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Events and Specials
Events And Specials
 
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Treetop Tropical Thursdays- Rooftop Happy Hour Pool Party

Join us every Thursday Night for our summer rooftop pool party!  Each Thursday from 6-9 pm we feature full cash bar with premium liquors, blended tropical drinks with DC’s hottest DJs cranking out dance music.  Rated “The Top 3 Happy Hour in the DC Area” by WTOP radio, and featured in numerous articles in the Washington Post, this event is the hottest place to be in Bethesda!  Each week we feature free specialty appetizers from area celebrity chefs and local Bethesda eateries, and other special and unique business in the area displaying their goods.

Arrive early due to limited capacity and to avoid the lines and stay to enjoy the sunset, but you must be over 21 to party at the Top of the Tree!

Reply to our Facebook Event page!

Nightly Activities


Every evening, we offer unique wine flights, over fifty wines by the glass, "The Nine Dollar Nosh" menu, as well as made to order sushi from our Umi Sushi Bar Restaurant.  In the Lava Room, we have XBOX 360 and Wii games and numerous HDTVs for the gamer in you!  We also have large screen HDTVs to view nightly sporting events.

Nightly Wine Bar Specials- 5-7pm

Monday- $2 draft Bud Light and $3 draft Stella

Tuesday-2-4-1 Nine-Dollar Nosh menu appetizers & $10 U-create-it wine flights

Wednesday- Half price all wine!  Bottles and by the glass + freebie food 5-7pm

Thursday- half price sushi maki rolls- in the Wine Bar only

Friday- Rum Fun!  U call it rum drinks $4.00

Free validated parking while dining at The Oz

While dining in The Oz Restaurant for either lunch or dinner, we now offer free validated parking for up to 2 hours.

Signature Cocktails

We have just added many new signature cocktails, made with fresh squeezed fruit juices, premium liquors, and each one unique and all hand-shaken.  Come in and try our "Ten Thyme Smash Martini" made with Tanqueray 10, fresh thyme, cucumbers, and white cranberry juice!

Wine Flights

`Bubbles-Bubbles', `I'm Blushing', `California Cool Chardonnay', `Mysterious Merlots'... what's in a name??

These are the names of some of our new wine flights in The Wine Bar. Our wine flights have three specially selected wines that share a common trait. But what are they, and what's in a name? Now that's the fun of flights, come in and have fun tasting and sampling our interesting flights, each flight has three wines, each with a two ounce taste, and all wines are available by the glass as we continue to pour over 50 wines by the glass every night.

   Sauv Me

   Douglas Green, Capetown, South Africa

   Villa Maria, New Zealand

   Hanna, Sonoma Ca

   $10

   Southern Hemisphere- Red

   Wolf Blass Cabernet/Shiraz ‘Red Label’, South

   Australia

   Bodega Tamari Reserva Malbec, Mendoza, Argentina

   Cono Sur, Pinot Noir, Colchuga Valley, Chile

   $9

   Southern Hemisphere –White

   Villa Maria, Sauvingon Blanc, New Zealand

   Douglas Green, Sauvignon Blanc, Capetown, South Africa

   Lapostolle, “Casa” Chardonnay

   $10

   Thunder Down Under

   Hardys Nottage Hill, Shiraz

   Penfolds ‘Thomas Highland’ Shiraz

   Wolf Blass ‘Red Label’ Cabernet-Shiraz Blend

   $9

Our new Director of Food and Beverage is also the Hotel Certified Sommelier and he will be introducing even more wine flights in The Wine Bar. In addition to our new wine flights, our unique signature cocktails and our nine-dollar nosh menu, The Wine Bar has it all.

The Juice

Put a cork in it!
The debate over natural cork wine closures has never been more intense! On the one side, wine oenophiles praise the natural cork for its ability to breath and expand and growers of cork trees are hurting as the need for natural cork is waning. This debate is basically due to Cork Taint. It is the tragic point at which a cork becomes contaminated with 2,4,6-trichloroanisole, or TCA. Discovered by a Swiss researcher in 1981 who detected TCA in a $400 bottle of wine, it's described as smelling like a cross between moldy newspapers and old socks. Most of us can't detect it until it goes above 6ppt (parts per trillion), but expert noses are thought to sense it below 2ppt.
This lead to new wine closure materials; polyethylene, screw top and plastic, that have taken off and in many markets represents over 70% of all wines sold. Natural cork is harvested from cork trees where the bark is harmlessly removed by hand with axes, and takes 9 years for the tree to fully regain its full bark back on its trunk. The proliferation of cheaper synthetic wine closures “corks” has farmers of these forests reconsidering and changing what they plant there.
As wines in the new world are crafted to ‘purchase and drink’, as opposed to old world varietals, ‘purchase and cellar’, more non-cork wine closures will begin to appear. Where this all goes and how far reaching this debate is? Only time will tell. As a certified sommelier, the sound a real cork makes is very different than any synthetic wine closure out there today. But who knows with today’s technology, what tomorrow may bring!


To cap it all: the options


Natural cork: Cork has more than 400 years' experience in stopping wine bottles but it is also charged with spoiling 3-5% of global wine. Spanish law now dictates that wineries in 11 regions must use natural cork to receive a DO (Denominacion de Origen) quality status. This won't do much to counter charges of a southern European monopoly.


Screw cap: Once the surest way to get yourself barred from the dinner-party circuit, screw-caps are now billed as the solution to both cork taint and the less-technical issue of "where's the bloody corkscrew?". Guala Closures, one of the world's biggest manufacturers, claims sales are growing at half a billion a year, and screw-caps are getting clever with plastic filters and layers to deliver oxygen to maturing wines.


The plastic stopper: Entrepreneur Dennis Burns, a producer of pro-tech hockey helmets in the US, decided to use a similar polyethylene composite to make a synthetic wine "cork" with no chance of taint. Burns's Supreme Corq is one of the biggest of the 30 synthetic cork producers worldwide. Its rival, Nomacorc, produced 1.4m plastic corks last year – enough to circle the earth 1.33 times. The synthetic boys don't buy cork's ecological superiority: "Many are just cork granules and dust bonded with solvents," says Simon Waller of Supreme Corq. "They are no more biodegradable than our product."


The zork: It's new(ish) and loud and hails from New Zealand. The Zork (a hybrid of "zero" and "cork") is a low-density plastic closure that boasts sophisticated tamper-evident design and inner foil oxygen barriers. The innovation will need to be more sophisticated than the colour – bright pink or red, which may put off serious wine drinkers. It's gaining popularity in US wine bars for by-the-glass fizz.

 


   

Be A Better Chef Through Our Fun Cooking Classes

Are you a Food Network junkie? Do you plan your evening around "Top Chef" or "Hell's Kitchen"? Maybe you just want to cook a nice meal for your sweetheart or eat a healthier diet. Timothy Jones, executive chef of the Oz, invites you to sign up for one of his fun, educational cooking classes. They're perfect for whipping up cuisine that's tasty and good for you.

Chef Jones - a rising star who has worked at the Four Seasons Palm Beach and the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City - believes in simplicity. Fresh organic ingredients. Bringing out the best of a food's natural flavors. Presenting cooking techniques that are easy for you to adopt.

During each class, you'll receive recipe cards, delicious refreshments, and a special gift. The price is $59 per person. Register today by calling (301) 664-7343. Space is limited, so hurry.

  • You can also enjoy cooking demonstrations every Wednesday at 6pm with Chef Jones

Check out our fabulous 2010 Cooking Classes

September 25th - Cooking with Kids
Get your kids involved in make some basic foods with a twist to peak their culinary senses and have them try new and exciting foods


November - 13th - All About Chocolate - a Chocoholics Dream
A lesson in the art of chocolate, learning the historic origins of the wonderful and addictive treat all while we try some great recipes to get the biggest chocoholic satisfied!

What's Your Flavour
What's Your Flavour
Read "The Juice" and discover new
lists and tasting at The Wine Bar.
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