gilmore (Barley Swine), Rene Ortiz (La Condesa) and Aaron Franklin (Franklin BBQ).

Featuring a schedule of hands-on demos and tastings, the festival offers attendees the chance to participate in everything from building a fire and grilling with Tim Love, to filleting the perfect fish for sushi rolls with Tyson Cole.  There are also numerous events scheduled to taste wines from around the world, including some of the Lone Star State’s own varietals.

If you plan to visit Austin for the weekend, The Driskill and Four Seasons Austin, both Harper-recommended, are also Austin Food & Wine Festival partner hotels.

For more information regarding the event, visit the Austin Food & Wine Festival website.

Notable December Events

Now through December 24: Ambling through a festive Christmas market while sipping a mug of piping hot Glühwein is one of the great joys of the season. Typically set up in a town’s main square in front of the cathedral, rows of charming wooden stalls overflow with handmade ornaments, local crafts and indulgent holiday treats. Nürnberg’s legendary Christkindlesmarkt is the largest (and most crowded), but the markets in Dresden, Munich, Berlin and numerous other German cities are just as delightful. You can also visit beautiful markets in France’s Alsace region, Vienna, Prague, Budapest, Tallinn, Kraków, Copenhagen and even Chicago. A wonderland, each and every one.

December 2-3: Oenophiles descend on Paris’ Carrousel du Louvre for Le Grand Tasting, where it’s possible to sample wines from more than 100 French châteaux. After enjoying some tastings, have a wander among the thousands of Christmas trees decorating the city’s boulevards and squares.

December 3-11: Milan celebrates all things artisanal at L’Artigiano in Fiera, a giant free trade fair attended by craftspeople from all over the world. Products for sale include handmade crafts, jewelry, furniture, food, wine, clothing and accessories.

December 5-11: Buenos Aires hosts the annual Festival Cambalache, an array of performances and workshops focusing on tango in music, theater and film. Events take place around the city, most notably in the recently refurbished Centenario Park.

December 7: To purge their homes of evil, many Guatemalans take out unwanted items and set them ablaze during La Quema del Diablo (The Burning of the Devil). The elegant colonial city of Antigua celebrates more literally, burning a giant fireworks-stuffed effigy of the devil.

December 8-23 and Dec. 26-30: A lack of snow doesn’t prevent San Diego from getting into the holiday spirit. More than 100,000 twinkling lights adorn the San Diego Botanic Gardens during the annual Garden of Lights. Visitors can shop for holiday-themed crafts, take a wagon ride, sip some mulled wine in the Poinsettia Garden, and, of course, sit on Santa’s lap. Go between 6 and 8 p.m. for live music.

December 10: Marina del Rey, California, hosts its annual Holiday Boat Parade. Fireworks at 5:55 p.m. sharp kick off the event, followed by a procession of elaborately decorated yachts.

December 23: At Christmastime in Oaxaca, Mexico, the radish is king. On the Night of the Radishes, carvers compete to win prizes for the best radish sculptures. Tableaux of these surprisingly intricate works of edible art fill Oaxaca’s central square, along with food vendors, musicians and dancers. Stay in town for a parade of floats on the 24th and a fireworks display on the 25th.

December 31: People the world over celebrate New Year’s Eve in countless ways, from mind-blowing fireworks displays over Sydney Harbour to grandly formal balls in Vienna and St. Petersburg. For something even more romantic, consider ringing in 2012 in Venice’s Piazza San Marco, where thousands of people are encouraged to kiss their partners as fireworks sparkle over the historic domes and bell towers.

Notable November Events

Loi Krathong Festival, Chiang Mai

 

October 27 – April 2: New York’s Neue Galerie, one of the city’s finest small museums, marks its 10th anniversary this month with a special exhibition of works from the collection of the museum’s founder, Ronald S. Lauder. Although the Neue Galerie focuses on Austrian and German art, this exhibition will display a wide array of fascinating works from Lauder’s collection, ranging from a third-century Celtic belt buckle to Matisse and Cézanne paintings. Viennese-style torte in the museum’s Café Sabarsky is a must.

October 31 – November 9: Tourists and locals flock to the edge of the Thar Desert (two and a half hours outside Jaipur) for the annual Pushkar Camel Fair. The lively camel races tend to be the most popular events, but visitors can also take hot air balloon rides and camel treks into the desert.

November 3-5: On one of California’s most beautiful stretches of coastline, the Big Sur Food & Wine Festival organizes wine tastings, winemaker dinners, cooking classes, beer tastings and even “hiking with stemware” featuring the wines of Byron Kosuge.

November 10: Loi Krathong, the “Festival of Light,” is celebrated annually throughout Thailand with fireworks and elaborately decorated floating candles. Sukhothai offers perhaps the most traditional celebration, with hundreds of candles illuminating a pond in the ancient city’s Historical Park, but Chiang Mai surely has the most spectacular event. Here, thousands of people launch illuminated paper lanterns into the sky, which gracefully float about like so many glowing jellyfish. Few events can rival this festival’s dreamlike beauty.

November 10-14: Auto enthusiasts roll into the United Arab Emirates for the biennial Dubai International Motor Show. Major car companies such as Bugatti, Lotus, Lamborghini, Aston Martin, Maserati and Kia unveil new models and concept cars during this glittering five-day event.

November 12-13: It’s spring in Australia, and the Macedon Ranges wine region (an hour north of Melbourne) celebrates with the Budburst Wine & Food Festival. The purchase of a tasting glass allows festivalgoers to taste wines at all of the participating wineries. Local restaurants host winemaker dinners and special degustation menus.

November 16: The release of this year’s Beaujolais Nouveau is heralded with much fanfare in Beaujeu, 45 minutes from the Château de Bagnols. After an evening of festivities and a torchlight parade, giant barrels of the wine are tapped at midnight, accompanied by fireworks.

 

Various Dates: Toward the end of November, Christmas markets across Europe start to welcome merrymakers with mulled wine, marzipan pigs and other seasonal treats. These festive, family-friendly outdoor markets are a shopper’s delight, with plenty of ornaments, toys and local crafts for sale. Chicago also hosts a surprisingly authentic Christmas market from Thanksgiving weekend to December 23.

Notable October Events: Berlin Festival of Lights, Chablis Wine Festival and More

 

Berlin Cathedral during the Festival of Lights by T. Schumann

October 6: The Navratri Festival in India culminates with Dussehra, marking the end of the battle between Rama and Ravana. In the evening, archers shoot flaming arrows at fireworks-filled effigies of Ravana and his evil brothers, which ignite and explode in a most spectacular fashion.

October 8: Santa Barbara celebrates its maritime heritage with the annual Harbor and Seafood Festival. Festival goers can feast on lobster, crab, barbequed tuna and other fresh, local seafood, and enjoy activities such as free cooking demonstrations and boat rides.

October 9: Siena has the most famous Palio in Italy, but the hamlet of Balconevisi boasts the quirkiest. Instead of racing horses, residents of the town’s four contrade (districts) pit goose against goose in the Palio del Papero. A street market with crafts and local delicacies keeps spectators entertained until the race begins.

October 12-23: Perhaps the best time to visit Berlin, Germany, is during the annual Festival of Lights (pictured above), when monuments, squares and boulevards all over the city are bathed in wild colors. It’s possible to enjoy the display on foot, of course, but you can also join an organized “Lightseeing” tour by bicycle, boat or bus. Or for something more private, reserve your own horse-drawn carriage or limousine. The “Lichterglanz” at the rococo Sanssouci Palace on October 15 is sure to be particularly memorable, with costumed performers and, of course, specially lit galleries.

October 14-16: Three delightful pursuits come together in Virginia’s Hot Air Balloon, Wine and Music Festival, held in the Shenandoah Valley near Millbrook. Hot air balloons launch at both dawn and dusk, ensuring that one can enjoy sampling the local wines and microbrews at a civilized hour.

October 16: In honor of the goddess Draupadi, Hindu devotees walk barefoot across a bed of hot coals during the Theemidhi Festival at Singapore’s Sri Mariamman Temple. Though white-hot, the four-meter long pile of embers will (in theory) not burn the pure.

October 22: Bonfires and huge torches light up Kurama, a small town near Kyoto, during the Kurama-no-Hi-Matsuri (Fire Festival). Nine-foot-tall “watch fires” blaze at strategic points, and men clad in traditional thongs carry huge pine torches — some more than 15 feet long — through the streets.

October 22-23: Surrounded by rolling hills swathed in picturesque vineyards, the Burgundian town of Chablis shows off its famous whites during the annual Chablis Wine Festival. Purchase a glass for a small fee, and wander from stall to stall sampling a wide variety of these wonderfully crisp, minerally wines.

October 30: Numerous cities host costume parades for Halloween, but surely none does it better than New Orleans. The Krewe of Halloween Parade features elaborately creepy floats and plenty of over-the-top costumes winding their way through the atmospheric decay of the French Quarter. The Monster Bash costume ball follows.

The Austin City Limits Music Festival VIP Experience

 

A sundae from Foreign & Domestic


Each year, thousands of festivalgoers head to Zilker park in Austin, Texas to experience Austin City Limits Music Festival (ACL) for three days of live music, food, and inevitably, crowds. Some of the featured performers this year included Stevie Wonder, Randy Newman and Alison Krauss along with big-name acts like Coldplay and Kanye West.

One way to mitigate some of the hassle is to attend the festival with a VIP pass.  This year, 3-day VIP passes sold for $850 on the ACL website with unlimited VIP Grove access, which included:

    • Gourmet Happy Hour daily with guest chef tastings
    • Complimentary catered food servings throughout the day
    • Complimentary beer, wine, water and specialty drinks
    • Mini spa treatments from Austin’s Viva Day Spa
    • Shade and relaxed seating in the VIP Grove (no stage seating/viewing)
    • Air conditioned restrooms
    • VIP Parking Pass (with purchase of four VIP passes)

We attended the festival as VIPs this year. Some thoughts and observations:

The VIP Grove is an area just to the side of the main entrance populated with large oaks, creating shady patches to spread out a blanket and relax. The shade alone is worth the extra money.  Shady areas should be plentiful in parks, but this is Texas, and shade is prime real estate.  Some of the only shaded areas in the entire venue are carefully roped off for those with VIP, media or artist wristbands. And when the sun is beating down and the regular bathroom line is 10-12 people deep, VIPs have direct access to their own air-conditioned bathrooms.

The main highlight of the VIP Grove is the happy hour.  Running from 3:30- 5:30 PM, gourmet Austin restaurants set up booths that serve bite sized treats adapted from their usual menus.  This year, highlights included a delectable lime and coconut sundae from Foreign & Domestic and chilled cucumber gazpacho and cold octopus salad from El Arbol.  Also of note was a juicy pulled pork sandwich doled out by the executive chef from Congress/ Second Bar & Kitchen. The Grove also features a number of thoughtfully placed Adirondack chairs in which to enjoy the excellent food and drink.

One complaint: the “complimentary” food and refreshments can only be enjoyed in the Grove.  This makes it needlessly difficult to coordinate with large groups who have regular passes. Also, the happy hours never extended until the advertised 5:30 pm hour because they simply ran out of food.

Another minor gripe:  VIP status usually goes hand in hand with exclusivity; however at ACL this is not exactly the case.  The Grove is primarily full of families and children who seem to be benefiting from corporate sponsorship perks.  The real exclusivity is in the Media and Artists Groves (and the coveted “friends of C3” badge will get you behind just about every door or stage in the venue).

If you have a relaxed schedule (where the food and drink are as important as the music), and you are looking for creature comforts amongst heat, crowds and lines, then we certainly suggest the ACL VIP pass. Next year’s festival takes place the weekend of October 12-14. For sit-down evening performances, we highly recommend a visit to the new Austin City Limits Live at the Moody Theater in Austin’s chic 2nd Street District. We have a number of recommended properties in Austin, including The Driskill and the Hotel Saint Cecilia.

 

 

Notable September Events: New Yorker Festival, Vintage Fashion Expo, La Mercè Festival

Revelers at Barcelona's La Mercè Festival

 

Chile’s Atacama Desert has received 0.13 inches of rain and snow so far this year. It sounds insignificant, but this incredibly dry region normally accumulates less than one-sixth of that amount annually. Botanists expect these unusually wet conditions to awaken long-dormant wildflower seeds, leading to a profusion of blossoms peaking in September.

September 1: Starting today, Cathay Pacific will offer daily nonstop flights between Chicago and Hong Kong. Because Cathay Pacific is a member of the oneWorld Alliance, airline miles for this journey can be accrued in an AAadvantage account.

September 6-7: Florence glows with hundreds of beautiful paper lanterns during the Festa della Rificolona. Various organic producers of Italy host a huge food fair both days of the festival, which culminates Wednesday evening with a lantern procession from the Piazza Santa Croce to the Piazza Santissima Annunziata. The street party goes on well into the evening.

September 17-18: Connoisseurs of fine vintage clothing converge on San Francisco’s Concourse Exhibition Center for the Vintage Fashion Expo. Browse and purchase designer fashions dating from any time between 1850 and 1980.

September 22-25: Barcelona celebrates its patron saint during the Festival of La Mercè (the Virgin of Mercy) with concerts, dancing, markets and street performances. Perhaps most memorable are the Castellers, who build frighteningly tall human towers, and the Correfoc, a wild procession of giant sparkler-breathing dragons, firecracker-wielding groups dressed as devils and various other costumed revelers.

September 30 – October 2: The New Yorker Festival hosts a wide range of panels and performances attended by an array of celebrities and performers. Last year’s festival, sponsored by the celebrated New Yorker magazine, included events with Cynthia Nixon, Aaron Sorkin, Malcolm Gladwell and Yo-Yo Ma. The 2011 festival schedule will be released on September 5.

Notable August Events

U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds, Chicago Air & Water Show Headliners

August 6-7: During the Livarot Cheese Fair, this town in Normandy, France, celebrates one of France’s greatest contributions to gastronomy. Festival-goers can of course sample numerous cheeses and other gourmet products, but this event is hardly the sole preserve of stuffy gourmands. The “Pig Call” and “Biggest Livarot Eater” competitions always draw delighted crowds.

August 16: Kyoto’s Obon festival culminates with Gozan no Okuribi, the lighting of five immense bonfires on the surrounding mountains. Set in the shapes of Chinese characters and other motifs, these massive blazes signify the souls of deceased ancestors returning to the spirit world. Just one of these fiery characters, all easily visible from the city center, measures 260 feet wide and 525 feet long.

August 16-30: Argentina’s capital heats up the winter with the annual Buenos Aires Tango Festival. Dancers and musicians perform all over the city — in the street, in neighborhood milongas and in grand theaters. The festival culminates with the competitive Dance World Cup.

August 19-28: Foodies have recently turned their attention to Copenhagen, where Noma has topped Restaurant Magazine’s list of The World’s 50 Best Restaurants for two years in a row. Scandinavian cuisine has undergone a revolution, and nowhere is this more apparent than at Copenhagen Cooking. This 10-day gourmet food festival features events such as day cruises dedicated to the cuisine of Bornholm Island, dinners in private homes, “secret” multicourse meals under a bridge and ancient Roman-themed feasts.

August 20-21: The Chicago Air & Water Show draws up to 2 million visitors each year, with two days of dramatic flight and watercraft demonstrations, including performances by the Blue Angels. Most spectators gather on North Avenue Beach, but the crowd-averse watch from the private tent of the Bravo Zulu Lounge ($90 per person). You should also be able to see some of the action from the beautiful terrace of The Peninsula, a private balcony at the Elysian or a lakeview accommodation at the Four Seasons, though the views from these venues are more limited.

August 21: Oenophiles can sample exciting wines from 300 small, family-owned wineries at a San Francisco tasting organized by the Family Winemakers of California. Although mostly limited to the wine trade, the event opens to the public from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. on the 21st. This tasting presents an opportunity to try not only top California Cabernet and Chardonnay, but also more unusual varietals such as Touriga Nacional, Lagrein, Tannat and Pinotage.

August 27 – September 5: Budapest celebrates its Jewish heritage during the annual Jewish Summer Festival. The ornate Doháhny Street Synagogue, the second-largest in the world, serves as the venue for the most popular performances. The Metropolitan Opera Brass kicks off the festival, followed by groups such as the Kálmán Balogh Gipsy Cimbal Band and the Budapest Klezmer Band. Film screenings, theater performances and a craft market round out the festivities.