Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Bertus Basson at Spice Route: "A modern South African Restaurant"

The Mining Indaba has been filling Cape Town this last week and it was hard to get a reservation at any of our favourite restaurants as they were heavily booked, so this gave us a chance to go to this new restaurant, which has only been open for a few days. Bertus Basson is one of our top chefs, a man with a wild child reputation for fun and interesting gourmet food, so we were keen to see what he is doing there. It has a South African traditional food theme running through the menu, but with lots of twists and surprises, as we would expect from Bertus, who deconstructs and enhances and uses the best fresh ingredients. At last there is a place to introduce your guests to traditional South African dishes with good wine. And of course there are a lot of other things to do on Spice Route
A lovely garden setting on the farm
Preparing the bread and butter boards. With the very moist sour dough bread with a crisp crust, you get an apricot butter and a snoek pate. A new slant on the local traditional Afrikaans way of starting a meal with bread, butter and jam.
Some things for sale in the restaurant
Cookbooks, aprons on sale and nice booster cushions for small children
The restaurant has nice clean lines, lime washed walls and floors, a rietdak ceiling (reeds) and bright touches of colour on cushions, furniture and wall art
We loved the ‘doily’ wall
A simple place setting with a board for a side plate
The menu, which changes regularly, showcases modern South African food and features local produce
We chose a bottle of Spice Route 2014 Swartland Chenin Blanc and it went very well with all the food
Ouma Jossie’s baked tongue with slaphaksteentjies (pickled onions) and two colours of organic baby beetroot. We see from the menu that these onions were dozing a bit (slaaphaksteentjies!) They were quite sharp with vinegar. The tongue with the beetroot was enjoyed very much by our friend Anne
Lynne’s starter was the Rice flour dusted tempura squid with two sauces, a Cape Malay curried sauce and a thick creamy mayonnaise, kimchi pickled cucumber and radishes that were very thinly sliced and topped with fresh chervil. It was crisp and tender and very, very good. One to return for again and again
John chose the rich and smooth chicken liver parfait served with sweet onion jam and slices of toasted mosbolletjie bread.
Lynne and Anne tweeting and taking photographs while waiting for the next course to arrive
We know we should have all ordered different main courses, but none of us could resist the Springbok Tomato Bredie pie. It was served in a hot frying pan, topped with thin crisp pastry. Inside was very tender springbok, but we missed the traditional rich tomato gravy in the sauce. It was accompanied by four small pumpkin fritters dusted with lots of cinnamon. They were more like light poffertjes and added just the right spicy note which one always expects in Tomato Bredie. A very good deconstruction. The lightly pickled onion salad was an extra, but we were not sure why it was there. Perhaps as a relish. The topping of roasted sunflower seeds added good texture.
We tried to resist dessert, but two of us decided to share the deep fried camembert. The frying made it soft but, sadly, the cheese was very unripe and therefore didn’t have much flavour. It was served with squares of watermelon konfyt, chopped nuts and a date puree
John (chocoholic) could not resist trying the Chocolate fondant, which came hot and oozy as it should. it was made with good dark bitter chocolate with the accompanying caramel ice cream and crushed honeycomb adding the sweetness
A decorated wall niche
A cool fountain in the garden
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2015

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