Thursday, November 10, 2022

Tastes and aromas at Seven Oaks

We enjoyed three experiences while we stayed at Seven Oaks

On arrival, we were welcomed by Ina Basson, their Tasting room manager,
who had so kindly and ably arranged the weekend for us

They have an attractive courtyard in front of the tasting room for balmy days and evenings

Patrick and Jacqui Pols were in the tasting room and wanted us to taste some of the Seven Oaks wines

The line-up of wines. Having tasted the whites and rosé on our trip around the farm it was a chance to taste the reds

The 2021 Seven Oaks Cabernet Shiraz is not oaked and has a lovely nose,
with good red berry fruit, spice and coriander spice
Crisp and zingy on the palate with strawberry, cherry, cassis and black pepper

To accompany our tasting, they had provided two of their specially curated cheese platters,
which was just perfect as we needed some lunch

and some excellent farm bread and butter

Chatting as we ate and tasted

and, inside, there is a long tasting table and a couch in front of an open fireplace for those chilly winter days

The 6+1 2019 Cabernet Shiraz has been matured in 2nd and 3rd fill barrels
Incense wood on the nose with ripe berry fruit
Sweet on the initial entry, with warmth from alcohol and layers of berry fruit

Jacqui Pols is the organizing brain behind the hospitality on the farm

The 6+1 2020 Merlot has wood smoke, then cherry, berry and dark chocolate on the nose
Sweet cherry fruit, some amaretto cherry stone, with crispness in the middle
Wood supports well. Some cherry candy on the end

Patrick Pols is gregarious, fun and a great host, full of bonhomie

The Per L'Amore de Andie is the name of the Seven Oaks Cap Classique
Amore is the registered name of the farm and Andie is their daughter

We all so enjoyed the 2020 Padre Red Nose Merlot Cabernet
A cassis bomb on the nose with good wood, mulberries and raspberry
A classic blend, still young but with good potential
Good fruit, chalky tannins and dark oak, so it has all it needs to age well

The 2020 6+1 Shiraz also has all it needs
It is spicy on the nose with good dark berry fruit, mulberry and incense wood
On the palate, sweet berries, cherries, cranberry, good supporting acidity
and layers of long fruit flavours, chalky tannins and wood on the end. Very good indeed

The 6+1 2019 Pinotage. Incense wood, berry fruit, with young sweet and sour fruit on the palate
This needs time, as all young Pinotages do

The 6+1 2012 James William Reserve Cabernet Shiraz was made by the 2006 Young Winemaker of the Year,
Francois Augenbach, at Romans River farm which is next door
Christmas cake aromas, sweet and sour bruléed fruit on the nose and palate with a touch of wood

The 2021 Seven Oaks Noble Late Harvest, made from Sauvignon Blanc from the neighbouring farm
It is aromatic on the nose, lovely and sweet with honey and flowers, well balanced with good acidity
It has an RS of 140

Our next adventure, the following morning, was to experience the Aroma Room
Ina explained how it worked and we were all keen to test our noses to see which smells we could recognize
Some of us have the advantage of doing this almost daily......

Into the room at the end of the tasting room

where there are 14 containers, each containing an ester to inhale, and to guess what you are smelling
The first 14 are found in white wines

and, on the other side, another 14 which are found in red wines!
Lynne took notes and, although this is what she does with wine regularly, found it quite challenging, as did we all
But it was a lot of fun too. There were some aromas that each of us got instantly, because they are very familiar
Lynne got the truffle quickly, because she makes truffle scrambled egg every Sunday – with truffle oil
and Violet is one of her favourite smells in wine and in macarons and in our garden
But telling the difference between say strawberry or pineapple and some other fruit can be a challenge

When you have finished each one, you can scan the box on the wall above each container.... 

....to find out how wrong or right you were

and you get the answer quickly

and then it was time for the Pop up Lunch, which Seven Oaks holds once a month
A different chef each time, with a different menu
This month it was the turn of Jo Wagener, Private Chef
A biscuit shaped like a bunch of grapes was on each napkin

A homily on the wall, to which we subscribe

Seating outside for early arrivals or people coming to taste wine. The lunch was held in the tasting room 

We scanned the menu with our phones

and, of course, there was Seven Oaks wine to order with your lunch

The Amuse Bouche was a smoked oyster on a thin crisp, topped with onion sprouts, and pomegranate aruls

Chef Jo Wagener, being introduced by Patrick Pols

She told us about the food to come

The first course was a recipe she’d invented
Baby Squid stuffed with her Mother's recipe Bobotie, topped with tomato concasse
It was a new experience for everyone and some were not sure it would work. It smelled very good and was enticing;
the bobotie was very good with lovely clove spicing and the squid was tender and in a flavourful sauce
A very enjoyable and satisfying dish

The palate cleanser was Spanspek;
cantaloupe melon, liquidised with vanilla sorbet and freeze-dried yoghurt, topped with Dukkah. Very sweet

Peter ordering some wine. We began with the 6+1 Chenin Blanc, which is lightly wooded
 It has good clean fruit, lime and lemon, long flavours and went very well with the starter

The main course was a lovely individual Lamb Wellington in crisp flaky pastry,
with a small amount of very flavourful mushroom duxelles inside
Served with crisp potatoes and caramel coated, deep fried pumpkin fritters
(we could have eaten a bucket load of those)
It was a very large portion and the shredded lamb inside was very tender 

One of the other friendly guests, who was also staying the weekend, came over to have a giggle with us all
We had the Padre Red Nose Cabernet/Merlot with the main course and it was such a good pairing

Time for dessert, when they start pouring the Noble Late Harvest; full of honey and so well balanced by the acidity

A tiny slice of Crème Fraiche mint tart on a light pastry base with very delicious strawberries and a chocolate sauce

A smiling chef after a good service

A great artwork bringing back lots of memories

and then on Sunday morning, after breakfast and tidying the cottage,
it was time to say goodbye to Patrick, Jacqui and Ina and thank them for a marvellous weekend
It had not been all relaxing - we were too busy to think of stopping; there was so much to do and we had such fun

Go and experience Seven Oaks yourselves. And perhaps book for their next Pop-Up restaurant?
You will find them on Seven Oaks Winery and Vineyard Cottages: Home https://www.sevenoaks.co.za

All our stories can be seen in the Blog Archive near the top of the column on the right

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A Weekend stay at Seven Oaks estate, Breedekloof

Seven Oaks Wine Estate is in the Breedekloof area and is on the way to Wolseley
We were invited by owners Patrick and Jacqui Pols to join them for a special Pop-Up lunch and, when we accepted,
we were invited to stay for the weekend and bring another couple
We had no idea what fun and entertainment we were in for
By the way, Seven Oaks has only six mature oak trees and a new baby oak
When the very hospitable owner Patrick bought the farm on an impulse in an auction, he thought he had counted seven!
The farm's logo shows six large trees and a baby and their best wines are labelled 6+1
It is set in the most beautiful countryside
The best route to the farm is to drive from Wellington over the spectacular Bain’s Kloof Pass
which brings you very close to the farm

We drove up through the vines until we came to the sign directing us to the cottages

There are four self catering cottages, named after grape varieties. Merlot was ours for Friday and Saturday nights

It is very spacious inside with a binne braai, dining table,
a relaxing seating area and doors which open onto the back garden patio

and there is a small and perfectly supplied kitchen
In fact, this was one of the best supplied cottages we have ever stayed in; they had thought of everything one could possibly need

Bedroom 1 has a large king size bed

Bedroom 2 can be fitted as two single beds or be made up a to provide a large king for our other couple

Once we had dropped our luggage and settled in,
we strolled off to the Tasting venue to check in, accompanied by the farm’s geese

Hmmmm… Christmas dinner? Love geese....

Violet and blue mountains looking over the vines. They are the Waterfall mountains to the West
This valley is on the watershed between the drainage basins of the Breede River,
which flows south to the Indian Ocean, and the Berg River, which flows north to the Atlantic Ocean

and after being warmly welcomed, we discovered that owner Patrick and Willem Viljoen,
his viticulturist and farm manager, were about to take us on a short tour of the farm
The initials on the truck stand for "Hier kom Groot Kak Wyn Motor"

Patrick and Willem gave us each a glass of the Seven Oaks Sauvignon Blanc to enjoy on the trip






A farm worker rolling the dirt roads flat!

A view of the tasting room buildings over the vines with the spectacular Witzenberg mountains behind them to the East,
where the sun rises and where the sunset turns the slopes to orange each evening

Next, a taste of the 2022 Seven Oaks Chenin Blanc, named Sam’s wine, a wine which quickly became a favourite
They found an empty urn in the vineyard, labelled “Sam” – presumably it had contained the ashes of a person or a pet
It gave a name to the vineyard

A small graveyard on the farm for previous owners and their family

Rosy peaks at sunset




John’s new lens can get incredible detail at very long distances;
here the crags and pinnacles of the mountain at sunset

Time to braai back at Merlot Cottage, so the fire is lit!

Very good Rooikrans Boerewors from Checkers and some tender lamb chops
and some good wines to go with the meal
Perdeberg Brut Reserve Chenin blanc Cap Classique got us off to a flying start
and, with the meat, a very supple and full Ernie Els 2015 Syrah

Baked potatoes and a simple salad and then a relatively early night for us all

John got up at the crack of dawn, which is about 5.30 this month (November),
and went off for a lovely walk around the farm with his camera

A cover crop of wheat grass between the vines

A new vine replacement just coming into leaf

Morning mist rising over the hills

Up a small hill 

Looking over to the Breedekloof road

A new shoot on a grape vine

Blue mountains in the early morning light over the vines



Walking back through the vines to the Tasting room and our cottage which is on the left

A Cape Robin-chat (Cossypha caffra) on an apple tree branch

Insect war. A crane fly, aka daddy long legs, attacks a mating pair of Soapberry Bugs

Sitting down to breakfast outside near the braai and the hot tub
which is heated by burning wood in a pit under the contraption on the left

One of our favourite bougainvilleas, white touched with pink

Peter and Michele deciding which way to go for their walk

Early grape flowers on the Chardonnay

Apple blossom

The farm is a wonderful place for bird watching
We heard but didn't see a Piet my Vrou, named for his call. It is a red-chested cuckoo in the family Cuculidae
Here are a Cape sparrow or mossie (Passer melanurus) and a watching Cape white eye (Zosterops virens)
Lynne has never understood why the beautiful moss coloured bird on the right is called a white eye and not a mossie!

A speckled mousebird (Colius striatus). They have lovely long tail feathers and are a delight to watch

A malachite sunbird (Nectarinia famosa)

A southern fiscal, common fiscal or fiscal shrike (Lanius collaris)
It is also sometimes named Jackie hangman or butcher bird

It has a rather nasty habit of pinning its prey on barbed wire or thorns for later consumption

The bokmakierie (Telophorus zeylonus) is a bushshrike
This family of passerine birds is closely related to the true shrikes in the family Laniidae,
and was once included in that group. It is endemic to southern Africa

We had a very simple supper after the long Saturday lunch we had been invited to,
but we did succumb to opening some wines we had both brought to enjoy
Valmoissine 2019 Louis Latour Pinot Noir Burgundy, Glen Carlou 2017 Curators Selection Chenin Blanc
- one of only 3000 bottles, picked from old vines in the Swartland,
Newton Johnson 2015 Resonance, a Sauvignon Blanc Semillon White Bordeaux blend
They were all outstanding
The evening was perfect, still and warm and few insects to bother us

Peter stoked the hot tub fire for ages and he and Michele bravely ventured in
It was not for John and far too tepid for Lynne

All our stories can be seen in the Blog Archive near the top of the column on the right

If you do not wish to receive e-mails from us, please email menucape@gmail.com with the word 'UNSUBSCRIBE' in your email