Great selection of fine dining in Destin includes Bijoux Restaurant in Sandestin Miramar Beach
We spent a week 
traveling, visiting the Emerald Coast of the Florida Panhandle getting 
to know the area and evaluating the real estate market and several properties. During 
our stay, we dined at four local legendary restaurants. In Destin (FL)
we dined at Louisiana Lagniappe, Boshamps Seafood and Oyster House, and The Crab Trap, Destin. We also dined at Bijoux in the Sandestin Resort community. The wide range of fine and casual dining options in one of the key reasons we're considering the Destin area for a vacation or vacation home. 
We featured some other wine and dining experiences in recent posts from a trip to the area earlier this month - Kistler Les Noisetiers Sonoma Coast Chardonnay at Emerils Coastal.
https://unwindwine.blogspot.com/2023/04/kistler-les-noisetiers-sonoma-coast.html
Bijoux Restaurant Destin/Miramar Beach
Bijoux is one of Destin’s top award-winning
 restaurants since 2002, offering “coastal cuisine with a New 
Orleans flair.” Bijoux is a full service fine dining restaurant located 
in The Market 
Shops at the entrance of Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort in Miramar 
Beach. Its open for 
dinner seven nights a week which is great since so many restaurants 
close one or two nights a week, most often on Mondays. They feature fresh Gulf seafood, prime 
steaks and an extensive award winning wine list.  
Bijoux has been selected Best of the Emerald Coast from 2009 through 2018 and the Best French Restaurant by Emerald Coast Magazine.
The restaurant is 
tucked away in the back behind another more prominent restaurant at the 
front, so its easy to miss if you're driving by. There is parking in the
 front or in the rear, beyond the resort security access entry gate. 
They
 offer a spectacular imaginative and well selected wine list with a wide
 range of favorites and several ultra-premium reserve selections, as 
well as numerous respectable modest budget selections. Its easy to offer
 great high priced wines. Its difficult to offer great wines at entry 
level or lower tier prices. Of course, most often I am focused on finding the best 
great values with high QPR (Quality Price Ratio) across price points. That is what readers of these pages most often ask about. Bijoux does a great job offering great wines and some good values at all price points. 
While most often I'm challenged to find a choice of more than a couple 
interesting and tempting offerings, Bijoux's wine list offered a dozen 
such labels. Their wines are priced at about or slightly above the 
customary 2x retail. Their wine list was awarded the Wine Spectator Award of Excellence award over the last decade. 
For a starter we had the imaginative and superbly prepared and presented Blackened Brie with Toasted Walnut Bread Pickled Grapes and Local Honey. It was fabulous.
 We also had the Roasted Beet Salad, Baby Arugula, Walnut Bread Croutons, Ruby Red Grapefruit, Whipped Goat Cheese, and Citrus Vinaigrette.
Linda had the Grouper Almandine Toasted Almonds, Crispy Brussels Sprouts with Preserved Lemon Vinaigrette, Creamy Herb Risotto.
For
 our wine selection we had one of our favorite labels, a Right Bank 
Bordeaux Blend that would be an ideal pairing with my steak as well as 
Linda's seafood.  
Spring Valley Vineyard “Uriah” Walla Walla 2015
I featured the Spring Valley Wines in detail in this detailed blogpost Spring Valley 2013 Blends - Uriah vs Frederick, and this particular label in a recent blogpost back in February - Uriah Spring Valley Red Blend 2015.
From that February posting - With a dinner of take-out of one of my favorite
 dishes from local eatery Gia Mia, their Meatballs al Forno, Veal Meatballs with Creamy
 Polenta and Roasted Tomato Sauce, and some artisan cheeses including Raclette cheese which was featured in our spectacular dinner the other night at 3-Michelin Star Alinea restaurant, that we were eager to try. 
For
 this favored meal combination, for a nice relaxed evening dinner 
together, I pulled from the cellar one of my favorite drinking Right Bank Bordeaux varietal blends from one of our favorite producers, Spring Valley Vineyards. 
We visited Spring Valley during our appellation visit to the Walla Walla (Washington) wine region in the fall of 2018. We visited the Spring Valley Vineyard tasting room in downtown Walla Walla, then ventured out to the vineyards and winery northeast of town. There, we met Dean Derby patriarch, and husband to Shari Corkrum 
Derby, grand-daughter of Uriah Corkrum, namesake for this label. Meeting Mr. Derby was one of the highlights of our Walla Walla Wine Experience, especially since he has since passed on. We posted a Tribute to Dean Derby and memorium of that visit - Spring Valley Vineyard toward the end of 2021.  
All of the Spring Valley wines are 
named for one of the ancestral or current family members.
 Spring Valley Vineyard 
wines are all produced from 100% estate-grown fruit, a relative rarity in 
Washington.
Washington State and regional powerhouse Chateau Ste. Michelle Wine Estates purchased the winery and the brand from the 
Derby family recently, but they continue to own and operate the 
vineyards.
Spring Valley Vineyards Uriah Red Blend 2015 
|  | 
| The Spring Valley Vineyards adjacent to the farmstead site
 | 
This label, 
Uriah,
 is named for the Spring Valley Vineyards founder Uriah Corkrum, 
grandfather of matriarch Shari Corkrum Derby. Born in Walla 
Walla on June 1, 1866, he began successfully farming on his own during 
the 1880s. Unusual summer rain kept him from getting his harvested wheat
 to the warehouse so he lost everything in the depression of 1893. He 
persevered and, in 1897, acquired land in the area known as Spring 
Valley that is the site of the vineyards today. 
Uriah is featured on the flagship label Uriah Spring Valley Red Blend. 
This is our favorite label from the Spring Valley portfolio. 
This is 100% sourced from Spring Valley Vineyards in the wind-shaped Palouse Hills 12 miles 
northeast of Walla Walla, amid the picturesque wheat fields of 
southeastern Washington and the Blue Mountains in the distance. The 
initial block of 
Merlot was planted in 1993 on a southern hillside 
facing southwest. The vines follow the north-south slope of the hills in
 vertical rows, an orientation that when combined with the declination 
of the slope, allows the vines to take optimal advantage of air 
drainage, sunshine, and the reflective nature of the surrounding wheat 
fields.
The 2015 vintage was one of the warmest 
growing seasons on record in Washington. Warm temperatures continued 
through the spring and summer, moderating slightly into fall and 
extending an early harvest. Overall, 2015 saw very favorable growing 
conditions, producing optimal ripening across varieties and yielding 
outstanding wines throughout the region.
This label, 
Uriah, is a 
Right Bank Bordeaux Blend,
 meaning it is predominantly Merlot based rather than Cabernet, 
complemented by Cabernet Franc, Petit Verdot and Malbec. This release 
has a high percentage of Cabernet Franc which provides spiciness and 
bright flavor sprites. 
 This 2015 release is a blend or Bordeaux varietals, 43% Cabernet Franc,
 38% Merlot, 14% Cabernet Sauvignon, 3% Petit Verdot and 2% Malbec. It 
was aged 18 months in 100% French oak, 40% new.
Winemaker Tasting Notes: “Our most terroir 
driven blend, mostly Cabernet Franc and Merlot. A rich wine coming from 
one of the warmest harvests. The tannins are velvety and the finish is 
long and soft.”
~ Serge Laville, Winemaker.
This
 was rated 93 Points by Wine & Spirits, 92 Points by James Suckling,
 91 Points by Wine Spectator, and 90 points by Sean Sullivan of Wine 
Advocate. 
We hold half dozen vintages of this label and pulled the oldest vintage as part of effective cellar management rotation.  
At
 eight years this is probably at its peak, the apex of its drinking 
profile, not likely to improve further with aging, but certainly to age 
gracefully for another decade if you're patient enough to keep it that 
long. 
Bright garnet colored, medium bodied, elegant polished, 
rich but approachable for pleasant but sophisticated drinking, its 
right-bank style blend shows vibrant black berry and dark plum fruits 
with notes of cassis, spice, floral and hints of balsamic and herbs with
 dusty 
minerality with polished soft tannins on the lingering finish.
RM 92 points. 
https://www.cellartracker.com/wine.asp?iWine=2648699
Linked referenced in this blog: 
https://unwindwine.blogspot.com/2018/10/spring-valley-vineyards-tasting-and.html
https://unwindwine.blogspot.com/2019/11/spring-valley-vineyards-nina-syrah-2017.html
https://www.springvalleyvineyard.com/
https://unwindwine.blogspot.com/2023/02/magnificent-dinner-at-alinea-kitchen.html
https://unwindwine.blogspot.com/2023/04/kistler-les-noisetiers-sonoma-coast.html