Tuesday, December 04, 2018

Hillcrest Estate New Release Launch

Thursday evening saw us at Hillcrest wine estate in Durbanville for the launch of the new vintages of their Saartjie wines. They are named after GM, winemaker and viticulturist Arno Smith’s cute Jack Russell terrier and she has made it onto the labels. They have built a lovely new deck and they also have a Beer garden
They had laid a table with six different varieties of their excellent olives (we know they are excellent, we have bought 3 litre buckets of them for several years), homemade farm bread, olive oil and balsamic vinegar. Just a snack before supper they said. There were also slices of Pizza bianco
We were served the 2018 Hillcrest Rosé, made from Cabernet Sauvignon
It is a summer wine; light, fresh and fruity
The four wines being released were the 2018 Semillon, the 2017 Malbec, 2017 Cabernet Franc
and the 2017 Petit Verdot, all of which we would taste at dinner, paired with different courses
Some of those plumptious olives. We particularly liked the lemon olives
- a version we had not tasted before
And there were some large canapés served. This was herb cream cheese topped with
a roasted tomato on a drop scone base. There was also a smoked salmon version
A word about the menu and the pairings from Restaurant Manager Elise Bothma
Winemaker Arno Smit welcomed us and told us some of the Saartjie story. She came as a puppy from Villiersdorp 5 years ago and they are inseparable. Saartjie comes with him into the vineyards, but she only tastes the grapes in the Semillon vines (they have 1000). She is very popular with visitors to the restaurant and tasting room and people bring their dogs to have play dates with Saartjie. She's a character, very friendly and approachable
Saartjie with her 'grandparents'. Arno says that when most people hear Saartjie’s name, they always make the joke or assume her name comes from Saartjie Baartman, the most famous Khoikhoi woman who lived in the early Nineteenth Century. But Saartjie is an old family name. A Great aunt of his - a fierce old lady - who also cautiously observed and assessed from a distance, and then, when she needed to intervene or to stand her ground, she would make herself known and silence all the wrong-, say- or doers. Just like Saartjie does
Time to taste the wines
The menu was large, we hoped that the portions would not defeat us
Durbanville is known for its generosity.
We sat at a long table in the restaurant
We began with the Semillon. It is made in one old French barrel, so quantities are limited. It is herbal, spicy, dusty with green melon on the nose, Full and rounded on the palate, crisp apples and limes, naartjies, with wood way in the background, supporting. R145 on the farm. We loved it. It would be amazing with crayfish or other seafood
Paired with the Semillon was seared tuna with pink grapefruit segments, green beans and a light wasabi mayonnaise. A good match
Huge activity in the kitchen plating up servings of the second course...
...a deep fried ball of goat’s cheese with a beetroot purée, avocado mousse and roasted baby tomatoes which was served with the 2017 Cabernet Franc. The wine is complex on the nose, dark berries, balsam, spice and savouriness. A thick robust red wine with lots of chalky tannins, more wood and balsam and a savoury, salty end, so it really suited this course
The next course was a rosemary and coriander crusted fillet of beef, served with shimeji mushrooms, a bone marrow custard and topped with crisp onion rings. This was paired with the 2017 Malbec; savoury on the nose, with hints of cumin, umami, sour cherries and something indefinable. On the palate pure salty liquorice, lots of cassis berries and leaves, mulberries on chalky tannins, grippy and lean, with long flavours, ending in more liquorice wood. Should age well
At this point we had a power cut, known in South Africa as 'Load shedding"; a result of dismal management by politically selected "cadres" who were responsible for a general lack of maintenance at Eskom, our electricity generator. When Eskom runs out of coal or the machinery breaks down, they cut off certain areas for up to 2½ hours. So we continued to eat in the dark, the table lit only with a few tea lights and the little torch from John's camera bag. Sadly, in the process, we did not get a picture of the next course, which was slices of Duck Breast, accompanied by a confit duck leg, fondant potato, pea purée and a good cherry jus. An excellent course, if a bit chewy on the duck, but a great match for the Petit Verdot. The nose is sweet, cooked berry fruit, some violets and herbs. A heavyweight, heady wine, salty, complex and silky on the palate, with dark Tay berries, great black cherry flavours, liquorice on the long end. Another one to keep for a while
A night time view from the restaurant, across to Melkbos, where the lights were still burning. Thank you Eskom
These are the chefs who fed us so well. We were challenged by the amount of food, but it was all very good
Dessert was a rather sweet Berry sorbet, a decadent and rich chocolate fudge brownie with pecan nuts, a pistachio crumb, fresh strawberries and a vanilla bean crème. This was accompanied by coffee and a taste of the new 2016 Quarry, a merlot. Sweet berries on the nose, lots of cherryade notes too. Rich with tight chalky tannins, tension, this is very new and needs time to come forward; the fruit acid is still high
Thank you Hillcrest for a great evening and for coping so well with the power cut
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Friday, November 30, 2018

This Week's MENU. StreetSmart, Aristea, Magic of Bubbles, DC Winemaker of the Year, Simonsig Grapesmith, Chocolate gateau

Wasn't that fun? Penguins emerging from the sea at Boulders Beach, Simonstown

The year is drawing too swiftly to its close; the older one becomes, the swifter the passing of time. So in a little over a week, we will slow it right down and, after publishing the last MENU of 2018, will go up the West Coast to look at the sea, our navels and a selection of good reading. But, enough of that. We’ve been to some wonderful events this past week and here they are for you to see…
Time for the Annual StreetSmart Cape Town Handover Event with Thank Yous to the restaurants, accommodation venues and wine tasting venues in the Western Cape, Garden Route, Gauteng and KZN, the volunteers, workers and the many other people who have contributed to the R1.7 million rand raised nationally this year. It is an amazing amount, raised by just adding R5 to your bill so, if you contribute, the Thank You is also for you. StreetSmart ensures that every cent donated by you goes towards social and educational upliftment projects for street children, helping them to rebuild their lives. StreetSmart raises its own funds for administration…
An invitation from Luke Krone to join him and taste the new release of his Aristea wines over dinner at the Alphen in Constantia. Aristea is a partnership of three friends who each already have their own wine brands/wine ventures and many years of accumulated winemaking experience. Their aim was to make exceptional South African wines that would reflect each of their individual identities and passion for wine, Luke, a 12th generation winemaker from South Africa who sources the grapes and makes the wine, Martin Krajewski who is British and owns Clos Cantenac in St Emilion and in 2016 bought Château Séraphine in Pomerol and Frenchman Florent Dumeau, a renowned Burgundian winemaker, who has extensive experience of winemaking and vineyard management, as well as considerable expertise in France, Italy, Greece, Hungary, South Africa, Turkey,China and Serbia. Together, they strive to produce exceptional wines in the Cape that encapsulate the wild spirit and raw beauty of this wonderful land and that make people smile. For the full story, go to https://www.aristeawines.com/
Oh joy, it was time to taste real French Champagne this year at Wine Concepts' "Finer Things in Life” International Sparkling Wine & Champagne Affair Celebration at the Vineyard Hotel last Friday night. No driving long distances into the winelands for 10 coupons, only to find that it will cost you five of them if you want a small taste of real Champagne, but the chance locally to taste all of the 34 different French champagnes and a few Cavas and Proseccos. And all this for a R500 ticket, which includes canapés and a champagne glass. Oh, and a free raffle based on the number on your ticket. You can take an Uber home without bankrupting yourself or, if you are feeling celebratory, take the Vineyards special offer of a room, dinner and breakfast.. Hope to see you there next year...
It was time for the 2018 Diners Club Winemaker of the Year and Young Winemaker of the Year awards, held again this year at La Residence in Franschhoek. It is always a glittering Black Tie occasion. This year’s Winemaker of the Year Finalists were Arco Laarman (Laarman Cellar Services at Avondale Wines), Ronell Wiid (Bartinney Private Cellar), Clayton Reabow (Môreson), Andries Burger (Paul Cluver Estate), Carl Van Der Merwe (DeMorgenzon) and Murray Barlow (Rustenberg Wines). The category was Chardonnay…
Simonsig is celebrating 50 years of wine making this year, so we were delighted to be invited to the Belmond Mount Nelson hotel for a launch of something new: The Grapesmith wines, Die Kluisenaar and Mediterraneo. What else would be the welcoming drink…

part of their new Grapesmith range, a blend of 57% Roussanne, 37% Marsanne, 5% Grenache Blanc and 1% Verdelho. There is sweetness on the nose, warmth and perfume of peaches and white plums, spice and light smoke…
An alternative to Christmas pudding is this luxurious and truly decadent dessert. It is so rich that it will serve at least 12 to 15 people, as you really cannot manage more than a small slice. We have to confess that we veered away from this recipe because Lynne has been hoarding slabs of Lindt 85% and 90% dark chocolate to make a dessert like this for John’s birthday this week. And she used salted butter; we think a little salt with dark chocolate makes it taste better. If you are using 85 or 90% chocolate do taste the molten chocolate mix and if it is not sweet enough, add a spoonful or two more of caster sugar to the mix, stirring well. It should not be bitter, but also not too sweet…

30th November 2018


© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2018
PS If a word or name is in bold type and underlined, click on it for more information

Phones: +27 21 439 3169 / 083 229 1172 / 083 656 4169

Postal address: 60 Arthurs Rd, Sea Point 8005

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 our website and ancillary works are © John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus. Our restaurant reviews are often 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, pleaseclick here to send us a message and if you wish to be  removed from our mailing list

What’s on the MENU this week. Chocolate Nemesis


An alternative to Christmas pudding is this luxurious and truly decadent dessert. It is so rich that it will serve at least 12 to 15 people, as you really cannot manage more than a small slice. We have to confess that we veered away from this recipe because Lynne has been hoarding slabs of Lindt 85% and 90% dark chocolate to make a dessert like this for John’s birthday this week. And she used salted butter; we think a little salt with dark chocolate makes it taste better. If you are using 85 or 90% chocolate do taste the molten chocolate mix and if it is not sweet enough, add a spoonful or two more of caster sugar to the mix, stirring well. It should not be bitter, but also not too sweet
Below is the classic recipe for you to try. Lynne used a loose bottomed cake tin; it is easier to get the ‘cake’ out when it is set. Make sure you seal it well. You will need to use an electric beater for this recipe or your arm might tire when whipping the eggs
340g 70% Dark bitter chocolate – 225g unsalted butter – 5 organic eggs – 210g caster sugar
You will need a 25 cm cake tin. Grease it with extra butter and line the base with parchment paper. Break the chocolate into pieces and melt it with the butter in a bowl over a pot of simmering water (don’t let the bowl touch the water). Alternatively, pulse it in the microwave at 30 second bursts, stirring between each one. Beat the whole eggs with a mixer or hand mixer with 70g of the sugar. Beat until the volume of the eggs quadruples; you want them light and fluffy
At the same time, heat the rest of the sugar with 100ml of water until dissolved to a light syrup. Then pour this syrup into the melted chocolate and mix well. Allow it to cool slightly
Turn your oven on to 125°C (it works very well if you have a convection oven as the temperature will be constant)
Add the chocolate mix to the eggs, beating slowly until it is combined properly. Pour into the tin and put the tin into an ovenproof dish a few inches larger than the cake tin. It might help to put a folded tea towel underneath the tin to keep it in place. Put it into the oven and then fill up the bain marie with hot water, so that it comes three quarters of the way up the sides of the tin
Bake in the oven for 50 minutes until set and make sure to leave the cake in the bain marie to cool. Then refrigerate and when you are ready to use it, very carefully turn it out face down onto a suitable dish, and slowly remove the lining paper. Decorate with fresh berries or some edible Christmas decorations. See the 2 pictures

MENU’s Wine of the Week. Mediterraneo 2016 from Simonsig


part of their new Grapesmith range, a blend of 57% Roussanne, 37% Marsanne, 5% Grenache Blanc and 1% Verdelho. There is sweetness on the nose, warmth and perfume of peaches and white plums, spice and light smoke

Full on the palate, with amazing layers of fruit, & warm alcohol. It stays and develops into a superb wine with long flavours of white peach, plums, apricots and nuts which coat the whole of one's mouth. Lime and lemon remain on the end. So refreshing and leading you to food. It begs for a creamy sauce or Mediterranean food. This is our wine of the week this week. R240 on the farm

Simonsig launches the Grapesmith and celebrates 50 years of wine estate status with lunch at the Mount Nelson

Simonsig is celebrating 50 years of wine making this year, so we were delighted to be invited to the Belmond Mount Nelson hotel for a launch of something new: The Grapesmith wines, Die Kluisenaar and Mediterraneo
What else would be the welcome drink than a glass of Simonsig's Cuvée Royale MCC
A bit of sparkle lifts the spirits
Outside on the terrace at the Pink Lady. The venue was in the Green Park Room and Terrace
Matt Dietchmann, FNB Manager of the Vineyard Hotel
with Simonsig's CEO and viticulturist Francois Malan
Cellarmaster Johan Malan, The Grapesmith, and his wife Diane
Sales manager Jacques Jordaan got the party started
Johan explained that his father Frans Malan (an esteemed pioneer in the South African wine industry) planted many varieties of vines on Simonsig. Now that the drought and approaching global warming are beginning to take its toll on our vineyards, Johan decided to start a new project to see if some of the more southern Rhône varieties that they had, that are tolerant of drier conditions, might be used to make some different wines. We must look down the road to a drier future, he says. There is always something new and innovative at Simonsig. He began last year with a wine called Die Kluisenaar 2016, a blend of Roussanne and Marsanne which he submitted for the Cape Winemakers Guild auction in 2017. This is now the first Grapesmith wine; a new brand and a new range of wines for Simonsig, Johan's project taking them in a new direction.. He got the word Grapesmith using the same context as Wordsmith. The Afrikaans word Kluisenaar means Hermit in English, and the connection is with Hermitage in France where many of these grapes are used, and in the blend of Châteauneuf-du-Pape
It is not about primary fruit in these grapes, but secondary flavours, texture and minerality;
as they age they develop viscosity and glycerols. They keep their freshness
with beautiful acidity and concentration, which self adjusts with time
The lunch menu was paired with the two wines
Chatting while we taste the wine and wait for the first course to be served
The very professional serving staff
Tinashe Nyamudoka, head sommelier at The Test Kitchen
chatting to Martelize Brink of SABC Radio Sonder Grense
The girls from Die Burger
Die Kluisenaar 2016 is a blend of 60% Roussanne and 40% Marsanne made in 12 to 7 year old oak. It has the fully integrated warm country wine nose, with nutty, sesame seed notes, even some olive oil, golden apples, loquats and perfume from Armani. Lovely entry; crisp, perfumed, the mouthfeel is gorgeous, limes, lemons, citrus full on with some marmalade wood on the end. It cries out for food. R240 on the farm
And it was served with all Lynne’s favourite seafood on one plate with salad leaves, including some local dune spinach. Smoked salmon, seared tuna, a perfect scallop, avocado and an avocado lime mayonnaise and a large peeled prawn topped with seaweed, which brings out the sweetness of the prawn. A marriage made in heaven
Perfection from another angle
beautiful colour
Johan telling us how he made the Kluisenaar
A smiling Sales Manager Jacques sitting with journalist Fiona MacDonald
Head sommelier at The Twelve Apostles, Gregory Mutambe. Greg is also Chairman of BLACC
Next was Mediterraneo, a blend of 57% Roussanne, 37% Marsanne, 5% Grenache Blanc and 1% Verdelho. There is sweetness on the nose, warmth and perfume of peaches and white plums, spice and light smoke. Full on the palate with amazing layers of fruit, & warm alcohol. It stays and develops into a superb wine with long flavours of white peach, plums, apricots and nuts which coat the whole of one's mouth. Lime and lemon remain on the end. So refreshing and leading you to food. It begs for a creamy sauce or Mediterranean food. This is our wine of the week this week. R240 on the farm
And it found its perfect match in the main course of Crown roasted chicken breast - the most tender and moist piece of chicken both of us have ever had. The leg had been made into a sage stuffed roulade and there were flavourful roast chicken tortellini, a celeriac purée beneath with wilted spinach and exotic mushrooms. The chicken jus was perfect too and the dish made the wine sing even louder.
You can see how moist the breast meat was
The Mount Nelson's Executive Chef, Rudi Liebenberg
To accompany the dessert, our favourite Brut Rosé from Simonsig. Crisp and full of raspberry flavours
Divine dessert! A Raspberry and Chocolate Delice entremets with 6 layers. Lynne detected a crisp nutty biscuit base, a layer of almond marzipan, an almond cake, caramel, a raspberry mousse topped with a raspberry jelly? Topped with raspberry and blackcurrants. So professional. This was served with a rich tonka bean ice cream and went so well with the raspberry flavoured Brut Rosé MCC
And they gave John a surprise Birthday plate as well, with fruit jellies, fudge and coconut ice
Thank you! Two marvellous wines, and a fantastic meal to go with it - thank you so much Simonsig and Chef Rudi