| EDITOR’S NOTE: Photos are available at www.uh.edu/admin/media/nr/2007/08aug/hrm_fredparksph.html.
EAT, DRINK AND BE MERRY: UH FRED PARKS
BOARDROOM OPENS ITS DOORS
New Venue Offers Gourmet Meals, Vintage Wines for Elegant Gatherings
HOUSTON, August 16, 2007—Plush leather chairs lounge around
a granite table, while vintage wines nest coolly in their racks,
waiting for the perfect pairing for lunch or dinner. Nearby, a grouping
of couches and tables invite. On the wall, a plasma television is
ready for the flashiest of presentations or the most heated competitors
of the field. The elegant and livable space is the new Fred Parks
Boardroom at the University of Houston Conrad N. Hilton College
of Hotel and Restaurant Management, and the doors are open for business.
“This beautiful addition to the college will be the setting
for meetings, receptions, wine tastings or intimate gourmet meals
prepared by our executive chef,” said Kevin Simon, director
of the UH Fred Parks Wine Cellar. “Guests will choose from
featured menus and have available to them a host of fine and rare
wines.”
The Boardroom is made possible by a grant from the Fred and Mable
R. Parks Foundation. The late Fred Parks was a Houston trial lawyer,
who served as counsel in such high-profile murder cases as that
of River Oaks socialite Joan Robinson Hill, a story later made infamous
in the best-selling book, “Blood and Money.”
Passionate about the law, Parks also was passionate about wine
and education. A portion of his collection of fine and rare French
wines, which features more than 1,000 bottles from the early 1900s
to contemporary vintages, was donated to the college in 1994. At
his bequest, his estate donated the remainder of his collection
to the college after his death in 2001.
“The wine selections include many First Growths of French
Bordeaux wines,” said Simon. “Fred’s philosophy
was to promulgate wine to the masses. I think he would be proud
of what we are doing.”
In addition to being an event destination, the Boardroom also will
serve as an educational venue for industry professionals, community
members and those UH hospitality industry students who are studying
the culture of wine and the process of winemaking. The college expects
next spring to offer a course in gourmet dining, where students
create the dinners and consider the wine pairings. These dinners
will be open to the public and designed around activities that will
introduce the Fred Parks Boardroom and its wine collection to the
community.
The wine and spirits industry, in Texas and across the nation,
is a multi-billion dollar a year business, creating thousands of
jobs—8,000 in Texas, according to 2005 statistics from the
Texas Wine Marketing Research Institute. Students of the college,
some on their way to becoming sommeliers, will have access to the
resources of the Fred Parks Boardroom.
“Wine is history and art,” Simon said. “The bottles,
the labels, each date provide insight into its life and times. One
of our bottles is from 1918…the things that bottle has seen.”
The Boardroom seats 28 for dinner or 30 for receptions. Simon creates
all wine lists and executive chef Abbas Jaffari prepares all menus.
For information on reserving the Fred Parks Boardroom, call Kevin
Simon at
713-743-2459 or ksimon@uh.edu.
For more information on the Fred Parks Boardroom or UH Conrad N.
Hilton College of Hotel and Restaurant Management, visit www.hrm.uh.edu/cnhc/ShowContent.asp?c=12609.
About the University of Houston
The University of Houston, Texas’ premier metropolitan research
and teaching institution, is home to more than 40 research centers
and institutes and sponsors more than 300 partnerships with corporate,
civic and governmental entities. UH, the most diverse research university
in the country, stands at the forefront of education, research and
service with more than 35,000 students.
For more information about UH visit the universitys Newsroom
at www.uh.edu/admin/media/newsroom.
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