Thursday, May 31, 2018

MENU's Iberian Exploit 6. Off to Lisbon in a new chariot, Belém, Cascais, TimeOut Market

Because of the burglary in Porto, our first hire car, an Opel Astra, needed to be repaired,
so we were given a new car, a Renault Clio Estate, by the hire company
While it was a bit smaller inside than we had wanted (it actually had a bigger boot!),
this one had SatNav which so improved our life and the trip

Quite sleek and shiny? That didn’t last because we had several major storms on the trip
and they blew across from the Sahara, so the car became very muddy indeed
Still in Cape Town drought mode, we left it like that and waited for clean rain to wash it!
It was quite well washed by the end of the trip

We had to find a hotel in Lisbon very quickly as our hotel for the first night did not work out
We stopped at a service station on the way and got out the laptop
Lynne found us one on Booking.com; fairly central, called Romantica, which we could afford
Lisbon is very expensive; be warned if you are going there, book well in advance
This cost €40 for the night, but that was the out-of-season rate; it is currently €60 for the double room
with a very clean shared bathroom
Booking said that they had parking, but we chose to park in the street
as overnight in the parking garage cost more than the room!

They have turned an old commercial building into a cheap hotel
The design and space are reasonably good, except for the lifts which are on the half floors,
so you do have to drag your luggage up a few stairs

Parking in the street is free for the evening but you have to move by 9 the following morning or start paying
Finding a space to park in is not easy. It turned out that we were in a loading zone
 but we managed not to get a ticket and did move the car early in the morning


Lynne was not feeling very well that day, so she stayed at the AirBnB we had booked, which was near the airport
John went on a tour with Joaquim Sá, Charmaine and Andrew
Joaquim was held up with a business meeting, but John was lucky enough to see the changing of the horse guards
in front of the Hieronymite Monastery at Belém;
rather similar to the ceremony in London and the guardsmen’s uniforms are also similar































The Monastery is one of the most popular tourist attractions. Very long queues

“You can take over now sir!”

As we said, long queues

The monument to the Discoverers at Belém which pays homage to all the famous explorers

Inside the Church of Santa Maria, next to the monastery; getting into this is easy
And worth visiting too, with soaring pillars, vaulted ceilings, marvellous stone carvings and a lovely cool hush

Then they went to the most famous bakery in Portugal
Called the Antiga Confeitaria de Belém, it is said that this is where the Pasteis de Nata originated
They bake 70 thousand a day and there are huge queues here too of people who want to buy 

or just sit down with a coffee and a glass of Madeira and enjoy a pastei

They are extremely good, with feather light, thin, crisp and buttery pastry and perfectly set, wobbly, sweet egg custard

And then it was time for lunch. They went to a restaurant in Cascais, not far from Lisbon
Arroz de pato or Duck rice, a classic dish which we saw all over Porto, with different levels of quality
Shredded duck meat mixed in with rice which has been fried in olive oil and then cooked in duck broth
This was a good one

Sardines grilled on the fire with potatoes and a salad, topped with red pimento

Lynne was very sad to miss this dish, the one she remembers the most from her previous trip to Portugal
Cataplana, made with pork and clams;
it is cooked in a wok-like pan with a lid and the dish takes its name from the pan
Here it is topped with crisp potatoes, olives, tomatoes and cheese

More juicy clams

Finally, summer came to Portugal
Our first few days were very wet and cold, much more than we had expected
This was the beach at Cascais at lunch time. A short respite; it poured next day

Designed to upset the equilibrium when you've enjoyed too much wine
- perfectly flat with the illusion of channels and ridges, the tiled central plaza in Cascais. Trompe l'oeil at its best
 The Portuguese and the Spanish have many of these wonderful pavements
And they seem to have originated from the Romans, as we would learn later when we saw some in a museum

The town hall at Sintra, near Lisbon. John was meant to meet Joaquim and friends there (they were in separate cars),
but he spent so much time driving around to try and find parking
that he only had enough time to take this photograph to show that he'd been there!

He found this bathroom signage rather amusing, if a bit tasteless

The following day Lynne was feeling better, so we left the car and took the Metro into central Lisbon

Their Metro is fast, efficient and clean and covers most of the city

This is the Marquês de Pombal monument in Marquês de Pombal Square - the centre of Lisbon

Lynne thinks that this department store is just for her. Called El Corte Inglés, which she translates as the Short English Person
(Yes we know it's male, and Corte doesn’t mean short, but it sounds as though it does....)

Hey, one of our favourite shops exists in Portugal. And it solved a problem for John,
as he was able to buy a moderately priced lens for Lynne’s camera
(his handed-down 12 year old Nikon D40 body which he had packed in his suitcase – just in case….)
Always reliable, it would work for him for the rest of our journey
All the photographs from the time his cameras were stolen until this point were taken with his Huawei mobile
Not bad, but the old Nikon is much better

We only had one day left in Lisbon, so we hopped onto the Red Hop-on-Hop-off Bus
and toured the city sights

The man looks tired
It’s the Memorial erected at Belem to celebrate 100 years of Naval aviation, 1917-2017,
and in honour of Sacadura Cabral and Gago Coutinho, who set off on the first flight across the southern Atlantic
from Lisbon to Rio de Janeiro in 1922
It is a replica of a First World War Fairey III B float/biplane named "Santa Cruz"
Who, today, would be brave or foolhardy enough to fly across the Atlantic in a machine like that,
with less performance, probably, than a modern Cessna or Piper?

Lunch time and decision time. This was a real tourist trap

Lynne ordered the prawn turnovers
Each one had a lot of thick, pink flavourless sauce and one half of a prawn
The chips were made from mash and re-formed. Not a great meal

John played safe with half a cheese and ham baguette, probably the better choice
and this meal cost more than our usual three course Menu del Dia
But you are there and you are hungry, so you do it

One thing we disliked all through Portugal and Spain was people smoking, everywhere,
but it was especially unpleasant when it was right next to us in outdoor restaurants
- and we ate al fresco many times
There doesn't appear to be any effective anti-smoking campaign

We were on the bank of the Tagus estuary at the famous Belém Tower, built between 1514 and 1520
It is very photogenic!

We wished this innovative tuk-tuk van had been open, just what we needed

The maritime aviation memorial next to the Tagus estuary,
with the 25 de Abril Bridge and the Santuário Nacional de Cristo Rei in the background

The Maritime museum at the end of the Hieronymite Monastery

John took a photo of the statue of Prince Henry the Navigator in their front reception area

Inside the Church of Santa Maria

A medallioned ceiling

and a Pietá window

Horse drawn carriages for hire

with a much admired dapple grey

A beautiful tiled wall in the Antiga Confeitaria de Belém

We spent a few minutes in a short queue
(John, having been shown the way the day before, knew how to beat the crowded queues,
which consist, mostly, of people queuing to buy pastries, not to sit down and enjoy them)

and were shown to a lovely table in the conservatory

where we ordered two pasteis with a pot of refreshing green tea for Lynne and a good coffee for John
They are superb

The bill is very reasonable. We just regretted having had only one each; they are very moreish
It is very busy, service is not quick and ordering another would have meant a longish wait

Trays keep arriving in the shop area

where people queue for a long while to take them away

We walked past the Presidential Palace with guards on duty
Holding those swords for hours must really be challenging

We had walked for miles that day and realised that it was time for some supper and that,
magically and by chance, we had arrived at a place to which we had been recommended
(Our source told us it was in Belém - it's nearer the middle of Lisbon)
The 28min/10Km is for a route across the bridge to elsewhere! It was still a good long walk

It is an old municipal market, but it has been converted and is now the Time Out market

Inside, just a few stalls selling market produce

Seeds of some of our best proteas, plus some from Europe

A very good wine shop

and lots of seating

Around the edges of the main hall, there are stalls manned by staff from some of the best chefs and restaurants in Lisbon
Here you can eat Michelin star food for very little. On this stall, the Plate of the Day special costs only €9.90

Most can sell you a glass of wine paired to your dish, or a bottle

and you can see the chefs working in the open kitchens at the back of the stalls

or you can buy some Portuguese charcuterie from this stand

They have a cooking demonstration area

Wow! Had we not been committed to eating Portuguese food that evening,
this sushi/sashimi was very, very tempting

This British couple was attacking a whole chicken, each!

We sat opposite a lovely couple from Denver in the USA and they could have been us, similar ages,
similar outlook on life, travelling like us, SKIing (Spending the Kids Inheritance) and not Trump fans
We had such a fun evening

John began with a draught beer to cut his thirst
They give you these small electronic devices when you place your order and tell you it will buzz when your dish is ready
 It goes off like a small firework display! Very clever, we need them in SA
On them, you can see the names of the two different restaurants who made our food

Lynne chose Suckling pork; beautifully crisp crackling with moist pork beneath, on a bed of rather watery Bok choi
and accompanied by a rich butternut purée and some orange segments
 She had a glass of their house wine and it was a great match

John had glazed duck with watercress salad on a bed of celeriac purée and another house wine
(both were from the Douro)
He loved them both - the wines and the dish. It is a great idea to have top chefs showcasing their food this way
It seems that it brings them even more business at their restaurants

It was pouring with rain when we left at about 9 pm

We took the Metro to our AirBnB and had an early night. We were off to Alentejo and Seville the next morning

We'll continue the story next week

MENU's Iberian Exploit 5. Visiting the business of Amorim Cork - not just for closing bottles

We left Porto early in the morning and drove down to another of the Amorim factories. This time it was to see the whole process of producing corks from the raw product and so see their museum, their flooring section and the champagne cork area
The factory is very large, quite noisy and we walked many kilometres to see it all, it is very interesting how many uses cork can be put to, some in unusual industries like the space programme
This is the receiving area for the cork where they do the initial sorting of the pieces. They are then steam washed
You can see the difference from these side sections, the ones with the fewest striation marks are the top quality
This man is an expert with years of training and experience. He has to position the cork carefully so that he gets the best cork possible, then he pushes a foot lever and a cutter punches out the cork, He does thousands in a day.
A plaque on the wall of the original Amorim family home, explaining that it was the birthplace of the founder of the company
This is the house which was the Amorim family home. It is now used for business meetings and functions
The lovely wooden “house” on stone mushroom stilts is how grain was stored; they have been in use for centuries if not millennia. Interestingly you will see this sort of thing in many Celtic countries, the UK where they are called staddle stones, and also as far north as Scandinavia. Rodents and other pests are unable to gain entry
Then it was time for the showroom of all the products that Amorim make out of cork. And some were surprising
Many are used as art installations in the showroom but you can see plant insulation, sound baffles, ceiling tiles
and strips of cork oak bark from which wine corks have been punched
These are compounds used in the flooring side
And compressed cork can be used to make bowls and other household equipment ...
... like these modern and well designed items
We watched machines slicing these huge compressed cork cylinders into such thin layers
It has many different uses and is all of it is used in some way, wastage from one area is then broken up and used in another, whether tiles, flooring, insulation, book covers, fashion items like handbags wallets and purses, to name just a few
This attractive wafer thin product is about to be used on wall coverings and tiles
Compressed blocks have many uses
They can be ’turned’ into bowls on a lathe
Or the thin slices are used by designers like Jasper Morrison to make shoes and other items of apparel. Now who wouldn’t want a pair of those?
Dart boards, table mats, seats: the sky and your imagination are the only limiting factors
And they have a very robust flooring company, with many different attractive finishes, not all of which look like cork. Cork is warmer, softer and longer lasting than many laminates. And it insulates against noise
Then we went to see the Champagne cork factory. They make the corks for many of the top Champagne marques. They have three layers and are compressed in the bottles where they take their more familiar shape and are topped with their muselets, the wire cages and metal caps which top the cork to identify the marque
This magic machine can sort them too, it is done with fast working lasers
Names you might recognise
Some for Chilean sparkling wine
And some for Burgundy
More Champagne names and even some for Portuguese Quintas

Saturday, May 26, 2018

This Week’s MENU. Wade Bales Wine & Whisky, Cabernet Franc Carnival at Avontuur, Stellenbosch, MENU's Iberian Exploit 3. The Lower Douro Valley, MENU’s Iberian Exploit 4. Return to Porto, RIP Giulio Bertrand and Jen-Luc Sweerts, Pão de Ló de Ovar, Fat Barrel OTB 2014

Beached boats at a boatyard on the north bank of the Douro, Porto

We write in MENU about our experiences, not only to entertain you, but to encourage you to visit the places and events that we’ve been to. We know you will enjoy them and we try to make each write up as graphic as we can, so that you’ll get a good picture of what is on offer at each place, restaurant, wine farm, festival we visit. We never regurgitate other peoples' copy. Our stories are about our personal experiences
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We are settling back into our normal routine. We have stories about two wine related experiences and continue with our Iberian adventures in the Lower Douro Valley and return to Porto. The wine industry has lost two of its stars and John’s stolen cameras have been replaced. Two stories from this week will appear in next week’s issue as well as more Portuguese adventures. Please read on and enjoy. Click the story's title or the highlighted green box to open it…
The Wade Bales Wine and Malt Whisky Affair 2018    

This now very popular annual tasting was held last week at African Pride 15 on Orange Hotel between 6 and 9pm and there were some gems to taste. We began with the Avondale Armilla MCC, crisp and complex.....

Rain was promised for the weekend and luckily it did not rain on Saturday, although we do still need it desperately. So this interesting single varietal carnival was able to be held outside and was very much enjoyed by all who attended. There were some very interesting Cabernet Francs, some absolute classics, some high scorers, some wild children and sadly just a couple that bore little resemblance to this noble grape. Many thought one was a Pinot noir rather than a Cab Franc! It was so light and perfumed. For your R200 entrance you got a glass and could taste everything on show. We think this is the best way. Coupons and tick sheets restrict you and make you choose which means you might miss an interesting gem. And we didn’t see one incidence of over imbibing
On our first day at Pinhao, we set out to explore the area and to find two Quintas (Port farms) that Joaquim Sá of Amorim Cork had organised for us to visit. For the next few hours Google maps got us terribly lost and we could not get to the Quintas, no matter how hard we tried
MENU’s Iberian Exploit 4. Return to Porto    

We had booked another AirBnB apartment in Porto and this was a really good one, it had underground parking and we would leave our car there and just use Uber or the public transport. There is almost no parking in central Porto so this was a find. Our landlord Jorge was there to meet us and he was extremely helpful point out all the important local things, like supermarkets and then how to get to all the tourist things and give us instruction for the flat, which was spacious and modern. We were now in the Serralves Park area. Lynne is looking a bit bedraggled as we got caught in the rain and had driven all day from the Douro

RIP #1 Giulio Bertrand 

A great loss to everyone who appreciates good things to eat and drink, Mr Bertrand died this week at the age of 91 after suffering a heart attack. He came to South Africa from Italy, having been the fifth generation of his family to work in the family’s textile business. He acquired Morgenster estate in Somerset West in 1992 and undertook a major restoration, planting olive groves and vineyards and restoring the historic buildings. Morgenster, under his guidance has become a very important producer of high quality wines and olive oils. We were at the launch of his massive new olive oil production facility last year. He did wonderful things for the industry and is a great loss

RIP #2 Jean-Luc Sweerts 
A very good winemaker with a very eccentric touch, Jean-Luc worked with Achim von Arnim at Boschendal before moving to Avontuur where he made some great wines. After Avontuur, he worked at Grande Provence before starting his own business MC Square. We remember well his MC Square Chardonnays from the early 1990s which were excellent in their youth but had the ability to age much better than most other Chardonnays of those years. He, too, will be missed

On the Menu this week Pão de Ló de Ovar – A Traditional Sponge cake from Ovar in Portugal

This traditional ‘sponge cake’ - the recipe is more than 200 years old, bears its own EU Protected Geographical Indication (PGI). It is more like a soufflé than a cake; it is very simple and quick to make with only three ingredients and is delicious, rich and gooey with a crisp meringue like crust. This is perfect if you have been making meringues and have egg yolks left over. You are meant to have a fluted edge, so don’t try to be too perfect when lining your cake tin with the greaseproof paper

6 egg yolks – 2 whole eggs – 100g caster sugar – 50 g flour

Set your oven to 180 ºC. Add the sugar to the eggs and yolks and whip till really light and fluffy using an electric whisk or a mixer. This can take 10 to 15 minutes. Carefully sift in the flour, folding gently so as not to break up the whipped mixture. Pour into a baking tin lined with buttered greaseproof paper. Bake at for 10 to 15 minutes, allow to cool than carefully peel off the paper and serve. It should be soft and gooey in the middle with a light brown top.
Amazing if served with a sweet white or pink port.
Lynne has not made this yet; it is someone else’s recipe. But we have eaten this in Portugal and it was amazing. Hope it works for you and you enjoy it

Menu’s Wine of the Week - Fat Barrel OTB 2014, an Ode to Bor….deaux from Stellenbosch
A blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot and Petit Verdot. It has a lovely nose of herbaceousness and fresh red berries, with some vanillins and violets. Sweet berry fruit, a hint of toasted oak, good tannins and some chalk and minerality on the end. No faults. Lovely with food, especially rich meat dishes. And a snip at R55 from Get Wine (was R95)

Dates for your diary:
Friday, 8th June: Wine Concepts Pinot and Chardonnay tasting at the Vineyard Hotel  See here for details
Wednesday, 13th June: 2018 Old Mutual Trophy Wine Show public tasting at the CTICC See here for details  

25th May 2018


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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