Monday, February 13, 2017

This week’s MENU recipe. Lamb shanks in red wine

Lamb has become so expensive that we now reserve it for only special meals and the recipe needs to be good. We love Lamb shanks and sometime we find these more reasonably priced than other premium cuts of meat. Long slow cooking while we are working is something Lynne appreciates and this recipe was very good. We hope you like it. Do use a robust red wine. The quality of the wine will reflect in the dish
2 T oil or coconut oil - 4 whole lamb shanks - salt & freshly ground pepper - 3 carrots, sliced - 1 large onion, sliced - 2 T seasoned flour - 3 garlic cloves, roughly chopped - 2 bay leaves - 3 or 4 small sprigs of rosemary - 600 ml red wine - 2 cups good lamb or beef stock - 1 tablespoon soft brown sugar -
Preheat oven to 160C
Season the lamb shanks with salt and pepper. In a large oven proof casserole, brown the lamb shanks on all sides in the oil; remove from the pan and put aside and keep warm
In the same casserole, put in the carrots, onions, garlic, bay leaves and rosemary. Stir and cook slowly until nicely coloured. Add the seasoned flour and stir into the vegetables so it absorbs the fats and juices. Then pour in the red wine, beef stock, and brown sugar and bring to a low boil, stirring all the time to deglaze the pan. Put the lamb shanks back into the casserole and top up with water; they should be submerged.
Cover the casserole with its lid and put into the oven and cook for 2½ to 3 hours until very tender. Check every hour to see that they are not drying out. Top up with more water and wine if they are looking too dry. Taste and adjust seasoning. Remove the lamb and vegetables to a serving dish. Reduce the sauce if it is a bit thin. It is great if served with mashed potatoes and peas. If you have leftovers, it makes a very good shepherd's pie topped with the left over mash

© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2017

A new menu for two at Kyoto Garden

We do enjoy being guinea pigs when restaurants want to try out a new menu or idea. This week, we were invited to Kyoto Garden to sample the new Menu for two people, which they are launching soon.
There are not many authentic Japanese restaurants in Cape Town. Kyoto Garden is very good. It is at 11 Kloof Nek Road, opposite Miller's Thumb
The bar, the sushi station with the sushi chef and the kitchen in the background. They have a good selection of Japanese beer, sake and whiskies as well as a good local wine list. Lynne enjoyed a glass of Steenberg Chardonnay and John a glass of Vrede and Lust Chenin with our meal. Both are wooded
First course was a nicely seasoned tuna tartare topped with spring onion; it is an amuse size and a palate delighter. The soy sauce dressing has a very light touch of wasabi, which adds a delicate accent to the umami of the soy, but avoids the typical wasabi heat. You get one each
Next was a shared dish of briefly seared salmon slices on a seaweed and baby spinach leave salad, with enoki and other blanched mushrooms, spring onion and wasabi. It comes with a rich sauce tasting of miso and soy with wasabi. You can use the sauce to dip or you can pour it over the salad.
Then you share a selection of sushi, nigiri and sashimi. All are delicious; the tuna was exceptionally fresh and pink, almost translucent. The platter comes with shaved daikon radish, wasabi and pickled ginger. The white fish is very fresh Cape salmon
The restaurant sometimes imports fresh wasabi root from Japan or Canada and we were lucky enough to be given some to taste and to grate on the authentic shark skin grater. Yes, that is real raspy shark skin. The wasabi was not as hot as we expected and quite creamy in taste. We liked it
Eating sushi at the bar
The restaurant is very light and airy, the decor simply, elegantly Japanese
Next a plate of mixed vegetable tempura to share. It is light, crisp and fresh, just the way is should be. It is accompanied by more daikon, a slice of lemon to squeeze and a dipping sauce. We found cauliflower, a bean, broccoli, yellow pepper, lotus root, sweet potato, aubergine and a basil leaf in the stack. The aubergine was soft and sweet inside its crisp coating, the sweet potato and the lotus root were both very special
Then a bowl each of Ramin noodles with prawns, leeks and green beans. Nice miso stock with the soup
The meal will finish with a dessert. We were given two to sample, a delicious fresh and creamy ginger ice cream accompanied by crisp Japanese wafer biscuits. And a sesame seed ice-cream, unusual but very good
We have not seen the menu yet and believe the price is going to be R780 for two, plus wine

© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2017

MENU's Wine of the Week. 2006 Nabygelegen Seventeen Twelve Merlot-led Bordeaux blend

This is the robust wine we used in the Lamb Shank recipe and there was enough left over to have two glasses with it. We are so pleased we have more because it was superb. It is a Bordeaux blend of Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon and Petit Verdot

We would not have expected an 11 year old wine still to be so fresh and full of ripe berry fruit. It has held everything, the fruit, the acid, the wood and the chalky tannin all melding together to make a very enjoyable wine. You can still buy it from the farm , the current release is 2014. Well done James. http://www.nabygelegen.co.za/our-wines/

© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2017

Franschhoek Summer Wines


What a lovely festival this is. It showcases the Franschhoek wines you might want to drink in the summer: their bubblies, white wines and some rosés. It was held at under marquees on the lawn at Leopard’s Leap, where the farms set up their stalls to showcase the one wine that each was allowed, appropriate to the day. 26 Franschhoek farms were represented; the wines were chilled, so were the visitors and much happiness ensued. We tasted, chatted to the farms’ representatives, had a light lunch and bought some wine to take home
White was the cooling theme and a white tented world welcomed us. If you bought water from the water stand on the left, you will be happy to know that all the money is used to support children who would not be able to study ballet without this funding
Taking time off from harvesting, a happy, smiling winemaker, Dawie Botha of Antonij Rupert wines with his Cape of Good Hope Riebeeksriver Caroline 2013 which John really liked. It is made from Chenin from 30-year-old vines, plus Roussanne and Viognier. Oaked, tangerine citrus and classy
Always fun to chat to Nick Davis of Morena and taste his lovely Cap Classique Brut Rosé, made from 60% Pinot Noir, 40% Chardonnay; zesty and lively
Peter Kampmeinert, our friend who visits every year at this time from Holland, with Lynne enjoying the chat and the Morena MCC
Taking a day off from her own harvest is KWV winemaker Anneke du Plessis 
Looking rosy with health, Irene Waller, General Manager and winemaker at La Bri. The Cellar Door Rosé at R65 was a steal, so summery and so refreshing
Guess what we drank with our lunch? A gift from winemaker DP Burger who refused to let us pay for it, a bottle of Glenwood's just released white Bordeaux bland of Sauvignon Blanc and Semillon. It is a lovely, satisfying blend with nice depth and richness from the Semillon. It is a food wine and went really well with the Pork Belly tortillas produced in the Leopard’s Leap kitchen
John was allowed into the kitchen to photograph the preparation of the simple but good food on offer. A cheese platter with fresh figs and chutney
The kitchen was very organised and there was no waiting for lunch. The girls behind the counter
The tortilla was packed full of good pork, vegetables and a spicy sauce
Sitting inside for lunch on the terrace with the cooling misters going
Girls having fun and enjoying a bottle of La Couronne Chenin blanc
Good music played all through the event
Magic 828 AM Broadcaster Guy MacDonald and Bronwen, enjoying the magic!
Oh no, up on the mountain behind us, a horrible fire broke out and raced up the mountain. They did eventually get it under control, but it was frightening to watch
Some enthusiastic tasters at the Bellingham stand, tasting the very good Old Vines Chenin Blanc with Marguerite Nel. Once you had your generous tasting portion, they crossed it off the list. There was plenty of wine to enjoy and lots to buy.
Boschendal winemaker Tammy Jaftha blowing a kiss!
Franschhoek Cellar showed their 2015 Chardonnay to a happy imbiber
Relaxing under the umbrellas. So much shade was provided this year and very much appreciated it was  too
Who has had a super day! And a large chocolate ice cream. This is the daughter of Pippa Pringle, who looks after public relations for the Franschhoek Valley and invited us. Lynne was also happy as she bought a case of La Chataigne's Kastanje 2014 Chenin Blanc. It is caramel toffee on the nose, crisp and full on the palate, a lovely Chenin with some age, just how she likes them
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2017