Thursday, December 23, 2021

Lunch at The View on Chart Farm

We had thought of going to Klondyke Cherry Farm in Ceres to pick cherries this year, but the huge rise in the petrol price was a major deterrent. Then we remembered that the same family also owns Chart Farm, a rose farm in Constantia and yes, they do sell the Klondyke cherries. So we decided to kill three birds with one stone, do an escape from home, get some cherries and have lunch at The View restaurant on the farm 

It was a perfect summer’s day, not too hot and no wind
Owner of The View Sandra Engelen, our friend, had booked us a good table
with perfect views of the rose farm gardens, where you can pick your own roses, and the mountain

We had booked for 1 and it was nicely full 

We wanted to celebrate being alive, so took one of our special wines, The 1947 from Kaapzicht wine estate in the Bottelary area of Stellenbosch, the second-oldest Chenin blanc vineyard in South Africa. This bottle is from the first vintage, 2013 and was a birthday gift to Lynne from winemaker Danie Steytler Senior; she is a product of the same year as the farm’s first vintage. It is a classic old vine Chenin Blanc, with good depth and length and such good fruit and it has lasted so well

The menu is concise with something for everyone and will not disappoint

They do good breakfasts and even better afternoon teas,
with scones, cream and jam and a large selection of homemade cakes

John chose the excellent large Wagyu Hamburger, which comes with a good mixed salad and crisps

Lynne decided to try the Prego roll and it is delicious
120g of sliced steak in a good Prego sauce,
and she detected that they use some chicken livers to enrich the spicy sauce
A great lunch with a glass of good Chenin Blanc

and at a very reasonable price. They do charge corkage, but it was waived for us by Sandra

Some lovely Iced Christmas biscuits for your Christmas tree on sale

A large selection

And those really good-looking cakes. Red Velvet, a Chocolate and a Carrot cake

Lemon meringue pie, a rich cheesecake and some chocolate torte

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Highlands Road wines in Elgin

Our visit to Highlands Road in Elgin nearly didn't start, as their neighbour shares the road into the farm and is having part of it resurfaced. The recent heavy rains - and Elgin is one of our wettest places in the Cape - had stopped the bricklaying work and made the road a quagmire. Luckily, we could phone the farm and they came to get us in the farm bakkie (pickup), so we could leave our car (which is not a 4x4) here

When we arrived, there was a car stuck in this mud and the bricks to be used for the new surfacing were piled in the way

Into the tasting room on this wet, chilly day

It is a nice long room with views of the wine cellar and they had a large order about to go out

Sadly, winemaker Vanessa Simkiss had to go into town urgently, so we had the tasting with Christal Jacobus
who has worked at the farm for the past ten years. She knows her wines and was very, very helpful

We began with the whites

The 2019 Highlands Road Sauvignon Blanc. It has a herbal green nose;
lemon, lime, nectarine crispness and fig leaf make this a very satisfying expression of the grape and the area

The 2017 Wooded Sauvignon Blanc Reserve has hints of the wood on the nose and palate, with herbal notes
It has concentrated fruit of fig, citrus and nectarine on the palate, a classic Blanc Fumé
It has, deservedly, scored many good awards

One of our favourites has always been the very satisfying and complex Sine Cera (the meaning is “honest” or “true”)
It is a blend of 50/50 Sauvignon Blanc and Semillon. Shy nose initially, with a hint of wood,
then filling the glass and palate are stone fruits in layers, nectarines, apricots, plums
It has a lovely mouthfeel from the Semillon and it is a very good wine with food

The 2018 Highlands Road Chardonnay has a hint of sweet incense smoke and baked apple on the nose
It is lovely and rich on the palate, with baked apple and apricots - delicious;
wood does not overcome this wine. It has earned many awards

The Highlands Road 2019 Semillon has a typical nose with grey notes, richness
and hints of fig, cherry blossom and beeswax with light wood notes
Round and full on the palate with baked apple, nectarine, guava and lime and with dark toast on the end
You just want to keep quaffing
The 2018 was awarded Platinum at Michelangelo

The 2015 Pinot Noir has cola on the nose with raspberry, rose and rhubarb
The palate is full of fruit, some brûléed, cherry, strawberry and rhubarb pie with the crust!
The crust for us is the pale wood. It has long and deep flavours

The 2016 Highlands Road Syrah has an attractive nose;
spicy, with dark deep fruit, plums, cherries, fudge and caramel wood
It’s a dive in nose. Brûléed berry fruits, cinnamon, pepper, allspice and more berries;
it’s a good expression of the varietal

The final wine was the 2017 Highlands Road Noble Late Harvest, made from Sauvignon Blanc
It has a sugar candy nose and 126gm/l residual sugar. Sweetness of ripe yellow peach and lime nicely in balance
this is not a heavy, syrupy expression of the style

An order for Wine of the Month Club being collected

Christal's Jack Russell, Rusty, is a great character and very friendly
Thank you for a great tasting all at Highlands Road

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Tasting and lunch at Oak Valley

As we were in the area recently, we took up an invitation to taste the wines at Oak Valley
We tasted the wines with lunch in the renamed Melting Pot restaurant,
which is a wonderful venue for outside and inside meals and tastings

They have a new chef, John van Zyl, who worked with the very successful Chef Liam Tomlin as head chef at Thali. His style of cooking and offering is summed up here: "The Melting Pot is a flavour packed, global food experience, serving contemporary small plates made for sharing. John’s cooking style is heavily influenced by his travels abroad, giving you a culinary trip around the world in one sitting. The menu is small and vibrant, comprising up to ten dishes that change every two weeks or so, with options for everyone. Be bold and order ‘one of everything’ for the full experience". And, indeed, we were to be delighted with what we ate

We arrived at one and were warmly welcomed by the owners, Anthony and Maddy Rawbone-Viljoen,
who were having lunch with friends, and the winemaker Jacques du Plessis

It’s an open kitchen, so you can see the chefs at work
 Good to see that they have a small childrens' menu

We were to have the tasting with Jacques of the exciting Tabula Rasa range of wines
The Pinot Noirs have just caused a sensation in the wine world
Top Platter Pinot Noir of the year was the Oak Valley Tabula Rasa 2018 (South Ridge PN 777)
and all four of Oak Valley's Tabula Rasa specific clone Pinots received Five Stars in Platter
No farm has ever done this before

Christopher Rawbone-Viljoen receiving the Platter Award

We can only imagine how surprised and delighted the Platter Guide judges must have felt as they tasted through these excellent wines. They are all so different, because of their different terroirs, but the quality and good winemaking shines through. Tabula Rasa (Latin) means Clean Slate and that is the where the terroir speaks. Only the two best barrels of each vineyard clone of Tabula Rasa will be bottled each year

Clone 114 has the classic Elgin fig leaf Pinot noir nose with raspberry fruit. On the palate, there is good wood integration, sweet fruit with lots of class. Grown on a block planted in 2004, it adds the crunchy component, says Jacques

Clone 115 is the most commonly grown Pinot clone in South Africa, as it gives good safe Pinot characters. It is more masculine on the nose, with some perfume. Meaty and full on the palate with different characteristics - soft and fruity on the front palate, with nice racy acidity on the back palate

Clone 667 has marzipan and cherry on the attractive red berry nose. Silky soft on the palate, with grippy tannins, it has quality and reminds one of Cabernet Franc in some way

Clone 777 was Platter's Pinot Noir of the year. Cigar box and herbs, Jacques description was, “It is like rolling on green grass!” Cranberry and mulberry fruit on the palate with racy fruit acidity on the back palate and a finish of licorice wood and good minerality

Wow, what great blending components these all offer

Winemaker/Viticulturist Jacques du Plessis told us that Oak Valley has decided that they are only going to plant Chardonnay and Pinot Noir from now on; they have been so successful for them. They certainly have the right terroir for both these varietals

The wine that took it all. The Oak Valley Groenlandberg 2020 Pinot Noir is the sum of all the parts
It is a blend of all the Tabula Rasa Pinot Noir Clones, grown in different vineyard terroirs
It has very gentle incense wood, herbal notes, then raspberry & cranberry aromas
Sweet cranberry, then raspberry fruit on the young and fresh palate, then wood and fig leaf herbaceousness

Our Pinot Noir tasting glasses

With lunch, we were to taste two Chardonnays. The first was the 5 star Platter Groenlandberg 2020 Chardonnay,
with fennel on the nose, summery flavours with crisp lemon and lime on the end, and a hint of wood on the end

Then the Tabula Rasa 2017 Chardonnay, clone CY95, from a single vineyard
Shy at first then aromatic with classic Chardonnay aromas
On the palate, lean and crisp lemon lime with good, lightly toasted oak support

We also tasted the Tabula Rasa Chardonnay, Clone CY548,
which is full of buttery brioche on the nose, lots of blonde oak, lime and ripe stone fruit

Tasting Room manager Carissa Moutsoyannis and Chef John van Zyl

Afrika Chimombe was our pleasant and attentive waiter

Carissa has a beautiful smile

The menu. We made some choices with assistance from Afrika
probably a little more than we needed, but the food was superb

The mezze platter is such good value: Humus sprinkled with Dukkah, rich, soft and sharp aubergine,
Goats cheese balls, Tibbouleh salad, fat olives and warm pita bread 

Beautiful beetroot stained salmon gravadlax with cucumber, fennel leaves and yoghurt

Pulled, smoked, spicy with chilli, pork, a bit palate busting, but worth it

Perfectly cooked and moist chicken breast on fragrant Jasmine rice in a delicate stock
it comes with rice wine vinegar and spring onions, a fruity spicy chilli and tamarind dipping sauce
and a salad of pickled vegetables

The dish of the day for us, as we love something we have not had before, and this was innovative and, for us, the best new invention yet. Wow. Squid sliders. Soft, almost brioche, buns with sesame topping, crisp, spicy, battered and deep fried squid with chilli mayonnaise

The contents spilling out. It so works

Special thanks to Jacques and chef John, and all in the kitchen, restaurant and the tasting room
The tasting did take a while and they stayed overtime for us,
for which we are extremely grateful for their time and their attention to detail
Definitely the place to go for great wine and lunch this summer and the rest of the year

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A taste of Newton Johnson

There are so many excellent wine farms in the beautiful Hemel and Aarde valley,
but one we always try to visit is Newton Johnson
Why? Because they produce beautiful, elegant wine, wine we love, wine we want to buy and drink
And they happen to be a really friendly and welcoming lot!

So, as we were staying in the area and had some late afternoon time, we had to visit

Lisa Renzenbrink has managed the tasting room for many years and is an old friend. She told us about how they have coped over the past two years, the changes at the farm, the change of the restaurant chef, and the new area outside that is going to be an extension of the restaurant; a good idea indeed now that tables need to be spaced well apart and people do prefer to eat outside in the summer. Bevan Newton Johnson does the marketing and the excellent wine is made by Gordon Newton Johnson and his wife Nadia. We were lucky enough to see Gordon briefly on our way out. They win many awards and high scores for their wines. And Gordon has just been elected Chair of the Cape Wine Makers Guild

We began our tasting with the 2020 Southend Chardonnay which has a faint hint of wood smoke on the rich nose,
ripe fruit on the palate and layers and layers of lime and lemon delight. It is so well made and so drinkable

The 2020 Family Vineyards Chardonnay is from the vineyards in front of the main building
Smoky bacon, herbs, and buchu hints on the classic golden nose
It spends 11 months in French oak. White nectarine, peach and lime on the palate with fullness, length
and good wood to round it off. It is undoubtedly a good food wine

Of all the good Pinot Noirs in our winelands, these stand out as being, in our humble opinion, the best
We know they age well and they drink beautifully

The Walker Bay 2020 Pinot Noir has soft perfume, spice and cherry and is so recognisably from this terroir
On the palate, lovely fruit with layers of plum, cherry, raspberry and mulberry, with long flavours
and a hint of salty minerality on the end. Wood is there, supporting but not intruding

The Family Vineyards 2020 Pinot Noir is playful on the nose, tempting
There is a hint of wood smoke with enticing raspberry & cherry aromas
Freshness of cherry fruit on the palate, with salty licorice wood, complexity and depth, another quality, well made wine

Time for another favourite, which we have often bought and cellared and which, we can report, ages very, very well

Full Stop Rock 2019 does indeed rock. A blend of Syrah, Grenache and Mourvèdre, it’s Spicy!
Dark berries, cherry and mulberry in spades on the palate, pepper and some licorice.
Drinking so well now, it is fresh and cheeky, but give it some age and wait for more excitement
We are currently enjoying the 2012

Granum 2016 is more serious. It is grown on granite soil, at the very bottom of the farm
and matured in French 500 litre barrels, only a small amount in new. A blend of 75% Syrah, 25% Mourvèdre
 Perfume on the dark berry fruit nose with some spice, it is quite sophisticated
You know from the nose that it is going to be good. On the palate, you find soft chalky tannins, concentrated cassis,
black cherry and mulberry flavours and good wood, pulling all its components together in one mouthful
Another perfect wine for food - complex sauces, duck and game

A final wine to refresh our palates was the new, fresh 2021 Sauvignon Blanc. It has those classic fig leaf and green pepper pyrazines on the nose and is crisp and zingy with salty minerality and more fig and green pepper notes

As his Birthday present from Lynne, John was the recipient of three bottles of the Walker Bay Pinot Noir
and three bottles of Full Stop Rock. We look forward to drinking them together

This is the stunning view from the terrace at Newton Johnson, looking down over the vineyards and the fruitful valley
to the sea and the far mountains. It is so good to see the dams so full after the cold and wet winter,
which the vines love. Rain was coming in and we were in for a chilly night

This cottage at De Werf is owned by our friends, who kindly let us stay the night
It now sleeps six and, if you would like to stay there, they are on AirBnB

There are several dams on the farm and you can swim and walk in the grounds

It is lovely sitting on the open terrace which has an outdoor built in braai and a plunge pool

Rain sweeping in, as we lit a fire and opened a bottle of excellent local wine

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