Thursday, February 13, 2014

Elgin Chardonnay tweet up at Caroline's

This is a list of the wines we and other media tasted and tweeted about. At one point we were really trending!
Caroline Rillema in her wine shop in Strand Street in town. She is just about to open a new shop in Tokai
Lap tops, phones and tablets at the ready, we begin a flight of three wines and start tweeting our findings. The screen at the end shows all the tweets from this group and the group in Elgin who were doing the same tasting at the same time
Aren't electronics wonderful?  So instant. The Tweetup gives the winemakers a minute by minute view of what the tasters think of their wines
All the wines we were tasting are on the shelf behind Shanté who writes for Wine.co.za
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© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2013

Lunch with Saronsberg wines at the Cape Grace

Saronsberg’s winemaker Dewaldt Heyns welcomes us with their crisp and delightful MCC Brut 2009, a blend of Chardonnay and Pinot Noir
This is what we do for a living... well, some of us
The Brut MCC, showing some of the prestigious awards it has received.
We begin the tasting and the tweeting ..
... and the conversation, while the Restaurant Manager, Martin Drotsky, and PRO Nicolette Waterford pour the wines
Dewaldt is extremely knowledgeable about his wines and his terroir and his soils and explained what they are trying to achieve in a very interesting way.
The line up of wines we tasted
Winemaker Dewaldt Heyns with Mariette and Nick van Huysteen, the owners of Saronsberg
We then moved into the Signal restaurant for lunch
Correct glasses for the tasting and some gifts to take home afterwards
The menu and the wines the courses were paired with
One of the wines we especially loved was the Shiraz rosé, which tastes just like a ripe red plum with savoury notes. This pairing of the ripe tomato, baby beets and strawberry sorbet completely echoed that wine and was a brilliant pairing. Tomato is notoriously hard to pair with wine, this is a real find AND is only R45 a bottle on the farm. This dish was originally going to be the starter for the vegetarians among us, but was so successful that they served it to everyone, together with the Smoked salmon trout and prawn starter. That went superbly with the Viognier which is elegant and restrained and not overfull or over wooded.
Mike Bampfield Duggan and Nick van Huysteen enjoying lunch with other members of the media
The main course of tender Chalmar sirloin in a good rich jus and roasted figs went so well with the beautifully made savoury Grenache 2011. The other good wine paired with this course was the Full Circle 2011 which is a Michelangelo Platinum award winning Rhône blend of Shiraz, Grenache, Mourvedre and a soupçon of Viognier and is made to go with meat dishes like this.
Shanté Hutton Of Wine.co.za chats to Christian Eedes
So nice to have the wines served in the correct glasses. It does make a huge difference
Dessert was a poem of textures and flavours. The crisp cream filled choux bun with a crunchy coating was stuffed full with white chocolate cheesecake and accompanied by a nicely balanced slightly sour peach and vanilla paste with a dollop of burnt honey ice cream. Served with the epic 2006Six Point Three straw wines it echoed all those flavours and the wine added more of the same flavours and sweetness the each mouthful. The exciting Brut 2010 was a good counterpoint to the dish, taking away any cloying richness with its crisp beady full palate. 
All in all it was a pretty damned fine tasting and meal with some great wines. Thank you Dewaldt, Saronsberg and Cape Grace chefs.
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

Monday, February 10, 2014

Franschhoek Summer Wines at Leopard's Leap

This very modern winery is situated on the main road into Franschhoek and this building contains the stylish tasting room, a shop selling modern kitchen equipment and accessories and the large restaurant and open kitchen where they also hold cookery lessons.
The different wine farms' stalls were all set up on the lawn under umbrellas, with seats and umbrellas in the middle. Suited for summer drinking, most of the wines were white, with a couple of rosés and some good MCC bubblies.  We tasted Sauvignon Blancs, Semillons, Chenins, Viognier, Chardonnays, several blends and Terra del Capo's good Pinot Grigio.  We particularly liked La Bri’s Chardonnay, so well made by Irene Waller, Haute Cabrières Belle Rose and Morena’s Brut Rosé. The standard of wines was very high and most were eminently drinkable, nay quaffable.
The chef on the left is Granville Riffel from Franschhoek and told Lynne he is Reuben Riffel's cousin. He works under  Head Chef  Pieter de Jager. Their pastry chef had lots of dessert delights on offer to tempt us.
Lunch was a serve yourself salad buffet and your plate was weighed to gauge the cost. We had a Moroccan chickpea couscous salad topped with a hot harissa, an artichoke and egg mixed salad, a potato salad, beetroot, beans and many more. If you didn’t eat meat you were fine, you just didn’t add any at the end
Then you could add a large slice of this magnificent crisp rotisserie pork, or some barbecue chicken. And there was apple sauce and other accoutrements to go with the salads and the chicken.
Our first bubby of the day was the MCC from Morena, lovely and crisp and lively
Lots of enthusiastic festival goers queued to taste it
La Motte offers the best selling sauvignon Blanc in South Africa from the farm next door
Takuan von Arnim showing the delicious Haute Cabrière Belle Rose
Lizelle Gerber, Boschendal's white wine maker, with their Brut Rosé
Ghenwa and Geza Steingaszner with Kevin Swart of Black Elephant Vintners and his wife
BE Vintners winemaker Jacques Wentzel with Barbara Swanepoel and her daughter
Anelle van Tonder of Babylonstoren
A band played Springsteen, rock, pop and other oldies
Great seating on the cool shaded and misted terrace and the queue for the buffet behind.  Everyone seemed to eat lunch; the queue went on for ages but was reasonably quick.
There were also some good chilling areas if you wanted a rest from tasting
The spacious lawn gave the large number of visitors plenty of room and no one felt crowded
Two English visitors, escaping the British winter with a glass of Leopard's Leap bubbly
poured by Lillian Jonker and Stian Willemse
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© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

IWSC tasting at the Grande Roche in Paarl

The International Wine & Spirit Competition is an annual wine competition founded in 1969 by the [German/British] oenologist Anton Massel. He had the idea of creating a competition which was based not just on organoleptic judgement, but where all entries also had to undergo chemical analysis. A set of technical controls was implemented in order to ensure that the highest quality standards were achieved and maintained year after year
The IWSC receives entries from nearly 90 countries worldwide. No matter where the entry originates, whether it is youthful or aged, it is judged according to its class and treated with respect and consideration. The awards given by the competition are considered as high honours in the industry.  The event occurs annually in November, in London
Chief South African Judge Dave Hughes with Maryna Strachan, who is the local IWSC representative and Michela Nassiz, the international representative, explains to us how the competition works 
The eminent Mr Hughes always prefers informal attire
The large crowd of winemakers, growers, wine trade and media listens to the speeches
One gold and three silver MCC winners of the international competition were indeed available for tasting, Grande Roche’s labels misleading everyone
It was agreed that the venue was too small for the very large amount of interest the wines received and tasting did become a bit of a scrum at times.  The white wines were on the right hand side of the table and the many reds were  on the left.  Sweet wines were on another table at the end of the room and brandies and whiskies had another table on the opposite side of this one
Lots of informed tasting and note taking and, of course, lots on conjecture as always when competition wines are being tasted
A selection of dessert wines being kept cool
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© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014