Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Vintage tasting and lunch at Saxenburg

Saxenburg shows off some of their impressive vintage wines
Cellarmaster Nico van der Merwe joined Saxenburg in 1990, just a year after the Swiss Bührer family bought the estate. Vines were first planted by the founder Joachim Sax in 1701. Winemaker Edwin Grace took over from Nico recently and is now the Cellarmaster. Nico made wines to last and this was a chance to taste quite a few of the older vintages with members of the family and Edwin, followed by lunch at the Cattle Baron restaurant on the farm
A list of the wines we tasted. The Private Collection Merlot: The three Merlots were interesting and each different. The 1995 still has huge tannins but shows suppleness. The 1998 is attractive with a pretty nose filed with cherry and raspberry and floral, so Merlot. Slightly spicy but sweet berry fruit, warm alcohol and tannins say this wine still has years to go. The 2005 has balsamic notes with brandy hints and the tannins overtaking the fruit still.
The Private Collection Shiraz: 1994 was spicy, peppery, intense and interesting, with green herbs and truffles. Dry chewy tannins soft berry fruit beneath. The 1996 was contentious in the room. Coffee mocha notes on black berries with violets, it had clean almost crisp fruit acids, the tannins are soft and supple, more Rhone like. Drink now. 2000 smells of wonderfully of kelp, spice and rich red fruit. On the palate rhubarb, tayberries and boysenberries, with some spice. A good food wine. The best of the bunch.
The Private Collection Cabernet Sauvignon: 1992 Cassis leaves and berries, oak notes, lactic and different herbal notes. on the palate herbal with basil and oregano, then light red fruit, pomegranate rather than cassis. 1998 A Full-on nose of cassis leaves and berries Silky on the palate with warm alcohol, very 'together' a proper Cabernet in the French style except the nice warmth from our South. Vanilla oak and violets make an appearance. 2000 Balsamic spice then berries on the nose; soft sweet cassis and cherry fruit, lively and refreshing backed up by good wood and chalk. Nose does not marry with palate. 2003 Vanilla violets and cassis and rich cherries, a block buster nose, so different from the 2000. Light spicy fruit, very warm alcohol, this wine needs to get together a bit more.
The Saxenburg Shiraz Select (SSS): 1998 Dusty musty spicy with dark black berries and pepper on the nose, Hot red fruit very Rhone style with some herbs dark liquorice wood, spice and warmth of alcohol, long flavours and linseed. nice lively fruit, with a pure fruit end. 2001 Balsamic with wood, almost cassis fruit, clean sweet and sour fruit on the palate, long with warm alcohol. 2005 Pretty nose with dark fruit, perfume and warmth, no faults and interesting, showing good age notes a bang of alcohol and sweet fruit. Lovely wine for red meats - steak or rare roasts. It was a very good tasting and rather special to be able to taste these wines.
On a warm autumn day we met on the lawn outside the wine cellar
Mike Bampfield Duggan examines a bottle of the Saxenburg Non-vintage MCC, a new offering made from 85% Chardonnay, 15% Pinot Noir
The tasting was held inside the old wine cellar. This was previously owned by KWV and was used to ferment brandy, vodka, Gilbey's Gin and to make sweet wines
A mural above one of the tasting tables
Vincent Bührer, in charge of Management & International Wine Sales with his sister Fiona, has been at the reins since 2011. Vincent welcomed us and introduced the team
Cellar master Edwin Grace
Media and wine industry discussing the wines
Pouring the wines for the other table
Each of the old kuipe cellars displays one of the Saxenburg wines
The line up of the vintage wines we tasted
Lunch was at the Cattle Baron restaurant on the farm
Inside the Cattle Baron restaurant, the room has a mural of the farm
Herb margarine for the bread
The lunch menu
Fiona Bührer, sister of Vincent, is also in charge of Management & International Wine Sales, she spends her time between Europe and South Africa, she is the European Brand Manager
With lunch we got to taste the current wines, this is the new rather contentious label on the 2016 Guinea Fowl Chenin Blanc
It is a typical Stellenbosch Chenin grassy and dusty on the nose, juicy with lots of tropical flavours like pineapple and apple. Unoaked.
The starter was a briefly citrus cured Norwegian salmon ceviché, served with pickled vegetables and spring onion
A rather fetching arrangement of lamps
The group enjoying lunch
Fiona telling us about the current wine range
Saxenburg are known for their excellent Shirazes. This is the 2009 Triple S Select, just launched at the lunch, from 3 vineyards, 50/50 America and French oak R800 on the farm,. Only 3000 bottles were vinified and it is only made in the best years. It has savouriness with rich wood and berries on the nose and more intense berries and some spice, with warm alcohol and taut tannins and chalk on the end palate. Needs time
This was served with the main course which was a first for several people, tender and succulent, well flavoured beef cheeks on truffle mash, with a wine jus, baby rainbow carrots and half an onion. Not sure why the onion was there, it didn't add anything to the dish
Dessert was a coconut Panna cotta with a mango coulis, topped with roasted coconut flakes. They unfortunately collapsed as it was rather thin in texture.
Served with dessert was the La Reve Natural Sweet Wine made from Sauvignon Blanc, Semillon and Chardonnay. Lovely label with a bee on a vine on the World. Sticky sweet grape must with some honey and hints of pourriture but not enough to get it certified as Noble Late
In conversation
Johannesburg Sommeliers asking questions of Vincent Bührer
Johann de Wet, visiting from Robertson, with Fiona Bührer
A double espresso to go. Saxenburg had kindly arranged Uber to take us there and back home

Best Wine on this week's MENU. South Hill King of the Hill Chardonnay 2015

The King of the Hill is a single barrel 2015 Chardonnay made for Kevin King by winemaker Matthew van Heerden (previously of Uva Mira, now at Grande Provence). It is made from best terroir Elgin grapes

Vanilla and jasmine nose with cooked apple. Clean zingy citrus flavours followed by apricot and more apple; it has a silky texture, with the wood showing full on the end with Seville marmalade. It can take time. Definitely a food wine, it matched the Seafood marinara so well.


Monday, April 10, 2017

Tasting Mèthode Cape Classique with Charles Fox

We popped into Charles Fox's tasting room on Sunday morning and were treated to a tasting of their MCCs. This collection of classic Mèthode Champenois always impresses. The wines all rate 4½ stars in Platter
A display of magnums in the large tasting room. They currently have six hectares producing the grapes for the wine, three more will come 'on stream' next year. This will enable them to do a Non Vintage which will be mostly to supply hotels and restaurants
They have three Mèthode Cape Classique wines in the standard range. They are also one of the few  South African farms with Pinot Meunier. There is a line of elegance that runs through all the wines. We began with the Vintage Brut 2013; R240 on the farm. Clean apples and pears with a nice crispness. Hints of apricots on the end palate, this wine has an attractive age component. Their Champenois advisor is French Champagne maker Nicolas Follet
Charles Fox with his flagship 2012 Cipher Brut 
We were lucky enough to be able to taste this wine which is available on-line only until the end of April. Only then will it be released in the tasting room. R460. It is a big wine, bready brioche yeast, huge crispness and leanness with rich apple sauce, some nice chalk with a lasting memory of fragrant lemon. It had four years on the lees

Then we tasted the Vintage Brut Rosé from 2012, R250 on the farm. It is bready, slightly minty, sparkling raspberry juice, very pleasing. Lovely fruit, no noticeable sugar, just long raspberry & strawberry flavours at the end. A wine for celebrations, breakfasts and long lunches
Charles with his wife Zelda
Next, the 2013 Blanc de Blanc, R360 on the farm, usually our favourite style of bubble. It has brioche, jasmine and apple on the very sophisticated nose, and is lean and dry on the palate, showing so well. It is full of apple flavour and you are left with a lingering taste of green apples
The spectacular view from the tasting room balcony of the Elgin valley and mountains beyond

We also tasted Zelda’s "gummy bear juice", a red wine made from Pinot Noir. It is not being released under the Charles Fox name, but under his mother's surname, M C Furneaux. They have just received certification. It is low in alcohol (12%) and sulphur, almost organic. Dark garnet in colour, aged in older oak barrels and not normally available for tasting. There is incense wood, soft sweet berries, minerality, light easy drinking, more in the Mercurey style for us, uncomplicated

Breakfast at South Hill

We needed to have a good breakfast in Elgin on Sunday morning and Nicky Wallace had recommended South Hill for breakfast the next morning and she was so right, it was superb. Owner Kevin King was on the farm that morning. He joined us for breakfast and gave us a tasting of some of their wines
John was up early and caught the dawn and the birds stirring
Flowers from a wedding the day before. South Hill is a very popular wedding venue. When we saw the accommodation available we understood why
The tasting room recovering from the wedding, and the shelves were being refilled
This is also where we had breakfast, admiring the beautiful vineyard views
The restaurant, which has a larger room through those doors, is also full of art by South African artists, all for sale
The menu
John's cheese omelette topped with bacon
Lynne had the Eggs Benedict with salmon. It was quite splendid. The eggs were perfectly cooked with the yolks runny, the white firm, the Hollandaise perfectly seasoned with just a little bite of lemon. It came on a slice of ciabatta, topped with well seasoned spinach and was accompanied by crisp slices of wild mushroom. The best in a long time
With breakfast comes toast and preserves. We also had lots of black coffee and were impressed, as they had a water problem and sorted it out so that the coffee machine worked. Kevin joined us for breakfast as did his son Ben and Ben's wife. Kevin unexpectedly and very generously paid for our breakfast
The King of the Hill, is a single barrel 2015 Chardonnay made for Kevin by winemaker Matthew van Heerden (previously of Uva Mira, now at Grande Provence). This is made from best terroir Elgin grapes
South Hill wines are made by their wine maker, Sean Skibbe. We tasted the 2015 South Hill Syrah; light berry fruit and wood with warm tea, black pepper and garam masala spice, it is smooth, subtle and sappig. Then the Kevin King 2014 Pinot Noir called the Bazza (named after Kevin's father) Soft and sweet fruit with a tang, vanilla oak on the end. It has layers of cherries and mulberries. Age this
Then the Kevin King 2015 BBK Malbec named for Benjamin Barry King, Kevin's son. A savoury meaty nose, incense wood, its intriguing with some maraschino cherry on the end of the nose. Soft licorice with salt, this has great fruit concentration of dark berries and some herbs, chewy chalky tannins, this is made for rich meat dishes and stews
The Mica red blend of Shiraz (50%) Mourvedre (25%) and Barbera (25%) is a Southern Rhône style blend, a full on warm berry fruit attack, with herbs, vanilla and coffee mocha wood, wildness from the Barbera, very satisfying.
One of the family dogs enjoying Sunday morning
Kevin and his son Ben
The vineyards on the hill
Cape honeysuckle loved by sunbirds
We went on a short tour of the accommodation with the family and the dogs
The South Hill logo spears in the chef's vegetable garden
A trellis made with old vine stocks, just waiting for the climbing beans and peas in winter
South Hill do have a popular wedding venue. The wedding party had just moved out of the Guesthouse, which is a five bedroom, en suite luxury villa which can be hired. http://www.southhill.co.za/guesthouse/index.aspx. It has room for the bride and groom and for several guests. They can entertain themselves in the lounge and the kitchen. As the beds had not yet been made, we didn't take photographs of the bedrooms. They also have Pumphouse Honeymoon Cottage
A spiral staircase in the house separates the bridal pair from the rest of the party
An outside braai at the Guesthouse

Wednesday, April 05, 2017

This Week's MENU. Winery Road's 21st Birthday , Paul Cluver Family Day, Sundowners with the Wallaces, Black pepper Chicken with vegetables, Black Dog Malbec

Tall, straight trees. Reaching to the sky. Paul Cluver Estate,Elgin
A week of starting to enjoy a new car with more toys than we ever imagined could exist in a vehicle. We enjoyed driving it to Stellenbosch and to Elgin for the events you can read about here. We miss the space we had in our old, much bigger, chariot, but we won’t miss the bills...

Tracy van Maaren continues to expand her list with excellent wines, which makes this trade tasting exciting each year. Chef Proprietor of Aubergine and Auslese, Harald Bresselschmidt, arranges food pairings for some of these wines and they are interesting matches which make one think about how you would serve these wines. This was held on Wednesday last week (Read On....)
As we discussed during the lunch held last week, there are not many successful restaurants who can claim to have survived this long under the same owners. 96 Winery Road certainly fits the bill. Partners Ken and Allan Forrester, Martin Meinert and chef Natasha Wray are still involved and the restaurant continues to provide superb food. At the celebration we tasted the all time favourites from their menu over the last 21 years, paired with some of the great Forrester Meinert wines (Read On....)
A Harvest festival of different sort, Paul Cluver organised a train to take families from Cape Town to and from the farm last Saturday for the fun day out, held in the Amphitheatre. We arrived under our own steam (pun intended) just as the train arrived and a very jolly day was had by all (Read On....)
We had booked an Airbnb for the night in Elgin following the Festival at Paul Cluver and made a stop at Wallowvale to visit our friends Nicky and Paul Wallace and watch the sun go down while tasting their wines, exchanging trade gossip and making a fuss of the black dogs and the terrier     (Read On....)

Lynne uses strips of bite sized thigh meat in this stir fry, but a mix of breast and leg meat will also be fine. You can use any vegetables that are suitable for a quick stir fry like those below or add broccoli, sweet corn, mange tout, mushrooms, etc. You need about four cups. You can use coconut oil for frying if you don't have peanut. Peanut oil can take a very high heat which makes it suitable for stir frying. Never use olive oil, it laminates and turns to plastic which is very bad for you.
350 g chicken cut into 5 cm strips - 1 T corn flour - 1 tsp light soy - 1 tsp Shaoxing rice wine or dry sherry - 1 garlic clove, grated - 1.5 cm knob of fresh ginger, grated - 2 T peanut oil for frying - selection of fresh vegetables, see below - ½ an onion, roughly chopped - ½ cup of fresh bean sprouts - 4 spring onions, sliced
Stir fry sauce: 1 tsp freshly ground black pepper, according to your taste - 2 Tbspns oyster sauce - 2 tsp light soy sauce - 2 tsp Shaoxing rice wine or dry sherry - 1/2 t sesame oil - 1 tsp honey - salt
Preparation
Stir the corn flour, the light soy and rice wine into the chicken, mix well and set aside for at least half an hour. This flavours and tenderised the chicken. This is known as velveting the chicken to tenderise it. Make the stir fry sauce and set aside for use later
Vegetables: Cut these into bite size pieces: half a red pepper - half a green pepper - 2 small carrots - 1 courgette - 1 stick of celery - 10 green beans - 1/4 of a Chinese cabbage, roughly chopped
Heat your wok and when hot put in the oil. Just before it begins to smoke, quickly add the rough cut onion and stir for a minute. Add the garlic and ginger, stir then immediately add the chicken and brown quickly on all sides. Add all the chopped vegetables and mix quickly to stir fry for a minute or two. Add the sauce and stir well. Cook till it starts to bubble. Fry for about three or four minutes till the chicken is cooked and the cabbage is beginning to wilt. Add the bean sprouts at the end and quickly stir them in. Top with the spring onions and serve from the wok with noodles or rice. Taste and add salt if needed

This wine has really come into its own and is drinking so well at the moment. It has green herbs, black cherries, and vanilla oak on the savoury nose. Supple and soft on the palate with dark berry fruit, salty liquorice and soy. It's a wine for fine foods or just to quaff with friends over supper. And it goes beautifully with chilli and dark chocolate

5th April 2017
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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. This electronic journal has been sent to you because you have personally subscribed to it or because someone you know has asked us to send it to you or forwarded it to you themselves. Addresses given to us will not be divulged to any person or organisation. We collect them only for our own promotional purposes. If you wish to be added to our mailing list, please click here to send us a message and if you wish to be removed from our mailing list, please click here to send us a message.

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