Monday, May 12, 2014

Old Mutual Trophy feedback at the Grande Roche, Paarl

There are several wine competitions throughout the year, each of which has a different format. Some are judged by wine experts, others by the wine trade; some by pure amateurs, others by winemakers, journalists  or the entrants' peers and some are a combination of all the above. The Old Mutual Trophy employs a mix of different specialists involved in the wine industry and, each year, invites several judges from different countries to get a good outsiders' view of how the local industry is doing. The wines are subjected to rigorous tasting. This year, 212 producers entered wines, and 1040 wines were tasted in three and a half days. There were some very exciting results, reported at the Feedback Session last Thursday
A welcome snack and a cup of coffee on arrival
There is always a large gathering of media and wine industry at the feedback, to hear the views of the judges on what they have tasted over the last few days. They talk about quality in the different categories, improvements, trends and, sometimes, the disappointments. 
And, as all the wines are tasted blind, this feedback is a very good indicator of where the South African wine industry is currently and where it seems to be heading. No results will be announced until the Awards presentation and lunch on the 28th of May
We heard that the depth of talent in most classes was extraordinary and about how hard it was to keep wines out of the medal classes. High silver medals this year would have been gold a few years ago. There are 23 Trophy awards this year, including the Museum class, 14 gold, 121 silver and 496 bronze awards
Show Chairman Michael Fridjhon tells us about this year’s wines
On average each taster tastes approximately 110 wines a day. Museum Class entries continue to show growth – an indication that producers and consumers are beginning to acknowledge the age-worthiness of the best new-generation South African wines. This year they represented 5% of all submissions
Michael was pleased with the spread of entries, noting that the increased number of submissions in the more niche classes added interest to the event and reflected the adventurous spirit of the Cape wine industry. “In the past we tended to receive the bulk of our submissions in a few high profile classes.” he said. "It left us wondering why producers who had planted less well-known varieties were disinclined to commit them to the judging process. Increasingly, we have seen that these lesser-known categories can be the important differentiators for the industry and it’s exciting to see more of them in the line-up.” Shiraz was the toughest and the largest class.  Someone asked if there had been stylistic changes over  the last five years. Top Shirazes were in a more elegant style, but there certainly are monstrous shirazes out there, which are not being awarded gold at this competition.  Red wines have started to dry out again. They have less sugar and less alcohol
Fongyee Walker (China) - Malaysian-born, a graduate of Cambridge University, where she held the title of ‘Best Varsity Blind Taster, and China's best known wine educator. 
She said that the Chenin class was fantastic and mind-blowing in its diversity of style, which we produce so well. There was not a lot of love in the large Merlot class. She was excited to see what South Africa has to offer and encouraged us to get involved in the growing Chinese market, where most people still drink tea and beer and spirits. She thinks that Cape Blends is an exciting category, although their reliability was disappointing, probably because of indifferent closures. So many bottles were needed because of this. Pinotage domination should not happen. It bullies everything else into submission. There are so many exciting red blends and several medals were awarded this year for wines using Tannat and Touriga Nacional; so different on the nose and the palate
François Rautenbach - Heads up the ‘Singita Premier Wine Direct’ programme for Singita Private Game Reserves, Relais & Chateaux, sourcing and supplying wines for the Singita properties in Southern and East Africa

He reported that there is obviously real care being taken in the Semillon class, so we need to reward them with purchases. There is substantial growth in the white Bordeaux blends class, but growers think that they can charge more for these wines. And, while there were a few good wines, too many did not reflect excellence. "Don’t experiment at the customer’s expense". The Sauvignon Blanc class was remarkable this year, no massive acid attacks, they have mellowed in a good way. Shiraz needs more precision and there were many disappointing wines. Some top, but not enough good wines
Trizanne Barnard - Graduated from Stellenbosch University in 2002 with a BSc in Viticulture and Oenology
Following vintages in Alsace, Bordeaux and Northern Rhône, as well as Portugal and Western Australia, she served as chief winemaker for Anwilka in Stellenbosch from 2005 to 2008. She released the maiden vintage of her Trizanne Signature Wine in 2010. White wine producers generally are doing a good job. Semillon is a hard sell but, if we continue to create these at this level, we will get great results. Niche whites show good growth and quality. Sauvignon Blanc/Semillon blends are very site-specific and we need to concentrate on choosing the right clones and terroir. She has so much praise for the Chardonnay class, where we are getting it right, showing focused and detailed wines, done to a T. Red blends were hard to judge and medals have gone to varietals not normally tasted, like Touriga National and Tannat
Christian Eedes - Freelance wine writer, contributing to Business Day’s Wanted and to GQ. Founder of Whatidranklastnight.co.za, past editor of Wine magazine
He is this year’s most experienced South African judge. He found a definite sense of growth, maturity and sophistication in the industry this year; better travelled and more experienced wines. With red wines, we seem to have stepped back from ultra ripe and block-buster wines; these wines are more restrained and will last. Chenin is the most widely planted and strong category. It is a difficult category to judge as every wine had merit. It is all over the place in the best possible way. Stylistic consolidation is not possible. He asks the growers please to put "Wooded" or "Unwooded" on the label, as is done with Chardonnay  
Véronique Drouhin-Boss (France). Winemaker at family-owned Maison Joseph Drouhin in Burgundy, she supervises the vinification and tracks the development and ageing of the wines through daily tastings with her brothers, Frédéric, Philippe and Laurent. 
In 1988, together with her father, Robert Drouhin, she vinified the first vintage at Domaine Drouhin in Oregon, USA, where she is still in charge of the winemaking.
She last judged here 6 years ago and says that the improvement is amazing. Quality is very high and the use of oak is a lot smarter than it was. There is great definition, purity, complexity and elegance. We need to ask "is the clone or rootstock the best for my terroir?" She encourages organic and biodynamic winemaking. There is still some over-pressed bitterness on wines. She found the Pinot Noir class more difficult; it was not very exciting this year. She found greenness and queried the fining and filtration. If it is ‘refining’, would it be better ? We need to do trials of when to pick, and when to bottle. She picked up too much alcohol on some wines. The most disappointing is the bitterness from possible over-wooding. The use of a maximum of 25% new oak overwhelms the wine and it does not age well. Some are too light, need texture and don’t taste like Pinot Noir. 
Gerard Basset MW (United Kingdom) - French-born but UK-based for more than 30 years, he started his career as a restaurant waiter, followed by extensive sommelier experience and training
Judged the World’s Best Sommelier in 2010 and awarded an OBE (2011) in acknowledgement of his mentoring of a generation of young sommeliers and his contribution to the British hospitality industry. Voted Decanter Man of the Year in 2013. The only person to have qualified as a Master of Wine and Master Sommelier and to hold a Wine MBA (from Bordeaux). Honorary President of WSET (Wine and Spirits Education Trust. Overall the quality of the wines he tasted is excellent. The Bordeaux blends were very consistent. The Sparkling/MCC class was disappointing. Many of the new wines are harsh, bitter and not very pleasant. Many lacked elegance and were clumsy but, conversely, some established wines are very good indeed. The Champagne template doesn’t always work for us. He enjoyed the Pinotage class; after 50 tasted, he is very positive. He would have given gold to all the dessert wines


JD Pretorius
- Graduated from Stellenbosch University in 2007 with a BSc in Viticulture and Oenology. Worked at Beyerskloof and Graham Beck Wines as well as at Stonestreet Winery in Sonoma County, California. Appointed winemaker at Steenberg Vineyards in Tokai on the Constantia Wine Route in 2009 and promoted to cellarmaster in 2012
In the Chardonnay class, he found some incredibly fine wines, very focused and poised with good minerality, not too rich. However, some contained so much CO2 that they could have been in the Sparkling class. Michael commented that with the use of mobile bottling plants, people are not controlling sparging, sulphur levels and CO2 levels; they leave it to the bottling plant and this is not good. Tasting the 50 Merlots was hard work. There are not many good ones. The Other Red Blends class, with cinsaut and other rarely used grapes, is beautiful and needs more investment and investigation.
James Pietersen Head sommelier for Belthazar and Balducci's restaurants in Cape Town and a former wine buyer for the Vineyard Connection in Stellenbosch. Moving imminently from there to The Wine Cellar.
Riesling was an interesting class, winemakers are working hard at it. One shone, others coming to the top. We mustn’t be scared to experiment. Unusual varieties like Tannat, Reisling etc will excite the consumers. They tasted 94 Cabernet Sauvignons and this is the most important class internationally. There were wines of quality and it is a strong class. He is glad to see structure, persistence and great freshness coming through. Our top wines are world class.
Cathy van Zyl MW  Master of wine, who has judged previously at the Trophy Wine Show, most recently in 2011
An occasional panelist for several other local competitions and has judged overseas with stints at Vinitaly's Concurso Enológico Internacional, the Sydney International Wine Competition, the Shanghai International Wine Competition, Decanter's World Wine Awards and the International Wine Competition. Associate editor of Platter's South African Wine Guide, co-founder of the web-based publication Grape, and co-author of the South African chapter of The Wine Report for several years. She chairs the Institute of Masters of Wine's education committee and lectures internationally.
She had a wonderful time judging the Sauvignon Blanc class. What style should we be producing? We should vary our styles. Herbaceousness is fine, so is the slightly sweaty style. There was representation of every style we could imagine. The wines tasted were very impressive. There is also improvement in oaked Sauvignon Blancs. She is just back from the UK and Decanter and tasted New Zealand, Chilean, Argentinian, Australian wines. Ours are good
The line up of the wine crew, who work tirelessly in the background to facilitate the tasting of the wines
The Grande Crew!
Then it was time for lunch in the restaurant
and to taste some wine with lunch
Three of the wines available for us to drink
as well as some good bubblies
The Menu
The fresh and simple starter of beetroot with goat's cheese
This unusual white blend from Rickety Bridge was a good accompaniment to the beetroot
Another guest at lunch was Don Hammond, a Confrère de Maitre de Bordeaux from Manchester in the United Kingdom. We had great fun tasting wine together and comparing the wines and the dishes
Veronique Drouhin-Boss and Angela Lloyd in deep discussion. We spoke to Veronique about Christopher Keet's wine pairing lunch at Aubergine the next day. Good fortune and coincidence brought her there... 
The main course was succulent breast of duck with a confited duck leg, crisp tuille of duck skin and a duck rissole, accompanied by a cauliflower purée and mushroom jus. Delicious and a good sized portion
The Outsorceress magician in the background: Janice Fridjhon, who makes it all happen, keeps this competition going so well and works on the road shows - seen here with Veronique Drouhin-Boss and Angela Lloyd. Do try to get to one of these shows in your area to taste some of the winning wines. Click here for details.
Another great wine to go with the duck
Decadent dessert
Tired judges and organiser after a long four day stint, enjoying lunch. Francois Rautenbach, Christian Eedes, Janice Fridjhon and James Pietersen
The beautiful manicured gardens of Grande Roche hotel in Paarl
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© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

Friday, May 09, 2014

Main Ingredient's MENU - Old Mutual Trophy, Elgin Cool Wine and Country Festival, StellenBloggers’ Party, The Bollinger Exceptional Wine Service, Prawn paté

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Waterlilies in Elgin morning light
In this week’s MENU:
* Old Mutual Trophy Feedback
* Elgin Cool Wine and Country Festival
* StellenBloggers’ Party
* The Bollinger Exceptional Wine Service Award
* Prawn paté
This week’s Product menu – Winter has arrived and it’s time for warming comfort food. Nothing fits the bill better than South West France’s traditional delight, Cassoulet. We can supply it ready made or you can prepare your own with some delicious duck confit.  Have a look at them here and place an order.
If you can find it in the supermarket, we don't usually stock it, just the products you would struggle to find.... Check our online shop to see more details and prices.
OLD MUTUAL TROPHY FEEDBACK SESSION     Is our talent in winemaking extraordinary? Are our wines growing in maturity and sophistication? Does Merlot need more love? Are SA Chenins mind-blowing? Are our Chardonnays praiseworthy? And are our unusual varietals a surprise with an interesting future....?
As we go to press today, we have just returned from a fascinating insight into the judges’ findings at this well respected award tasting, which took place at Grand Roche during this week. We will give you a full and detailed report about this next week. It’s interesting and mostly great news……
ELGIN COOL Wine and Country Festival     Someone said, over the weekend, how beautiful fruitful Elgin is and commented that, when most of us were growing up, we drove straight through, never knowing how beautiful the valley and the hills are. You do need to go and explore this marvellous place. At the moment, the trees are full of ripening apples and pears. In spring, it will be full of blossom. And at harvest time, the vines will be laden. It's full of lovely, welcoming people too.
The weather is slowly changing from autumn to winter and, in Elgin this weekend, we had both kinds of weather. The liquid amber trees are putting out the most beautiful show of reds, oranges and maroon shades. We started at Hannay wines, where they had a vertical tasting of their sauvignon blancs and some of their winemaker, Catherine Marshall’s, Pinot Noirs. A lovely tasting, held inside the working wine cellar, that was very well attended. You had the option of staying on for a simple buffet lunch costing R80 and, for every case of any of the wines bought, one person's lunch was free. They sold a lot of wine. We loved their 2012 Sauvignon Blanc, which has a little Semillon added, a classic of the varietal in this area, and all of the Pinots were impressive. Cathy makes very, very good pinot, in the fruit driven style that we like. Her pièce de resistance was the 2012 – cherries, violets and roses on the nose and full on sweet berries with such elegance and style, a food wine with length and depth. MORE here!
Then it was off to see the new Wallovale tasting room. Paul Wallace is a well respected viticulturist who consults for many farms in the Elgin area and elsewhere. His client base includes Boschendal, and their range of Elgin grown wines was also available for tasting alongside the Wallovale wines. Nicky Wallace had decorated the inside of the tasting room beautifully in lavenders and pale mauves and was herself toned to match on the day. We sat on the terrace chatting to friends and enjoyed the view while sipping their Little Flirt Sauvignon Blanc and some of their well deservedly renowned Black Dog malbec. We and lots of others also loved the Boschendal Chardonnay which is very elegant and restrained. It was great to see lots of cases of wine going out of the winery that day. John watched some exciting rugby as our team, The Stormers, beat the New Zealand Hurricanes by one point. See photos of the venue here Then it was off to Cathy Marshall for supper, lots of chat and wine and a night’s accommodation. She makes a great breakfast as well as great wine.
Sunday morning, there was a major storm sweeping in and it was quite impressive. The three of us went to Charles Fox for a cellar tour and to taste and buy some of his excellent MCC bubbly. He makes a Brut from Pinot noir and Chardonnay and a Brut Rosé from Pinot noir with a touch of Pinot meuniere. MORE
Then it was time to depart for South Hill. Kevin King had kindly invited us to visit and sample the menu of chef Damian Dearlove. We took Cathy with us and were joined by the Wallaces. Photographs here
StellenBloggers Party On Monday night, we were whisked off from the Waterfront in rather speedy minibus taxis with 23 other food and wine bloggers to join many others at Dornier for this very large event. Four International bloggers have been touring SA hosted by Stellenbosch American Express® Wine Routes. Sadly, we were not told beforehand who they were, so did not get to interview them; the information was only sent to us after the event. It was quite a crush, but very enjoyable. Tables had been set up for several Stellenbosch wineries and each had a dish to support one of their wines. If they had a restaurant, their chef was there and so we were able to sample lovely food from Michael Broughton of Terroir at Kleine Zalze, Richard Carstens of Tokara and a few others We think we were meant to blog throughout the evening but, sadly, the WIFI was not working terribly well. John did manage to get some out, Lynne did not. The international bloggers were staying at Dornier for the week. MORE
It is time for The Bollinger Exceptional Wine Service Award again. Entries for the First Round of The Bollinger Exceptional Wine Service Award 2014 are now open and candidates are urged to enter soon, as entries close on the 31st May 2014. For more information and to download the Registration Form and Question Paper candidates must please go to: www.wineserviceaward.co.za. We know that we have quite a few readers, who are in the industry, and who might like to enter, or you may know someone who qualifies.
This week’s recipe - Prawn paté
275g well drained peeled pink prawns or shrimps – 150g butter – 2 garlic cloves, finely chopped – ¼ T grated nutmeg – zest from one lemon – 1 T lemon juice - good shake of cayenne pepper –salt and pepper –2 T good quality mayonnaise or crème fraiche or rich cream cheese – 1 T snipped dill or chives. Optional extra 50g butter
Melt the butter in a pan and add the garlic. Cook for a moment then add the prawns. Cook briefly and begin to add the nutmeg, lemon, juice and cayenne. Taste and adjust seasoning . remove from heat. Blitz with a hand blender, leaving some texture. When cool, stir in the mayonnaise and the dill or chives; put into a serving bowl. If you want to keep this for a day or two, melt another 50ml of butter, clarify it and pour the melted butter over the top. Allow to set in the fridge. Serve with prawn crackers, crudités or, if you are not Banting, good brown bread
Buying from us On Line    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 is what drives our business and drives the wheels that enable us to produce MENU possible. We stock a good range of ingredients and delicious ready-made gourmet foods. You can contact us by email or phone, or through our on line shop. We can send your requirements to you anywhere in South Africa. Please do not pay until we have confirmed availability and invoiced you, then you pay and then we deliver or post. When you make an eft payment, make sure that it says who you are. Use the form on the website to email us your order. Click here to see our OnLine Shop.
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 see what’s happening in our world of food and wine (and a few other cultural events), visit our Events Calendar. All the events are listed in date order and we already have a large number of exciting events to entertain you right through the year. Events outside the Western Cape are listed here.
Learn about wine and cooking We receive a lot of enquiries from people who want to learn more about wine. Cathy Marston and The Cape Wine Academy both run wine education courses, some very serious and others more geared to fun. You can see details of Cathy’s WSET and other courses here and here and the CWA courses here. Karen Glanfield has taken over the UnWined wine appreciation courses from Cathy. See the details here
Chez Gourmet in Claremont has a programme of cooking classes. A calendar of their classes can be seen here. Nadège Lepoittevin-Dasse has cooking classes in Fish Hoek and conducts cooking tours to Normandy. You can see more details here. Emma Freddi runs the Enrica Rocca cooking courses at her home in Constantia. Brett Nussey’s Stir Crazy courses are now being run from Dish Food and Social’s premises in Main Road Observatory (opposite Groote Schuur hospital). Lynn Angel runs the Kitchen Angel cooking school and does private dinners at her home. She holds hands-on cooking classes for small groups on Monday and Wednesday evenings. She trained with Raymond Blanc, and has been a professional chef for 25 years. More info here





8th May 2014
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 online shop for details and prices.
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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 and standard or Dutch-flavoured Afrikaans.
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Wednesday, May 07, 2014

#Stellenblog Party at Dornier

On Monday night, we were whisked off from the Waterfront in rather speedy minibus taxis with 23 other food and wine bloggers to join many others at Dornier Estate’s regal Homestead, an original Sir Herbert Baker design, for this very large and fun event. Four international bloggers, Matt Long of the luxury adventure travel site, Landlopers (www.landlopers.com), Niamh Shields (www.eatlikeagirl.com), recently recognised by The Times as the most influential food blogger in the UK; Norman Röhlig of I-REF (www.i-ref.de), one of the most reputable lifestyle websites in Berlin and Keith Jenkins of the opulent Velvet Escape travel blog (www.velvetescape.com) have been touring SA, hosted by Stellenbosch American Express® Wine Routes. 
Tables had been set up for local wineries and each had a dish to support one of their wines. If they have a restaurant, their chef was there and so we could sample lovely food from Michael Broughton of Terroir and Richard Carstens of Tokara among others We were meant to blog throughout the evening but, sadly, the WIFI was not working terribly well. John did manage to get some out, Lynne did not. We didn’t get to meet any of the international bloggers but believe they were staying at Dornier for the week.
Kleine Zalze, The House of JC Le Roux, Stellenbosch Vineyards, Tokara, Spier, Simonsig, Dornier, Majeka House, The Devon Valley Hotel, Oldenburg, Van Ryn, Warwick Estate, Delheim, Middelvlei and Lanzerac had tables with their wines paired with matching foods. The international bloggers for #Stellenblog were selected for the quality of their content, ideal target audiences and social media reach, representing the wine route’s core international markets: the USA, UK, Germany and the Netherlands. Before the party, they were joined by local bloggers and online influencers for a #Stellenblog Tweet-Up of discoveries when they were let loose for a see-sip-and-savour of the Stellenbosch Way of Life. This sensory meander included stopovers at Bartinney Wine & Champagne Bar, Brampton Wine Studio, the SMAC Art Gallery and the 5-star Coopmanhuijs Boutique Hotel & Spa, whilst Thrifty sponsored all the transport on the day.
By the 5th of May, the campaign’s launch day, it had already generated a digital reach of 20 million opportunities to see (OTS) content generated via Twitter with a reach of 2.1 million accounts. Over 550 pictures have been shared on Instagram. Hashtracking, a twitter tracking tool, shows more than 23 million OTS and a reach of 2.7 million Twitter accounts, whilst the global online tracking agency Brandseye, shows a slightly higher OTS because they also monitor Facebook.
This week-long digital exploration of the beauty and bounty of the region, forms part of the wine route’s year-long Stellenbosch Experience wine tourism marketing campaign, which was initiated in conjunction with Stellenbosch 360, to showcase the region’s authentic, multifaceted and must-experience wine tourism offerings on a global scale.
#Stellenblog is hosted and digitally monitored in association with iAmbassador – renowned for successful blogging campaigns like #Blogville in Emilia Romagna, Italy. This online initiative is also supported by South African Tourism and is aligned with its #MeetSouthAfrica and Indaba 2014 programmes, which will see a number of top international bloggers visit South Africa, and especially Durban from 10th to 12th May. The international #Stellenblog bloggers were flown to South Africa courtesy of South African Airways and connectivity was provided by Afrihost. Pick 'n Pay, another campaign partner, has stocked the Homestead, home to the bloggers for the week, with typical South African food and snacks.
The red carpet to the entrance was blocked by something interesting
Have a glass of lovely Simonsig Kaapse Vonkel Brut and take a mask.
They were a challenge over tri-focals but we managed for a while!
Not only the delightful Miles Mossop of Tokara
with his super Reserve Sauvignon Blanc, but also...
...Tokara's divine chef Richard Carstens
with his dish of tuna on sushi rice with a fresh pea jus
Executive chef Michael Broughton of Terroir,
now famous for his BBC series Seasons,
gave us a very delicious, comforting Braised Lamb risotto,
paired with Kleine Zalze Shiraz 2011
The lovely ladies of Oldenburg,
with their Cape Malay chicken sosatie and Oldenburg chenin blanc
Periperi chicken liver paté, well matched with Warwick's Three Cape Ladies
and fish croquettes with their Professor Black sauvignon blanc
Host winery Dornier had their Donatus white blend to taste, paired with a good spoonful of tender pork belly
How to finish a great evening.
A taster of Van Ryn Brandy
which went excellently with all the dessert choices on offer
Chatting and tweeting on the terrace
How we ended our evening on the terrace.
Macarons and Canel from Makaron restaurant,
tiny cup cakes and some rather strange white rubbery things from JC le Roux, with a good double Espresso
and a van Ryn 15 yr old brandy
Then it was time for the slow taxi home
For more information on the Stellenbosch Experience and #Stellenblog campaigns visit StellenBlog at http://blog.wineroute.co.za/ or contact Mariette du Toit-Helmbold at experience@wineroute.co.za or phone 083 225 5955.
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

Lunch at South Hill, Elgin

On Sunday morning there was a major storm sweeping in and it was quite impressive. After our visit with Cathy Marshall to Charles Fox for a cellar tour and a taste of some of his excellent MCC bubbly, it was time for lunch at South Hill. Kevin King had kindly invited us to sample the menu of chef Damian Dearlove.
There was a break in the clouds and you can see what beautiful views they have from the restaurant/tasting room
We were warmly welcomed by owner Kevin King and chef Damian
Our table for six. There is lots of space in the gallery restaurant, which has changing art for sale hanging on its walls
The full selection of South Hill and Kevin King wines. We started with a glass of their new crisp MCC
The menu for the day, The food is all sourced as locally as possible
A happy group photo
Chicken liver and green peppercorn parfait with preserved figs
Ceviche of salmon with pink grapefruit, coriander and lime
A superb plate of mussels
Parsnip and ginger soup
Several of us had the aged sirloin steak, topped with glazed onions, with a red wine jus and sauté potatoes
A magnificent helping of free range chicken, leek and mushroom pie
We drank some South Hill Sauvignon Blanc and a very special bottle of Catherine Marshall Merlot, Peter’s Vision, made in tribute to her late partner. It was magnificent - soft and fruity with great elegance
For those of us who could not resist dessert, a  classic thin crisp apple tart with divine vanilla crème anglaise ice cream
or a gooey chocolate fondant with a blueberry compote
or a cheese platter . We enjoyed dessert with a bottle of Cathy’s Myriad, a dessert wine made, unusually, from Merlot. Christmas pudding in a bottle is how we have always referred to this lovely wine
or a crème brulée
The chef tells us about his food
And the storm rages outside.  Thank you Kevin, Sandy and everyone at South Hill
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© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014