Wednesday, March 22, 2023

High Tea book launch at Klein Constantia

On Thursday 9th March 2023 Klein Constantia launched a new book about the history of this historic wine estate
Established in 1824, the 146 hectare Klein Constantia estate originally formed part of “Constantia”,
a vast property established in 1685 by Simon van der Stel, the first governor of the Cape
Famous for its world-renowned wines, and the revival of the famous 18th century sweet Constantia wine,
known as Vin de Constance

The book is available for sale on the farm

The current owners purchased the farm from the Jooste family in 2011
The four current shareholders are financier Zdenek Bakala, a US and Czech citizen
Charles Harman, a Vice Chairman of J.P.Morgan
Hubert de Boüard de Laforest from St. Emilion, France
and Bruno Prats whofor 28 years, was the CEO and winemaker of his family vineyard Chateau Cos d’Estournel
the famed Cru Classé of Saint Estèphe in the Médoc
Hubert de Boüard de Laforest and Bruno Prats have aligned Anwilka wines with Klein Constantia
Swedish-born Hans Astrom joined the Klein Constantia family in January 2012 as Managing Director
Having studied economics and been voted Sweden’s best sommelier in 1986, Hans worked in the hospitality industry
During this period he established the Swedish Sommelier Association and helped create “Grythytteakademin”,
the first academically based wine and food education programme in Sweden,
and where today one can graduate with a doctorate
Hans continued to gain invaluable experience in the international wine world,
working as Director and Vice President of Sales for Peter Lehmann Wines,
and thereafter assuming the role of General Manager for Hess Family Estates,
spanning four continents and seven wineries.
In recent years, Hans has become a member of the acclaimed Académie du Vin (AIV).
Steven Cowley is Klein Constantia's CEO

The book launch was held in the old cellar, an area the public does not often get to as it is a private area

We turned down past the historic Islamic Kramat (grave of a holy man)

Through a lovely avenue of trees

past the Manor House on your left. Constantia is known for its slopes of decomposed granite soils,
and a cool climate caused by its proximity to the sea and ocean breezes

and arrived on the lawn in front of the old cellar
We met Dougie Jooste's daughter at the event
and she told us of the fun and fabulous parties she experienced in this cellar growing up
Dougie Jooste was the previous owner of Klein Constantia
He bought it in 1980 and restored the farm and its vineyards from their sad and neglected state
into the jewel it has become with Ross Gower as the first winemaker
His son Lowell Jooste sent his son from America to celebrate the event

The door of the old wine cellar

We all enjoyed a glass or two of Klein Constantia 2019 Blanc de Blanc Cap Classique, beautifully crisp and dry with citrus and brioche notes, zesty crisp limes on the palate

Beautiful old beams in the old cellar

A table set with sweet treats

Tiny carrot cakes, shortbread and fresh strawberries

Marshmallows, fresh figs and pretzels for dipping into the chocolate fountain

Mini scones, cream and jam

and bottles of the famous Vin de Constance

A huge attraction was the Chocolate fountain, which did taste of good, high-quality chocolate

and copies of the new book to admire and leaf through

Trays of good canapés circulated all afternoon

Skewers of fresh pear and gorgonzola were delicious

Delicious pink prawn rolls

Excellent open sandwiches with tender rare beef

Arancini balls

The Klein Constantia Cuvée Anabel Rosé 2021 on ice
 This wine is dedicated to Anabel Bakala, the eldest daughter of shareholder Zdenek Bakala

and the Klein Constantia Sauvignon Blanc, characteristically clean and green with fig leaves,
green gooseberries and nectarine from the good terroir it was grown in, with a touch of vanilla oak

and we could also taste the 2016 Vin de Constance, redolent of the perfume of the muscat grapes it comes from,
with layered candy floss sweetness, stone fruit and a touch of lime to balance;
it has good potential to age as well as the preceding vintages
The wine does not have Noble Rot, nor do they encourage it

Esteemed and experienced wine journalists Malu Lambert and Joanne Gibson are the joint authors of the new book,
Joanne covering the history of the farm and Malu the current developments

Michael Fridjhon and politician Tony Leon in discussion about life, the world and the Government; and wine of course

Charles Harman welcomed the guests
He is a Vice Chairman of J.P.Morgan and has had a thirty year career in international finance
He is also co-owner and a director of Philglas & Swiggot, the London wine merchants
UK born, he was educated at Eton and Oxford
He lives in London but is happiest when he is at his home in Cape Town,
where he has been a regular visitor since 1991
He is a keen cyclist and tennis player and has completed the Cape Town Cycle Tour every year since 2005
He is married to Charlotte, an art historian, and they have two sons and a daughter,
all of whom share his passion for the Cape

Michael Fridjhon, renowned wine writer, judge, educator and wine importer wrote the foreword of the book
He spoke of how, in the 1980s, then owner Dougie Jooste approached the task of recreating the place of legend
as much like an archaeologist as a magician,
conjuring out of the layers and slopes the vineyards that would produce the wines that had been lost in antiquity"

Maryna Calow of WOSA and others listening to the speeches

Malu Lambert and Joanne Gibson enjoying a moment
Both have had extensive training in wine and much experience in our wine world
both have won very prestigious Journalism competitions for wine writing
Malu is also an experienced wine judge, locally and overseas

Joanne Gibson is an expert on the history of Constantia and other wine areas
To quote Michael Fridjhon: "Over the years Joanne Gibson has delved where others found barren ground
She has assembled a cache of forgotten facts and fascinating particulars,
but has also exposed the fables, half truths, fabrications and distortion - some erroneous, some mendacious -
that contaminated the historic record"
She has worked long and hard on this book

Kate Kent, daughter of Dougie Jooste, was very happy to be back visiting the farm she grew up on
and to hear our good memories of Dougie who was quite a raconteur and character
We have both been fans of the wines of Klein Constantia since the 1980s,
so we, too, have happy memories of the wonderful wines produced there and its winemakers, like Ross Gower,
who made the first modern Klein Constantia wines and recreated the historic Vin de Constance
It was a treat to meet her and share those memories

Winemaker Ross Gower, who died in 2010



Craig Harris, viticulturist. Craig took us on a wonderful tour of the farm in March 2020,
a few days before we all went into Covid lock down, it was our last outing for many months
The best memory was being taken to the Muscat de Frontignan vineyard which is the source of the Vin de Constance
and watch the wizened, magical grapes being individually hand harvested, and getting to taste them

Talented winemaker Matthew Day and a colleague
Matt has been with the farm since 2008 and was also appointed chief winemaker at Anwilka in 2021
His wine has won prestigious awards for Klein Constantia, locally and abroad

Heidi Rosenthal Duminy CWM, Cape Wine Academy Principal
and wine writer and judge Fiona McDonald enjoying the day

Everyone there was given a copy of the book and most were very keen to get these three people to sign their copy

Journalist Bubs Hyland chatting to Cathy van Zyl MW

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Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Meze platters at Mykonos, Sea Point

 Despite a chilly and rather wet Sunday evening, our spirits were up
as we had a reunion with a friend whom we had not seen for two months
We decided to go to Mykonos Taverna, a local Greek restaurant, and found other friends eating there too
NB - We were told that the Sea Point Mykonos is due to move soon to a new location in Sea Point,
but we were not told where it will be


We both decided on the Meze platters to share between two

This is the vegetarian option, with crisp Saganaki cheese, Spanakopita spinach and cheese triangles,
an aubergine dip, Tzatziki yogurt and cucumber, and Dolmades - vine leaves stuffed with flavoured rice,
and of course Pita bread

The non-vegetarian was our choice with many of the same ingredients,
but with chicken souvlaki, meatballs, humus and crisp deep fried baby squid
It was very satisfying and delicious

We took our own wine and shared a plate of chips
We also had the Vanilla ice cream with Halva as dessert and three coffees
The bill came to R200 per couple
Each couple brought a bottle of wine, a Grier French Rosé and a Spier Chenin blanc
Corkage was not charged

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2023 RMB Starlight Classics Concert at Vergelegen - Singing in the Rain

We were delighted when we were invited to the RMB Starlight Classics Concert this year, held again at Vergelegen;
one of our favourite events to cover each year
Multi-talented performers at a great venue and some good food and wine to accompany it

We were welcomed by Joandra Griesel, Communications Manager at Rand Merchant Bank, and her team

A welcoming glass of Vergelegen Brut MCC
and a lovely walk through Mrs Phillips’ garden and the historic Manor House

The garden is filled with beautiful and unusual flowers this year

and the last pear of summer on a tree at the entrance to the Manor House

The public area was already becoming populated at 4.30pm

We were asked to collect our wine for enjoying with supper

and were given a bottle cooler bag to keep it in while we walked around

John went to find a seat on the aisle so he could take some good photographs during the concert

Lots of helpful and smiling staff

The weather did look a bit iffy and there was some rain during the late afternoon, but only intermittent showers

Sheltering under large umbrellas, which they have to put down during the concert,
so everyone was praying that it would not rain

There were various food stations for the invited guests and this is the Harvest Table
with a great selection of things to eat, hummus, tzatziki, rolls, breads, a good cheese selection,
lots of excellent smoked salmon, salads, biltong, droëwors, cheese straws, nuts

The Silwood students were manning different stands,
like this one serving pasta, a choice of Penne Arabbiata or Beef ragout pasta

A mixed salad on the Harvest Table

The bar had a very good selection of drinks

We found a lovely table in the middle of the wood

and in our bottle cooler we discovered two of these very useful rain ponchos

Two other food stations. Lynne tried the Paella which certainly had lots of prawns, mussels, calamari and fish
and John tried the rather gentle lamb curry and rice
Each station had a vegetarian option

and waiting staff were roaming with different canapés

The paying audience was keeping warm and dry

The concert was about to begin and as we took our seats, the heavens opened
 Everyone quickly donned their ponchos and it did rather resemble a meeting of the Star Wars Storm troopers!
Everyone was in a great mood, having been well fed and watered,
so we all got ready to enjoy the concert and we didn't see anyone leave
In all the years that we have been coming to the Starlight Concert, this is the first time we have had rain

5 minutes to lift off!

and the Cape Town Pops Orchestra with beloved conductor Richard Cock
went into a rousing performance of the first number
Someone had turned the bass very high up, so it was a very rousing performance indeed

with light show added

Richard Cock introduced the evening 

and then the CEO of RMB, Emrie Brown, welcomed us
 We all stood to sing the National Anthem and the concert began

Sadly, we do think the rain affected the tuning of the orchestra’s instruments;
sometimes it did sound rather like a Mariachi band! It improved later as the rain departed
and they were able to dry out and the bass speakers were softened

The audience are not supplied with a programme of the music, so we do not have the titles of all of the songs
and taking notes under a plastic poncho in the rain was, frankly, impossible

Lukhanyo Moyake is an Internationally experienced South African tenor with a beautiful rich voice
He has performed in London with the ENO and at the State Opera in Vienna, ably opened the show

The rain ceased and the clouds parted

Katlego Maboe, singer, actor and joint host joined Richard Cock on stage for some of the evening

They had lots of banter!

Corlea Botha has a very versatile voice and sang many different songs and modes, from opera to rock

She was joined for this performance by dancers from the ballet

The very dramatic Habanera  from Carmen

which was performed by Siphokazi Molteno. She is billed as a 'Dazzling mezzo-soprano' and she certainly is impressive

Great backdrops on the stage for each performance

Jesse Clegg, billed as SA’s hottest pop rocker, received a warm reception

Some very emotive slides showing him and his late father, Johnny, who was an iconic South African performer

There were several performers from the Zip Zap circus,
including this very talented and supple aerial gymnast and her hoop

She performed while the Cape Town Pops Orchestra played

A joy to watch and photograph!

More banter on stage between Conductor Richard Cock and Katlego Maboe

Time for some great Jazz from Langa Mavuso, acclaimed Afro-soul singer and songwriter

A beautiful Aria from Brittany Smith. a gifted young South African classical soprano

She sang the "Doll Song” (Les oiseaux dans la charmille) aria from Tales of Hoffman
Such a difficult aria, and so well performed

Her clockwork running out.... she was quickly wound up again to continue her performance

The Ndlovu Youth Choir performed several familiar songs, mostly in African languages

And we had a beautiful aria from Lukhanyo Moyake and Brittany Smith

Even the band was captivated by the lyrical music

Time for some rousing pop music, with multi performers on stage

The audience was encouraged to join in too


and we did!

Langa Mavuso in full song

and joined by Siphokazi Molteno, showing their versatility

Time for the Compère and the Conductor to join in the fun

When you see gondolas, you know we have Italian opera

Back after the short interval, we no longer need our ponchos, as the sky is clear and the concert can begin again

and then it was Starlight time, when we light our candles and hold them high to support the stars on the stage

Corlea Botha and Langa Mavuso performed a familiar song in Afrikaans

An extraordinarily supple acrobat from the Zip Zap circus

who could manipulate his body so gracefully and skilfully

A final number from The Ndlovu Youth Choir

And some rousing Gloria Gaynor songs from the three Divas

Everyone on stage for the finale!

Singing joyful music and the audience was up on its feet
demanding encores to Don’t Stop Me Now, I'm having a good time.....and we were

A final visit to the bar and a taste of the desserts and sweetmeats on offer
This allows the public to depart, so that the roads are not blocked when the invited guests need to leave

All the stories we have published can be seen in the Blog Archive near the top of the column on the right

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