Thursday, September 08, 2011

Victoria Street Market, Durban

Warning: There are images here which may upset sensitive viewers!
Monday morning saw us making a pilgrimage to the Victoria Street Indian Market which is much smaller than we both remembered.


We bought some masalas and salt mixes from Mr Joe who has been there for 46 years and wants to move to Cape Town! So (they say!) do several of the other traders.



There are some strange (to Cape eyes) ideas about fish identities

Spices in abundance

 


Live chicks
Colourful decorations
Bright brass
Benin bronzes







































Smileys are the most popular meat item



Morningside Hotel, a sad wine story

We found a Groupon offer for a buffet at the Morningside Lodge Hotel restaurant in Durban just before we left: R70 instead of R150 a person and, not knowing Durban, we took a chance.
How bad could it be? It turned out to be a fairly Fawlty Towers experience.
the curries (a prawn & chicken, and a lamb biriani) were very bony and very mild
The puddings were scary, solid rice pudding and a very strange bouncy finger they called a chocolate brownie, which had no flavour and a most peculiar texture, like a very solid floury jelly.
Chicken wings next to the dessert
We asked for the wine list – blank looks from our waitress. “We have wine, led (red) wine (pause…) and white” she said. We asked, what kind? “Led wine or white wine.” We asked what name, what label – no label she said, “in glass”. In the end we gave up, realised we were being pretentious and said, “just bring us two glasses of the red”. It was absolutely awful! Oxidised, thin, sour and quite undrinkable. But it was included in the price…. They did eventually bring us a wine list as we were leaving – they have four wines on it
That was when we realized that Durban doesn’t drink much wine.
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2011

110901 Main Ingredient's MENU - Pizza and Beer, Seductive Sauvignons, World Chefs Tour, Risotto of Chicken and Broad Beans, Durban trip, leisure activities and restaurant special offers

MENU
Main Ingredient’s weekly E-Journal
Gourmet Foods, Ingredients & Fine Wines
Eat In Guide’s Outstanding Outlet Award Winner from 2006 to 2010
Click on anything underlined and Green to open a link to pictures or more information



Two delightful aliens: A grey squirrel in a Franschhoek oak
Pizza and Beer     We were invited to a very convivial 8th birthday celebration at Sense of Taste in Maitland on Thursday – one of our best suppliers, they are extremely successful and professional caterers and they do superb cookery classes - the “hands on” kind of class which we so prefer to the “demonstration” classes. We discovered that they have quite another talent and that is for making fantastic pizza. These are crisp, with a very thin base and the fillings are sensational. We loved the Middle Eastern influenced one with melting lamb and cumin (they have opened a branch in Istanbul), the spicy chicken tikka pizza, and the smoked salmon with caper berries. There were lots of other sensational flavours as well. Sadly, you can’t order them in the evening, but if you have a corporate event in Cape Town during the day or a lunch, they can be delivered to you or your office. Check out their website senseoftaste.co.za or phone Sense of Taste on +27 21 511 0426.
Seductive Sauvignons festival      Wine Concepts’ Sauvignon festival which covers their choice of both the best Sauvignons blanc and the best Cabernet sauvignons is held once a year at the Vineyard Hotel and is certainly one of the highlights of our wine tasting year.
We tasted many of the sauvignons: lots of favourites, some new farms and some very improved wines but only managed to taste one of the Cabernet sauvignons. It is just not possible to taste that many wines in one evening, even if one spits and doesn’t swallow - which Lynne does with reluctance but John (our driver) has learned to do of necessity. It looks like a good year for this white wine and we hope to re-taste many of these wines as they get a little older because many of them had been very recently bottled and released. There were some magnificent older wines available for tasting (a special feature of this event) and it proves our point that you don’t have to drink Sauvignon blanc while its young, because it does age fantastically well. Favourite examples were the Oak Valley 2006 (which was as fresh and lively as it was when first released), Cape Point and Miravel 2006, Klein Constantia Perdeblokke and Paul Cluver 2005, and Groote Post and Hermanuspietersfontein 2007. Lynne’s favourite wine of the evening was another ‘aged’ wine, the 2009 Black Oystercatcher Blanc Fumé – a wooded Sauvignon Blanc which is in very short supply. Only 600 litres were made by the winemaker for his own use but he has been persuaded to release it onto the market. It is very French in style, with lots of minerality and elegance.
2009 was an exceptionally good vintage for Sauvignon blanc and we have several good examples at home which we are enjoying, including the Elgin Vintners, which was on the show. Lynne thinks that the wine which will develop best from this year’s vintage is the Bouchard Finlayson which has lots to offer, full and perfumed and a corker on the palate. Springfield, Nitida, Cederberg and Miravel all delivered great wines as expected and they, too, can be expected to improve if you keep them. La Barry from Martin Meinert is also definitely one to try, although the sample we tasted had only been bottled a few days earlier and was very closed. Many producers had only just released their 2010 wines and these showed a delicious maturity. These included Black Oystercatcher, Cape Point, Groot Constantia, Constantia Uitsig, South Hill, Louis, Shannon, First Sighting and Sterhuis.
After the festival, we and some other visitors and exhibitors decided to have supper at the Vineyard’s The Square restaurant before the drive home. We both had a lovely seafood pasta in a marinara sauce. It is on the a la carte menu at the cost of R110. The hotel is currently running a special of dinner and a night at the hotel followed by breakfast, which is very good value indeed. Our friends were taking advantage of this special and the three course menu looked very good indeed.
World Chefs Tour against Hunger     You may have been aware from the huge newspaper advertisements that there were foreign chefs visiting for the Bidvest World Chefs Tour against Hunger. We saw them advertise only three countries: Holland, USA and Egypt and, as it was a busy week and these cuisines are not particularly inspiring to us, we didn’t plan to go. Apparently there were 200 chefs from 44 countries here for the tour. Then, on Saturday morning at the Biscuit Mill, Pete Goffe Wood told us what a fantastic meal he had had with the Singapore team who were cooking at the Holiday Inn Garden Court, just off the Mandela Boulevard. On the spur of the moment, and because Lynne knows and absolutely loves Malaysian food (she used to eat it at least once a week in London for many, many years and has visited Malaysia) we decided to book and go that night. Cost was R155 per person, a portion of this going to the charity. Pete did say that the two top chefs would be cooking at the Banquet on Saturday, but that the other chefs would be cooking at the hotel. Sadly, they were not and the food was a bit of a disaster.
It seemed as if it had all been prepared a lot earlier (possibly the day before?), and was languishing in bains marie, dried out, overcooked and in pools of oil. The presentation was appalling, dirty spoons lying around and everything looked like slop. The hotel staff were mostly unable to tell us what we were eating and the added complication was that Egyptian food dishes were mixed up with the Singapore. The prawn curry had all been eaten by 7.30 and all that was left in the dish was a little sauce and a few large prawn shells. There was an enormous dish of expensive scallops in a spiced sauce. They were ruined because they had stewed to hard disks, such a waste. We did manage to taste the chilli soft shell crab Pete had so sung about, but it was dry and not hot - we think someone had been a bit shy with the chilli - and it had little texture and flavour. The rice was transparent and crisp with age, the egg on it solid rubber. One dish they could not ruin was a Nonya Laksa where the noodles, fish balls and bean sprouts had to have the Laksa sauce poured onto them at the last moment and this tasted fresh and very lively indeed, if a little oily. An in-house cook did grill some fragrant fresh chicken satay while we were there, but provided no dipping sauce. Luckily there was some Gado Gado salad covered in peanut sauce, so we added some of that. Some of the dessert dishes had been placed next to savoury so we had a few surprises eating our main courses, like finding an Egyptian sweetmeat which we had mistaken for a meatball. There was one super Malaysian dessert hidden in a lidded pot of fragrant ginger and lemongrass broth – a sweet rice dumpling stuffed with sweet soya paste. The other desserts were a disgrace! See our pictures which include the childrens’ party dessert plate: green lime jelly, packet chocolate mousse, packet crème caramel and a melk tart. And some of the food was a complete mystery – Lynne got a huge surprise tasting some of them as they were completely unidentifiable as food.
Besides the residents of the hotel and an entire visiting football team (who we think were a bit shell shocked with the food selection), there was only one other foodie couple eating there. We enjoyed comparing notes with them. If we had seen this advertised earlier in the week, we would have been there when the Singapore chefs were cooking. Just before we left, the manager gave us a menu of what ‘should have been’. Made you weep. We hope the money we paid went to the charity.
Sadly, we think that this exercise was very badly done and we feel so embarrassed for the chefs who were not given any publicity. We met several senior Czech Republic chefs at the Biscuit Mill that morning and gave them tastes of some of our local specialities, which they loved. But we hadn’t known beforehand that they were here, either.
This week’s Vinimark trade show was the latest in the current season of wine tastings hosted by wine distributors. Favourite wines we tasted were Altydgedacht’s The Ollo (a delicious blend of Viognier, Chardonnay, Chenin and Semillon), Creation’s Sauvignon blanc, Viognier, Merlot and Shiraz Grenache, Fryer’s Cove’s subtly salty Sauvignon and Pinot Noir (the vineyards are right on the coast north of Lambert’s Bay), Le Riche Cabernet Reserve 2008 and 2010 Chardonnay, Morgenhof Estate 2005 red blend, Morkel’s Bellevue Pinotage 2009 (delicious fruit with a serious backbone, possibly the best wine Wilhelm Kritzinger has made in ten years), Atticus and Tumara red blends and their wild buchu/eucalyptus Malbec and Krone’s Nicolas Charles Krone Marque 1 MCC (Not for Lynne, but John liked the mature flavours). These tastings are so often quite social and one seldom gets to taste all the wines. We missed Rustenberg, Warwick, Villiera, Veenwouden and Spier, among a few others. Lynne has to mention the varied canapés served during the wine tasting. They were particularly good – original, nothing too spicy, they all were very freshly made and they went very well with the wine. And, most important, there were plenty of them. Well done One and Only.
Risotto of Chicken and Broad Beans
Drift Farm at the Biscuit Mill has had superb young broad beans for the last couple of weeks. They inspired Lynne to make this risotto and she now uses the Masterchef method of shaking the pan instead of stirring it. She finds it much easier and far less tiring and you do still get a lovely creamy risotto. Do make sure that your cooking temperature is not too high, the rice should simmer, not boil. It should not every stick to the bottom and should stay nice and liquid and creamy.
1 T olive oil – 1 T butter - 1 small onion, finely chopped - 2 cloves of garlic, crushed - 500g Arborio or Carnaroli rice – a large pot of good chicken stock– 150ml dry white wine -1 t fresh thyme leaves – 1 kg broad beans – 400g cooked chicken, chopped into bite-sized pieces – 1 T butter – 100g grated parmesan cheese – pepper and salt
De-pod the broad beans, boil them for two minutes, drain and take off the hard skins of very large beans and discard them. In a separate pan, heat the stock and have a ladle ready. Fry the onion in the oil in a heavy bottomed pan until soft but not brown, add the garlic and stir for a couple of minutes. Add the rice and stir till it is all covered in the oil and butter. Pour on the wine and let it bubble and reduce for a few minutes. Cook on a medium heat, not a high one. Start ladling on the stock, a ladle at a time. Shake the pan rather than stir and when the stock is reducing, add another ladle. Keep giving the pan a good shake every now and then. Stir if you prefer to. When you see the rice is nearly ready, and getting nice and creamy, add the thyme, the chicken and the broad beans. Taste and adjust the seasoning if necessary. With good stock you usually don’t need extra salt. Continue shaking the pan to incorporate everything and when the rice is cooked but still has a little bite, remove from the heat, stir in the butter and the cheese and rest for five minutes before serving. Serves 4.
Travel     As we told you last week, we will be paying a short visit to the land of John’s birth, Durban (his father was transferred and they left before John was a year old!), at the beginning tomorrow. We have quite a programme of restaurants and other places to visit, so you’ll hear about them in the next couple of weeks. MENU will come to you from Ballito next week.
Our products. We haven’t added anything new because of  our impending trip, but some of our suppliers are talking about some exciting new products and we’ll give you news of them when we come back.
We have a lot of fun putting MENU together each week and, of course, doing the things we write about, BUT making it possible for you to enjoy rare and wonderful gourmet foods is what drives our business. We stock a good range of ingredients and delicious ready-made gourmet foods. So, please have a look at our Product List and see what you need. You can contact us by email or phone, or through our website. We can send your requirements to you anywhere in South Africa. If you are following the various international foodie programmes on television, we have or can find lots of what some may call the strange and difficult things that they use.
Our market activities   We will not be at any markets in the next week, because of our travels in The Last Outpost of the British Empire (as it has fondly been called). We will be back at the Old Biscuit Mill’s brilliant, exciting and atmospheric Neighbourgoods Market on Saturday 10th between 9am and 2pm. The following Wednesday, we will be back at the Dean St Arcade in Newlands from 09h30 to 14h30 and at The Place at Cavendish the Friday after that.
Good food and wine continues to grow as a focal point for many people in the Western Cape and, to an extent, in other parts of the country. As a result, our list of Interesting Food and Wine Events has grown so much that it was making MENU too long for some of our readers. So we’ve taken it online. Click here to access it. You will need to be connected to the internet.
Our  list of Winter restaurant special offers continues to grow. Click here to access it. These 2011 Winter Specials have been sent to us by the restaurants or their PR agencies. We have not personally tried all of them and their listing here should not always be taken as a recommendation from ourselves. When we have tried it, we’ve put in our observations. We have cut out the flowery adjectives etc. we’ve been sent, to give you the essentials. Click on the name to access the relevant website. All communication should be with the individual restaurants.








1st September 2011
Remember - if you can’t find something, we’ll do our best to get it for you, and, if you’re in Cape Town or elsewhere in the country, we can send it to you! Check our product list for details and prices.
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
Our Adamastor & Bacchus© tailor-made Wine, Food and Photo tours take small groups (up to 6) to specialist wine producers who make the best of South Africa’s wines. Have fun while you learn more about wine and how it is made! Tours can be conducted in English, German, Norwegian or Dutch flavoured Afrikaans.
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 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. Our Avast! ® Anti-Virus software is updated at least daily and our system is scanned continually for viruses.
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 and keep our mailing list strictly confidential. If you wish to be added to our mailing list, please send us a message, inserting "subscribe" in the subject line. If you wish to be removed from our mailing list, please send us a message, inserting "remove" in the subject line.

Thursday, September 01, 2011

110825 Main Ingredient's MENU - Winelands working conditions, Spinach & ricotta pasta, Dunes, DGB wine show, interesting events and restaurant special offers


MENU
Main Ingredient’s weekly E-Journal

Gourmet Foods, Ingredients & Fine Wines
Eat In Guide’s Outstanding Outlet Award Winner from 2006 to 2010
Click on anything underlined and Green to open a link to pictures or more information

Franschhoek mountains

Living conditions on wine farms have been receiving a huge amount of negative publicity in the last few days, with newspapers, radio and other media locally and abroad giving air and paper space to a report by an organisation called Human Rights Watch. This report has told the world that living and working conditions on South African wine farms are universally intolerable and a disgrace. Undoubtedly, they have made a good point and bringing light to an unacceptable situation has to be a good thing. However, and this is a big however, one of the easiest things in the world is to cherry pick a few bad apples and label the whole orchard as rotten. It may be true that one bad apple can spoil the barrel, but then we should remove that apple and enjoy all the good ones.

The truth, we believe, is that the wine farmers whom we know make an enormous effort to ensure that their workers are well housed and paid and that their working conditions are good. Humanitarian considerations aside, wine is a product which is extremely sensitive to bad handling. Grapes have to be grown, nurtured, picked, sorted and handled with great care if we are to enjoy a delicious glass of wine – and our industry produces millions of delicious bottles of wine each year. This can only be done by well-trained and willing people. We can cherry pick a few examples: Buitenverwachting in Constantia built a model workers’ village when they started to make wine in the modern era. Franschhoek’s Solms Delta did the same and has a programme to train and motivate their workers who are now involved not only in menial work but have been given opportunities to develop exciting opportunities and to become part of the management. Diemersfontein in Wellington gave their workers the opportunity to become shareholders in the company with their Thokozani programme and to develop, manage and enjoy the fruits of areas of enterprise - a wine range, guesthouse, coffee shop and an art gallery - on the farm. The Cape Winemakers’ Guild has an extensive Protegé programme to develop and train farm workers, several of whom have been trained to university level in winemaking and a programme to educate and develop workers’ children.
The list is long and we don’t have space for more here. We spend a lot of time in the winelands, visiting wine farms, and we know a lot of the most important producers. We see positive examples like these everywhere. Human Rights Watch has, apparently, been unwilling to identify the bad apples they have pointed out and has simply used them to tar and feather the whole industry. In doing so, they have turned a potentially good exercise into one which is unfair, unjust and, ultimately, scurrilous. In doing so they have, potentially, damaged the good apples. The wine industry is struggling to keep solvent. Wine farms are going out of business because they have become unsustainable. Closing farms loses jobs and all the benefits that come with them. If this negative publicity damages our wine exports, the ultimate damage will be to the workers whom Human Rights Watch say are their concern. They should name and shame the bad apples, so that their peers can take action and they ought to be honest and point out that these conditions are exceptions which are not typical of the whole industry. It is easy to find fault when you want to be sensational, perhaps less easy to be accurate, objective and honest.
Dunes     We were invited to Dunes restaurant last Friday evening for a media dinner to try out their Bistro menu. Quinton Spickernell, who cooked our dinner, says Dunes is, apparently, known only for its calamari and chips and its very child friendly garden and attitude. He wants to change this perception. Their reasonable Sunday buffet breakfast has been doing this, now he wants to draw attention to the restaurant rather than the pub. We have been fans for years and take all our overseas visitors there for: Yes! a plate of calamari or nachos, a good draught beer and a fantastic view. We have to confess we have never eaten downstairs in the restaurant. The restaurant has always served very good meals and to draw people in: both locals and us from other suburbs, he has come up with the well priced Bistro menu. Adding up the most expensive starter and main course we worked out this might cost you a maximum of R120 per person for two courses. Drinks, service and dessert will add to the bill but we still think it is a very good deal.
We started with a good fish soup which had a thin, well-flavoured broth and contained mussels, fish and a scallop. The other starter, which we were not expecting to wow us but did, was a crisp phyllo-wrapped vegetarian spinach and feta parcel with a tomato and basil sauce.
Our main courses were, for John, a Chargrilled Beef fillet with a green peppercorn cream sauce and good chips and vegetables and for Lynne, perfectly cooked, soft and flaky Kingklip with a slightly singed hazelnut, thyme and lemon coating and a butter sauce – even John who is not a fan of Kingklip, liked this dish. There is a vegetarian butternut and lentil bobotie on the menu and we might return for the scallop starter (R40) and the Bouillabaisse main (R59). The wine list is good, with lots of wines served by the glass at very reasonable prices. Desserts are on the main menu and Quinton spoilt us with the White chocolate cheesecake, which everyone went crazy for. Good coffee finished a good meal. One negative for us is the restaurant does smell very strongly of cigarette smoke even though it is not allowed and we suspect this is seeping in from the pub area above the restaurant. Sealing the floor up there might help. The views are marvellous at sunset and of course, during the day. Now that the whales are back, it is well worth a stop for a good meal and a bit of whale watching.
Not always to one’s taste     Have you ever made a meal for friends and then absolutely hated your own cooking, despite everyone else around the table saying they liked and enjoyed the food? This is what happened to Lynne last week and we think it comes down to what we often preach: when you eat out and you don’t like something, it doesn’t always mean there is anything wrong with the food, it is just your personal preference.
Lynne discovered some amazing huge pasta shells at Checkers and decided to use them for friends who were coming to supper. Using a classic recipe of stuffing the shells with ricotta and spinach, she added some tinned Canadian salmon for added protein and made a separate tomato and red pepper sauce as a base. What went wrong? Lynne has decided she just doesn’t like the taste of ricotta cheese, which she found bitter, unlike all the others who enjoyed the dish. Here is the recipe, if you want to try it. Next time (and there will be a next time - as we cooked the whole packet of pasta, which was far too much and now have half of it frozen,waiting to be stuffed with a different filling. Perhaps a thick cream sauce with prawns, or a mushroom and spinach filling?
STUFFED PASTA SHELLS WITH SALMON, RICOTTA & SPINACH
For the tomato and pepper sauce
1 T olive oil - 1 large onion, finely chopped – 2 cloves of garlic, chopped – 1 tin of chopped tomatoes - 1 large red pepper, sliced - 3 stalks of thyme – salt – freshly ground black pepper – sugar
Gently sweat the onion in the oil till soft, then add the garlic and cook for 2 to 3 minutes. Add the pepper and the tomatoes and thyme and cook covered till they have broken down and made a nice thick sauce. Do stir occasionally and season. It the mixture is too acid, add a teaspoon or two of sugar. This is often necessary with local tinned tomatoes. If the mixture looks too thick, do add a little water.
Pasta recipe
Conchiglioni – very large pasta shells – 350g fresh ricotta cheese – 2 fresh egg, lightly beaten – 180g fresh spinach – 1 tin of salmon – salt and pepper – nutmeg – half a cup of grated parmesan cheese – 200g mozzarella or taleggio
Cook the pasta according to instructions till it is ‘al dente’ (still with a bite, not floppy and soft). You will need about 5 shells per person and the cooked pasta left over will freeze. Cook the spinach briefly then strain well and dry it off as much as you can. (You can use Swiss chard but real spinach is far better). Finely chop then add to the ricotta with the eggs, seasoning and several gratings of nutmeg. Drain the can of salmon and flake it and stir into the cheese and spinach mix. Use this to stuff the pasta shells. In a large ceramic serving dish that will go into the oven put a 2 cm layer of the tomato sauce then arrange your pasta shells. Top with the parmesan and slices of the soft cheese. Cover with foil and put into the oven at 180°C for half an hour before serving. You can serve with extra tomato and pepper sauce.
The annual DGB Wine trade show was an enjoyable experience last Monday evening. The Douglas Green Bellingham empire has a wide range of mass market brands, which are not really our province, but it has some excellent premium labels (Bellingham, Boschendal) and also represents some other very good producers. The Boschendal range is being reprofiled, with a real emphasis on quality. We started the evening with their Grande Cuvée Brut, deliciously bready with a soft but lively mousse and then were given a taste of the new The Bernard Chardonnay from Bellingham, (named for Bellingham founder Bernard Podlashuk) which we loved. It follows the modern trend of well-balanced wines which are not dominated by too much wood and it is elegant and delicious. Delheim Gewürztraminer was the next wine to make a big impression. The sweetness is countered by the acidity and it has a rich aroma of roses and litchis. An event like this always has too many wines for us to describe in detail, but other wines which impressed us were Vergelegen’s Sauvignon blanc and White Blend and their premium red blend, ‘V’. Their previously off-dry Vin de Florence is a wine which we have tended to ignore, but, tasted at cellarmaster André van Rensburg’s insistence, it showed itself to be very well suited to spicy food. Graham Beck’s sparkling wines are always among our favourites, and were excellent palate refreshers after a series of tannic young red wines. We reacquainted ourselves with their Rhône style reds, The Ridge Syrah and The Joshua and loved the rich smoothness. We were also very impressed with the latest releases of Pheasant Run Sauvignon blanc and the Game Reserve Chenin blanc. Kanonkop is one of the country’s iconic producers and their Pinotage and Paul Sauer Bordeaux blend are excellent. Laibach is one of a few producers who have made a name for themselves with truly organic wines and we are great fans of their Ladybird red and white wines.
Travel     We will be paying a short visit to the land of John’s birth, Durban (his father was transferred and they left before John was a year old!), at the beginning of September. We won’t have a lot of capacity, but if any of our Durban readers want us to bring something special, and light, like truffle salt for them, please let us know and we’ll make the necessary arrangements.
Our products. The Italian anchovy paste continues to fly out and we keep upping our replenishment orders and the same applies to Carnaroli rice and the perennially popular Prego sauce. We have increased the stock level of Protea Hill Farm’s fabulous balsamic raspberry vinegar because we struggle to keep up with demand. It makes a wonderful salad dressing when used with hazelnut oil. We also have more of their delicious basil, thyme, dill and raspberry merlot vinegars. The French patés are also deservedly popular and we received more this morning, including the delicious duck rillette. Chou farci, haricot beans in goose fat, Cassoulet and Confit of Duck appeal to the more adventurous gourmets who come to see us. We have added dried lime powder and Baharat to our interesting range of unusual spice mixtures such as Ras al Hanout, Za’atar, Chinese Five Spice, Shichimi Togarashi, Yemeni Zhoug, Garam masala and Sumac as well as more common spices like Mace, Nutmeg, Cardamom and seriously pungent, unwashed Black pepper. We also have lovely moist vanilla pods, sealed in glass tubes to keep them in good condition, leaf gelatine, Belgian 70% couverture chocolate and the excellent, real Nielsen Massey extracts. Our Italian truffles, truffle oils and truffle salt continue to gain fans.
We have a lot of fun putting MENU together each week and, of course, doing the things we write about, but making it possible for you to enjoy rare and wonderful gourmet foods is what drives our business. We stock a good range of ingredients and delicious ready-made gourmet foods. So, please have a look at our Product List and see what you need. You can contact us by email or phone, or through our website. We can send your requirements to you anywhere in South Africa. If you are following Masterchef Australia we have Carnaroli risotto rice and truffles, amongst lots of other strange and difficult things to find that they use.
Our market activities   We had expected to be at the Long Beach Mall market tomorrow, splitting ourselves between there and Cavendish, but we have had no information from the organisers, so we hope that you will not be too disappointed at our absence. You will find us at The Place at Cavendish (Woolworths underground entrance to Cavendish Square), today, 19th August, from 10h00 to 17h00, and we will have our great selection of delicious treats and ingredients there for you. We will be at the Old Biscuit Mill’s brilliant, exciting and atmospheric Neighbourgoods Market, as always, on Saturday between 9am and 2pm. Next Wednesday, we will be back at the Dean St Arcade in Newlands from 09h30 to 14h30.
Good food and wine continues to grow as a focal point for many people in the Western Cape and, to an extent, in other parts of the country. As a result, our list of Interesting Food and Wine Events has grown so much that it was making MENU too long for some of our readers. So we’ve taken it online. Click here to access it. You will need to be connected to the internet.
Our  list of Winter restaurant special offers continues to grow. Click here to access it. These 2011 Winter Specials have been sent to us by the restaurants or their PR agencies. We have not personally tried all of them and their listing here should not always be taken as a recommendation from ourselves. When we have tried it, we’ve put in our observations. We have cut out the flowery adjectives etc. we’ve been sent, to give you the essentials. Click on the name to access the relevant website. All communication should be with the individual restaurants.


25th August 2011
Remember - if you can’t find something, we’ll do our best to get it for you, and, if you’re in Cape Town or elsewhere in the country, we can send it to you! Check our product list for details and prices.
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

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Singapore and Egyptian food at Eastern Boulevard Holiday Inn Garden Court

The Menu
































Presentation??





Chilli soft shell crab




Cool ambience




The cuisine appears aimed mainly at refuelling hungry patrons




Lynne was amused at 




the childrens' party dessert