Thursday, October 27, 2016

Three Robertson wine farms: 2. Tanagra, McGregor

The owners, Robert and Anette Rosenbach, have been pressing us to visit for several months; we were so pleased we could finally get there. It's a small farm in the McGregor valley with interesting wines and lots of different grappas and other tempting fruit and grape spirits. They also have guest accommodation and we were taken to see one of the most beautiful houses for hire, set in the middle of the wilderness. If you feel the need to get away from it all and contemplate nature, this is the place for you. Especially with a bottle or two of Heavenly Chaos red wine and some Eau de Vie de Lie
We were welcomed by Anette Rosenbach
and their lovely dog
Robert makes the wine with help from Lourens van der Westhuizen, who is also their viticulturist. This is the tiny winery and distillery
Their house contains the tasting room. The basket press is still put to use in harvest time
Cooled by a huge wild fig tree
A swimming pool for guests who stay in the cottages
They took us on a trip down the valley to see some of their cottages there. This is the Honeymoon Hill cottage, which was occupied for the week
The land they own borders the Vrolijkheid Nature Reserve, a birder’s paradise, with hides and walking and mountain bike trails in the area
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Magnificent views from the house for hire called Faraway, which is off the grid
Its kitchen
Bathroom and bedroom
A bathtub with a view
The lounge with fireplace for chilly evenings, There is a barbecue on the veranda
The house from the outside. It has solar panels, gas fridge and cooker and LED lighting
A fat beetle in a vygie. The plants in are area are very interesting dry land Karoo with many succulents
The house also has a small plunge pool off the veranda
Robert shows us the distillery with its modern German still
In the tasting room, there are lots of different things to buy besides the wine and the spirits. Local jams and olive oil, booklets, local handicrafts and droƫwors
First the 2016 Blanc de Noir made from Cabernet Franc
It is yeasty with vanilla perfume, dry crisp and clean with long refreshing flavours
Then on to the reds. The 2014 Cabernet Franc, is dark brick red, cherries, savoury umami nose with green leaves and black cherries. More cherries on a palate with salty liquorice drop, a very deep and sophisticated food wine which finishes with more cherries. We liked it a lot. All the wines are certified as Single Vineyard. The 20124 Cabernet Sauvignon has cassis berries and leaves on the nose. minerality and elegance with soft sweet cassis fruit. Its juicy with a nice kick of alcohol and a finish of more liquorice drop and cherries.
Some guests were also tasting with us . Next was the 2014 Shiraz. The first hit is black pepper and spice with some peppermint, then soft fruit with some green leaf notes and chalky cheek coating tannins. This needs time to develop. The 2014 Carah is 40% Cabernet 60% Shiraz blend with cassis and spice on the nose, very soft sweet entry with spice and pepper then long cassis flavours remain. Heavenly chaos is made on the farm by Robert in his old basket press. It’s a lighter style red wine, 50% Merlot, 25 % Cabernet and Shiraz. Smoky from the wood, with cassis, red cherries, warm linen nose and is nice juicy fruity bound wine.
Swallows nest inside and outside the house. We are sure they can read. They keep flitting in and out feeding their young
Time to taste some of the spirits. We began with the Marc de Hanepoot. its grippy with heat, good sweet nuances rather than flavours and a hot chilli burn Then the Marc de Chardonnay Barrique made from Springfield wineries chardonnay skins. With oaty flavours, like a soft malt whiskey with wood, it really impressed us. The Eau de Vie de Lie is made from Springfield’s Life from Stone fruit skins and indeed has a familiar nose and taste, with some apricot and fullness on the palate. The Marc de Sauvignon Blanc also from Life from Stone skins has green leaves fully perfumed warmth and is pretty and deadly! The alcohols were beginning to get to us even though we were taking tiny sips and John was spitting. The Shiraz Eau de Vie is pretty and perfumed with wood like a Speyside whiskey with some cherry and spice. The Lemon Eau de vie is just pure lemon, you cannot miss it And the Orange Liqueur is bitter orange marmalade with an orange oil nose and soft orange sweetness on the palate. very pure fruit flavours. We had to stop regretfully as it was time to rush to our next appointment. Robert generously let us pick our favourite and a bottle of the Marc de Chardonnay Barrique came home with us to be enjoyed on special after dinner occasions. Thank you both for a lovely meeting. We shall be back in the new year with friends from Holland
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

Three Robertson wine farms: 1. Lord's near McGregor

When we travel long distances out of town, we reckon that, if we have paid for the petrol to drive the distance, we might as well stay over and explore the area in more depth, find new wine farms and farms we haven't visited before and re-establish old connections. This time we spent Monday in the McGregor area and in Robertson visiting three wine farms. The first was Lords Winery
Not to be confused with Lords Guest House, (also owned by the winery but way down the valley on the Robertson side of McGregor), Lords is set right up the McGregor Valley on the "Road to Nowhere" to the Boesmanskloof Pass, where you can take the long walk across the mountains to Greyton. It's a great stop for refreshment either way. We were so warmly received and entertained.We really enjoyed our visit and will definitely return soon. The views from the farm are superb and the wines really impressed
The farm, nestled beneath the mountains, has the winery behind the main building, Our appointment was for 10.30
Walkers follow that road right up the hill and over the pass, one of the most popular hikes in the Cape. It's a day's walk of about 15 kilometres but, unless you have a car at both ends, you have to return to your start point the next day. There is a place to swim on the journey. The two towns of Greyton and McGregor are about 3 hours apart by road, round a rather large mountain range. Accommodation at either end is good
The farm entrance
Now you know
We were met by Jacques Oosthuizen, son of the owner Jacie
The wine cellar and tasting room
We sat on the terrace
had a tour of the barrel cellar
and admired some of the Cricketing memorabilia. Yes, the owner is a cricket fan; the farm is named after Lord's Cricket Ground. A place rather familiar to Lynne, as she lived not far from it for many years
They were in the middle of bottling their MCC. As happens with many smaller producers, the bottling plant comes to you in a truck
Wonderful views all around
The tasting room
A Good Luck Barrel with some bargains
Spring grapes. Karoo fynbos and blue mountains
Umbrella up for the sunny day
Jacques mother had prepared this lovely plate of nibbles especially for us. We felt very honoured. The light-as-air crispy vetkoek are tiny dumplings deep fried in mutton fat and they are eaten with the cheese and jam. The tiny pies were filled with moist egg, spinach and feta cheese with a buttery crumbly layer of thin pastry, beautifully flavoured
We tasted the wines. The MCC Brute won the Best Non Vintage award at the Amorim Cork Awards in 2014. It’s yeasty and zesty, with a good prickle and long raspberry flavours from the 100% Pinot Noir. The unwooded 2016 Sauvignon Blanc has green leaves, granadilla and green pepper on the nose and is tropical on the palate. The 2015 Chardonnay with 6 to 8 months in barrel has rich cooked peaches and vanilla on the nose, it’s crisp with chalky tannins, richness and more of vanilla on the finish
Pinot noir has the biggest share of their vineyard; 2016 was a big harvest, they had to buy more barrels. The CRAFT Pinot Noir is rich, with red berries on the nose, dark bitter wood, almost chocolate and liquorice, then more berries and cherries on the palate. Finally the 2012 Three Barrels Shiraz, wood, spicy dark fruit on the nose and palate, smooth with a nice kick of warm alcohol followed by more spice and black pepper and vanilla ice cream on the end
A fiscal shrike surveys his territory
Jacques took us through the wines and was a wonderful host. He has many exciting plans for promoting the farm and has invited us back to see some of them. We intend to accept the invitation
Then off we went down the dusty road back through McGregor and out the other side for our appointment at Tanagra
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

Nedbank Getaway Green Wine Awards 2016


Knowing what a long hard path you have to take to become classified as Organic or IPW (Integrated Production of Wine) in the wine industry, your respect should soar for those farms who achieve it. This achievement is lauded and celebrated every year with these Green Wine Awards now in their 8th year, held this year at Rozendal in Stellenbosh. 120 wines were entered in the two categories: Best wines made from Organically Grown Grapes and Best Wines from Integrated Production of Wine. Judges in the Best Farming Practices category looked at not only what goes into the bottle, but considered the wellbeing of farm employees and surrounding communities and the wider impact of farming on the surrounding environments. The Awards are sponsored by Nedbank and Getaway Magazine
The conference facility at Rozendal on the Polkadraai road
Some of the winning wines were there to be sampled
and canapƩs were served. Chutney and feta tarts
Mini hamburgers
Someone from the media whom we don't see often enough as he is in Johannesburg; veteran reporter Len Maseko enjoying a moment with Anel Grobler of Spit or Swallow
Mushroom Risotto
Very good duck spring rolls
Time to move inside for the awards and lunch
You are over there...
Getaway editor Neil Piper and Kathryn Frew of Ramsey Media
Neil opens proceedings. He told us that Getaway magazine launched these awards in 2009 to encourage the industry to conserve, reduce carbon footprint and green their wines. Quality too is very important. How things have changed in these 8 years. Two decades ago, anything tagged “organic” would have been somewhat out there on the hippy fringe. Organic is mainstream, and nowhere is this more obvious than on retail shelves where sustainable production is now sought after, with consumers happy to pay a premium to be kinder to the environment. In 2015, Integrated Production of Wine (IPW) replaced the Biodiversity and Wine Initiative (BWI) as a judging category in the Nedbank Green Wine Awards
Daniel Rousseau, Regional Manager AGRED Nedbank gave thanks to the partners of the awards, WWF, Ramsay Media and the Nedbank Green marketing team. They are humbled by the growth of the awards and in the accelerating change in the wine industry. They have now produced the world's first Green Map for our local wine industry.
Time for the starter which was mock crayfish using Monkfish in a salad with basil pesto and Buffalo Mozzarella cream served with the Longridge 2015 Chardonnay (this also scored 90 points in the Top Chardonnays this week).There is a nice integration of golden fruit and gentle wood. All the media were so impressed with the wines this year, which has not always been the case
Head Judge Fiona MacDonald talked about the entries. There were 120 wines judged across two categories (Best wines made from Organically Grown Grapes and Best Wines from Integrated Production of Wine category. She said judging was a real treat this year, we are no longer winging it. Improvement in quality has been incremental, not in big leaps. Moody’s have said that South Africa is the fastest growing Green economy in the world. To anyone like Nedbank, who became involved years ago, well done. It is not a 'trend' anymore, we have to be serious about our future. Seven billion Rand has been spent on Green infrastructure in South Africa, without a penny from Government
The judges were Fiona, Dr Winnie Bowman CWM, Nomonde Kubheka, FranƧois Rautenbach, and Tinashe Nyamudoka. Two wine bloggers were judges: Jon Meinking and Jeanri-tine van Zyl. Judges in the Best Farming Practices category Duimpie Bayly, honorary life president of the SA Society of Enology and Wine Viticulture, Daniƫl Scheitakat of the Integrated Production of Wine, and AnƩl Blignaut, an environmental consultant
Time for the main course: A very good tender beef fillet topped with an olive and her butter and a rather fatty but tasty piece of ox-tail, bones and all. Served on parmesan crushed potatoes, with blanched courgettes and beans and some rocket. We drank the Earthbound 2015 Organic Cabernet Sauvignon
Duimpie Bayly gave an address on Best Farming Practice and then the awards were presented. See them here. http://www.greenwineawards.com/

Sandile Mkhwanazi of Wynland magazine looking very smart, rushing off to another function
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

Caroline's White Wine Review 2016

The second of Caroline Rillema's annual wine reviews, this showcases her pick of the best White Wines out there, those that have scored highly in the industry with points and awards and wines she likes and sells. It is always a tour de force of amazing wines. We always struggle to taste that many wines, but it is such a good tasting
The Table Bay Hotel is right in the middle of the V&A Waterfront. We stopped off in the shopping centre for a quick bite to eat, as we were in between two wine events
On the hotel’s terrace. Not sure why the seal is wrapped up. It was a warm and sunny day.
An appropriately named wine
John Loubser of Steenberg who was showing their Magna Carta, an exciting Constantia Sauvignon Semillon white blend made by JD Pretorius. Seen here with Gordon Newton Johnson, who was showing his 2015 Whitehall Chardonnay
Boschendal are always great at presentation and friendly presenters. This was their Grande CuvƩe Brut MCC 2012
An elderly gent tasting the Charles Fox Blanc de Blanc Brut MCC 2013 watched by Melissa Nelsen, Leon Engelke and Zelda Fox
Also at the table was Melissa Nelsen showing her Genevieve Brut MCC 2012
and another good bubbly, Graham Beck CuvĆ©e Clive 2009 presented by ElbĆØ Nortje and Chloe Canderle
Nadia & David Sadie had their David Aristargos 2015 an interesting white blend of Chenin, Clairette Blanc, Viognier and Semillon
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016