Friday, December 16, 2022

The Ubuntu Trophy International Sommelier Competition between Team Zimbabwe and Team South Africa

The Stellenbosch Wine Routes Ubuntu Trophy challenge, now in its second year, is the only International Sommelier Competition in Africa. This competition pits the Sommeliers Association of Zimbabwe (SAZ) against South African Sommeliers Association (SASA) who both enter members to take part in the challenge. The top three members of each team will make up the team which goes forward to the International challenge in 2023. We were invited to attend the competition which was held at Lanzerac Wine Estate in Stellenbosch

The headline Trophy sponsor is Stellenbosch Wine Routes. “Stellenbosch is South Africa’s premier wine destination and, by animating the story of our wines, the sommelier has become a cornerstone of this experience”, says Stellenbosch Wine Routes manager, Elmarie Rabe. “These wine ambassadors fulfil a crucial role that we eagerly acknowledge, especially in this milestone year for the region”. And “Lanzerac is proud to be involved with the Ubuntu Sommelier Trophy for a second year in a row”, says Lanzerac Hotel general manager Emile Langenhoven

The floating Ubuntu trophy that goes to the winner each year
The meaning of Ubuntu: ‘I am what I am because of who we all are'. is a value that Africans share

Sommelier Tondai Joseph Dafana was one of the judges for the day
He was the previous recipient of the trophy and he is also one of the four Zimbabwean sommeliers
who starred in the moving and award-winning documentary film "Blind Ambition",
which showed how four hard-working young men from Zimbabwe found their way to South Africa and,
despite having no background in wine, facing many difficulties and with much hard work,
have become very successful Sommeliers. Three of them have produced their own wine

The Judges, Tondai Joseph Dafana, Shane Mumba and Kim Williams take their places as the competition begins


The competition was created by Jean-Vincent Ridon, international Sommelier, winemaker, and wine educator,
so that local teams might participate in the international competition
He was the invigilator for the competition and took the contestants through their tasks
The attention to detail demanded in performing all the tasks is very high and each is scored

The contestants had spent the morning writing a Theory paper
Twelve Sommeliers qualified for this stage of the competition and only six passed the morning tests
Their names were about to be announced by Jean Vincent Ridon,
three for the final Zimbabwe team, and three for the South African team

Sommelier Tinashe Marlvin Gwese, another of the stars of the film Blind Ambition,
was there to support the Zimbabwe team
He is now the Head Sommelier of the Liz McGrath Collection of hotels
The other two, Tinashe Nyamudoka and Pardon Tuguzu are currently overseas

Janine Van Zyl was the first member of the South African team to compete
She was about to start the next part of the competition. The first task was to welcome the guests (the judges)
and supply them with the drinks they had already ordered from the bar behind her


Two glasses of Villiera Cap Classique Brut and one double of Armagnac, on ice with a tonic water
There were some inbuilt stumbling blocks in the test, e.g. there was no Armagnac
and she had to offer the guest who ordered it an alternative from the small selection on the bar
And the rituals of correct service of the beverages have always to be performed in the correct way
Who gets served first and who next.....


James Mukosi was the first member of the Zimbabwe team
and he, like all six contestants, had to repeat the same series of set tasks, one after the other


Italian judge and invigilator Giuseppe Vaccarini was watching very closely
There was also a live feed from France, where another judge was watching the competition

George Young was the second member of the South African Team and showed a lot of skill and experience
One of the most difficult tasks was to identify three wines that a 'guest' had brought with him,
unlabelled but each from a different country
The contestants were given only two minutes to give the correct answers,
naming the varietal, the country and the region of production

They were a Stellenbosch Chenin Blanc from L’Avenir, a German Riesling from the Nahe
and a French Pinot Noir from Mercurey in Burgundy


Checking for sediment by holding the bottle and decanter over a lighted candle

Tawanda Marume, the second member of the Zimbabwe team, showed that he is also extremely skilled
He has already won the title Best Sommelier in South Africa and Zimbabwe
and will compete in the Best Sommelier of the World 2023 this coming February in Paris


This task was complex
One of the guests had ordered a 2018 Spier wine and wanted it decanted in case there was any sediment
Despite the fact that it was rather young, the sommeliers all obliged skilfully,
pouring carefully over a lit candle which would have revealed the sediment, if any


Stefan Reinmuth, the third South African team member, checking the cork for taint before pouring the wine

The judges were scoring each contestant
as the competition took them through each of the identical tests which they all had to perform


Stanley Zimbizi, the third member of the Zimbabwe team,
correctly identifying this surprise dessert as panettone and suggesting a matching wine from the country of its origin, Italy
He chose a Moscato

and then the final test ....

Each Sommelier was given one bottle of Simonsig Kaapse Vonkel Cap Classique and eight glasses
and, without going back to adjust the quantity in any of the glasses,
they had to try to pour an equal portion of the wine into each glass with nothing left in the bottle
Not as easy as it sounds, but something Sommeliers often have to do at functions

Now that looks like a winning pour by Stanley Zimbizi


Pouring fast and furiously and perhaps not getting things very even. It is very difficult, and takes much practice


Spencer Fondaumiere is the Chairman of the South African Sommeliers Association SASA
and he was there to present certificates to some of the contestants

SASA Introductory Sommelier Nothando S M Khuzwayo

SASA Junior Sommelier Yonela Zondwayo


SASA Junior Sommelier Sanelisiwe L Damawe


SASA Sommeliers Stefan Reinmuth and George Young


"Would madam like a glass of Simonsig Cap Classique?" enquires sommelier James Mukosi
After watching the competition from 1 to 5 pm, yes please, she would

Sommelier Tawanda Marume was the highest scorer
and, therefore, the deserving winner of the individual competition

South Africa won the Ubuntu Trophy team competition and here are both teams with their national flags
Hopefully, they will be able to attend the International competition next year

These are all the South African competitors and recently qualified sommeliers


and all the Zimbabwean competitors with Joseph Dafana

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Wednesday, November 30, 2022

In MENU This Week. Agulhas Triangle wine festival, Southern Cape Weekend

Fluffy clouds over Pearly Beach

The last day of November and things are slowing down, with not much other than family and friends in the diary. So MENU this week is all about a trip with friends to the coolest wine region in the country (some say) for a local festival and a weekend excursion around it. We had a lot of fun…

Agulhas Triangle Wine Festival

When we heard, way back in early September, that there was going to be an Agulhas Triangle Wine Festival, we booked accommodation immediately, as close to the site as we could afford. We love these southernmost Cape wines but it is rather a long way from Cape Town and making a summer weekend of it in November seemed to be A GOOD THING. It was held at Lomond Wine Farm, which is just south of Gansbaai on the Baardskeerdersbos road. Read on…

A Southern Cape weekend

We made an escape down to the Cape Agulhas area for the weekend and a wine festival. We took our visiting friends from Holland who have not been able to come here for four years because of Covid. We booked accommodation near Pearly Beach and wanted to show them this lovely area, which is about 2½ hours' drive out of Cape Town. Well, not if you leave the city on Friday afternoon, when everyone else is also leaving, but we were not in any rush and made stopped along the way to get pies for lunch at Houw Hoek, which seems now to have the best in the Elgin valley and provisions at Gansbaai Spar. Our friends had never been to the very southernmost tip of Africa, so that was on the agenda. Read on…



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A Southern Cape weekend

A weekend in the Country. We made an escape down to the Cape Agulhas area for a wine festival and to enjoy the weekend away from home. We took our visiting friends from Holland, who have not been able to come here for four years because of Covid. We booked accommodation near Pearly Beach and wanted to show them this lovely area, which is about 2½ hours' drive out of Cape Town. Well, not if you leave the city on Friday afternoon, when everyone else is also leaving, but we were not in any rush and stopped along the way to get pies for lunch at Houw Hoek, which seems now to have the best in the Elgin valley, and to pick up provisions at Gansbaai Spar. Our friends had never been to the very southernmost tip of Africa, so that was on the agenda. The weather was perfect all weekend, even though these clouds did seem a little unsettling

Our small but perfectly formed cottage at Klein Paradijs Country Retreat
They are on Booking.com and have several different standards of accommodation
We chose the budget variety and were very impressed with the humble cottage
which proved to be much comfier than the pictures had implied
Two bedrooms, a bathroom, a lounge, kitchen, binne and buite braais and, most important in summer,
a stoep where we could enjoy the evening and morning meals

The lounge area at one end

Kitchen and binnebraai at the other

A comfortable bed

A glass of Silverthorn River Dragon to get the weekend started

and, at 7, we drove off over the hills to Baardskeerdersbos for a fish and chip supper at Marietjie’s Pub
where we have eaten before and wanted to come back for the good food
You can drive the 31.5 Km conventional, long, route, but there is a much quicker way from Klein Paradijs, over a low hill, 
down a dirt road and only about 8 minutes away

You can eat on the terrace

but it books up quickly

so we chose inside




Indoor gardening?

Oh, so fresh, hake in batter, with good chips, a small salad, lemon and a tartare sauce, all for R80

and, as we finished dinner, a little after 8, another power cut, and so a romantic candlelit end to the day

They stop serving food at 8, so there were not many people left in the pub

Our bill. We drank a bottle of Kranskop Chenin blanc with the meal and were not charged corkage

A nightcap by torchlight

We took our friends to see Pearly Beach the next morning, a very pretty small seaside village with a lovely sandy beach

Lynne loves to beachcomb

Yvonne enjoying the sea air

Come and join us lads? But they don't enjoy walking on beach sand. Firm friends for 70 years

Gulls catching the updraughts

Everything was a beautiful blue

A tiny daisy surviving on the boardwalk

A European barn swallow (Hirundo rustica)

Thanks for correction by reader Peter who says it is a Greater Striped swallow (Cecropis cucullata)

We went to the Agulhas Triangle wine festival that afternoon (see separate story)
and then went back to the cottage to relax and enjoy a braai supper
John photographed this Jackal Buzzard (Buteo rufofuscus) in flight

We had brought a rather special bottle of wine to enjoy with dinner, 2009 Ad Honorem Cabernet Sauvignon Shiraz blend,
made by Erika Obermeyer with Pieter Ferreira, cellarmaster at Graham Beck wines,
to honour the legacy of the late Graham Beck (1929-2010) and chosen after his death from a special barrel selection
It really is a very special wine, a classic red blend,
with all the fruit, gravitas, weight, minerality and layered flavours you would expect and we so enjoyed drinking it
If you have some, it could go another 10 years and still be superb
Graham Beck is now a specialist Cap Classique producer, so they will not produce more still wines

The back label

The meat on the buite (outside) braai

We enjoyed some good well-aged steaks, Boerewors and lamb chops...

... with a French salad, coleslaw and baked potatoes. A lovely summer's evening in the country

Sunset turning the clouds pink
It did rain heavily in the night, but all the clouds had disappeared by the morning

"Time for bed", said Zebedee...

and a clear sky, pink dawn with a new moon the next morning

We set off to see Cape Agulhas, the southern tip of Africa

Passing large farms with sheep, cattle, wheat and grapes

A pair of blue cranes (Anthropoides paradiseus) by a waterhole. The blue crane is South Africa's national bird

A useful Information board at the Cape

A Bloukop Koggelmander/Southern rock agama/Blue-headed Agama Lizard (Agama atra)

So tame, he posed for John

The Cape of Gulls, the most southerly point on the African continent,
the place where the Atlantic and the Indian Oceans meet. Next stop Antarctica

Yvonne and Peter had to have the obligatory photograph taken to prove they had been there

We had taken a picnic for lunch and had it near this wreck on the coast just a couple of kilometres after the point
The wreck of Meisho Maru No.38, a Japanese fishing vessel
which ran aground in a storm off Cape Agulhas on 16th November 1982
The crew of 17 all managed to swim to safety

and what else would we enjoy with lunch, but one of our favourite wines, SeaSalter Sauvignon blanc from Groote Post

A toast to travel and widening horizons

The impressive Cape Agulhas Lighthouse
It was the third lighthouse to be built in South Africa, in 1849, and is the second-oldest still operating, after Green Point
Lynne thinks it looks slightly Egyptian
and wondered whether the architect was echoing the ancient Lighthouse of Alexandria at the other end of Africa?

Then we drove to Struisbaai to watch the fishing boats coming in and sit a while on the docks. It was a dazzling blue day

Kids having fun jumping off the end of the dock

Lynne and Yvonne were lucky enough to see the local treasures, the large black stingrays that live around the dock

Then, as the afternoon progressed, the fishing boats started coming in

A man in a special fishing canoe, well-protected from the sun

Some people SUPping and another canoe fisherman

The scientific name of the silver fish is Argyrozona argyrozona, known locally as Silvers, they are Carpenter Sea bream
They must get very bashed and bruised by this treatment

A very pretty fish, which comes from this area. Lynne has eaten them and they can be quite bony

This boat had caught a huge catch of Yellowtail. Again, subjected to lots of rough treatment, throwing them into the boxes
There were commercial and private customers all around

We enjoyed an ice cream and then headed off on the long 4½ hour drive back to Sea Point, feeling very rested and revived
These summer weekends away are a joy

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