Monday, July 25, 2016

Overnight at Angala, a luxury boutique hotel near Franschhoek


Another visit to the Place of Angels - Angala

We loved our first stay at this chic, small Boutique hotel on the slopes of the Simonsberg last year in April and were delighted to be invited back to see the new Spa, have dinner and stay the night. We had a marvellous time in this peaceful and tranquil place. Angala is surrounded by Vrede and Lust and Rupert and Rothschild vineyards. You enter through the Vrede and Lust gate and then drive 3 Km up the mountain, until you come to this lovely guest house with superb gardens and views. They have recently installed a spa and they also have a special Winter Spa package for two. http://www.angala.co.za/
The entrance
The crystal clear green swimming pool flanked with water lilies, frogs and water plants
Outside the new spa is a small pool and above it, a hot tub
The sauna inside the spa building
This is the hot tub. We were not tempted to try it in the very cold weather that day
Aubrey Blignaut, manager of Angala, was showing us around
The cottage on the far right was where we stayed the last time we visited
A tree sculpture; there are many in the gardens
Looking up towards the restaurant, the lounge and the deck
A mountain stream rushing down the hill, filled with fresh rain water. Angala uses some of the water and the rest goes through the wine farms below and finally goes into the Berg river
Lots of indigenous wild olive trees on the property and spring bulbs showing their heads beneath
The small pool at the Honeymoon cottage
With its enormous four poster bed
A quiet corner of their garden
It is fully self catering if required by the honeymooners, 
or they can employ the private chef to cater for them. Or they can eat at the restaurant
The lounge area
The bathroom with the walled outside shower as well as one inside
One can imagine a tranquil time in this lovely cottage
A double cuddling chair in the lounge

Our cottage with its private pool
Our softly textured bedroom with its enormous bed and high count percale linen
It is also self catering
And has nicely organised space, with the bonus of the wood burning fire
Our bathroom with its double shower and enormous tub
They are establishing a vegetable garden and a perfumed garden outside the cottage
At 7pm, we had dinner in the main restaurant. Because it was a rather raw night and we were the only people staying that night, they put our table in front of the fire, a wonderfully comfortable and romantic place for dinner
This is normally a nice warm nook to sit, next to the small library
The menu
We chose wine by the glass. There is a more comprehensive wine and drinks menu
John chose the tomato tart tatin
Lynne the well cooked and spiced calamari and prawn warm salad. The addition of orange segments was interesting
Because we had that large Mexican lunch at Tuk Tuk, Lynne chose the vegetarian option of tempura vegetables with a sweet soy dip as her main course. They were perfectly cooked, lovely and crisp and the dip, reminiscent of Indonesian Ketjap Manis sweet soy, was a good accompaniment
John chose the Duck breast with cabbage and walnuts, apple and a red wine glaze
just relaxing over a good dinner
Lynne chose the fruit juice sorbets, three flavours, citrus, tropical mix and red berry. More granita than sorbet and the citrus one was the best
John had the trio of chocolate
The chef on duty, Jonathan Swanepoel, came to introduce himself after the meal, an enthusiastic, friendly young man. The head chef had the evening off. We think he did a very good job
Next morning after a night of good rain the gardens looked refreshed and sparkling
A huge carved wooden heart with some carved toadstools
A tree angel
Time for breakfast. A good selection of cereals, cheese, meat and smoked salmon
Three different yogurts; most appreciated was the double thick
Fruit. The berry compote included mulberries and loganberries and was very good with the yoghurt
Our table by the window
This hammerhead shark sculpture was superbly done
Juice and a pot of good black coffee, and a nice fire
John’s selection
They have a good selection of breakfast dishes, Lynne chose scrambled egg and smoked salmon on a croissant
John had a cheese and bacon omelette
Both came with a rather superfluous sweet balsamic reduction and lots of rocket was on everything
Ah, the sun finally showed its face at 10 as we were leaving
The clouds lifting off the Simonsberg mountain behind the main restaurant and lounge building
The swimming pool was like a mirror and overflowing with the rain water
And the hot tub in front of the spa was steaming. A lovely stay in a tranquil place where they know how to look after guests
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

This Week's MENU. Dutch East lunch, Bastille Fest at Franschhoek, KRP Mandela Day wine tasting, Moroccan Lamb Tagine, Wine of the Week

Stormy weather on the Sea Point beachfront
Franschhoek has occupied a large share of our time in the past week with lunches at Haute Cabriere and Dutch East and the annual Bastille Festival. We'll be back there again in the next few days to cover stories that we'll tell you about next week. As we write this, there is a marvellous North Westerly storm pounding the Cape and bringing with it lots of longed for rain.  We hear from our friends in the winelands that it is raining hard and soaking the vines well. May it continue and help to fill up our very empty dams after the long dry summer.
To get the whole story with photographs, please click on the paragraph title, which will lead you there. At the end of each story, click on RETURN TO MENU to come back to MENU.
Bastille Day lunch at Dutch East, Franschhoek     Franschhoek celebrates Bastille Day every year on the weekend closest to the 14th of July. This year we were all a little subdued by the dreadful news of the attack in Nice on Bastille Day, but determined not to be deterred by terrorism and to continue our involvement in honour of the people who died so cruelly. We had been invited to lunch at Dutch East restaurant in the middle of Franschhoek before we attended the festival
Sunday at the Franschhoek Bastille Festival     The Festival was at the top of the main road and next to the Huguenot monument. The layout was very impressive this year. The marquees were much wider and there seemed to be so much more space. Finding a seat, however, is still as difficult as people reserve empty seats for ages while their friends do the rounds tasting, leaving others standing around. There was lots of food from the top restaurants, pulled pork seemed to be the dish of the day from many. And the wines from Franschhoek can be very impressive
Mandela Day wine tasting at Kitima’s new Raya's Kitchen      Kathy and Dane Raath have a good list of wines and beers which they represent in the trade and this was a chance to taste these together with samples of the food at the recently opened Raya's Kitchen. This new Asian restaurant, serving authentic food from the East, is in Mandela Rhodes Place with entrances on Wale and Church Street in Town. Kitima in Hout Bay is very popular and now you can experience some of the food here in town. You will find some of the wines which KRP represent on their menu. Have a look at their website http://rayakitchen.co.za/
We had a roast leg of lamb, deboned, from Woolworths on Friday night and it was tough. Why are we paying premium prices for meat like this? It was cooked as instructed on the packet. So what to do with the remainder? A Moroccan Tagine would tenderise it. We had lots of lamb gravy left over so that became the stock. You can use cooked lamb or raw. Ras al Hanout is a blend of spices used in Morocco, it is now available at good grocers or spice shops like Atlas. You can use many other vegetables: courgettes, butternut, aubergine, baby potatoes etc. Just cube or half them. And you do not have to add meat.
1 T Olive oil - 1 large onion, finely chopped - 3 small carrots, sliced - 3 or 4 cloves of garlic, crushed -1 or 2 teaspoons Ras al Hanout spice mix - half a kilo lamb cut into cubes - 1 red pepper cut into 3 cm pieces - 10 green beans, sliced - 1 tin of chick peas, drained - 250 ml tomato passata - 500ml lamb or chicken stock - 6 or 8 baby tomatoes - 6 dates, roughly chopped - 6 dried apricots, roughly chopped - 20g flaked almonds
In a cast iron casserole with a lid, fry the onion in the oil till soft and golden but not browning. Stir in the carrots and continue to fry for another 4 to 5 minutes. Add the garlic and then the Ras al Hanout. Stir well for a minute to warm the spices. Add the lamb and stir well to incorporate the flavours. If raw, brown it all over. Then add the rest of the vegetables and the chick peas. Pour on the stock and the tomato passata, the dates and apricots and stir. Put on a lid and put into the oven. If you have a Tagine, transfer to that. Cook for 1 or 2 hours or until the meat is lovely and tender. Check that the liquid does not cook out, add some water mid way through if it looks a bit dry, you do need a sauce as you will serve this with cous cous (or rice or flat breads if you prefer). Just before serving sprinkle on the flaked almonds
Wine of the Week     
Tomato in food does overtake many delicate wines, so can spices and chilli. The wine that went so well with this dish was a Garagiste wine from Topaz made by Cape Wine Master Clive Torr from Stellenbosch grapes. It is a 2009 Cabernet Franc/Cabernet Sauvignon blend. This is full of robust cassis fruit and also some lovely savouriness from the Cab Franc. If you have some, try it with this sort of food and you will enjoy it. It was from our cellar and I am not sure Clive still has any to sell. But it might be worth looking for, he has always made excellent hand crafted wines. Some heavy red wines wash away the taste of the food, this added another dimension to it
20th July 2016
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Wine of the Week. Garagiste 2009 Cabernet Franc/Cabernet Sauvignon from Topaz, made by Clive Torr

Tomato in food does overtake many delicate wines, so can spices and chilli. The wine that went so well with this dish was a Garagiste wine from Topaz, made by Cape Wine Master Clive Torr from Stellenbosch grapes. It is a 2009 Cabernet Franc/Cabernet Sauvignon blend. This is full of robust cassis fruit and also some lovely savouriness from the Cab Franc. If you have some, try it with this sort of food and you will enjoy it. It was from our cellar and we are not sure if Clive still has any to sell. But it might be worth looking for, he has always made excellent hand crafted wines. Some heavy red wines wash away the taste of the food, this added another dimension to it
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

This week's Recipe. Moroccan Lamb Tagine

We had a roast leg of lamb, deboned, from Woolworths on Friday night and it was tough. Why are we paying premium prices for meat like this? It was cooked as instructed on the packet. So what to do with the remainder? A Moroccan Tagine. We had lots of lamb gravy left over so that became the stock. You can use cooked lamb or raw. Ras al Hanout is a blend of spices used in Morocco, it is now available at good grocers or spice shops like Atlas. You can use many other vegetables: courgettes, butternut, aubergine, baby potatoes etc. Just cube or half them. And you do not have to add meat
Moroccan Lamb Tagine
1 T Olive oil - 1 large onion, finely chopped - 3 small carrots, sliced - 3 or 4 cloves of garlic, crushed -1 teaspoons Ras al Hanout spice mix - half a kilo lamb cut into cubes - half a red pepper cut into 3 cm pieces - 10 green beans, sliced - 1 tin of chick peas, drained - 250 ml tomato passata - 500ml lamb or chicken stock - 6 or 8 baby tomatoes - 6 dates, roughly chopped - 6 dried apricots, roughly chopped - 20g flaked almonds
In a cast iron casserole with a lid, fry the onion in the oil till soft and golden but not browning. Stir in the carrots and continue to fry for another 4 to 5 minutes. Add the garlic and then the Ras al Hanout. Stir well for a minute to warm the spices. Add the lamb and stir well to incorporate the flavours. If raw, brown it all over. Then add the rest of the vegetables and the chick peas. Pour on the stock and the tomato passata, the dates and apricots and stir. Put on a lid and put into the oven. If you have a Tagine, transfer to that. Cook for 1 or 2 hours or until the meat is lovely and tender. Check that the liquid does not cook out, add some water mid way through if it looks a bit dry, you do need a sauce as you will serve this with couscous (or rice or flat breads if you prefer). Just before serving, sprinkle on the flaked almonds
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016