Thursday, June 14, 2018

MENU's Iberian Exploit 9. Jerez de la Frontera

If you are planning to travel in this area you need to know that from Seville to Cadiz, our next stop, it only took one and half hours driving. We wanted to see this famous port on the coast, but our experience can be summed up in just a few words from Lynne's notes: motorway tolls, SatNav doesn’t work, reverse, reverse, reverse, green roads, too many roundabouts, council estates, no access, dizzy, stress. They do have a seafront like Sea Point, but not a single café or place to have lunch. We left and headed straight for Jerez, where we had booked an AirBnB for a night - 3/4 of an hour away. We eventually found these 2 competing cafés, five minutes’ walk away, to have some sherry and some supper! One had food, the other football, it was Liverpool 2, Roma 0
Before ordering supper, we ordered a Palo Cortado sherry as an aperitif - what else would one choose in the home of sherry? Palo Cortado is a rare variety of sherry that is initially aged under flor to become a fino or amontillado, but inexplicably loses its veil of flor and begins aging oxidatively as an oloroso. The result is a wine with some of the richness of oloroso and some of the crispness of amontillado. Only about 1–2% of the grapes pressed for sherry naturally develop into palo cortado. Interesting! Dark amber, we concluded that, had this been from a better house, the quality might be better. €2.50 a glass
When in Jerez.... After the Palo Cortado apéritif, what else to accompany your Salmorejo but a glass of Fino with a lovely nose, nutty and dry, lean, very typical of the style, and hot with alcohol. €1.40 a glass. Sherry should not be something your Granny keeps on the sideboard for when you visit 
Our choices for supper
Bad choice: We ordered Chicharrones de Atun Rojo (pink tuna). It was not tuna, but very overcooked pieces of dry pork belly, also Chicharrones but not what we ordered. (Pity, the tuna may have come fresh from Cadiz). The pork was fatty and full of skin and John does not do those
Just billed as Tapas: Salmorejo is a version of Gazpacho found in every restaurant or bar we saw in Andalusia. Lynne makes it often in Summer, as we love it. Base ingredients are tomato, garlic, sherry vinegar, white bread and olive oil (see our recipe at https://adamastorbacchus.blogspot.com.es/2018/01/this-weeks-menu-recipe-is-cold-soup.html). It is delicious and very refreshing, especially in summer
A dish of potato salad, which was another tapa, rather good
Tempura boccarones (flattened anchovies). This suited John down to the ground, but not Lynne, who hates fish bones and small fishy fish
The bill. Lynne had a tonic water
Up bright and early next morning to visit Sandeman Sherry. We wanted to visit Gonzalez Byass (Tio Pepe) but they don't open till noon. Fortunately, Sandeman opens at 10, so we had a very good cellar tour and sherry tasting there. It is time for Sherry to become fashionable again. It is a wonderful apéritif and a good accompaniment to food. South Africa used to produce some really good examples, but the few that remain cannot compete with the Spanish, sadly
First a tour of the cellars; rows of 600 litre American oak barrels of sherry
The shop
Atmosphere
And Lisa, a guide who spoke excellent English and was very informative, wearing the traditional Sandeman cloak and hat outfit. She knew we were informed, so she added to our knowledge
A Sandeman winemaker drawing sherry from barrels for the inspector, using his "wine thief" to pour with incredible skill to give the wine a bit of air as he pours - sorry it's unsharp, but we came round the corner in the dark cellar and John just pointed and shot! Yes, they do this so expertly, no drips
George Sandeman set up his Port and Sherry business in 1790. These, we were told, are his original tools. Not for torture, for marking the barrels
Some more sherry winemaking tools
A lovely courtyard
Lined with flower pots
The vine pergola in spring, just breaking into bud
Murals with the story of sherry
An illuminated glass fronted barrel where you can see the flor yeast floating on top of the sherry. It is this yeast which gives sherry its special character
A Criadera or Solera system of sherry. The top barrels are the youngest wines; a portion of wine is drawn from the oldest barrel at the bottom, replaced from the younger barrel above and that replaced from the younger barrel above that. So there will never be a vintage sherry; they are all made from a combination of vintages. There can be many layers of barrels
We had a tasting, of course. It costs €15. First a three year Fino, grapey, nutty, dry, soft and crisp. Then a 5 year dry Fino which had more maturity and was warmer and nutty. Then a medium dry, complex Amontillado, shy with nuts and spice on the nose, richness and layers of warm flavour. A 3 year old Oloroso sherry followed with a sweet nose with notes of wood and nice warmth on the palate with nut and apricot flavours; full on the palate, more nuts and Christmas mince pies. Next, a 5 year old Oloroso, raisins, dried fruit, & nuts. Sticky and thick on palate, a dessert wine, with an amaretto biscuit character, to pair with blue cheese, cheese cake and Christmas pudding. And, finally, Pedro Ximenez with raisins, brandy plums, nuts, sweet, velvety rich, perfect for desserts or to add and marinate strawberries or whip into cream (rather like an aged red Muscadel). We bought a bottle of the young Fino because we love it and it is very difficult to find in Cape Town. Sherry has been rather in the shadows and out of fashion in SA. Perhaps we should take another look at it - and do try the real thing
Our companion tasters, Janet and John, were British. They added tapas for another €8 each
The two younger sherries
We were hungry and needed a good lunch rather than Tapas so we stopped for lunch at a bar across the street from Sandeman
Beer is always a good refreshment after sherry, or any other wine tasting
Simple menus like this can deter one as you don't know what the quality will be like
Really good olives and bread came first
Volaores Rellenos - It doesn't look too appetising, but the flavours are great. Squid stuffed with more squid, onions, herbs lemon was quite sour and came with chips 
And the herbs were a little bitter
Somehow, Gambas al Aillo sounds more exotic and romantic than Shrimp scampi. Becoming a favourite, shrimps rather than prawns in olive oil and lots of garlic. So good to use the bread to soak up the juices. Lunch with a beer and a tonic cost about €14

Siris Vintners Trade tasting at the Mount Nelson

Once a year, Siris Vintners holds a trade tasting for their commercial customers. This year it was held in the Ballroom at the Mount Nelson so there was plenty of space for the many brands they represent

Megan Parnell and Shane Mullis showing their Claudia Brut from Domaine des Dieux, best bubble of the evening
Also of special note and top marks was the Groote Post Darling Hills Shiraz; sweet fruit, a full, rounded palate, spice and salty licorice on the end

David Nieuwoudt showing the wines he makes for The Berrio to Mark Herd of Sunset Beach Wines. The Sauvignon Blanc knocked our socks off. One for the summer
Fanus Bruwer of Quando has such a good selection. If you have a small list, these wines would fit perfectly
A top Sauvignon Blanc, a versatile Chenin Viognier blend that is magic with food, a lovely cherry berry Mourvèdre rosé just asking for a summer lunch and a Pinot Noir of note. His Mourvèdre rosé is currently sold out, but more will be coming soon, hopefully
Pete de Bruin of The Food Barn with broadcaster Jon Meinking
The shiny crew. Ad and Johan Wegner of GetWine with Pete de Bruin
Maia Bezuidenhout was showing the revived Lievland estate's wines. They had a horror: just as Maia was about to pour some of their Cabernet for John, someone used the just-filled decanter as a spittoon. It held their last bottle
We think the labels need a little more love on them. Hearts and flowers
Linda and Lydia Nobrega of the Chapman's Peak Hotel with fellow wine merchants Vaughan Johnson, famous in the V&A Waterfront for 30 years, and Mario de Biasio of Norman Goodfellow's
Wynand Grobler and Duncan Stuart of Rickety Bridge. Their "The Road to Santiago" Semillon really impressed as did the Cabernet Sauvignon. And no, we have no idea why the Semillon has that name. Wynand also makes the Landau de Val Semillon for Basil Landau - another benchmark wine in the Cape
Some snacks that went very quickly
Doolhof’s wines from Wellington. The Malbec has been a favourite of ours for a long time
The Mullineux table is always popular. The Old Vine white is complex and herbal, The Syrah intense. The Straw wine is pure honey with cherries, the Chenin classic with a dry finish. Their Swartland rouge is complex, fruity, soft and layered, definitely a food wine and very reasonably priced
Nico and Petra van der Merwe's daughter pours her father's wine. The Syrah is complex with sweet fruit and licorice
The Nicolas MCC
Anura has a good selection and a 2013 MCC in their reserve range. The excellent sauvignon blanc has incorporated Darling fruit for years but, we were told, now has Stellenbosch fruit as well, from vineyards high on the hill
Colyn Truter was showing Lourens van der Westhuizen’s Arendsig wines
The Arendsig Chenin blanc is awesome, full rounded and delicious. The Grenache is chewy and correct, very true to the varietal
Lynne and an old friend, Victor Mangala, now working at the Bay Hotel in Camps Bay
RETURN TO MENU

Latest wine releases by David & Nadia launched at Bill & Co., Swartland Street Market, Malmesbury


A trip to the Swartland this week to taste the wines of David and Nadia Sadie at their (soon to be opened) new venue in Malmesbury called Bill and Co. which will become a market when the building works are finished
David Sadie, who was born and bred in the Swartland, studied winemaking and viticulture at Stellenbosch University where he met his wife Nadia, who qualified as a soil scientist and viticulturist. So they are a well-matched pair in wine and are both very talented. Their iconic Swartland wines consistently get 4.5 stars and more in Platter; they have won several wine awards and they get lots of worthy attention
All the grapes come from the area but, with the current drought, David told us that he has to source from as many as 12 different vineyards, where they work closely with the local like-minded wine farmers. The welcome wine was their 2016 Siebritzkloof Semillon from two old Paardeberg single vineyards, one planted in 1960, the other in 1972. And their maturity shows in the wine which has that Swartland oxidative character, with apples on the nose and apples and plums on the palate, with good fruit acids supporting
The building is still very rough and ready; it has a roof on but no flooring or windows yet. All the cottages have been broken through and joined and the rooms combined into larger spaces. We were told that these are old slave cottages. Lunch was being prepared at one end of the room by local people who will be involved in the market, like Marble Bistro
The function room had to be tented for the day
David and Nadia Sadie. This was a very informative and interesting tasting; many of the wines have just been released. We learned even more about wine making, and its results in places that have been so challenged by the drought; the difficulty of sourcing good grapes.  We really enjoyed tasting these wines.  Go on line to see their web site and to order the wines  www.davidnadia.com 
Our friend Deon Oliver, local wine lover, who has recently moved to Malmesbury
Looks like we'll be having tacos for lunch
The formal tasting began and David took us through the wines. First came the 2017 Chenin with its typical Chenin dusty and yeasty nose, with apricots and pears. Richness, fullness, long deep Chenin signature fruit with apples, limes and plums. Impressive. Next, we tasted the 2017 Aristargos, a blend of 50% Chenin Blanc, 20% Viognier, 20% Roussanne, 10% Semillon, 8% Clairette Blanc. This was from the 8th vintage; shy nose at first, yeasty herbal fynbos notes; dusty with loquat flavours, Crisp, lots of complex fruit nuances like persimmon, lime, loquat, with slightly bitter wood on the end. From 14 different vineyards, mostly Paardeberg. The Semillon has had skin contact for a week. Then, 2017 Hoë-Steen Chenin Blanc with vanilla, herbal fynbos, dust and juicy red plums on the nose. Crisp, with sharp fruit acids; long, with big flavours and more of those red plums. The wine is layered with some wood showing on the end. A food wine that entices the more you drink. Old French oak with 100% malolactic fermentation
Our tasting sheet. The 2017 Skalikop Chenin Blanc is grown on the high Paardeberg mountains. Golden fruit on the nose, wood smoke, vanilla and balsam followed by perfume. Crisp grapey flavours then wood and fruit acids. It is dusty with sweet spice. Needs time.
 And besides the normal tasting glass, we were given a chance to see how the wine changed in this special Zalto glass. It has the thinnest stem and we were all wary of snapping it. Yes the wine does smell and taste very different in these glasses. http://www.zalto.co.uk/ So here is how it changed this Chenin. Parisian perfume, ice cream vanillins, round and silky smooth, acids are still there with limes, loquats, unripe peach
Nadia carefully pouring the tasting wines. The  2017 Grenache (they are growing lots as no older grenaches are available. David said they have to fight for them, so they are working with younger vineyards).  Pale red, even less colour than a Pinot. Cherry, strawberry KoolAid with balsam and crème brulée caramel on the nose; red berries, light fruit, heady acids, warmth, chewy tannins and a finish of red cherry
Next the 2016 Elpidios. Grapes come from 7 different Swartland vineyards and it contains Carignan,  Syrah, Pinotage, Cinsault and Grenache. Raspberries, tayberries, mulberries with a whiff of wood. The fruit predominates; good acids and chalky tannins. We predict that this will become more complex with age
The last wine was the Siebritskloof Pinotage, rich on the nose with rose petals (Pinot Noir parentage showing?) and Turkish delight notes, so unusual for a Pinotage. Nice red fruit, almost Cinsault like, so showing both the grape's parents. Enjoyable wine, chalky tannins, mulberry and rhubarb and no metallic hints at all. Lynne enjoyed this Pinotage
Time for lunch. The aroma of these mixed mushroom skewers had invaded the tasting glasses a bit on the last couple of wines, but they were very good
Enjoy mushrooms more with a squeeze of fresh lemon! You learn something new every day
Filling the tacos. First with coleslaw and then with pulled pork. On the table are two relishes, a yogurt cooler and a hot barbecue sauce for us to add
Those mushroom skewers, raw
... and seasoned and cooked
Pulled pork tacos. You had to add the barbecue sauce to make this into a delicious treat
Good food to end off a very good and interesting wine tasting

On the MENU this week. Broccoli and Blue Cheese Soup


Quite an easy soup to make and great for dinner parties. One thing that is different about this is that it doesn’t contain any milk or cream. You can add some at the table if you wish.
1 tbsp canola oil - 1 medium onion , finely chopped - 1 stick celery, finely chopped - 1 leek, sliced - 1 medium potato, diced - 1 knob butter – 1 litre chicken or vegetable stock - 1 large head broccoli , roughly chopped, core and stalk removed, chopped and put aside - 140g of good blue cheese, crumbled
Heat the oil in a large saucepan and then add the onion, and fry gently on a medium heat until golden. Add the celery, leek, potato and a knob of butter. Stir and allow to sweat, covered with a lid, for 5 minutes. This really improves the flavours. Remove the lid.
Pour in the stock and add any chunky bits of broccoli stalk. Simmer for 10 – 15 minutes until all the vegetables are soft.
Add the rest of the broccoli and cook for a further 5 minutes. Don’t cook for too long or you will loose the lovely green colour. Carefully transfer to a blender and blitz in batches, until very smooth. Be careful, hot soup can be dangerous in a blender, don’t overfill. Stir in 100g of the blue cheese and liquidize till smooth. Season with black pepper and serve. Taste and adjust seasoning if necessary.
We accompanied our soup with three things, bagel croutons, the other 40 g of blue cheese to sprinkle and crisp dried onions. We served a Sauvignon Blanc Semillon 2009 from KWV’s The Mentors range. The Strandveld Sauvignon Blanc would also be a perfect match