Thursday, March 18, 2021
Franschhoek Visit - La Cotte Inn Wine Sales / Fromages de France
Franschhoek Visit - Colmant Sparkles
Don’t you
just love the bottle closure of a top hat!. The tasting glasses fit the bill
and show off the Cap Classique to their best. We began with The Sec Reserve Non
Vintage, which has a dosage of 23 g/l, so off dry. It is a wine that is
apparently very popular with the young, who want sweeter wines. We have to
confess it is not our favourite style, we prefer them as dry as they can be
made like the Brut Zero, with no dosage at all. Bready with red berry fruit on
the nose from the 52% Pinot Noir. A fine crisp mousse. Stewed apple from the
48% chardonnay and, beneath, strawberries and raspberries on the palate, some
umami and we found the sweetness very acceptable, at the level of a fresh
raspberry. A wine to serve with good rich paté and desserts
A great view
of the Franschhoek mountains from the farm
They also
have the agency to sell Tribaut French Champagne, of which we are quite fond
Buttery Brioche on the nose, apples in abundance, Granny Smiths,
A very worthwhile tasting and definitely a place to visit when in Franschhoek
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Franschhoek Visit - Three nights at Sunny Lane Guest House
We were given a very kind gift by friends who live in Carlisle in England. They are swallows and have not been able to come back to their flat here for two summers due to Covid. Every year they also book a self catering place in Franschhoek for two weeks, for which they prepay. They had hoped to come again this year but the UK went into lock down just as they were about to travel. So they offered us and a couple of other people their time at Sunny Lane. We waited a few days to see if the others had booked it out before phoning, but no one had yet reserved any time. We are wary of booking at weekends, now that we are on Schedule 1 and people can travel. Our Wedding Anniversary was coming up, so Lynne thought we might as well celebrate it there and booked us in on the Monday 8th, departing on Thursday, 11th March. It seems that Franschhoek is very, very busy at weekends, so we had a marvellous time in a rather quiet village, which was exactly what we wanted
Sunday, March 07, 2021
First MENU of 2021 - Special wines, Greek inspired dinner
MENU has, until about a year ago been a weekly publication. But these are, as we all know, very different times and we expect them to remain like this for the foreseeable future, a depressing thought, but, until we can all be vaccinated and until people learn to behave sensibly, there can be no other way
So here is a collection of stories we have published in the past few weeks. We will be going to Franschhoek for most of the coming week, so there will be stories coming out of that. After that, who knows. Please enjoy them. Stay safe and please keep out of trouble
In case you have missed any stories we have written in the past year, please look at the Blog Archive to the right of this. Click on a year to open all the stories of that year, all the way back to when we first published
South Hill Sauvignon blanc 2015
Another delightful mature wine. This one served with an artichoke pasta. We first saw South Hill Vineyards sauvignon blanc when winemaker Sean Skibbe, moonlighting as sales rep brought his wines to our shop in Sea Point in 2006. We loved it then and we love it now. This is the 2015. It still has vibrant acidity with flavours of nectarine and granadilla and a hint of cassis right at the finish.
Meerlust Red 2019
Meerlust Rubicon is one of this country's truly iconic red blends. Occasionally, very occasionally, after the requisite time in barrel and bottle in the Meerlust cellar, it is deemed by its makers to be less superb than it should be. It is then downgraded and simply called Meerlust Red. Experience has shown that, kept for a few years, this is still a wonderful wine. We were given a sample of the latest Meerlust Red, the 2019. On the nose and palate, it has rich berry fruit; we tasted raspberrry and blueberry as well as cassis. Assertive acidity, as one would expect from a young wine, and the fruit is not overpowered by the wood, which makes a subtle statement on the finish. It will be interesting to taste it again in five years, after which time we'd expect it to have matured very well. 18/20
A Shirley Valentine's dinner from Dish Food and Social - with Greek wines
Two ancient Sauvignons
Wednesday, March 03, 2021
Two ancient Sauvignons
Friends who came to supper last week brought with them two 1998 Sauvignons blanc, both from Stellenbosch. Most people think old South African white wines are not worth drinking, and we have found that that includes wines that are only a couple of years old! We do not hold with this belief, really enjoying wines with maturity and we have in the past had some notable and enjoyable older white wines. However it is quite a long time since we had any wine with this age, so we proceeded with caution and a little anticipation, not sure of what we might find.
Discussing the wines at tasting, we all thought that they must have been one of the first vintages from either producer. In fact, Villiera's first Sauvignon blanc was produced at the same time as the first Platter, 1980 and Thelema's was in 1988
We looked them both up in the 1999 Platter and it is interesting to compare our notes when we tasted the wines with the comments made when they were released.
1999 Platter: Jam-packed with super-ripe gooseberry fruit, loads of flavour, seemingly indomitable alcohol 14.20%
Our note: Golden amber in colour and with golden fruit notes on the nose, there was richness and still a hint of that 14.20% alcohol. On the palate the golden fruit followed through with maturity and warmth from the alcohol. What it reminded us of was a good Spanish Sherry, an Oloroso in style for Lynne, who still found a little fruit, and a Manzanilla for John. We continued to drink this with dinner and the next day and it was very enjoyable and lasting.
1999 Platter: Herbaceous gooseberry-toned from unirrigated vineyards. Loire-like aroma, tropical asparagus top notes, accessible, not simple, persistent
Our note: Dark amber in colour, with honeycomb and apricot notes. It had a lovely mouthfeel, a buzz of alcohol and lots of depth of flavour with apricots and a hint of grape moskonfyt giving richness, but dry. There was also a sherried character and we found it very delicious. Good with food too. We loved the comment on the label, Winemaker Jeff Grier was correct: "Intended for extended maturation in the bottle". Indeed.
An essential tool for safe removal of older corks, which does not have the same propensity for putting crumbs of cork into your glass is the two prong cork puller. There are several brands; the one which seems to be most accessible in South Africa is made by VacuVin and can be found at TakeaLot, Makro and YuppieChef with quite a lot of variance in price. We have also seen one in Checkers
One final pertinent question. Why are we not drinking Sherry in South Africa? It is a really cool thing to drink as an apéritif and with food. Not the sticky oversweet stuff that masquerades as sherry, but the drier and more interesting styles. And we used to produced world class variations.Ken Forrester Silver Rose
Lunch at Dunes
Lynne loves Calamari and has not had any for months, so we decided to go and find some at a favourite place of ours on Hout Bay beach, Dunes, which is a pub with food. We picked up a local friend and off we went for lunch. If the wind is blowing you can sit downstairs behind the see-through blinds, or if it is calm, upstairs on the terrace admiring the view and watching for whales.
Monday, March 01, 2021
A Shirley Valentine's dinner from Dish Food and Social - with Greek wines
The very simple cooking instructions which came with the food