Wednesday, November 07, 2018

Visits to Robertson wine estates: Springfield, Paul René, Lord's, Mont Blois

We began our third day in Robertson at Springfield, where we tasted some of the new vintages in the tasting room, specifically the Life from Stone and Special Cuvée Sauvignons Blanc, and could not resist buying six of each. These wonderful wines are distinctly different from each other, change during the year and vie for first position
Abrie Bruwer's daughter Jenna gave us an informative cellar tour of their large production facility. (If you are not a Bruwer or a de Wet in Robertson, you are probably related to them). They put insulating jackets on their cooling tanks.
Here she is explaining how they make the white wines
Underneath this floor are the old Kuipe or concrete tanks, which are still used. They were being cleaned by this worker and have to be accessed via those steel capped holes in the floor, not a popular job
More gleaming tanks in the spotless winery
and more above us
A wall of bottles, and each one can be removed without disturbing the others, should you want to
A solid wall of bottles
and more
In the red wine barrel cellar
The bottling line is impressive and was working that day
It is large but, apparently, is about to be replaced by an even larger and faster one which will bottle under nitrogen for increased stability and longevity
Storage bins
And the newly expanded deck alongside the tasting room
Jenna's new puppy, a Vizsla, has a lovely nature and is very inquisitive
A lovely place to enjoy wine on a sunny day
The Springfield Life from Stone Sauvignon Blanc. We also tasted something new, an Alvarinho 2018, This wine was first tasted in Uruguay by Abrie and his sister Jeanette and they fell in love with the grape. The nose is tropical and quite 'foreign' with a lovely muscat perfume. Peach and nectarine with limes on the palate, juicy and young with long lime flavours at the end. A lovely summery drink, that will pair well with food. More farms are planting it so soon it won’t be so foreign. It is a dryland grape that we had several times in Portugal. Newton Johnson also has one
Then on to our next farm, Paul René on Wonderfontein where they produce two MCCs, a Brut and a Brut Rosé, made by Henk van Niekerk
The old Georgian house, which was an orphanage at one stage
Inside the tasting room, a chandelier of bubbles
The original distillers licence, granted to the farm in 1885
The wines
And a working petrol bowser; every wine farm should have one
Henk with his son, Paul René, after whom the MCC wines are named. Henk and his wife Monica moved to Wonderfontein in 2008 and conceived the wine as a labour of love. Their first release was in 2013. Monica is responsible for the branding
We began with the Brut 2015, a Blanc de Blanc made from 100% Chardonnay from the Langeberg which has spent a minimum of 24 months on the lees. Bready and yeasty on the nose with hints of honey and lime. A lovely prickle on the palate with crisp lemon and grapefruit, refreshing with good minerality. We like this very much
A kiss from wife Monica
She is a talented designer and illustrator and is the brains behind the beautiful packaging and design
Next we tasted the Rosé, which is very pale, almost a partridge eye colour. 75% Pinot Noir and 25% Chardonnay. On the nose, raspberry Pinot fruit with bready yeast, a nice prickle with soft strawberry and rosé flavours, it has complexity and some sweetness. Grown on ripped shale
The vineyards at Wonderfontein
Their house
Next we were off up the McGregor valley, right to the top to Lords Winery, where the weather was anything but clement. We had to run from the car to the winery as the wind and rain were horizontal and it was cold. This is the large tasting room which is also a conference or wedding venue. The clever bar can be moved and even separated into two parts to make separate bars
We tasted the Lords MCC Brut with its many gongs. Made from Chardonnay and Pinot Noir. Bready on the nose, it spends 13 months on the lees and is bready and crisp on the palate. We also tasted the three Barrels Shiraz 2012. Pale in colour, with smoke and juicy fruit on the nose, lots of crisp fruit on the palate, lactic and warm alcohols
Their current range of wines. The Sauvignon blanc is unwooded, and full of granadilla and tropical flavours, crisp fruit acidity with grapefruit. The Rosé, made from 100% Pinot Noir has rose petals and raspberry fruit. Strawberry and raspberry on the palate with good acidity and some lactic flavours. The Pinot Noir has coffee choc vanilla with green leaves on the nose, tart fruit acids on the palate. It needs time, with dark wood on the end. Just released is the 2016 Shiraz, smoky and spicy with fruit cordial notes on the nose, good fruit, but thin with long flavours and very grippy chalky tannins
We were presented with a platter for lunch with some biltong, local cheeses, ham, a liver paté, some humus and some tiny cheese quiches, which certainly helped after all the wine and filled us up nicely. Thank you Lords, GM Louwrens Rademeyer and Benita Gouws for the informative tasting and nice lunch
The line up of their wines
And then back to Robertson and into the countryside behind the town to Mont Blois and their vineyards, for our appointment with Ernst and Nina-Mari Bruwer. They met at while studying Viticulture & Oenology at Stellenbosch University and Nina-Mari joined them in 2008. She and Ernst are married. And Nina-Mari is a Cape Wine Master

Their Cape Dutch house. The family’s first wine farm in Robertson was bought in 1846 and the Mont Blois Wynlandgoed cellar was built in 1884. Sweet muscadel wines were farmed in those days. Six generations later, owner Ernst Bruwer now manages three farms in Robertson: Mont Blois, La Fontaine and Sunshine. Mont Blois is named after the picturesque town of Blois in the Loire in which the Bruwer antecedents originated. They are both passionate about making site specific quality wines; they believe in sustainable farming and that older vineyards should be cared for
The wines we tasted. The 2016 Kweekkamp Chardonnay (4.5 stars in Platter 2019) is grown in a single vineyard on limestone soil. There is apple, honey and richness on the nose and clean palate, with full flavours of more green apples and limes, minerality and some chalk. The 2016 Hoog en Laag Chardonnay (4 stars in Platter 2019) is grown on red clay soils, 500 meters from the Kweekkamp and is different. It has perfume, fennel, nutmeg and nuts on the nose; on the palate, sweet oak vanillins with fruit and limes, good minerality and richness on the end with hints of spice. Two delicious and different Chardonnays, both well balanced and lightly oaked. The 2016 Groot Steen Chenin Blanc (4.5 stars in Platter 2019) comes from 32 year old vines on the banks of the Breede River. Spicy and perfumed on the nose, then honey richness and fullness on the palate, warm alcohols, lime marmalade acidity to balance, clean and full of minerality
We tasted their 2018 Grenache Blanc (4 stars in Platter 2019), recently released, with cooked apple and white grape notes on the nose; good minerality, stone fruit, plums, pear, nice warmth and texture on the palate, it has long flavours and is unfamiliar but very enjoyable. Normally found as a component in Rhône blends, it is being adopted by some good wine farms, so we expect to see more. Then two red wines: The 2016 Bacchus, a blend of Cabernet Sauvignon and Petit Verdot, has cassis and violets on the pretty nose and pure fruit - layers of berries and cherries, warm alcohol, and nice wooding which hints on the end palate. The Estate 2016 Pinotage is called Tarentaalsdraai. Chocolate and cherries on the very pretty nose, soft sweet fruit in layers, nice chalk and lots of cherries - black and red. Some complexity and definite aging potential
They still have stock of their Superior 1984 Estate Muscadel
The line up of the wines we tasted
Nina-Mari with a Coravin, an interesting pouring device that pours a measured dose and tops the bottle up with argon gas, so that it does not oxidise
Chatting about wine with Ernst and Nina-Mari while we taste. They are a charming couple
Then a taste of the two Estate muscadels The 2016 Pomphuis from across the river, a warmer farm, 260 gm/l sugar. With honey, herbs and dry grass on the nose, full of thick honey and limes, so well balanced. The Harpie 2016 has some Noble Late Harvest. It has honey, apricots and dried peaches on the nose, with wonderful warm, sweet fruit and honey on the palate. Two treasures. Both get 4.5 stars in the 2019 Platter
Long shadows began to stretch across the lawn as we said thank you and goodbye and headed back to Cape Town at about 4.30. We got home at 7.30, because there was a very nasty crash on the R60 near Nuy. A farm with really good wines, well worth visiting and buying

A private on-line auction for Allan Mullins' medical support

Our friend, Cape Wine Master Allan Mullins has had a huge impact on the South African wine scene, especially in his capacity as Wine Selector for Woolworths

He has done this despite having to live with a severe disability since he broke his spine in a diving accident at the age of 23. He has been in a wheelchair since then. He celebrated his 70th birthday last month
Living with such a severe disability presents severe medical challenges, especially as one reaches an advanced age, and this becomes very expensive. A group of Allan’s friends and family has put together an auction of Special Vintage Wines, Unique Experiences, Art and Accommodation to boost his Medical Fund. The success of the auction rests on getting the word out to as many people as possible, so please

•         forward this message to your contacts
•         post the graphic below on social media (Twitter, Facebook, etc)
•         bid for items yourself!


Many, many thanks to the generous companies and individuals who have donated such an exciting range of auction items
Go to the website in order to participate at auction.allanmullins.co.za
Four days to go! Go in and have a look. The auction has been advertised in Wine magazine so there will be plenty of interest. These vintage wines and items are still at opening prices so you can get real bargains:
6 x Diemersfontein Carpe Diem Pinotage 2016                 R1500
Webb Ellis 2010 Magnum                                                    R2500
6 x Neil Ellis Cabernet Sauvignon Vertical 2010 – 2015     R2500
Raats wines - 3 red 2015, 3 x white 2017                            R2000
6 x Vergelegen V and GVB wines 2009-2012                      R6000
6 x Haute Cabriere Pinot Noir Magnums 2004 A                R3500
“Roots” oil painting by Therese Mullins                              R7000
Two nights B&B stay at Diemersfontein Manor House   R2000

Wade Bales launches Constantia White blend

Beautiful late afternoon light on the vines at Wade Bales’ Cellar in Constantia. Wade is a wine merchant (or, in French, a Negociant). We were there for the launch of a wine commissioned by and made especially for Wade; the first in his pioneering Wade Bales Regional Series: The Constantia White, a blend of 67% Sauvignon Blanc and 33% Semillon - as Wade says, the two hero varietals of the region. This is the outcome of a collaboration combining the talents of seven of Constantia’s top wine farms. Each winemaker selected a component of Sauvignon Blanc and/or Semillon from their best vineyards, tanks and barrels. All seven then participated in the rigorous tasting and blending process, hand crafting the best wine that represents Constantia
We were welcomed with a glass of Constantia bubbly; you could choose which one you preferred
Journalist Mel Minnaar with winemakers Matthew Day of Klein Constantia and Boela Gerber and Louise van der Westhuizen of Groot Constantia. Are they discussing sweet wines of the valley?
Under the tent, you could taste wines from all seven of the Constanta wineries involved
while waiting for the release of the Constantia White
JD Pretorius, cellarmaster at Steenberg, with his selection
The Steenberg white wines, including the wonderful 1999 Semillon
Louise van der Westhuizen, who has recently joined Groot Constantia as assistant winemaker
Winemakers JD Pretorius of Steenberg, Boela Gerber of Groot Constantia, Justin van Wyk of Constantia Glen and Brad Paton of Buitenverwachting. An interesting fact is that all the seven Constantia winemakers involved have been there at least 10 years and some, like Boela and Brad, for longer
Wade Bales introduced the wine and we were all given glasses of it to taste
He told us that The Stellenbosch Red, a Cabernet Sauvignon 2017, will be available after mid 2019
Wade introduced the winemakers from the seven top Constantia wine estates who collaborated to make the wine and donated some of their best barrels of Sauvignon Blanc to go into the wine. They were asked to talk about their contributions. L to R, Gregory Brink Louw of Silvermist, Matthew Day of Klein Constantia, JD Pretorius of Steenberg, Boela Gerber of Groot Constantia, Brad Paton of Buitenverwachting and Justin van Wyk of Constantia Glen (Jacques du Plessis of Constantia Uitsig is not in this photograph)
The wine. A classic, classy Constantia indeed, with green pepper, asparagus and peas and a little perfume on the nose, the wine has minerality and that special semillon mutton fat weight. Crisp and lean with elegance; long flavours of lime and granadilla and some wood notes appear with some grapefruit bitterness on the end. Definitely a food wine. 900 six bottle cases were made and it will sell at R220 a bottle. R10 from every bottle sold will go to support a sustainable solution to Baboon management in the area
Afterwards, there was a very good repast on a table filled with cold meats,
cheeses, dips, bread, chutneys and relishes from the area
Also cold soup; other dishes appeared from the kitchen and there were fresh strawberries,
dates and other fruit
Then we found a table to sit at and eat and try the Constantia White wine with food; it goes very well

Visits to Robertson wine estates: Kleinhoekkloof and Kranskop

Robertson is full of some really kind and hospitable people in the wine industry, as we found on our most recent stay there
Although we had previously met the owners of Kleinhoekkloof, Theunis de Jongh, his wife Ronelle and daughter Danielle, who makes the wine with her father, we had never visited them on the farm and what a delightful visit it turned out to be. Ronelle is obviously a lover of animals and this tame guinea fowl was one of an abandoned clutch she rescued and raised when they were chicks. Some of them have gone back to the wild; this one cannot be separated from her

Into their tasting room to sample some of the wines. We began with the 2017 Sauvignon Blanc, R75, which has a green fig nose and lovely fresh acidity, melons, gooseberry and lime: it is zingy with nice minerality. The Merlot Rosé R70 seems to be going through malolactic fermentation in the bottle; it has lovely fruit, is bone dry, with a little fizz and is perfumed on the nose. Kailagh (named after their bull mastiff) is 70% Sauvignon Blanc and 30% Nouvelle (they have 10 rows). It is shy on the nose with some perfume, then some Sauvignon Blanc pokes through, with sweet fruit, and crisp acidity. They bought the farm in 2004 and KWV viticulturalist Marco Ventrella helped them plan what to plant where. Initially it was all red grapes. Kim McFarlane taught Theunis how to make wine

Theunis has a hobby; he trained with Neil Jewell and makes his own charcuterie. He buys one pig a month and these are the results hanging in his cold room. On the bottom shelf was a small smoker working magic on the hams above it, lightly smoking only them

The range of their wines. The 2016 Pinot Noir is smoky on the green nose, with sweet berries, a darker style with smoky bacon flavours. Good with the charcuterie! The 2016 Shiraz is herbal and spicy with deep red berry flavours. Jupiter, the 2015 Merlot, R220, has spice, perfume and wood on the nose; clean and green with raspberries and mulberries. The Cabernet Franc 2016 is elegant and savoury, with a classic Cabernet Franc nose. Lovely fruit, warm alcohol, layered, with all the bones it needs to become great in time. Jupiter 2014 is a co-fermentation of Shiraz, Viognier and Petit Verdot; smoky, peach from the viognier and elegant. Cherry berries, meatiness, so concentrated, spice notes and cooked plums with minerality on the end. He doesn't sell his wine to retailers, just on the farm and to his mates. You should make a trip to try them. Don't mind the dirt roads, they are well graded

Theunis de Jongh was in the International Steel market until his "retirement" took him to wine and charcuterie, which keeps him very busy and happy

We were treated to a plate of his excellent charcuterie for lunch. Different cuts of the pig produce such different results and there were local cheeses, chutneys and relishes and good warm bread. We were quite overwhelmed by their superb hospitality. His prosciutto is the best we have tasted outside of Prosciutto di Parma in Italy, soft and sweet and delicious. The fat on his meats just melts in the mouth and the variations of textures and flavours are great. We get the feeling that Theunis only does things one way, the perfect way

The happy family entertaining us so well

And, in a lavender bush, a nest of tiny Cape Wagtails waiting for their mother. The day was so hot that the lavender was watered to cool them down and the mother reappeared to feed them. Thank you so much, family de Jongh. We really appreciate your warmth, hospitality and friendliness

Beautiful views over the vines at Kranskop, where we went next. You can see the heat shimmer

Lynne trying to cope with the heat while chatting to Newald Marais on the deck over the tasting room. It was in the high 30s

Much better inside the cool tank cellar.  Newald, who is both Cellarmaster and Viticulturist on his family farm, was at Stellenbosch Farmers Winery for many years and, ultimately, at Nederburg, where he succeeded Günter Brözel as cellarmaster

Newald took tasting to a new level. We began at 3 and left at nearly 9 pm. We did the full range, some tank tastings and then from the barrels. We have to assure you that we do spit, especially the driver, John. The Chenin Blanc 2017 is dusty with summer fruit and apricots on the nose, full of golden fruit on the palate, crisp acidity of quince, a classic Chenin. It will age beautifully. The grapes came from 30 year old vines. The 2018 Chenin has quince, is shy with buttery brioche and thyme on the nose, lovely on the palate, zingy, full and rich with greengage and nectarine. The Sauvignon Blanc 2018 is a classic green Robertson sauvignon, full of pyrazines, crisp lime and gooseberry with lovely long layered flavours. We were able to taste the 2015 Sauvignon Blanc, a classic green pepper and smoke nose; soft, sweet and full of sunshine, with lime and asparagus and rich on the palate, intense long flavours, the perfect food wine. The 2017 Viognier is rich, full of golden and white ripe peaches with hints of fennel seed. Crisp intense, not overly sweet or sickly, more golden peach and quince fruit with white plums and nectarines. The 2017 Chardonnay has perfume, peaches and a golden oak nose. Soft with limes in the dry French style with oak and peach roundness. The 2018 has more wood, more fruit, more of everything; some marmalade, 3500 bottles and we predict will win awards

Newald is passionate about his wines and has lots of experience. We talked wine industry while we tasted and had a lovely afternoon with him. He has not bottled all his 2018 Sauvignon Blanc and we were able to taste a tank sample of this. It is herbal and vegetal; it has the same background as that in bottle, but is spending longer on the lees and that adds more and more quality. And the tank sample of the Viognier has so much perfume that you could wear it. It is intense, with ripe peaches, nectarines and lots of deliciousness. The 2018 Rosé made from Petite Sirah and Viognier is perfumed with raspberries and strawberries, and while the colour is a classic pink, there are dark berry fruit flavours on the palate; more a red wine than Rosé

The 2013 Pinot Noir is fruit forward with dark red berries and raspberries on the nose, cherry, berry, long fruit flavours backed by wood; concentrated and dark, very enjoyable with more raspberry on the end. The 2016 has lovely fruit and incense wood. Nice fruit and cola flavours with liquorice wood in the mid palate, some salt, then dark toast umami flavours. The 2017 has savoury marmite, then fruit, spice and perfume on the nose. Good fruit, plums, minerality and soft wood on the palate. The 2016 Merlot is very good with a pretty nose of lovely fruit and perfume. Sweet fruit, warm alcohol; no greenness at all. Perfume on the back palate, a lovely follow through with long fruit flavours

The 2016 Shiraz is spicy and fruity on the nose; clean, quite dry with chalky tannins, juicy and savoury, needs time. The 2015 Cabernet, to which Tim Atkin gave 91 points, is full of cassis fruit and leaves and violet perfume; very deep, an excellent nose. It is very French in style with good wood and cassis, with some forest floor, a knock out wine. On the palate, beautiful fruit with long flavours, blackberry, cassis and violets, with some nuttiness. Then, something rarely found and quite different, a Tannat. The 2016 earned a double gold at Vitis Vinifera. Dark, almost black red, a savoury nose with wood, sesame and linseed notes, the fruit comes afterwards on the nose. Dark red fruit, warm alcohol, mulberry, with long flavours and shy wood on the palate with tannins. The 2017 Tannat has more perfume, greener on the nose and some savouriness. Lovely fruit and warm alcohol (14.6%) with notes of green cassis leaves, blackberries, elderberries long flavours and tight tannins. What a wonderful tasting. Thank you so much  Newald, we can’t properly express how much we enjoyed our session with you. You were very generous with your time, your knowledge and your wine

We drove back to our cottage on Bushmanspad for a late supper and woke to find that the heat had broken. We had lots of wonderful rain in the night and the temperature was down to 15 degrees
Such a relief