Friday, March 30, 2012

Searching Heaven and Earth and Babylon

We took our friends to the Hemel and Aarde valley for three days this week, for some country air. We stayed in a cottage owned by friends which faces the other Cape Babylonstoren mountains

It is peaceful and so quiet. The plan is always to do as little as possible but taste lots of wines in the valley so we have been to four vineyards this trip: 
Bouchard Finlayson,



Newton Johnson,

Ataraxia, with its tasting room styled like a Greek chapel

and Creation


all of whom treated us like royalty

Petit Verdot grapes at Creation, two weeks from picking


We bought wine at each farm and even had some sent to Holland
We had one meal out at Harbour Rock in Hermanus’ new harbour,

which we expected to be busy as the school holidays have begun, but it wasn’t



We ate fish and seafood, with very fresh kabeljou,

West coast oysters, small starters of calamari, sushi and some not quite perfect prawns  -  some were a little raw and others overcooked. Some crisp chips but, sadly, lots of slap chips and minimal salads

Carolyn Martin at Creation had given us a bottle of the just released, delicious 2011 Sauvignon blanc to drink with dinner and we also had a bottle of Jordan Nine Yards 2003 Chardonnay,

which Lynne gave John for his 60th birthday, and needed drinking. It was a golden yellow and still full of fruit and good flavours, but on the edge of maderisation, so we did drink it just in time


PEOPLE
Danel Theron at Bouchard Finlayson spoiled us with a most generous tasting

Peter Finlayson with his mad, jumping German pointer, Wolfgang


Pamela at Ataraxia,


and Jo-Ann Roux and Genevieve Linney at Creation were wonderful hostesses

with Carolyn

and JC Martin

What a place to live!


 

© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2012
































PEOPLE
Danel Theron at Bouchard Finlayson spoiled us with a most generous tasting

Peter Finlayson with his mad, jumping German pointer, Wolfgang
Pamela at Ataraxia,
and Jo-Ann Roux and Genevieve Linney at Creation were wonderful hostesses

with Carolyn

and JC Martin

What a place to live!


 

© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2012

Saturday, March 24, 2012

New! Mexicorn salsa range

Mexicorn has given us their new range of Chipotle and salsa products and you can see them for the first time here.
These products contain no MSG, artificial sweeteners, added artificial flavourings or anything else and they are suitable for vegetarians.
To order send us a message at johnford@iafrica.com with product codes and description and quantities of each product. We will then invoice you and give you payment instructions.


Code
ProductPrice incl VAT
1163Mexicorn Chipotles in adobo sauce R           45.00














0120Mexicorn Chunky tomato salsa R           35.00
1707Mexicorn Chipotle salsa R           35.00
0397Mexicorn Black bean salsa R           35.00
0207Mexicorn Jalapeno cheddar salsa R           35.00



120315 Main Ingredient’s MENU - Cape Point Vineyards, Food Barn, Challenging customers, Summer Sunday dinner, Bouchard Finlayson, Broccoli & cauliflower in rich cheese sauce, Products,markets, events & restaurants

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 underlined and Bold words to open links to pictures, blogs, websites or more information
Looking down over the vineyards to the Atlantic from Cape Point Vineyards’ lawn

In this week’s MENU:
*     Chilling at Cape Point Vineyards
*     Anniversary dinner at the Food Barn
*     Chasing challenges and challenging customers
*     Summer Sunday dinner
*     Bouchard Finlayson wines
*     Broccoli and cauliflower in rich cheese cream with almonds
*     Products
*     Our market activities, events and restaurants
CHILLING AT CAPE POINT VINEYARDS     It has been a busy week for us and it didn’t let up. We love this time of year because it is when friends visit from all over the world and March has brought us friends from Holland, Germany, Australia and England, so there is a lot to fit in and a lot of entertaining to do. However, we spent our 9th wedding anniversary working at the market in Long Beach and then, as we had been invited by Duncan Savage, Cape Point Vineyardswinemaker, we went to have a romantic sundowner on their lawn. They really do these picnics properly. You get groundsheets, huge cushions to laze on and really friendly staff bring you your wine with good glasses and, if you want supper, your picnic basket. We bought a bottle of Splattered Toad Sauvignon blanc and spent two stolen hours watching the sun go down; definitely the best place to chill after a heavy week’s work. They do have a tented marquee with tables and chairs, should you not be a lawn lizard. We will definitely return for the picnic with some of our friends. Lovely birdlife there and a splendid view – see pictures.
FOOD AT THE BARN   Then we fell off the hill, down to the Food Barn in Noordhoek village. We have been promising ourselves a return visit because we love Franck’s food. We started the celebration with a glass of Môreson’s Miss Molly MCC (100% Chardonnay) at R40 a glass, and we were each presented with a delicious appetiser of deep fried haloumi in one Chinese spoon and a prawn in an Asian sauce in the other.
We opted for the Summer Bistro Menu, priced at R220 for three courses and some of the courses were delicious. We ordered a carafe of Newton Johnson Felicité Pinot Noir (R42), which was the wine matched to the starter we both could not resist: Fresh figs, sweet cured San Daniele Ham and deep fried Taleggio balls, mesclun leaves dressed with a sweet balsamic reduction, fresh, gooey, sweet and salty – the dish of the evening. John had rather firm and very salty gnocchi with home-smoked salmon for his main and Lynne very pink (as it should be) rack of Karoo lamb. John’s dessert was, predictably, the Chocolate marquise. Special mention goes to the wonderful dessert Lynne had. A rich, hot almond sabayon ‘soup’ with hot strawberries and raspberries, breathtakingly good. Floating on top is an almond tuille bearing a fig scented ice cream; definitely one to try to make at home for a special occasion.
Click here to see the menu and some photographs. We would have liked to have tried the Nitida special menu, but it is a little bit more expensive than we can afford right now at R480 pp with wine. We had excellent service from Matthew, who earned a generous tip.
ARGUS CYCLE TOUR     This race certainly brings business to the Cape, for which we and many other businesses are very grateful. The Biscuit Mill was pumping on Saturday morning and it was so nice to see lots of our out-of-town customers as well as the locals, although one of them did waste an enormous amount of John’s time and put in a big order on Thursday for collection on Saturday (we had asked them to give us a week’s notice) which had John running all over town to fulfil and then they didn’t take it  -because they said the price was wrong! Which it wasn’t. They obviously haven’t refreshed our internet price list for a while. Reality check – prices do change, especially in March when, traditionally, all the food trade has to take into account petrol and commodity price rises. And, as we sell a lot of imported goods, we are subject to currency fluctuation. We try to hold prices as long as we can, but sometimes increases are inevitable, especially with petrol going to R10+ per litre.
DINNER ON OUR DECK     Sunday night is a lovely time to have an informal dinner with old and good friends and we had rather a merry one, with the table filled with glasses and the air loud with spirited discussion. Lynne put out a lot of mezze and then we had a whole filleted Yellowtail, bought from Julie (Ocean Jewels) at the Neighbourgoods market. Lynne marinated this in our famous Prego sauce and it was sensational, baked in the oven for a few minutes. We had this with a huge mixed salad, new potatoes and a pesto pasta orzo salad. She made the panacotta again, but this time flavoured it with Frangelico and tossed on some roasted hazelnuts and some Frangelico and grape syrup. There were supposed to be raspberries but, somehow, they have completely and mysteriously disappeared. Do cats eat raspberries? Have they slowly dragged the punnet under bushes to consume at their leisure? Hmmm.
Bouchard tasting on Monday at the Twelve Apostles     We are so spoilt in the Cape for wonderful function venues and the banqueting hall at the 12 Apostles must come somewhere near the top of the list, with its fabulous terrace and sea and mountain views. We didn’t get to see much of the view on Monday because we were seriously tasting Bouchard Finlayson wines from 4 till 8pm. We have such a hard life! Peter Finlayson had brought out some classic wines from his cellar, a tremendous privilege. We started with all the current releases from the farm and particularly liked the 2011 Blanc de Mer, his current blend of Riesling, Viognier, Sauvignon Blanc and Chenin, which has all the richness of these cultivars with a lovely salty tang of the sea (a brilliant match with seafood and our choice with fish at Milkwood in Onrus), so it was particularly special then to be able to taste vintages from 1991 and 2003 – which contained other German cultivars like Kerner, but was mainly Riesling. The ’91 was still very much alive, with some honeyed turpenes, and was very like a good aged Riesling. The 2010 Reserve Sauvignon blanc is very crisp and minerally and a superb food wine, the 2005 still has a good classic nose, is full of smoke and minerals and English gooseberries and the 08 was like a Grapefruit spritzer, still crisp and lively and also would be great with rich food. On to the Chardonnays: the current Missionvale 2010 is elegant and crisp citrus with vanilla and nuts, while the 04 is full of melons and pine nuts and the 07, with its beautiful golden colour, is still fresh and crisp. Kaaimansgat 2010 Chardonnay was delicious, full of lime notes, while the 2010 Limited Edition (50/50 wood/tank) is even more so, well balanced and integrated. And, finally, the 07 Sans Barrique has honey on the nose, long complex flavours with a bitter grapefruit end.
There were, thankfully, lovely snacks during this marathon tasting and we particularly liked the huge breaded prawns you dipped into a cocktail sauce and the baby hamburgers. Then it was time for the reds.
Galpin Peak 2010 Pinot noir has a shy nose but is full of dark chocolate, liquorice, red and black berries. The 04 was quite balsamy on the nose but with good fruit. The 05 has pretty fruit on the nose, hot fruit and a cola end. The 06 was also balsamy with good pinot characteristics. Both seem to have lots of alcohol to support the fruit. Then a treat: the Tête de Cuvée Galpin Peak. The Current vintage 09, elegant, expensive wood with good soft sweet fruit showed promise, while the 06 is pretty, perfumed, very modern with full sweet raspberries and strawberries, a long, long end of well toasted wood, probably our favourite wine of the evening. The 2000 is showing better than the 2002 at the moment, but this might change.
And before we could leave this very social evening with many of the wine trade attending, we had to taste the Hannibal, Peter’s special and serious blend of French and Italian cultivars, which works so well in our climate. All grown in the Hemel and Aarde valley on heavy clay soils, the current vintage 2009 contains Sangiovese, Pinot noir, Nebbiolo, Shiraz, Mourvedre and Barbera. Full of wild gamey notes but sweet flavours. This wine delivers. Hot, at 14% alcohol, it is a great food wine. 2009 has lovely sweet and sour flavours, still has good chalky tannins, so it needs more time. The 06 is full of cherries and blackcurrants and deep dark flavours and would also be superb with meat dishes. The 04 is less sweet, with deeper, more concentrated flavours, so it might last further. And the 01 is vanilla, incense, violets and layers of fruit. We wish we had lots of all of these in our cellar. If you have some, we think that you are very fortunate indeed to have made such a great investment. As they say in the film business – fade to black.
DIET?      Yes, Lynne is still following the Low/No carbohydrate diet, when she can. She had one pita bread on Sunday and swelled up like a balloon, so obviously the yeast and the bread are not a good idea. Note to self: DON’T DO. Broccoli and cauliflower are two of the permitted vegetables, so if you are struggling for ideas, try this simple supper dish – the quantities are up to you.
Florets of half a white crisp cauliflower – 250g stems of sprouting broccoli – 200 ml cream – 100g grated Parmesan or grana padano – 25g flaked almonds- salt and freshly ground black pepper – optional: a grating of nutmeg.
BROCCOLI AND CAULIFLOWER IN RICH CHEESE CREAM WITH ALMONDS
Lightly toast the almonds in a dry pan and set aside. Heat the cream and stir in the cheese until it melts. Briefly boil the two vegetables in salted water or rinse them and cook in the microwave, covered, for 3 minutes. Put into a serving dish, cover with the cheese cream sauce and sprinkle over the toasted almonds and the nutmeg, if using. You can serve immediately or, if you like the vegetables cooked a little longer, bake in a medium oven at 180˚C for 20 minutes.
Happy St Patrick’s Day to all our Irish readers and to all who want to join them in the celebration. We will be celebrating the small amount of Irish blood in John (he had an Irish great-grandmother) at the Twankey Bar at The Taj, on the corner of Adderley and Wale Streets. The celebration starts at 12h00 and continues until a late hour. They offer special prices on Irish drinks, fresh oysters at R12 each, Irish Bangers-on-the Bar-B for R25. The atmosphere will be helped by traditional Irish Folk Music plus U2, Morrissey & The Corrs (no, not live!) There will be lots of promo giveaways and drink specials and no cover charge. Come and enjoy the craic, with a free welcome drink for those wearing something green. Sláinte! (Good Health) Check the entry and poster in our events list for more.
Products     In addition to the white truffle balsamic reduction, and last week’s additions, we have bought in a delicious fig balsamic reduction, all of them from Italy.  Spanish sherry vinegar is flying and we are getting more. Rose water and Orange blossom water are in copious quantities thanks to the above-mentioned customer who ordered a large quantity and then reneged. We have had lovely compliments on the quality of the Italian stock cubes, especially the chicken stock, and have increased our stock holding. They are all in our product list. Check it here.
If you are looking for anything, have a look at our product list and tell us what you want. You will be able to access it through our website. If you can’t find what you need, let us know and we will try to find it for you. Until our online shop is ready, drop us an email and we will help you. We are very happy to see that traffic on our website is increasing and more orders are coming from it. The financial year end has put a hold on work on on-line developments, but we have nearly finished with all the final adjustments to our accounts and should, soon, be able to give it more time.
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 and introducing you to new products are the things that drive our business and make it exciting. 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    We will be at the Old Biscuit Mill’s brilliant, exciting and atmospheric Neighbourgoods Market, as always, this Saturday between 09h00 and 14h00 and every Saturday. We will be back at Long Beach Mall on Friday, 23rd March for our South Peninsula friends.
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, click on our list for March, April and beyond. All the events are listed in date order and we already have exciting events to entertain you through into the new year. Click here to access the list. You will need to be connected to the internet.
Some restaurants have responded to our request for an update of their special offers and we have, therefore, updated our list of restaurant special offers. Click here to access it. These 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. If they don’t update us, we can’t be responsible for any inaccuracies in the list. When we have tried it, we’ve put in our observations. We have cut out the flowery adjectives etc. that so many have sent, to give you the essentials. Click on the name to access the relevant website. All communication should be with the individual restaurants.
Summer time is picnic time and several wine farms offer picnic facilities. We have put together a list of wine farms who can provide you with a picnic, We haven’t put in much detail, just where it is, phone number, email address and a link to the website. The latter is where you will find all the important information. Go and check it out.






15th March 2012

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.
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 click here to send us a message and if you wish to be removed from our mailing list, please click here to send us a message.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Durbanville's Feat of the Grape

Durbanville, sensibly, decided to have their Feast of the Grape Harvest festival on our Freedom Day public holiday on Wednesday, so off we went with John’s daughter Clare and all our Dutch visitors in tow. First to Durbanville Hills, where there was lots going on,
including tots crushing grapes by foot in a paddling pool and having a whale of a time.
We did a quick tasting, especially loved the Biesjes Craal Sauvignon Blanc and the Rhinofields Shiraz. The girls had a mid morning coffee and then off we pushed to see Oliver Parker at Altydgedacht. This year we were able to taste and buy the Ollo white blend and the lovely light Tygervalley Rosé, made from Cabernet franc, and loved the Gewürztraminer and the 2011 Sauvignon Blanc. We had our first taste of a 2012 Sauvignon, but it needs time to learn good manners, which it will undoubtedly do. Sadly the Gamay and the Cabernet franc are sold out, but we are sure Oliver is very happy about that.
We turned back to Nitida, where we saw racks of grapes drying on beds of straw and Nitida proteas, in preparation for making a Vin de Paille
Bernhard & Peta Veller, Nitida owners, having fun 
Peta Veller Opening a bottle of Nitida sauvignon

and after our expensive snacking at Wellington we decided to have a sit down meal in Cassia and were fortunate to get a table. Most had the huge burgers with potato wedges,
Yvonne had a fig, ham and cheese salad
and Lynne had a great duck salad.
We drank a bottle or two of Nitida Sauvignon Blanc and one person succumbed to the mini Pavlova.
Then off for the late afternoon view from De Grendel’s terrace, a sight of their new restaurant,

and a taste of their lovely wines before heading home.
Errieda du Toit, Durbanville Wine Valley PR

Wellington harvest festival

On Sunday, we hied off to Wellington for their festival, saw some lovely people and drank some lovely wines. First stop was  Diemersfontein,
where we were welcomed by a very trim David Sonnenberg, enjoyed the full tasting, ate a little sushi and left with a couple of bottles of Carpe Diem Chenin blanc, quite glorious. Then, off to Bovlei

where Bubbly and Oysters were on offer –

our friends and John demolished 12 each (at a bargain R7 each) in very short order, while we tasted some of the wines and bought a box of their inexpensive Gewürztraminer to serve with winter curries and some of their good white grape juice for our teetotal friends. We left with a wicked packet of slap chips, BAD. Down the valley to Dunstone, where we had a quick tasting and ate nothing.

Then to gorgeous Nabygelegen to admire their restored ancient tasting room, which was a ruin when we were last there. James McKenzie has done a great and sympathetic restoration.
We tasted the wines and Lynne bought a case of their really good Merlot, which doesn’t show any green stalkiness or mint and is full of sweet ripe fruit and some chalky tannins, pointing to a short life in our cellar before drinking. We could also not resist the prawns, calamari and mussels they were serving, so had plates of those, well-matched with a bottle of the Lady Anna chenin sauvignon blend for the three passengers. The problem with the grazing on each farm is that you spend quite a lot of money, but in this case it was really good value and worth it. Yes, they came with more chips. Not a vegetable in sight in Wellington... Our final stop was at Welbedacht where we chatted with Rob Gower who is working there at the moment and also Schalk Burger senior, his winemaker son Tiaan
and, of course, Mugabe the shar pei (Schalk says he is planning to take over the farm)

while we tasted through the wines. John bought a box of the barrel matured Chenin. Stormers captain, Schalk junior, who is recovering from an injury sustained in the first Super 15 match of the season, had the afternoon off. What a friendly place Wellington is.

Lunch at Babel - amazing Gardens and Food

It can often be disappointing when you finally get to a restaurant which everyone has been talking about. Other than missing the garden tour (mea culpa, says Lynne who got the start time wrong), Babel absolutely lived up to expectations. Babylonstoren farm is officially in Paarl, but it is on the other side of the N1, on the same apparently unnamed road near Simondium as Backsberg and Glen Carlou, on the way to Franschhoek. We could not find a name for the road on the many maps we consulted, including Google Earth.
Someone brilliant planned and planted these amazing gardens
and a huge staff of friendly, well trained people manicures and tends them, producing the most amazing looking fruit and vegetables.
There are also chickens and ducks and, soon, there will be mushrooms. The tour of the gardens starts at 10, so you need an early start from Cape Town and the tour takes about an hour and a half, which then leaves one rather tired and hungry, with quite a long gap before lunch unless, of course, you have a snack  at the small Conservatory café or book lunch for 12 o’clock. We wandered through the gardens unguided and had lots to admire, as the mixed plantings are done sympathetically and in a very orderly manner. We sat down for a cup of coffee in the café and, finally, it was time for lunch.

All the food is sourced from the garden or locally and the menu is seasonal. Some of our friends had been before, so they knew the drill of ordering each of the three coloured salads, a Green (R50), a Yellow (R60) and a Red (R55) as starters.
These are a mix of fruit and vegetable, raw and cooked in the appropriate colours, fairly plainly seasoned and they are a great meal option for vegetarians. The eight of us all had large main courses, which were also accompanied by huge platter of roasted aubergines topped with basil pesto, roasted pears and rather chewy raw fennel
and with another platter of the most delicious crisp (duck fat?) chunky chips. Yes, Lynne succumbed to a couple. There were huge lamb cutlets, perfectly pink (R140) in a gooseberry, lemon, caper & mint pesto,
Franschhoek Trout with a Kei apple (a miniature indigenous apple tree) sauce.
Lynne had a huge portion of rather fatty and rich belly of pork in a superb Vygie (local sour fruit from a succulent) liquor, with fresh figs and crackling.
John’s choice was  a huge sirloin steak with an olive and shiraz sauce. This was ordered medium rare, but arrived close to bleu, so it was a tiny bit chewy. The portion was so large that he could not finish it.
Saucing is very good, but sometimes a little sparse. None of us could cope with dessert so we ended on good coffees. The bill was R415 per couple including 3 bottles of Anura Sauvignon Blanc (at a very fair R70) and service, which we think is very reasonable for this level of cuisine. You do have to book well in advance to get a table.