Monday, October 26, 2015

McGregor Country Cottages and Green Gables Mill House Country Inn

Our First night: a cottage in McGregor and great dinner out
The Robertson Wine Valley and McGregor Country Getaways organised our accommodation while at the festival and for our first night we did self catering at Country Cottages in McGregor. The country views on the way are lovely
Our home for the night was Orchard cottage, right in the middle of an apricot orchard which will be ripe in a week or two. It is in a gated centre with several other cottages
Our back garden
It has two bedrooms, one with a double bed
and another with two single beds
The lounge and kitchen area is spacious and well appointed. John was delighted to see the television over the fireplace as he was able to enjoy the Rugby, SA playing Wales
We only cooked breakfast the next morning, but it is a very well supplied kitchen
There is a pool in the orchard
We looked on Trip Advisor and read how popular and good Green Gables Country Inn restaurant in McGregor is, so Lynne had booked a table for dinner. We were welcomed by the pianist, professional musician John Hargreaves
John was the Timpanist with the Cape Town Symphony Orchestra for years and he also used to make his own wine, which we sold in the shop. In the background is the very friendly owner Jill Meyer. She and her late husband Tiger have run the hotel for 16 years
It is a wonderful old house with eclectic decor. Our table was next to the window
The restaurant was full; it is very popular, so always book. They do put up a lot of people who do the walk through the pass from Greyton. Jill told us that many come intending to walk back the next day, but then get a car back as the walk is quite taxing
We took some older wines from our cellar for our week away, like this bottle of Cordoba 1999 Merlot, and did not have to pay corkage. We are glad we opened this now, it needed drinking. It went beautifully with dinner
There was no menu. It is a set three course meal, but you pay for the courses you eat, so you can skip the starter or the pudding. We skipped the butternut soup starter, as it was a very warm evening, and went straight for the roast pork option. We could have had roast chicken. Just like eating a well prepared Sunday roast. Roast pork, done two ways in a rich meat gravy, crisp duck fat potatoes, carrot ribbons and a sticky sweet, brown sugar dusted, pumpkin fritter which was a great accompaniment to the pork
It is a lovely dining room with lots of art on the walls, some for sale. There is a TV lounge at the end
Dessert did not appeal to us, but we are so glad we said yes to the cheesecake. It is from a secret recipe and is lighter than air with a good caramel topping. Dinner cost us just R100 a head, which we think is marvellous value
You can also dine on the terrace which has views of the garden and the countryside. And, of course, you can stay a night or two. Rates start at R400 pp. Address is Smith St & Mill Street, McGregor, 6708 Phone:023 625 1626
Friendly and professional owner Jill Meyer with her poodle.
Rugby in the TV lounge
Night view of the garden
Sunday morning on McGregor's Main Street
It is a lush valley full of vineyards ...
... and hills
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2015

Bistro 13 at Stellenbosch Vineyards celebrates its first anniversary

with a celebration lunch

This bistro opened just a year ago and it already scores 5 stars in the reader reviews on Eat Out. Chef Nic van Wyk, ably assisted by his partner Roxy Laker, has put together a winning formula of good bistro food, paired with a selection of Stellenbosch Vineyards wines. We were invited for lunch with other media to celebrate and to sample their new summer menu. We were fed good food till we begged "no more please!"
Roxy welcoming us and telling us about the past year. The R44 outside the restaurant was under huge construction for a couple of years as they widened the road. It is now finished and access is great to all the establishments along the way
Chef Nic with his pots
Our menu for the day with lots of dishes from the new summer menu
The bread was made by Nic and was delicious
First course of deep-fried crumbed goats cheese with a tangy salsa, fresh broad beans and honey vinaigrette.
This went perfectly with the dry and crisp 2015 Welmoed Pinot Grigio
Stellenbosch Vineyards Hayden's White paired with the next course ...
...tender morsels of fried baby calamari dusted with smoked paprika and accompanied by a creamy avocado salsa on a base of baby potatoes, topped with ribbons of crisp pickled cucumber. The plate was dotted with a good rouille mayonnaise. Definitely a dish to return for again and again
Wine for the next course was the Credo Chenin 2010. So great to have a chenin with some age and maturity, which is still singing with fruit and elegance
The next course was Sweetbreads on a carrot purée in a brown caper butter, for those who enjoy sweetbreads. It is one of Nic's signature dishes and we hear it was excellent,
but for those of us who are not fans of sweetbreads, wafer thin slices of well seasoned pork belly served with a celeriac remoulade, apple cubes and a fresh salad of baby leaves. Another well thought out dish
The main course was beautifully plated. Herb crusted tender but firm monkfish fillets, served with Nic's own rich tangy tomato sauce done two ways, the darker has squid ink added to it. It was accompanied by peas and crisp potato cubes. The wine served with this was the Credo SMV 2012. SMV is a Shiraz, Mourvedre, Viognier blend and it may surprise some that red wine does pair well with fish dishes, especially when accompanied by a rich sauce
Roxy with Kalinka Lombard
And then a surprise addition to taste from Infinity wines. The First XI The Belter 2014 is a wine made at Rickety Bridge for cricketer Faf du Plessis, who has a share in the restaurant. It is a blend of Shiraz, Mourvèdre, Grenache, Cinsaut, Tannat and Viognier. The bottle is signed by four great cricketers: Two South Africans, Faf du Plessis and AB de Villiers, New Zealander Stephen Fleming and Australian Mike Hussey. This wine will be served in the restaurant. It's a complex and layered blend showing good aging potential and which goes well with food
And then another main course: Braised lamb shoulder and rib, on a bed of barley and asparagus "risotto" with crisp onion rings, broad beans and a herby olive oil and garlic sauce. Wonderful. The toothsome barley goes so well with the soft lamb. The wine served with this was the juicy Stellenbosch Vineyards Bush vine 2014 Pinotage
Nick sent us a pre-dessert of a warm Rum Baba. Many people at the table had not experienced this classic dessert before and it may well become a firm favourite at the restaurant. A baba is made from a baked yeasty batter and it is then soaked in syrup and alcohol, usually rum, served warm and topped with a rich cream and fruit. Nic added more syrup to the plate
Then came the official dessert - a Three chocolate terrine with a caramel sauce and praline dust. It was beautifully light, but rich with chocolate. Both desserts were served with the sticky sweet and delicious Infinity 2012 Noble Late Harvest wine. By now we were all "elegantly satisfied" and ready for the trip home after good double espressos. A great introduction to the summer menu, thank you both
The summer menu for you to go and try
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2015

Nedbank Green Wine Awards

It has now been six years since the inception of these awards in 2009 and we have seen such an improvement in our Green and Biodiverse wines. The awards were held in a new venue for us: In the Vine on the R44 in Helderberg. A total of 150 wines were judged across two categories (Best wines made from Organically Grown Grapes and Best Wines from Integrated Production of Wine category). The panel was led by internationally renowned wine judge Fiona MacDonald. Other members were Greg Mutambe, Dr Winnie Bowman CWM, Francois Rautenbach and winemaker Nomonde Kubheka. Wine journalists Anel Grobler of Spit or Swallow and Shante Hutton of Wine.co.za were co-opted onto the tasting panel as bloggers
The venue has lots of parking in the front
The interior is airy and spacious
And the lawn outside was a perfect venue for a welcoming glass of bubbly
Ramsey Media Getaway publisher Neil Piper opened proceedings
It was a well attended function
Sponsor of the Awards is Nedbank. Alistair Pearce of Private Banking gave the speech. The partnership with Ramsey Media started in 2008. Nedbank donate R200 million a year from customers' Green Affinity cards to conservation projects. They have issued a Green Wine map which they hope will boost tourism in the sector
The menu
The starter was a wild mushroom risotto, served with Ken Forrester's excellent IPW award winning Chenin Blanc, FMC.
Non mushroom eaters got a cheese Risotto
Inge Kotze, Senior Programme manager for WWF SA. Sustainability is key to the wine industry. South Africa is the smallest of the 6 global plant kingdoms but it is the most diverse. In the past vineyards, were a threat to this kingdom; now things have changed as biodiversity and wine partnerships have been born, steering farming away from threatened areas.
Head of the judging panel, Journalist Fiona McDonald. She told us that there were no fault wines this year. There were 78 IVW entries and 64 Organic entries. Reds outperformed white wines this year for a change. There was also an organic grappa entered. The Org de Rac MCC, which was served to us on arrival, was the Bloggers' choice
Kathryn Frew of Getaway
The award winners with their certificates. There are 15 top achievers. Org De Rac La Verne MCC 2012 took top honours in the Best Wine Overall in the Made from Organically Grown Grapes category (the wine was also the Bloggers’ Choice Award). Sijnn White 2013 scooped the Best Integrated Production of Wine Overall (the wine was also the IPW Best White). Wildekrans was named the Best Farming Practices Overall Winner. Wines from Organically grown Grapes: Best red won by Reyneke for Cornerstone 2013; Best White: The Ladybird Chardonnay 2014; Best value winner Stellar Organics Running Duck Sauvignon Blanc 2015/ Integrated Production of Wine winners wsere Best Red Waerley Hills Grenache 2014; Best White Sijnn 2013; Bloggers Choice Ken Forrester FEMC 2013 Best Value Winner Wildekrans Sauvignon Blanc 2015. There were also four more awards: Leader in Energy conservation: Lourensford. Leader in Water conservation: Spier. Leader in Eco Tourism: Villiera; Leaders in Community Development & Best farming practice, Wildekrans
David Trafford of Sjinn wines with his award
The venue has marvellous views of the Helderberg mountain
The main course of good tender fillet of beef on a bed of mash with a rather metallic and sour sauce of yellow and red capsicum peppers
Rene Barnard of Singita Private game reserve
Cape Wine Master Duimpie Bayly made a very amusing closing speech
A book published by WWF on our Wine Kingdom and conservation success stories
Dessert came as three separate items. A berry crumble, a custard tart and a cinnamon and ginger ice cream. All rather sweet
More winners with their awards
The entire group
Wine enthusiasts will be able to sample the winning wines from the 2015 Nedbank Green Wine Awards in Cape Town and Johannesburg in November. More information on these tasting events can be found at www.greenwineawards.com/tasting-events
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2015

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Reciprocal Trading tasting of imported wines at The Vineyard

It is a special occasion when we are invited to taste good French and other nations wines like Spain, Portugal, Australia, New Zealand and South America. This event is held annually for the trade and media and good customers and we were delighted to be invited
Welcomed with a glass of Tio Pepe Palomino Fino (very dry) pale sherry. We think fans of Swartland wines should reacquaint themselves with sherry, which is an oxidised wine, matured in barrels for several years. It is delicious and a lovely aperitif
Then on to the Champagne stand to taste three Roederers. The Millesime was quite wonderful, mature, deep full of citrus and buttery lees and still lots of promise
We also tasted the Benoit Lahaye and Gratio Champagnes
and the Jacquinot Champagnes. Reciprocal is the importer of these French marques
Owner and MD of Reciprocal, Michael Fridjhon tells us about the wines on show
It was a very well attended tasting with lots of sommeliers, hoteliers, restaurateurs and media. We so enjoyed tasting both the Burgundy Pinot Noirs and Chardonnays and other white Burgundies. When Lynne tasted the famous Corton Charlemagne again, she could see the style that so many of the South African chardonnays are aiming to emulate as the beautiful minerality of this crisp elegant wine shines
It was also interesting to taste Cloudy Bay - so jam packed with asparagus, tinned peas and acidity and other similar New Zealand Sauvignons Blanc. We think we offer more variety with our local Sauvignon Blancs. The Bordeaux reds were amazing, but still too young to drink. They have layers of flavour, but lots and lots of chalky tannins to protect them. Some are still closed and need time to age and develop. You have to buy and put them away for a few years and hope to see the reward
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2015