Tuesday, October 07, 2014

Vondeling launches Methode Ancienne bubbly

Last week, we visited Vondeling in the Paardeberg area to try their brand new wine, a Méthode Ancestral made from 100% Chardonnay. To quote Jancis Robinson: “Méthode Ancestrale, sometimes called Méthode Artisanale or Méthode Rurale, very traditional sparkling wine making method, used chiefly in Limoux, resulting in a lightly sparkling, medium sweet wine, sometimes complete with sediment”. There is no sediment in the Vondeling wine, and it is beautifully dry and full. It is the first of its kind registered with the SA Wine and Spirit Board.
Where did we first taste it? Well they took about 20 journalists in 4x4s up to the very top of their mountain, Kanonkop, and served it to us ice cold with freshly shucked oysters and some killer smoked salmon sandwiches. It is a very steep and long track and we hear that it going to be part of the Cape Epic this year. Good luck to those crazy cyclists!
It was a beautiful day and we could see from Hangklip on the False Bay side of the Peninsula all the way round to the Piketberg mountains and the Atlantic in the north. The mountain is 750 metres above sea level, so you really did feel on top of the world. Then back down the mountain we drove, to lunch in the winery with vertical tasting of their white blend, Babiana, and another of Erica, their Shiraz. It was a sensational event.
A welcome cup of coffee in the tasting room after an early start from town
Spring green in the vineyards on a lovely morning
The cellar, the tasting room and their small chapel, which is used for weddings and other ceremonies. The local bishop will be blessing this very soon
Vines being thinned and trained as they sprout
Our beautiful mountain from the top of theirs, looking over the Durbanville Hills
We begin a very short hike to the top of the mountain from the 4x4s that drove us up
The Paardeberg mountains are covered in the most beautiful fynbos and are part of the Nature Conservancy in the area. Bridget Johnsen, wife of Director Julian Johnsen, is very involved in this. This is a watsonia
Julian welcomes us to the summit
A table bearing the Méthode Ancestrale and the smoked salmon sandwiches. The young man on the left opens and serves fresh oysters from his buckets and can be hired for events He has Tabasco and pepper in the top of his leather apron and lemon in the bucket to flavour them
A view back to the farm in the valley and looking towards Wellington and Paarl Rock on the right
The ancient cannon that was dragged up the mountain centuries ago to protect and notify the valley of visiting ships
Winemaker Matthew Copeland pours the first Méthode Ancestrale for Bridget and Julian
Chilling nicely in a huge ice bucket. Someone had to bring all this up to the summit
The oysterking.co.za shucks an oyster
Matthew explains Méthode Ancestrale to us
We get to taste and enjoy
It is lovely and fresh and full, with some brioche on the nose and rich pear and green apple flavours. Not at all like Champagne, but patently French in style.
To quote winemaker Matthew: “Natural fermentation commences in the tank and when only a small, but critical amount of sugar remains, the fermenting wine is bottled and capped. Bottling must take place at the precise moment when there is enough remaining sugar to create a healthy, vibrant mousse, but not so much as to cause the bottles to explode. This single, continuous fermentation, using fruit which is approximately three weeks riper than base wine used to make Champagne, is what makes Méthode Ancestrale unique.
The wine is matured on its lees for 16 months before being disgorged. Autolysis of the yeast cells creates further richness and adds palate weight and creaminess in the wine. After being hand riddled over a one month period, it is disgorged and topped using Rurale from the same vintage, as an alternative to liqueur d’expedition. It is therefore not sweetened and considered zero dosage. Because of the ripeness of the fruit, it’s flavour profile is more in line with a Brut, rather than an extra-brut.
It is a highly labour-intensive way to produce sparkling wine, and for this reason, only 1200 bottles of the 2012 vintage were produced. All grapes are grown and vinified at Vondeling. Recommended retail price R220

Having a wonderful time on the mountain drinking great bubbly and eating smoked salmon sandwiches
or oysters
Bridget Johnsen telling us about the biodiversity of the fynbos and the mountain conservancy project that she is passionate about and very involved in
The green fields of grapes and wheat that grow so well in the valley, looking towards Malmesbury, Tulbagh and the far Piketberg
You can always tell a 4x4 owner
Sunshine and celebration
Time for the hairy drive back down the mountain ‘road’
Vondeling’s chapel
They laid a long table for lunch
We had three vintages of Vondeling Babiana 2009, 2011 & 12. It’s a blend of Chenin, Viognier, Chardonnay and Grenache Blanc. Full of golden yellow plums, peaches, honey and pineapple, but it’s not sweet. It has a lovely mouth feel and long juicy flavours
The three vintages of this primrose yellow wine
Then three vintages of Erica – a shiraz. 2007, 2009, 2010. All rather different from each other but all good, spicy shiraz. The 09, which is a food wine, gives a lovely mouthful of rich cherries and cassis with some spice and vanilla, and lightly toasted oak.
Jane Eedes promotes and sells the wines for Vondeling
The winemaker tells us about the dessert wine we were served, Sweet Caroline, a divine Muscat de Frontenac with an RS of 140. It is made by crimping and twisting the bunches on the vine to concentrate the fruit sugars and is classified as a Vin du Paille
Lunch was prepared by Mariaan Harris, who manages the tasting room and functions
It started with a lovely fresh salad with beautifully lightly hot smoked salmon. We then had a lovely soft fillet of beef with a rich mushroom and cream sauce

And finished with an Eaton Mess with raspberries and mango served with Sweet Caroline.
Thank you all at Vondeling for a really impressive and very enjoyable day
Photo of John by Maggie Mostert, Batonage
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

Thursday, October 02, 2014

141002 Main Ingredient's MENU - L’Avenir Pinotage & Lodge, Joostenberg Spring menu, Seductive Sauvignons, Franschhoek Uncorked, Foliage, Winchester Mansions Brunch, Plaisir de Merle launch, Elgin Pinot Tweetup, Victoria Sponge Cake

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L’Avenir’s resident grey heron surveys his domain
In this week’s MENU:
* L’Avenir Pinotage Vertical Tasting
* L’Avenir Lodge
* Joostenberg Spring menu
* Seductive Sauvignons at The Vineyard
* Franschhoek Uncorked
* Lunch at Foliage
* Jazz Brunch at Winchester Mansions
* Plaisir de Merle wine launch with lunch
* Elgin Pinot Noir Tweet up
* Another little Rant from Lynne on Copyright
* Victoria Sponge Sandwich Cake
* Food and wine (and a few other) events for you to enjoy
* Learn about wine and cooking
To get the whole of our story, please click on “READ ON.....” at the end of each paragraph, which will lead you to the related blog, with pictures and more words. At the end of each blog, click on RETURN TO MENU to come back to the blog version of MENU.
This week’s Product menu    Truffle season has been and gone, so any of you who want fresh truffles need to wait till next season. However, we do have preserved black truffles, white and black truffle oil and truffle salt and some other truffle related products to enhance your dishes.  See them here
L’Avenir Pinotage Vertical Tasting      To have the opportunity to go back to 1996 and taste all the eight L’Avenir Pinotages which have reached the top 10 in the ABSA Top 10 Pinotage competition over the last few years was a very special opportunity. We were very fortunate to have Mauritian-born former owner Marc Wiehe with us. He bought the farm in 1992. It had been growing grapes for Nederburg in Paarl. Pharmacist Francois Naude, who had more passion for making wine than for pushing pills, was hired as winemaker and a legacy was born. By 2004, no Pinotage had been named in the top ten as frequently in the annual Top Ten Pinotage Competition as L'Avenir, with seven out of eight vintages in the Top Ten.
Marc Wiehe sold the farm in 2005 to French winemaker, Michel Laroche of Chablis. In 2010 Laroche merged with the Jeanjean family and L'Avenir became part of the AdVini group, one of the largest wine producers in France.
We started the tasting with the 1996, which still shows soft fruit, soft tannins and has the Pinot parent peeping through, more than the Cinsaut. It still has some time to offer! It’s an old style, but has lovely fruit. We then tasted through 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 & 2011. All these Pinotages were made by Francois Naude, who guided us through the tasting, with the exception of the 2011, which was made by the current winemaker Dirk Coetzee. You can see the progression of these wines as the vines aged and matured and the change in style as the years went by and more was learned about how to treat this difficult grape, in the vineyard, in the cellar and in the bottle. L’Avenir produces great Pinotage.
The tasting was held in their tasting room and it was followed by supper on the terrace – thankfully with lots of space heaters. The food had been catered by Bertus Basson’s staff and was delicious. READ ON
L’Avenir Lodge     L’Avenir had wanted us to stay at their Lodge for a while and this was the perfect occasion to do so, as driving back to Cape Town after such a tour de force of wine, which finished rather late, was not an option. We were given one of the best rooms in the Lodge and had a superbly comfortable stay. READ ON
Joostenberg Spring menu     After breakfast at L’Avenir’s Lodge we did some cheese shopping at Parmalat’s Simonsberg cheese factory shop in Stellenbosch and then drove through to Joostenberg, where Susan and Chef Christophe Dehosse had invited us to join them for lunch to try out their new menu in their recently refurbished restaurant. It was lovely to discover that Hartenberg cellarmaster Carl Schultz and his wife Karen had also been invited, as well as co-owner/winemaker Tyrrel Myburgh’s wife Anette. Tyrell was in the USA, marketing their wines. We had a very gemütlich lunch with lovely food, good wine and wonderful company – all the ingredients of a wonderful meal. READ ON
Seductive Sauvignons at The Vineyard     Then it was a quick trip home to unpack the car, fetch a friend from Europe who was staying at the Winchester Mansions and tohare off to The Vineyard Hotel for Wine Concepts’ Seductive Sauvignon wine show. Were we tired? Hell no, when faced with over 107 wines to taste. Many farms showed both Sauvignon Blanc and Cabernet Sauvignon. And there were many seriously good wines to sample READ ON
Franschhoek Uncorked     On Saturday, we took our friend Terry to this Franschhoek festival. We collected our tickets and glasses from Babylonstoren which gave us a chance to show him their amazing gardens. Unknowingly, we arrived at the perfect weekend to see their collection of over 5000 clivias in full bloom. It was a superb site. You can walk through the clivia wood and admire those planted plus a good display of other unusual and beautiful hybrids in pots. Then it was off into Franschhoek in time for our lunch booking at Foliage. After lunch we called in at Haute Cabrière, who had such a fun event going on in their marquee. We tasted their wine and bubbly, had a bit of a bop to the band and threw some balls at a rubber ring in the lake to try to win a bottle of Ratafia. No, we didn’t get one. What a lovely way to spend a Saturday. READ ON
Lunch at Foliage     Foliage Restaurant was opened recently by talented Chef Chris Erasmus, formerly at La Motte. As he puts it, the cuisine is “From farm and forest to the plate.” We have wanted to try it out since he opened, so the festival seemed the perfect occasion to book. We had two courses each and loved the food and the house wine choices. READ ON
Jazz Brunch at Winchester Mansions     This has become an institution at the Winchester. Once a month in the off season, more frequently in the summer, you arrive a 11 and stay till 2 and in the process listen to jazz, eat breakfast, morning tea, sushi, and finish with a full Sunday lunch and dessert. And all for a very reasonable charge of R350 per person. They provide a glass of Miss Molly Bubbly to start the morning and the Sunday Papers READ ON
Plaisir de Merle wine launch with lunch     Plaisir de Merle invited us to join them at the launch of their new Petit Plaisir red, a Shiraz-driven blend with lunch at The Dining Room in Woodstock, owned by the talented Karin Dudley. Petit Plaisir means small pleasure, but this is anything but small. It is a lovely, sweet and soft blend of Shiraz, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc and a scant 0.7% Viognier, which shows its presence despite the small amount. It is easy to quaff and great with food. We suspect we will be seeing this on wine lists all over the country soon. READ ON
Elgin Pinot Noir Tweet up     This “Tweet Up” was held at Cork and Chalk Pizza place in Kloof Street and we tasted and tweeted our opinions of 12 Elgin Pinot Noirs, while in Elgin the farms’ winemakers met to do their own tasting, tweeting and watching the tweets we were sending. All the tweets from both venues are projected onto screens in each venue. It is a good way for the producers to get an idea of what people think of their wines. And there were some really impressive Pinot Noirs on show. Our high scorers of the twelve wines tasted were from Catherine Marshall, Elgin Vintners, Iona, Lothian, Oak Valley, Paul Cluver, Paul Wallace and Shannon.
Another little Rant from Lynne on Copyright     Since my last rant the results have been encouraging. John has had some good orders for his photographs from professional organisations. We say “Thank You”. BUT why do some people think that using someone else’s image on social media doesn’t require payment or permission? You are getting worldwide coverage using someone else’s labour, which doesn’t come for free. And you have to pay for that. If you can’t take a usable photograph yourself, realise you are paying for expertise. If you can’t fix your car, you need a mechanic. The same logic applies. Don’t steal images; the copyright does not belong to you. And its use without permission is a crime, which is enforceable by law.
This week’s recipe was requested by a friend in the media who, like Lynne, has been devoted to the BBC Programme Great British Bake Off, which finished this week and will be sadly missed. She wanted a good recipe for a classic Victoria Sponge. It is a long time since Lynne made one, but this recipe from The Constance Spry Cookery Book is simple and has sensible instructions, geared to easily measurable proportions.
Victoria Sponge Sandwich Cake    
Ingredients: 3 eggs. Their weight in each of butter, castor sugar and self raising flour (or 1.5 teaspoons of baking powder and plain flour). Raspberry or strawberry jam. Icing or caster sugar for dusting the top. Whipped cream is an option.
Set your oven to 180°C. Cream the butter until it looks like whipped cream. Add the sugar and beat until white. Add the eggs, one at a time, with a good spoonful of sifted flour. Beat thoroughly. Sift the baking powder with the remaining flour, stir quickly into the mixture. Turn into two tins, 7 inches across (17 or 18 cm will work) that have been well buttered and floured. Bake in a moderate oven 180°C for 20 to 30 minutes. Turn out onto a rack. When cool, sandwich well with a good jam. Powder with icing sugar or castor sugar. You could also add some whipped cream on top of the jam.
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 type of event 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 list of wine and food pairing dinners, list of Special events with wine and/or food connections, list of Wine Shows and Tastings and list of special dinner events. All the events are listed in date order and we 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
The Hurst Campus, an accredited school for people who want to become professional chefs, has a variety of courses. See the details here
Chez Gourmet in Claremont has a programme of cooking classes. A calendar of their classes can be seen here.
In addition to the new Sense of Taste Culinary Arts School, Chef Peter Ayub runs a four module course for keen home cooks at his Maitland complex. Details here
Nadège Lepoittevin-Dasse has French cooking classes in Noordhoek 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.
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 Thursday evenings and she has decided to introduce LCHF (Banting classes). The Kitchen Confidence classes, which focus on essential cooking skills and methods, have been expanded and are now taught over 2 evenings. She continues to host private dining and culinary team building events at her home. She trained with Raymond Blanc, and has been a professional chef for 25 years. More info here






2nd October 2014
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Phones: +27 21 439 3169 / 083 229 1172 / 083 656 4169
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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.
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 and our blogs 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.

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Lunch at Foliage, Franschhoek

Foliage Restaurant was opened recently by talented Chef Chris Erasmus, formerly at La Motte. As he puts it, the cuisine is “From farm and forest to the plate.” We have wanted to try it out sine he opened, so the festival seemed the perfect occasion to book. We only had two courses each and loved the food and the wine choices  Our bill for three was R1000 and included two bottles of house wine and a tip.
The menu for the day – it changes regularly
Full and vibey and, of course, there were other people we know who were also enjoying lunch
The warm salad of sweetbreads, bacon, potato and squid. Spiced red pepper and tomato fondu, hazelnut and a 17 year old vinegar with foraged forest greens
The superb terrine of confit duck, foie gras and eisbein, with a salt cured mushroom purée, a lovely slice of beetroot brioche, a remoulade and nasturtium salad – one to return for again and again
and one without the mushroom purée
Main course for both the boys: Boerbok (goat) shoulder and tongue en crepinette, with tender wildebeest loin and a roasted marrow bone. Delicious and very rich
Lynne had pasture fed roast pork topped with good crackling, comforting dandelion and pumpkinseed crushed potatoes, beetroot and baby carrots and her first fiddle fern. The pork was not as tender as it might have been but had great flavour
The chef with his mother, nephew and sister in law
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© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014