Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Launch of Miles for Style at L'Avenir

On Tuesday we were off again to L’Avenir in Stellenbosch, for the launch of Miles for Style, a loyalty programme tied in with Voyager air miles, where you gain air miles with every R5 spent on your purchase of luxury goods on their on-line shop. This offers an extensive range of top-quality, unique and innovative brands. We were welcomed by a glass of L’Avenir Brut Rosé with blueberries, had a brief tour of the wine cellar with Barend Barnard, L’Avenir Marketing & Sales Manager, and then sat down to brunch and lots of networking chat with many of the people involved and some bloggers who were there to write about the day. We were presented with a great gift bag containing a selection of the products you can purchase on the site. Do check it out : http://www.milesforstyle.com/
We hope you don’t get this confused with David Grier’s Miles for Smiles Foundation http://davidgrier.co.za/miles-for-smiles/, which raises money for the very worthy charity Operation Smile, which changes lives worldwide with operations to repair faces and give back smiles to children with birth and other facial deformities http://southafrica.operationsmile.org/
A lovely welcome from Barend Barnard, L’Avenir Marketing & Sales Manager
Here showing a colleague how to perform sabrage on another bottle of their MCC Rosé, made from Pinotage
who performed sabrage on a bottle
The brunch spread that awaited us
Danish pastries
Scones and croissants with cheese and ham
Mini croissants with smoked salmon
All set up inside the tasting room
We chatted in the garden
and a lot of networking was accomplished
Melissa Delport of Miles for Style explains the system to us
Barend checking to see if we have enough to drink
Yes, those are goodie bags containing some of the products and services of participating companies which are part of the scheme
We tweet and start our cellar tour in the barrel cellar
Barend took us briefly through the wine making process
and then followed this with a visit to the tank cellar where the marvellous smell of fermenting wines pervades, as picking is nearly finished and they are at the wine making stage
We then had a tour of their guest house. This is the swimming pool area
Some of the rooms have their own terraces
This is the comfortable lounge area
The dining room set up for breakfast
The rooms are named after grape varieties
A very comfortable room with en suite bathroom
Another room with a private terrace
One of the large well equipped bathrooms
And the best suite, named after Pinotage, has its own very private outdoor terrace with plunge pool and outdoor shower, very suitable for honeymooners
Some of the guests, imagining what it might be like to stay there
Hotel Manager Julie Vandeventer and receptionist Elmarie Swarts told us all about the Guest house
The view from the dining room out to the pool
The lake in front of L’Avenir winery
The cheese and charcuterie platter in the tasting room
More networking as we eat brunch 
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© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

A day in Franschhoek

Our friends, who are visiting from Holland, had requested a trip to Franschhoek, so we had a lovely summer’s day in the country on Monday. We started at Pasch du Plooy’s Dutch East restaurant for some good coffee, as the Dutch like to start their day this way. After five minutes in the shops, the girls were ready to move on. OK, it was a little bit longer and the men had to be patient. Then it was off to JP Colmant for a good taste of his local MCC bubblies. We did see JP briefly and he looks rather exhausted after a very, very busy harvest. Then it was off to show them the beautiful view from Dieu Donné. The menu looked rather tempting, so we opted for a nice table in the shade on the terrace. We had a very enjoyable lunch and then it was off to La Motte to taste and buy some wine there. Next, it was Antonij Rupert’s L’Ormarins Motor museum for the men. The ladies rested themselves on the comfortable sofas and then it was time to drive home
The tasting room at Colmant winery in Franschhoek. We preferred to sit on the terrace outside
We were ably assisted by Schalk Basson, who poured us small glasses of the 3 MCC bubblies. The tasting for four people costs R180
The lunchtime special menu at Roca restaurant on Dieu Donné farm
This restaurant has very, very special views over the entire Franschhoek valley from its shady terrace
Very tender, slow cooked rolled belly of pork with a crispy crackling outer and a very good rich wine jus
Prawn and lemon risotto. There were more prawns hidden inside the risotto
Two of our party ordered the Crispy duck
and one had the ostrich steak and chips
John could not resist the chocolate mousse, which came cleverly ‘wrapped’ in a chocolate space ship.
The soft white chocolate mousse, topped with a strawberry confit, was very sweet and unctuous
Affogato – Ice cream with an espresso coffee which is then poured over the ice cream
The large windows allow a view from inside, which makes this a lovely place to come in cooler weather
Our next call was at La Motte, where only the tasting room is open on a Monday
We tasted through the wines available for tasting and admired the elegance of the tasting room
They provide very good tasting glasses and a fresh roll to clean your palate between wines
The vaulted barrel cellar with lots of excellent La Motte reserve reds to come
Then it was off to the L’Ormarins Motor Museum at Antonij Rupert
This is a 100 year old Model T Ford
One hall has only red cars
Another is dedicated to racing cars
There are several very rare vehicles. This is an Aston Martin DB2/4 from the mid 1950s, with Italian Superleggera coachwork, showing a lot of American influence
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© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Lunch at Dunes, Hout Bay

On Sunday, we had to drive through to Constantia to deliver an order to a client, so we decided to go and have lunch at Dunes in Hout Bay. We have often written about this beach -side cafe restaurant because of its wonderful location, view and rather tempting and simple food. They do really good fish and calamari and, this time, we discovered that they also do good hamburgers. They all go with good draught lager and the wine list isn’t shabby either.
The view from Dunes of Hout Bay beach and Chapman’s Peak
A dozen deep sea oysters from the West Coast cost R18 each. Expensive, but worth it, was the verdict of our two internationally experienced oyster addicts
A light Chicken salad followed for one of the oyster eaters
Crisp calamari with chips and some roasted vegetables. The tartar sauce, sadly, still has too much mustard in it. The calamari was fresh and perfectly cooked
Good beef hamburgers with a creamy peppercorn sauce
Two  gulls eyeing our lunch
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© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014