A pair of black oystercatchers, Pringle Bay
In this week’s MENU:
On
Line Shop
This
week’s Product menu
Our
market activities
Challenging
Christmas menus
Restaurant
reviews: Jardine, Paulina’s
Tarragon
mustard chicken
French
Toast adieu
Wine
and Food Events
Wine
courses & cooking classes
Main Ingredient's On Line Shop is performing very well. We
are continuing to update it with new products and with photographs of products.
Please do not
pay until we have confirmed availability and invoiced you. Use the
form on the website to email us your order and we will send you the final
invoice. Click
here to see the shop.
This week’s Product menu We have a wonderful, wide
range of vinegars; not only good Italian red and white vinegars, but Spanish
sherry vinegars and French truffle, tarragon, champagne, shallot and Provence
herb vinegars, Italian balsamics and Protea Hill farm’s superb raspberry
balsamics. Go to our shop to see them.
The Burgundian Edmond Fallot mustards from Beaune sold
extremely well through the holiday season and continue to do so.
We sold out of prego sauce although we ordered a large
quantity and will have more soon after our supplier returns from holiday. Send us a
message if you wish to order.
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. You can contact us by email
or phone, or through our website.
We can send your requirements to you anywhere in South Africa.
Our market activities Come and visit us at the Old
Biscuit Mill’s wonderfully exciting, atmospheric Neighbourgoods
Market, as always, this
Saturday and every Saturday between
09h00 and 14h00. Tip: Some visitors tell us how they struggle to
find parking. It’s quite easy if you know how. Click here for a map which shows
where we park.
Cape Point Vineyards Market in
Noordhoek is
where we'll be again next Thursday evening, January 17th. Come and buy some treats,
enjoy some of their stunning wines and have a picnic while you watch the sun go
down. Tomorrow,
Friday 11th, you will at last find us at Long Beach Mall
once again
Challenging Christmas recipes We hope you all had a super
Christmas and New Year with lots and lots of great food to eat, whatever your
choice.
Lynne
decided to make two recipes from the Christmas Specials on TV by Jamie Oliver
and Nigel Slater. The Jamie Oliver recipe was his Pork and Chestnut stuffing
which we took to friends, who bravely did a Christmas Eve dinner for 48 people,
with turkey, gammon and lots and lots of other delicious food. Sadly this
recipe did not work as expected and Lynne had to perform quick surgery on it
before it could go to the party. It became a solid lump of minced pork with not
much flavour and the chestnuts on the top had gone a most unattractive colour
so given that we were off in half an hour, she broke it up, mixed up a box of
Paxo sage and onion stuffing mix, added that and stirred in some moist dried
apricot pieces, slivers of almonds and a great deal more seasoning and fresh
sage. This changed the texture to traditional stuffing and added lots more
flavour. Sometimes you just have to use commercial products and if they are
good ones, they can save the day.
Then on Christmas day she cooked Nigel Slater’s recipe
for a whole duck roasted on top of sliced onions and potatoes in duck fat. It
was delicious, BUT the potatoes do not go crisp, they go rather soggy and break
up a lot with all the juices from the duck so we had duck on a sort of smashed
Boulanger potato, which did taste very good. Next time she might cook them
separately. Sadly, our 2 kilo duck had seen better days..... probably months,
or even years. It was still tough and unyielding after an hour and a half in
the oven and needed a lot more cooking. Even after another hour in the oven,
then resting it for a good long time, the meat was fairly tough if still,
thankfully, juicy. It tasted good but was very chewy and full of long sinews. It
fed three of us for lunch and we did have enough for Chinese duck and pancakes
a couple of days later, but it was still tough. Why can we not have good duck
in the Cape? We will have to go back to confiting or casseroling it as we used
to.
Writing
reviews of restaurants is one of our favourite things to do, but we do find it very amusing
when we go to two restaurants in a week and both have also been covered by
journalists in the newspapers. Here are our versions.
To
Stellenbosch for Sunday lunch It is a great experience to
take overseas visitors to the winelands to show off the beauty of the Cape and
then go to one of our favourite restaurants. So a visit to Jordan and George
Jardine’s restaurant on a perfect summer day was a given for our expats from
Australia. It is always an absolute treat to sit on that terrace, look out over
the fantastic valley view, drink amazing Jordan wines and eat George Jardine’s
superb food. The menu is short with choices that will suit most tastes, some
adventurous like the Blesbok liver starter Lynne and one of our guests had, and
others are fairly traditional like the tender, medium rare Chalmar sirloin that
John ordered. It was served on a bed of Risotto with a jus. Lynne tasted that
Jus and it was life changing. Her beautifully moist and well cooked Gurnard in
a smoked tomato sauce with linguine was excellent, but she did wish she had
ordered John’s dish. It tasted like a master stock reduction that had taken the
kitchen hours and hours to make. We could only manage two courses each – age
and a warm day does limit one’s intake. However, we did discover that Jordan
has the very best Espresso in the Cape at the moment. Two courses cost R275 and three R350, which
for this standard of food and service is good value. Wine is extra, but
reasonably priced, and we drank the Outlier Sauvignon Blanc and The Prospector
Shiraz. The wine list has a very good selection and Jordan wines are available
by the glass. It was good to see our top chef of 2012 also having lunch there.
Afterwards
we made a quick trip next door to Wendy and Hilton Applebaum’s farm de
Morgenzon and tasted some of their wines. They have very beautiful garden,
which we could see from the tasting room veranda and they play baroque music to
the vines in one of the special vineyards and in the tasting room and the
cellar. And, of course, we all bought some wine at both farms to add to our
collections. Click here to see the pictures of the
perfect day and the glorious food.
Paulina’s on Rickety Bridge We needed to deliver an order of
exotic spices to Margot Janse, chef at Le Quartier Français and decided to take
up the invitation we had from Jan van Huyssteen of Rickety Bridge to try their
restaurant, Paulina’s, which has a new chef and a new concept. It is named
after the first owner of the property in 1797, Paulina de Villiers.
Executive
chef Melissa Bruyns (previously at Haute Cabrière and Westin Grand) has ensured
that each dish on the menu is available as a half or full portion. This enabled
us to share several dishes ‘tapas ‘ style. The half portions are generous and
the price is very reasonable. The food has both a local slant and an exotic
one, and you will find it can cater for conservative tastes as well as offering
good vegetarian options.
We
drank a bottle of their excellent Paulina’s Reserve Chenin Blanc and it was a
very good match for the food. We had great service too from our waiter, Jeremiah.
Joanna Hurleston, the manager of the restaurant, and her assistant Garth
Ferndale made sure our every need was taken care of. We sat outside on the
terrace as the view is too hard to resist, but were nicely sheltered under a
large umbrella, watching preparations for a very large wedding taking place the
following day. This is a very popular wedding and function venue as they also
have accommodation in the Cape Dutch Rickety Bridge manor house and the
neighbouring Basse Provence, which is owned by Rickety Bridge. Click here to see what we ate.
Checkers – checking out? The building which houses our
favourite supermarket in Sea Point is going through a yearlong major re-build
and revamp and we are so longing for it all to be over because over Christmas,
quite frankly, Checkers lost the plot. We have tried to stay loyal and not shop
elsewhere, but frightening sounds of walls crashing above your head had Lynne
running for the exit on more than one occasion. We dashed in on the 26th to
restock on basics like bread and eggs and they hadn’t baked anything. The rolls
were about three days old and the fresh fruit and veg was sadly depleted and
showing their age. All our favourite staff seemed to be off on holiday or gone
elsewhere. Since then, they appear to be catering just for the holiday crowd,
not the locals who are still here and working so, when we go in, there is still
no bread and other necessities and only very disinterested staff who tell us
come tomorrow morning – but we can’t; we and many of their other loyal
customers are working.
The
extreme building works are badly affecting La Mouette restaurant next door, so
please do go and support them. They are so good and we would hate it if we lost
them from Sea Point. We were invited to one function there which had to be
cancelled and moved elsewhere. We hope the building developers are paying them
huge compensation for all the noise, dirt and lack of parking while this goes
on. And we hope they are claiming a reduction in their rates from the council
because of the inconvenience and loss of business.
Tarragon
Mustard Chicken Some of our most popular products at the moment are the
Fallot range of mustards from Beaune in Burgundy. Because the mustard is still
ground between stones these have a lot of attitude, but also loads and loads of
flavour and creaminess. Lynne has been experimenting with them and wanted to
try the very pungent tarragon mustard in a recipe, as it is so hard to find the
fresh herb here for most of the year and it is difficult to keep alive in the
winter. Using the old French technique of putting butter under the skin before
roasting, she combined the mustard with soft butter and, hey presto, we had a
magnificently moist chicken. Here is the recipe for you to try. You can, of
course, substitute any of the other mustard flavours to get a different effect
and glorious creamy gravy, like the green peppercorn, basil, or cassis. The
chicken was not at all hot and spicy. Just full of flavour.
1 Elgin Free range chicken – 1
heaped tablespoon of Fallot tarragon mustard – 2 tablespoons of soft butter – ½
teaspoon each of white pepper and flaked salt
Using
a dessert spoon with the bowl turned upward, push it under the skin from the
end of the chicken and carefully open up pockets above the breast and leg meat,
trying not to break the skin anywhere. Then fill these spaces with the butter
and mustard mixture. Use the remains of the butter to coat the inside and
outside of the chicken and put into a hot 180°C oven and roast for one hour, or
until just cooked and the skin is crisping. Rest the chicken covered in foil, for
at least half an hour then serve with your favourite potatoes and vegetables. We
had crisp duck fat potatoes, sprouting broccoli spears and al dente thin green
beans. You can use the chicken juices to make a good gravy – however, you will
find that the chicken is very moist and it gives off a very creamy mustard
sauce when you carve it, so you may not need gravy.
French
Toast RIP We are
sad at having received news of the closure of French Toast, the wine bar in
Bree St opened by John Harrison and Karin Visser a little over two years ago.
They provided a great venue for enjoying excellent tapas and well-chosen wines
and it was also the venue for some very special wine tastings. Sadly, John lost
his fight with cancer late last year and Karin is unable to continue without
him. We thank her and her team for all the enjoyment they have given us and the
other people who have enjoyed our visits to French Toast and we wish her great
good fortune in her future.
There is a huge and rapidly growing
variety of interesting things to occupy your leisure time here in the Western
Cape. There
are so many interesting things to do in our world of food and wine that we have
made separate list for each month for which we have information. To help you choose an event to visit, look at our events calendar. All the events
are listed in date order and we already have a large number of exciting events
to entertain you right through the year. We have a new calendar for 2013. Check it here.
Learn about wine and cooking
We have had a lot of enquiries from people who want to learn more about wine. Cathy Marston and The Cape Wine Academy both run wine
education courses, some very serious and others more geared to fun. You can see
details here.
Sadly,
refreshing our restaurant specials list takes more time than we have,
especially at this time of the year, so we have set it aside for now. There are
numerous special dinners listed in the above-mentioned events calendar.
10th January 2013
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.
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