Tuesday, May 23, 2017

Morgenster Olive and Wine Launch

We were invited by the owner, Giulio Bertrand, to the unveiling on Friday of the Estate’s new Pieralisi Olive Press and to taste the new season's olive oil. And, of course, we would have the opportunity of tasting the recently released wines. The Olive Press is astounding. We have not seen an installation this big and sophisticated in South Africa. And the wine tasting was pretty special too

Morgenster means Morning Star. We began in the Morgenster tasting room

which has a lovely terrace. Besides some media and wine industry people,
the staff and students of the Sense of Taste Culinary Academy had also been invited, something we so approve of
Chefs need to know how olive oil and wine are made

Beautiful views of the Schapenberg mountain over the lake

Chef Owner of Sense of Taste Pete Ayub with lecturer Angie Boyd



Tables set up for the wine tasting later

Werner Els, who has recently joined Morgenster, runs the tasting room. We met him at Zandvliet last year

Jason de Beer,  Global director of sales and marketing at Morgenster

Cellarmaster Henry Kotzé has been at Morgenster since 2009. He took us on a cellar tour

We started in the barrel cellar. Morgenster's cellar has been custom designed and the South African team works closely with consultant and director of the Morgenster  Board, Pierre Lurton of the renowned Chateau Cheval Blanc in France

Then into the gravity fed tank area, no pumps are used. All the wine making is gently done with as little contact with the grapes as possible. Morgenster is a BWI winery (Biodiversity and Wine Initiative)

It has quite a mix of different barrels, all French. Giulio Bertrand releases only a portion of each vintage at launch date and keeps the balance in pristine condition in his cellar to be evaluated at six monthly intervals. He then releases the vintages in batches that showcase their progression, providing an unusual offering to private and trade consumers of several vintages of the same label

Time for the wine tasting. They use Riedel glasses. Morgenster's vineyards are planted mainly with Bordeaux varieties and smaller quantities of Italian cultivars. We began with the 2017 Sauvignon Blanc, now in a screw capped bottle. Mouth filling with a good balance of fruit and acid, peaches and good minerality, no wood but 4 weeks on the lees. Then the Single Varietal Sangiovese made in the Chianti style. Huge cherry nose with savoury hints, good wood notes and some smoke. Chalky tannins, long soft flavours of cherries, wild berries and smoke

Then the 2017 Caruso Sangiovese Rosé from the Italian Collection. It is perfectly pink, a slightly tarry nose, with strawberries, cherries, raspberries, mulberries and pomegranate with a milk powder end. Easy to quaff, nice mid palate acidity than a nice buzz of warmth

Followed by the elegant 2015 White Reserve which is a Sauvignon Blanc Semillon blend with crisp acidity, then a kick of grapefruit on the back palate. Cassis leaves notes, silky , which encourages quaffing and reaching for a forkful of food, creamy on the palate from the Semillon. Great with seafood or creamy fish dishes

The 2014 Tosca from the Italian Collection is a blend of Sangiovese, Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot, a super Tuscan blend in the Montepulciano style. Vanilla oak and ice cream, wildness, violets and incense wood on the nose, Soft sweet fruit on the palate with more violets - such a giveaway that this is an Italian style wine. Cherries, Cassis, raspberries soft supple tannins and fruit with long flavours



Then the 2014 Nabucco made from Nebbiolo. This grape comes from the misty mountains of Italy and the name actually means mistiness). Rhubarb on the pretty nose, richness, vanilla oak. On the palate red berries, chalky tannins, deep and rich and decadent. Wild and very satisfying

Then the wine that wowed everyone The 2013 Lourens River Valley, a classic Bordeaux blend with cassis leaves and berries on the nose with cherries on the end. Sweet fruit, very soft chalky tannins, so pretty. Savouriness from the Cab Franc, no greenness, the wood supports . There is a nice buzz of spice on the plums and cherries, with salty liquorice on the end. This is drinking so well now but has years to go

How to follow that? With the 2013 Morgenster Estate Reserve Bordeaux blend, which to quote Giulio Bertrand is "the best from the best on the farm". It is an illustration of the 2013 vintage. They are sure that the quality will stay the same and improve. Cassis, liquorice, incense and wood on the nose. Red and black cherries and cassis, with green cassis leaves. Good supporting acids, lovely dark wood showing as mocha and chocolate. The fruit is layered and remains on the palate. It has a long savoury end. Needs time

The wine price list

The Olive Oil tasting wheel. We have both done intensive olive oil tasting courses in the past and love good oils

The Olive Cellar door price list

A short drive took us to the Olive oil factory which is in front of the old manor house

This is where Giulio Bertrand lives. The property was purchased on 28th May 1711 by Jacques Malan, a Huguenot,
who built the house, a wine cellar and outbuildings for his family of 13 children

The olive oil tasting room where our simple lunch was set out

We were welcomed there by Giulio Bertrand and his daughter Alessandra

The food for lunch was set out on three tables

Some air dried bresaola

Fresh South African Parmesan to enjoy with black and green olives, tapenade
and fresh peeled garlic to scrape across the toast

Fresh tomato salsa with basil

Toasted ciabatta

Parma ham

Coppa

and salamis

Time to look at the new Olive Oil production facility, from tree to bottle
Ear muffs are necessary for the staff working there all day

The olives coming in to the facility

They still have leaves and stalks and need washing

They go into this hopper which removes much of the dross

Where the leaves end up. They go to compost

Onward

Into the washer on rollers which allow unwanted bits to fall through

Then into the crusher. You can see the colour of the olives being crushed

The machine can handle two different streams of olives at once. It used these huge crushing wheels

The oil begins to appear

and at the end of the process, the golden fresh olive oil. Tasting this is a dream experience
The bitterness has been removed and the oil is lively, fresh, peppery and green

One of the experts who run the facility

Everyone made up Bruschetti and enjoyed them with a glass or two of the Morgenster wines
We sat outside to enjoy the weather, the wine and the food

Autumnal oaks lining the avenues

This might have been the old shaded avenue for the ox wagons. What a superb day. Thank you, Morgenster

RETURN TO MENU

MENU's Wine of the Week. Aslina Umsasane 2015

a blend of Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon and Petit Verdot
Made by winemaker Ntsiki Biyela. This classic Bordeaux blend reminded Lynne so much of a great Cape wine called Crescendo from the now defunct winery Cordoba, made by Chris Keet, who now makes his own blend called First Verse. The nose is superb: Incense wood, gunflint, stone, full of violets and cassis. A smooth mouth feel then the berry fruit gathers itself and goes POW on the palate. It is sophisticated with layers of fruit and gentle wood with some necessary tight chalky tannins and on the end hints of tea and more violets. A wine built to last 20 plus years

The launch of Ntsiki Biyela's Aslina range of wines at the US Consulate General

Ntsiki Biyela, originally from KwaZulu Natal, has been the winemaker at Stellekaya for the last 13 years. She was the first South African black woman wine maker. She trained in Viticulture & Oenology at Stellenbosch University and worked stages in Tuscany and Bordeaux. At Stellekaya she produced four star Platter wines and won awards. Her dream was always to make her own wines and this she has now done. Aslina is her tribute to her grandmother (it is her grandmother's name) who was her inspiration and guide as she grew up. She was awarded Woman Winemaker of the year in 2009. It is an exciting venture. She continues as a consultant to Stellekaya. She is involved in many wine industry competitions as a judge i.e. SAA, Diners Club Winemaker of the Year, IWSC and Nederburg Auction. We were invited to the launch of these wines held at the American Consul Generals residence in Bishops Court
Our welcome drink on the terrace was the 2016 Aslina Chardonnay. Rich and golden, full of peaches and citrus flavours, with wood in the background with some stony minerality
Canapés of seared prawns with pineapple and red onion salsa which went well with the Chardonnay
Tiny crisp fig, gorgonzola and thyme puff pastry tartlets with a balsamic glaze
Beggar’s purses stuffed with mushroom duxelle
The students who served us are all students at the Pinotage Youth Development Academy; they were a lovely bunch. Ntsiki sits on the board of the Academy
Taking our seats for dinner
The U.S. Consul General in Cape Town Teddy Taylor opened proceedings by introducing Ntsiki. She took part in The African Woman Entrepreneurs Programme in the USA and it has changed her life, encouraging her to start her own brand. She met other International Visitor Leadership Programme Mandela Washington fellows and Fulbright scholars who mentored, supported and encouraged her. This programme is funded by the U.S. Department of State's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
Ntsiki Biyela told us about her journey and the courage it took. Why did she start her own business? To work with the community. When she was in the USA on the AWE Programme her cohorts made her face an intervention. They told her to stop taking the drug! she was puzzled, she doesn't take any. Stop taking the salary they said, that is the drug. She realised it was time to do her own thing
Chef Adolphus Stuart who was visiting from Texas where Ntsiki met him. He was involved with Chef Stacy Lightfoot in producing the food for the event - which they said met in mid-Atlantic!
We had a great time chatting to him about the food, his visit and his career; he is very amusing and fun. He said Chef Stacy had taught him some new dishes and new tricks
The unusual starter of tender fried aubergine, marinated in pomegranate served with crumbed herb cheese balls, a pea and mint sauce, crisp onions, pomegranate aruls and topped off with a while wheat crisp and melt in the mouth croute. We drank the Aslina Sauvignon Blanc with this, a nose of herbs, figs, grass and a hint of honeyed grapes, full on the palate with good Sauvignon pyrazines, crisp acidity and length with a flinty minerality on the end
Chef Stacy with the main course
It was Asian braised pork belly with cranberry jus, confit dug leg, asparagus, a rich butternut and Tahini puree, garlic baby potatoes and caramelised baby beetroot. We drank the Aslina 2015 Cabernet Sauvignon with this course. Pure cassis and incense wood on the nose. A wine in waiting, gathering itself together for the future, with room to grow. Rich red berries, vanilla oak, stony minerality and some chalky tannins. It went very well with the rich main course
And so to dessert. A lovely spiced red wine poached pear stuffed with dark chocolate and dates and enrobed in toasted pistachio nuts and served with a vanilla bean custard
This was served with the UMSASANE 2015 a Bordeaux Blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot. See our Wine of the Week. Yes it was that good

We think these wines show Ntsiki's skill and huge potential. One day we are sure, she will have her own farm. At the moment the grapes are all sourced from very good Stellenbosch farms

New winter menu at Kyoto Garden

Earlier this year, in February, we were invited to review the Kyoto Garden's Menu for Two which was obviously a success, because this week we were invited to review the new Winter Special menu. On offer are three courses and a glass of wine for R220 pp. This also includes an appetiser of Edamame beans, not counted as one of the courses. This authentic Japanese restaurant in Kloof Neck Road can be a tad pricy, but they do serve some of the best sea food in Cape Town. This menu is good value and an excellent introduction to authentic Japanese food
The restaurant is in Lower Kloof Nek Road, at number 11
The interior with the bar and sushi station
The main restaurant
The new Winter Special Menu. 
We decided to order one of the dishes each and then share them
Our taster of Edamame beans, warm and sprinkled with flaked salt. You just open the pods and eat the beans, not the pods. We both chose to drink white wine and the wine on offer was Gabrielskloof Sauvignon Blanc, crisp, dry and full of Overberg sunshine with Sauvignon flavours of Cape gooseberry and lime
The Tuna Tartare, gently flavoured with wasabi and soy, topped with spring onion and accompanied by seaweed and grated daikon radish
A dish to recommend is the Vegetable tempura, we could eat this again and again. They really do this well. The crisp fluffy batter is perfect, but so are the vegetables inside, not hard and unyielding. The sweet potato, courgette and aubergine slices are sweet; delicious and soft inside their crisp coating. There is also crisp broccoli, carrot and green bean. Served with an intriguing, slightly sweet soy dip with rice vinegar and shreds of ginger; daikon, fresh lemon and salt.
Then the two main courses. The bowl of Udon noodles with duck comes with these special wooden ladles so you can enjoy the broth
The dish is topped with seaweed, spring onions, baby leeks and some very thin slices of duck, which is cooked in the broth. The hand cut Udon noodles are made at the restaurant. The meaty broth is a delight, so deep and flavoursome
Entitled Rice with special fish this was our favourite dish and we will be returning for more. Simple but an absolute knock out. A bowl of well-cooked flavoured rice - stock? mirin and/or rice wine vinegar? we can only guess. This is topped with slices of perfectly cooked hake, which has a seasoning that resembles umami barbecue flavours. It was super fresh and flaked beautifully. On top of that is Tatsoi, an Asian green, sliced leeks. We devoured this dish, very satisfying
Time for dessert. This is the Black sesame seed Ice Cream. It is a small portion of creamy Halva like ice cream, not too sweet and sprinkled with lots of black sesame
Then the Cherry Blossom Ice Cream with nice cherry flavour and sour cherries. Very good. It has been sprinkled with chocolate shavings
We could have had the roasted Rice tea but had to rush home to write this review, as we are off to Europe in two days. As we left, Scott the owner did give us a quick taste of a very interesting Japanese gin, which is full of Juniper and herb botanicals at first and then changes to lots of lemon lime and citrus flavours. Powerful but delicious. Kyoto Garden also serves very good cocktails and, of course, good sushi

Supper at Lily's Mouille Point

Something for Everyone
Mouille Point beachfront has suddenly been populated by several smart looking restaurants, those that should be on Sea Point's promenade but are not (and there is a long history there). We were invited to Lily's to try out the food last week. It is on the corner of a new block that has taken the place of the old Newport Deli. Lily is the name of Paul Kovenski's young daughter. The Kove Collection also owns Pepenero next door and La Belle Bistro and Bakery in the same road, as well as the Alphen and several other Cape Town restaurants. They do not yet have a wine licence, so you do need to Bring Your Own. Phone first though, in case the licence has been granted. Or you can order wine from Pepenero, but you need to run two bills
The inside is airy and light during the day, with pull back windows to the terrace which is also enclosed with a roll-down protection on windy or inclement days. This all opens up for fine summer days. However, the lighting at night is less than perfect, we keep re-iterating that seeing your food is half of the pleasure of eating, and If the lighting is bad and you are peering at your plate in a gloom, it is not a great experience. John's camera works very well in low light, so the pictures do not show how dark it actually was
The starter menu also has a vegetarian section. Prices are not shy. One of the reviews we read said they served the "the Best Mac and Cheese" the writer had ever had in her life." It is not something you find on a restaurant menu often. There is also a Buddha Bowl on offer (very trendy at the moment). It is easy to make a choice, many choices are very familiar
Brought to the table are toast and an olive oil and balsamic vinegar dip. A good way to use up bread at the end of the day? Much of the food is scattered with marigold petals, edible yes, necessary, no. We brought along a bottle of Rhebokskloof 2010 Semillon. This would be our wine of the week if any were still available; sadly they no longer make it. We bought this wine two years ago at a very reduced price on the farm and how it has grown in depth, flavour and enjoyment. Absolutely superb; it shows how well South African white wines can age
The Carpaccio! Biltong served with parmesan cheese, avocado mousse, olive oil and balsamic. John said it was not hard like biltong, but not soft like a good raw beef Carpaccio would be. There was no sign of the parmesan, was it incorporated with the avocado? More marigold petals and micro herbs
Lynne ordered the calamari, about 5 baby squid (polpetti), very tender, with a fresh tomato and feta salsa in the centre, on warm mashed potato and surrounded by a basil oil. Good flavour, but we were puzzled at the addition of mash on a starter? It does make it seem like a main course and it rather jars with the raw tomato
The Mains Menu has lots of familiar choices, nothing out of your comfort zone. This should appeal to the Sea Point market. Perhaps our sophisticated summer tourists might want something with a more local flavour? For our main course we brought along a bottle of the Laborie Shiraz, such a well matched wine for our two choices.
The Lamb Popsicles. Lynne was expecting just the lamb meat on the bone with all the fat removed, so it looks like a popsicle or lollypop. The chops came 'fully clothed' with the fat on. The lamb was very good, well seasoned and perfectly cooked, but we did pass a message to the chef that she needs to really crisp up the fat. Served with crushed new potatoes, a few crushed black olives and more of those marigold petals. The dish could do with a vegetable, or two....
John ordered the Duck confit leg served on mash, with peas and a briefly seared lettuce. And marigolds. Good flavours but this dish needs a gravy, as it is a bit dry. We passed the message to the chef and she said she thanked us. These two dishes show how times and tastes have changed and inflation has struck. Who would have thought confit duck would be substantially less expensive than three lamb chops?
The Dessert Menu
Much against our wills (OK, we let them twist our arms just slightly) we had dessert. John was persuaded to go with his predilections and order the Death by Chocolate. Lynne went against hers and ordered something with a coffee flavour because it came with something wickedly chocolate
Well you need to know, this is the biggest and best chocolate lava cake (AKA chocolate fondant) currently being served in Cape Town. Head there before they take it off the menu. It was ample enough for us both to share. Loads of rich dark lava chocolate pour out of the sponge dome which is only 1 cm thick. The Espresso coffee ice cream was enjoyed by those who like coffee flavours. It is supposed to come with a salted caramel, but no sign of any. More petals though...
The Death by Chocolate has all three levels of chocolate. The dark chocolate is in the pastry tart base and the crumb. The tart shell is filled with a white chocolate mousse, topped with caramel, then a pour of melted milk chocolate and it is topped by a white chocolate ice cream and caramel popcorn. Smaller than it looks. John was disappointed, as he prefers dark chocolate. You might not be, as it certainly has it all
The other menus. They also do breakfasts but don't take booking for breakfast at weekends. The chef is Amber Deetleef, who has worked for the Kove group for several years. Dean Parker the Manager and our gentle waitress was Karen. We had a very pleasant evening. There were two invited bloggers having a meal at the next table, Dax Villanueva and Sam Linsell