Saturday, September 01, 2018

This Week’s MENU. Cape Winemakers Guild tastings, A weekend in the Overberg, Tasting at Newton Johnson, A day at Benguela Cove, Vinimark Wine Fair, Dinner at Coco Safar, Overnight stay at Jordan, Simonsig Vintage, Raka Rosé 2017

A sunset view of Table Mountain from the vineyards at Simonsig, Stellenbosch

A bumper issue, and regrettably late. We were all set to send out MENU when the lights went out. A switch in the Council’s junction box had blown and the part of our three phase connection which powers our computers stopped working. Thankfully, we are once again empowered and here we are. We cannot remember when last we had so many stories to tell and we have been so busy that we have had to miss out on publishing a recipe this week; there hasn’t been any time to cook! – and, once again, we have had to hold a couple of articles over to next week. Thank you for your patience and we hope you’ll enjoy the stories

Cape Winemakers Guild tutored and public tastings    
This year's Cape Winemakers Guild Auction will be held at Spier Wine Estate on Saturday 29th September, beginning at 09h00.  It is open to the public as well as the wine industry. Further registration information and details on their Telephonic and Proxy bidding options are available from the Cape Winemakers Guild Office via email at info@capewinemakersguild.com or call +27 21 852 0408. Registration for the Auction and sales of VIP Lounge tickets will close on Wednesday, 19 September 2018. We will be there enjoying the day and perhaps making a bid or two for these really special wines. There are some pre-auction events. Look on : http://www.capewinemakersguild.com/events. We were invited to the very prestigious VIP guided tasting

A weekend in the Overberg    
Once a year Lynne, who is the Secretary of our wine club, the Oenophiles, arranges a weekend away in a different wine region for members of the club. In the past we have done Paarl, Wellington, Robertson, Botrivier and this year it was the Stanford and Southern Cape area. Finding places with enough good accommodation is a challenge, as most of our couples want their own room and bathroom. We would love to go to some areas but staying together is a challenge. This year, we were a group of 16 and most of us stayed at the Stanford Valley Guest Farm where each couple had their own cottage, some self catering, others not. It is a vast place, with a good restaurant and close to the town. If you want to book with them, be very careful which booking agency you use, one of them we suspect is a fake and they wanted full payment up front - no one else does. Book direct or use an agency like Booking.com - we nearly got caught until Lynne became suspicious. Our cottage, with its stoep and wood pile

Tasting the wines at Newton Johnson    
A stunning winter view from the Newton Johnson Tasting room overlooking their vineyards as the stormy weather comes in.  We had stayed the night in the valley, as we had a media event at Benguela Cove starting at 11 and had some spare time before that - and it was very cold in the cottage we borrowed from dear friends. A grey and wet day….

A day at Benguela Cove    
A media invitation to visit and experience what Benguela Cove has to offer the travel industry. We were last there a year ago and we cannot believe how much this estate has grown in infrastructure and buildings. A new tasting area, a large restaurant, a shop and a new state of the art cellar have gone up since we visited. Read on…

Vinimark Trade & Media Wine Fair 2018      
We were invited to the Vinimark trade tasting at the CTICC this year but arrived very late as we had come home to discover we had been burgled the previous day. We had spent the day waiting for the police and got there very late and rather stressed. Vinimark director Ginette de Fleuriot gave us a glass of Bolly as a rescue remedy. It was a very well attended tasting…

Dinner at Coco Safar, Sea Point     
We wrote recently about being invited to breakfast at Coco Safar restaurant in the renamed Adelphi Centre in Sea Point. Why the new owners of the centre have chosen to rename a building which has been a landmark in Sea Point for more than 50 years is baffling. Most people we know continue to call it the Adelphi. This week, we were invited to have dinner there. Coco Safar takes up a lot of space - most of the front foyer of the mall, and it is detached from itself, being in three different areas. So to get to Clicks or the car parking upstairs, you walk between the restaurant and the bar and then walk up the broken escalator - we have been told for several months that it is being replaced by the centre management. To get to Pick n Pay, you walk between the bar and the coffee roastery. The restaurant entrance…

Simonsig Vintage Day preview    
Once a year, in the late winter, Simonsig in Stellenbosch holds a Vintage Day on a Saturday when they allow customers to come and taste and buy some older vintages. We felt very privileged when we were invited to the Preview on the Friday before the public event. Greeted by their Kaapse Vonkel…

A lovely overnight stay at Jordan     
We were invited to attend the Young Wine Awards in Stellenbosch last Saturday, a black tie event, and when Thea van der Merwe, Jordan’s Marketing Manager, heard that we were going to book accommodation for an overnight stay, she insisted that we should stay at Jordan in one of their Suites. We hate going to a late wine event in the winelands and driving back to Cape Town, so we are very grateful…

MENU's Wine of the Week. Raka Rosé 2017    
Raka on the Stanford wine route makes a very good Rosé wine from Merlot, Shiraz, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc. It is summer in a bottle, with notes of rhubarb and roses with some strawberry on the nose. Almost a light red wine on the palate, with raspberries and rhubarb, it reminds Lynne of Tavel Rosé from the Southern Rhône valley, and that is a compliment

24th August 2018

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© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2018
PS If a word or name is in bold type and underlined, click on it for more information

Phones: +27 21 439 3169 / 083 229 1172 / 083 656 4169

Postal address: 60 Arthurs Rd, Sea Point 8005

Recommendations of products and outside events are not solicited or charged for, and are made at the authors’ pleasure. All photographs, recipes and text used in these newsletters and our blogs are © John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus. Our restaurant reviews are usually unsolicited. We prefer to pay for our meals and not be paid in any way by anyone. Whether we are invited or go independently, we don’t feel bad if we say we didn’t like it. Honesty is indeed our best policy. While every effort is made to avoid mistakes, we are human and they do creep in occasionally, for which we apologise. This electronic journal has been sent to you because you have personally subscribed to it or because someone you know has asked us to send it to you or forwarded it to you themselves. Addresses given to us will not be divulged to any person or organisation. We collect them only for our own promotional purposes. If you wish to be added to our mailing list, please click here to send us a message and if you wish to be removed from our mailing list

Why we are cancelling our Cape Times and Weekend Argus subscriptions

One of the highlights of the day, for many years, has been breakfast with a newspaper. We have subscribed to the Rand Daily Mail, The Star, Cape Times and Argus/ Weekend Argus for the best part of fifty years. The advent of the tabloid Times was a highlight as it was a manageable format with excellent writing and good news coverage.

The acquisition of Independent Media by Iqbal Surve has seen a steady decline in the quality of writing and reporting in the Cape Times and Argus over the past few years. Sadly, we see his face on the front page much too frequently. A newspaper should not be a medium for self-glorification. 

We gave up the daily Argus several years ago when it became a re-hash of the stories in the Cape Times and our mate David Biggs, sadly, was not a big enough incentive to purchase when he was the only reason. The letters page in the Cape Times is now a vehicle for bulletins from government departments and political parties, with almost no real letters from readers, which were always an attraction. Some regular writers to the editor have told us they they are now embargoed, which is why we never see their contributions. We miss you James!

The brilliant cartoons from successive talented artists were a highlight: John Jackson, Tony Grogan, Derek Bauer, David Marais, Myke Ashley Cooper, Dov Fedler and, of course, the brilliant Jonathan Shapiro/Zapiro. These have all gone, some having died, others sidelined or fired and replaced with well-drawn but far less imaginative, cutting, critical and pithy illustrations

Today's Weekend Argus sees it hit a new low. The new design is an illogical mess, stories scattered over the page with no clear boundaries and proper news is relegated to the "Lifestyle" category. Most of the writing is infantile, apart from the columns written by our three favourites, Andrew Donaldson, William Saunderson-Meyer and Ryland Fisher whose contributions are now randomly scattered through the paper.

We will miss the comics, some of the sports writing, which has been and still is good, but we can get it online. Above all, we will miss a crackly sheet of paper which can irritate, educate, entertain and even catch the crumbs of the toast. We can read the daily Times on our Kindle and smartphone, but it isn't the same. We will still enjoy the Sunday Times and hope that Tiso Blackstar won't take that into the digital ether.

Perhaps we are too old and part of a generation that was brought up on newspapers. I devoured them at home and in our school library from almost as soon as I could read and they were an essential part of my education. The era of the soundbite and Tweet is all very well, but there is seldom any depth in those arenas.


RIP the news papers as we once knew them. We live in hope of a resurrection