Wednesday, May 01, 2013

Open garden with scones and bubbles at Klein Optenhorst, Wellington

At the plant sale, Lynne tries to negotiate on the Lotus plant. Sadly, they were sold  out; she wants one for our koi pond (ex swimming pool)
Ladies busy in the kitchen baking fresh batches of scones. They had been doing this for two days straight and they were really light and delicious.
We help ourselves to scones, cream and jam and a good cup of tea accompanied by one of the farm dogs
A view from the house of the gazebo across the lake ...
...which is a wonderfully peaceful place for the contemplation of nature
Water margin plants of iris, elephant ears and pampas grass
The view of the house from the bottom of the garden
Abandoned weaver bird flat, the kids having fledged.  New ones will be built in the spring
A fiscal shrike (butcher bird) surveys his territory. Lots and lots of things to eat
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2013

Lunch with a Twist, Wellington

Twist is housed in a barn with an outside area in front and plenty of parking

we took a table inside
The breakfast menu and the Childrens' menu – note the reasonable prices
The starter Menu of the Day
Buffalo Mozzarella Wonton with tomato mousse, basil oil, Toasted pine nuts and NO bacon as it was for a vegetarian, cost R45

Another vegetarian option was the Aubergine Roasted Butternut, sundried tomato, spinach & gorgonzola salad stack with hazelnut dressing R85 which Ronnie enjoyed
Both of us chose the Wild Boar, Apple & Sage burger with Onion marmalade, gorgonzola, fries and coriander Mayo on a very good home-made ciabatta roll for R70.  It was excellent.
We didn’t touch the dessert menu, but were very tempted
It is a very good and reasonably priced wine list with local wines from Wellington, Bain's Kloof to Agter Paarl. We chose the Nabygelegen Chenin
It’s a large restaurant space.  Lynne is contemplating the menu
Another room has a bar and a lounge area and ....  a piano for possible musical evenings?
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2013




Wine and waterbirds at Ridgeback, Paarl

Ridgeback dogs on the wine label and living at the farm

The spacious restaurant/tasting room
The deck restaurant and tasting area overlooking the dam
We settle ourselves down for a good tasting
Ducks rafting together on the dam
The black swan having a lovely water bath was a beautiful sight
He was a keen customer for crumbs
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2013

Vertical wine tasting at Muratie

The welcome board with the prices of the different tastings
A charming sign from past days
The front of the historic tasting room and cellar – the garden restaurant is on the right
The table laid for the vertical tasting of the Isabella Chardonnay, Ansela van de Caab Bordeaux blend and the Shiraz
Francois Conradie, the winemaker and farm manager, tells us about the Chardonnay we are tasting. Greg Landman on the left, Alan Mullins on the right
Also for tasting was a selection of some of Muratie’s best wines and ports
Owner Rijk Melck and Greg Landman, who writes for Country Life
The ‘layers’ of Isabella Chardonnay, ready for tasting - 2008 to 2012
Six glasses of Bordeaux Blend Ansela van de Caab - 2005 to 2010
A typical media tasting: visible, from left to right, are Philip van Zyl, Rijk Melck, Angela Lloyd, Lynne Ford, Joanne Gibson, Jan Laubscher, Anel Grobler, Maryna Strachan at the end of the table, Orielle Berry, Greg Landman and the back of Alan Mullins. All busy tasting and making notes on the wines
Francois shows us the new Muratie wine labels
Mike Bampfield Duggan of Wine Concepts
Kalinka Heyns
Alan Mullins of Woolworths
Francois Conradie, the winemaker and farm manager
Dr Rijk Melck, owner of Muratie, in his snazzy glasses
One of Rijk’s lovely German Shepherd dogs “Collapso Fatso” in front of the port barrels
It’s as good a place as any to store a saddle in the cellar. It has, apparently, been ridden at the occasional party
The day’s menu in the Cellar Kitchen
Lots of wine and lots of history in this cellar. The portrait is of Georg Canitz, Bohemian artist and previous owner of the farm, and the head is his sculpture of a young man who sat for him
Journalist Melvin Minnaar and Muratie PRO, Posy Hazell  having a good time...
.. .  discussing the industry and the wines
Kim Melck and her staff in the kitchen, preparing our lunch
The best lamb shanks we have ever had. Glazed with a sauce and simply cooked in a wood fired oven, served with grated carrots, peas and mashed potatoes.
Heloise Sykes and Kalinka Lombard with Mel Minnaar: "You don’t say!?”
The outdoor restaurant in the warm weather - a super lunch venue for a party of people from the Netherlands
A small ‘snug’ in the cellar building – apparently where Georg Canitz used to entertain the ladies he fancied
An old leaded glass window in the cellar tasting room
Alan Mullins’ driver, reading after his lunch in the cellar
More tasting and eating space in the cellar
A wonderful bit of old Cape wine history (cobwebs) and an amusing old sign from the 1930’s.
An old Dover stove under a portrait by Georg Canitz of a professor from Stellenbosch University

© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2013