Wednesday, November 09, 2011

Eating at Keenwa


The restaurant is lovely at night with pale blue walls and a couple which are chocolate brown, but with candlelight on the tables it has a very romantic atmosphere and all the customers, us included, were having a lot of fun.
























 










































Talk about eating outside of our experience! We had no idea what to expect when we were invited to try this Peruvian restaurant at 50 Waterkant Street in town. Lynne has cooked Quinoa once and obviously did not get it right, because we really didn’t like the rather crunchy grain that resulted. Now we know how, we can try again. What do we know about this country on the other side of South America? That it has a huge range of climates (23 of the worlds 24) and topography which starts at the sea, crosses a dry desert and ends in the Andes, an ancient history of Mayan culture. We did know that many of the foods we love to eat, like potatoes, sweet corn, peppers, avocado and squash originate there. We had been told by someone that this is not authentic Peruvian food but the owner German de la Melena, assured us that it is. It is not haut cuisine, just humble food which the locals love to eat out and at home. He has a couple of recipes his mum makes and they were delicious. This charming man is a widely travelled international model who lived in Europe for several years before settling in what he calls Paradise - Cape Town. (We agree.) His chef Fabricio Durand is from Cuzco in Peru and he certainly can cook. We started with two Pisco sours – Pisco is their local firewater made from grapes and German imports it for his restaurant. We absolutely loved these, enough to try to make a local version the next evening at home, but without the Pisco. They are expensive as cocktails go at R50 each, but are really worth trying, and we are not normally cocktail drinkers.
Not knowing what food to order, we placed ourselves completely in German’s hands and said “bring us what you think we should try”. And boy, did they! We had six starters and five main courses before we admitted defeat at the final fall with one dessert. Luckily these were small portions of the food and we shared them all.
The first dish was a fire seared piece of fillet on a skewer, tender and full of flavour, served with boiled new potatoes, a corn and pepper salsa and a creamy spicy sauce – worth returning for, all on it’s own.
Then a platter with four different starters: a cubed tuna ceviche, a Tiradito sliced fish in lime juice topped with crisp deep fried sweet potato chips; quinoa topped with cheese and a salad; sweet potato and baby corn salad.
Then a Trio de Causas (three salads on one platter) consisting of beetroot & tomato; tuna and egg in a spinach sauce; and chicken mayonnaise with turmeric. Most of these dishes were lovely and fresh covered in shredded vegetable and sweet potato and there are good vegetarian options. Nothing is searingly hot.
Our main courses were mashed potato with limes and avocado, shredded chicken and mayonnaise, Sliced rare beef with a gooseberry sauce;
rather dry ostrich fillets with fried banana,
huge unpeeled prawns on potato & butternut mash

and a rather strange speciality: a Chinese stir fry with beef in soy accompanied by chips and rice!
 We were told this is what the locals like to eat as there is a strong background of Asian food from its large Asian population – ergo Nobuyuki 'Nobu' Matsuhisa and their former President, Mr Fujimori.German twisted our arm with his favourite dessert and it was wonderful. Crisp yeast batter fritters,deep fried containing pieces of sweet potato and butternut, accompanied by a really dark delicious cane sugar syrup. You are not allowed to use cutlery, you push the crisp batter down into the syrup and then eat messily with your fingers.

We must mention our very special waiter, Cristian Patarroyo Buitrago from Colombia who is here for a short stay after university, where he graduated as a chemical engineer. He was absolutely wonderful, helpful and great entertainment.

























































Go, try them.
 

111102 Main Ingredient's MENU - Keenwa, Elgin Gardens, pisco sour, e-marketing, product news, events & restaurant specials

MENU
Main Ingredient’s weekly E-Journal
Gourmet Foods, Ingredients & Fine Wines
Eat In Guide’s Outstanding Outlet Award Winner from 2006 to 2010
Click on anything underlined and Green to open a link to pictures or more information
 A female sunbird on a salvia at Fresh Woods

Eating at Keenwa (The restaurant uses Quinoa’s phonetic spelling, as South Africans are not familiar with its pronunciation.) Talk about eating outside of our experience! We had no idea what to expect when we were invited to try this Peruvian restaurant at 50 Waterkant Street in town. Lynne has cooked Quinoa once and obviously did not get it right, because we really didn’t like the rather crunchy grain that resulted. Now we know how, we can try again. What do we know about this long thin country on the other side of South America? That it has a huge range of climates (23 of the worlds 24) and topography which starts at the sea, crosses a dry desert and ends in the Andes, an ancient history of Mayan culture. We did know that many of the foods we love to eat, like potatoes, sweet corn, peppers, avocado and squash originate there. We had been told by someone that this is not authentic Peruvian food but the owner German de la Melena, assured us that it is. It is not haut cuisine, just humble food which the locals love to eat out and at home. He has a couple of recipes his mum makes and they were delicious. This charming man is a widely travelled international model who lived in Europe for several years before settling in what he calls Paradise - Cape Town. (We agree.) His chef Fabricio Durand is from Cuzco in Peru and he certainly can cook. We started with two Pisco sours – Pisco is their local firewater made from grapes and German imports it for his restaurant. We absolutely loved these, enough to try to make a local version the next evening at home, but without the Pisco. They are expensive as cocktails go at R50 each, but are really worth trying, and we are not normally cocktail drinkers.
were told this is what the locals like to eat; there is a strong background of Asian food from its large Asian population – e.g. Nobuyuki 'Nobu' Matsuhisa and their former President, Alberto Fujimori.
Not knowing what food to order, we placed ourselves completely in German’s hands and said “bring us what you think we should try”. And boy, did they! We had six starters and five main courses before we admitted defeat at the final fall with one dessert. Luckily these were small portions of the food and we shared them all. The first dish was a fire seared piece of fillet on a skewer, tender and full of flavour, served with boiled new potatoes, a corn and pepper salsa and a creamy spicy sauce – worth returning for, all on its own. Then came a platter with four different starters: a cubed tuna ceviche, a Tiradito sliced fish in lime juice topped with crisp deep fried sweet potato chips, quinoa topped with cheese and a salad, sweet potato and baby corn salad  and mashed potato with limes and avocado. Then a Trio de Causas (three salads on one platter) consisting of beetroot & tomato; tuna and egg in a spinach sauce; and chicken mayonnaise with turmeric. Most of these dishes were lovely and fresh, covered in shredded vegetable and sweet potato and there are good vegetarian options. Nothing is searingly hot.
Our main courses were shredded chicken and mayonnaise (Aji de Gallina), Sliced rare beef with a gooseberry sauce; rather dry ostrich fillets with fried banana, huge unpeeled prawns on potato & butternut mash, and a rather strange speciality: a Chinese stir fry with beef in soy accompanied by chips and rice! We
German twisted our arm with his favourite dessert and it was wonderful. Crisp yeast batter fritters, deep fried containing pieces of sweet potato and butternut, accompanied by a really dark delicious cane sugar syrup. You are not allowed to use cutlery, you push the crisp batter down into the syrup and then eat messily with your fingers. Go try them.
We must make mention of our very special waiter, Cristian Patarroyo Buitrago from Colombia who is here for a short stay after university, where he graduated as a chemical engineer. He was absolutely wonderful, helpful and great entertainment.
The restaurant is lovely at night with pale blue walls and a couple which are chocolate brown, but with candlelight on the tables it has a very romantic atmosphere and all the customers, us included, were having a lot of fun. Pics of the restaurant and dishes are here.
Cooking Quinoa     German tells us you must boil it till the grain gets soft and milky and begins to get ‘wings’. Then you drain it quickly and wash with cold water to cool it down. If it cools slowly it gets sticky and is not nice to eat. It is used mainly in salads.
Breakfast at Wimpy     We just have to mention this seriously good value offer from a place where we don’t often eat. Lynne discovered it at the Wimpy in Long Beach Mall (but it is in all their stores), when she really needed some protein after a heavy night out. They are doing a breakfast which consists of two very fresh fried eggs, two rashers of bacon, a grilled tomato, two slices of rather flattened bread (we think they are ‘toasting’ in the sandwich press rather than under a grill) and a portion of chips. She could have done without the sad chips but, at R19.95, we feel they are really coming to the party in a recession. Lots and lots of people, including many pensioners, were taking advantage of this special. If you want to add a sausage at R5.99 and/or baked beans at R4 you can and a cup of coffee or tea is R10.95. Put this into context: most sandwiches sold elsewhere now cost approximately R24 each.
Glorious flowering Elgin      Everything blooms in the fruitful vale of Elgin as we discovered this last weekend when we went to the Elgin Open Gardens weekend. Great news for those of you who want to go, it continues this coming weekend. Sadly, the weather when we left Cape Town on Sunday morning was a full-on North Westerly storm and the motorway was not fun, but when we got there the weather, although cloudy, remained dry for the day, if a little chilly. Better weather is promised for this weekend. The roses growing everywhere are quite, quite amazing. From huge hedges to pergolas to individual beds and standards, we could not stop gasping at the glorious show of both old and new style roses. Don’t forget to smell the roses as some of the older varieties have sensational perfumes. We started at Fresh Woods, a garden we have delighted in before, where the show of different plants, both rare and local, and planted landscapes is amazing. Out came our cameras and we snapped away like crazy – you will be seeing lots of the results. Lynne’s favourite was seeing the very rare tulip tree from the USA in full bloom and because there were low flowering branches, she was able to see the ‘tulip’ flowers in detail. She has only ever seen this tree in Kew and the flowers there were high in the canopy. They have a lovely Japanese Acer garden being established and this has rather inspired us. Next we were off to Eikenhof for a bite of lunch – gammon and salad or quiche and salad and the most divine apple tart swimming in honey. Their formal gardens have a very English flavour – we just missed the bluebells - and is at its peak at the moment. There was an exhibition of stunning, detailed botanical art and it is selling very well. Don’t miss the birds everywhere and the bees building their nest in an oak tree. Then we went down to the opposite end of the valley to see the lovely water gardens at Lorraine, where we bought some real (organic) farm butter and some of the best fresh apple juice either of us have tasted. On to the nursery at Keurbos for a look at the plants and their very wild garden and then it was time to join our hosts for the weekend, the very hospitable Paul and Nicky Wallace of Elgin Vintners, at their house for a delicious dinner and probably far too much good wine, including Paul’s extremely dark and delicious licorice and mulberry Black Dog Malbec. Next morning, we were shown their farm from the bank of their hill top dam and John took lots of photos of their local blue cranes, our national bird. We then visited their friends at Duncan’s roses and picked up two pale cream climbing roses to put around our front door. Then on to our friends the Gowers on their farm, the Wallace’s friend Andrea Semple of Topiary Creations, who makes super décor items out of leaves and branches and then on to the Elgin Vintners tasting room for a tasting of the wines.
We tasted a lovely typical Elgin sauvignon blanc, crisp and clean with good fig leaf and gooseberry notes, followed by the very rich and lightly wooded Viognier. Then the summery merlot rosé and their fruity and silky Cabernet. The night before we arrived, they had just been awarded the SAA prize for their Shiraz, which is soft and velvety and absolutely deserving of the award. We bought some of the Cabernet and the Shiraz to take home before it all sells out, as it will. It was quite a “weekend” (our weekends are Sunday and Monday - we work on Saturday).
Attempting a Pisco Sour    We had very small limes which gave us just about 200ml of juice. Lynne made the sugar syrup by combining 4 T sugar with 50g water and stirring them together till the sugar melted, then boiled the syrup for 5 minutes. Boil quite hard but do not stir. If it starts to colour (you do NOT want caramel), remove it from the heat immediately and start again. We made the cocktail in the small blender container which comes with our stick blender. You can use a liquidizer or just whisk the egg white till stiff and add it to the other ingredients. This makes enough for two, served in whisky tumblers. You can add different alcohols like rum or whiskey if you like, but they give a different flavour.
Sour recipe
1 egg white, juice of 8 limes, 100ml sugar syrup, 2 tots of Cane Spirit or Vodka or Grappa
Blend the egg white till light and fluffy and just getting to peaks, add some of the sugar syrup and blend quickly, then add the lime juice and the alcohol. Taste and add more syrup to your taste if it is too sour.
Our diary for the next week is becoming hectic. We will be at the KWV’s launch of Doctor Charles and re-launch of Roodeberg tomorrow lunchtime, then off to the Vineyard for a dinner celebrating iconic Methode Cap Classique Simonsig Kaapse Vonkel’s 40th birthday. Friday and Saturday will see us at Long Beach and Biscuit Mill markets and we will be at Backsberg on Sunday for a friend’s special birthday. Monday will find us at Buitenverwachting for their trade wine tasting and on Tuesday we will be at the launch of the Platter Wine Guide for 2012. Some of you sometimes mention that you don’t know how we fit it in; sometimes, we don’t!
Our E-marketing     Listeners to Cape Talk on Monday morning may have heard us talking to Aden Thomas and a very clever man named Pavlo Phitidis in the Entrepreneurs SA slot about our need to improve our web-based activities. We need to create a better website and set up a proper online shop which will make it easier for you to order our special products, but we don’t have the expertise we need. Several people have contacted us and we are weighing up options, but this gives us an opportunity to spread the net a little wider. If you have any ideas or, more importantly, expertise we can use, please contact us by replying to this mail.
The Eat In DSTV Food Network Produce Awards aim to acknowledge and celebrate outstanding, independent South African producers for putting South Africa on the international food map with their integrity, care for the environment, passion and innovation. Of course, an outlet is a vital connection between the producers and public, which is why the awards also recognise the stores, shops and market for their vital role in the process. If you think that the bread from your local bakery or fresh veggies from your Saturday morning market is worthy of some praise, now's your chance to speak up! We are very proud of being winners in a few previous years. Nominate your favourite producer, product or outlet in this year's Eat In DSTV Food Network Produce Awards. Read more about it and submit your nomination at http://www.eat-in.co.za/Awards/Nominations
Our products.
We have a lot of fun putting MENU together each week and, of course, doing the things we write about, but making it possible for you to enjoy rare and wonderful gourmet foods is what drives our business. We stock a good range of ingredients and delicious ready-made gourmet foods. So, please have a look at our Product List and see what you need. You can contact us by email or phone, or through our website. We can send your requirements to you anywhere in South Africa.
Our market activities   You will find us at Long Beach Mall this Friday, 4th November from 09h00 to 16h00. Our other date at Long Beach for November is Friday, 18th November. We will be at The Place at Cavendish on Fridays 11th and 25th November. We will be at the Old Biscuit Mill’s brilliant, exciting and atmospheric Neighbourgoods Market, as always, this Saturday between 09h00 and 14h00. The Neighbourgoods market has been rearranged. The tables have been arranged at right angles to the way we are all used to, with all the aisles running straight down from the entrance, in order to improve the flow of visitors through the market. Lynne will be wearing a gold plastic crown in order to help you find us.
There is a huge variety of interesting things to occupy your leisure time here in the Western Cape. To help you choose an event to visit, we have taken our list of Interesting Food and Wine Events online. All the events are listed in date order and we already have exciting events to entertain you through into the new year. Click here to access the list. You will need to be connected to the internet.
Many of the specials in our list of restaurant special offers are continuing through summer and we have been told that there will be some new summer menus soon. Click here to access it. These Specials have been sent to us by the restaurants or their PR agencies. We have not personally tried all of them and their listing here should not always be taken as a recommendation from ourselves. If they don’t update us, we can’t be responsible for any inaccuracies in the list. When we have tried it, we’ve put in our observations. We have cut out the flowery adjectives etc. we’ve been sent, to give you the essentials. Click on the name to access the relevant website. All communication should be with the individual restaurants.





2nd November 2011
Remember - if you can’t find something, we’ll do our best to get it for you, and, if you’re in Cape Town or elsewhere in the country, we can send it to you! Check our product list for details and prices.
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
Our Adamastor & Bacchus© tailor-made Wine, Food and Photo tours take small groups (up to 6) to specialist wine producers who make the best of South Africa’s wines. Have fun while you learn more about wine and how it is made! Tours can be conducted in English, German, Norwegian or Dutch flavoured Afrikaans.
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 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. Our Avast! ® Anti-Virus software is updated at least daily and our system is scanned continually for viruses.
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 and keep our mailing list strictly confidential. If you wish to be added to our mailing list, please send us a message, inserting "subscribe" in the subject line. If you wish to be removed from our mailing list, please send us a message, inserting "remove" in the subject line

111027 Main Ingredient's MENU - Buitenverwachting, 15 on Orange, Il Cappero, duck with orange glaze, product news, events & restaurant specials

Tuesday, November 01, 2011


This week's MENU from Main Ingredient

MENU
Main Ingredient’s weekly E-Journal
Gourmet Foods, Ingredients & Fine Wines
Eat In Guide’s Outstanding Outlet Award Winner from 2006 to 2010
Click on anything underlined and Green to open a link to pictures or more information

A moorhen with her chicks
Our restaurant reviews     We have a note about this at the end of every MENU, but we believe that we need to say this here. When we review restaurants, we do our best to give an honest evaluation. We do this if we have been invited by the owners or their PR agents, or if we have decided to go and pay from our own purses. Our objective is to improve the dining experience for all of us who love good food and to encourage dining out if the restaurant is good. We try to be constructive and to promote, but if we receive food which is not good or poor service, we owe it to you and to the restaurant to say so. Our credibility matters to us. We believe that our being honest is in the interest of the restaurants that we visit. If their food and service are sub-standard, customers will not return and they will not survive. They need to know if they need to improve. We do not want to destroy them, but to help them thrive.
Buitenverwachting Restaurant new menu      We were invited recently to try Executive Chef Edgar Osojnik’s new summer menu and spent a very jolly evening with other members of the social media. Edgar is very interested in using foams, reductions, and jellies to accompany his food and we had several dishes which included these. We started with Three ways with Olives and Pepperonata and Olives, one of their vegetarian dishes, and this was served with the farm’s best selling white wine, Buiten Blanc – always deliciously crisp, mainly sauvignon blanc and deservedly one of this country’s most popular restaurant wines. Then came a lovely piece of fresh and moist Tandoori Kingklip with a prawn dhal, definitely one to return for again. This was accompanied by one of our favourites, Buitenverwachting Sauvignon Blanc. Next, a deep bowl of creamy mielie bacon soup with a tiny roulade of lamb and pesto on the side of the plate. “One to try at home!” thought Lynne, but you must use fresh sweetcorn. This went perfectly with the Chardonnay, which has had 10 months in French oak. This was followed by Saddle of rich Springbok, served three ways with a Port wine couverture chocolate sauce accompanied by the equally rich and deep Cabernet Sauvignon. And finally a perfect honey saffron ice cream with dark chocolate, rhubarb and blood orange compote, with which we were treated to a glass of the excellent “1796” muscat dessert wine. Luckily this meal was served in quite small portions and did last quite long time, so we were not totally unable to move when it finished. Go and see this new menu for yourself with its many different facets.
Entertaining     We have been so hectic this winter that we owe most of our friends some supper. Last Thursday, we finally got down to doing a dinner for eight. Lynne likes to prepare most of the dishes beforehand, so she made twice baked cheese soufflés for the starters. We served them with a 2010 Diemersdal Sauvignon blanc. We had two main courses, sparklingly fresh seared yellowfin tuna from Julie Carter (find her at Ocean Jewels in the Neighbourgoods Market on Saturdays) as the tuna season has begun at last and everyone loved it. And the popular chicken with black olives and balsamic vinegar, which we first had at a lunch at Morgenster. We served it with a 2001 Morgenster Lourens River Valley red blend. Lynne made the never fail chocolate and apricot tart from the first Moro cookbook and much wine was served to those who were not driving. The tart was perfectly partnered with a Nederburg Auction Reserve 1998 Gewürztraminer/Weisser Riesling special late harvest. More dinners are planned, but now the diary is filling up with pre-Christmas events…
Winning Buffet     In the winter, we won a prize of Sunday lunch in the Savour restaurant at 15 on Orange Hotel and, as we suddenly had a free Sunday last week, we decided to go and use our voucher. We have to say that, in our opinion, this is STILL the best buffet in town. See pictures. At R265 per person, it includes a bottomless glass of Graham Beck Brut or Brut Rosé. See the menu. Lots and lots of fresh food, lots of sashimi, carpaccios, salads and they don’t pile dishes high with pasta, rice and potatoes and other starches. There is one soup, this week it was Hungarian Goulaschsuppe, and four bains marie of hot dishes, the best of which was the kingklip thermidor. The cheeses were mostly local this time and needed a bit more ripening, but they were very welcome. The dessert sideboard groans with different options, many of them chocolate based, for those of you who cannot resist the sweeter side of life. We drank two glasses of the Graham Beck Brut Rosé and had another cup of what we think is the best espresso in town. We didn’t overeat, but one could! It is very tempting to go back to the buffet again and again… and many people do.
Il Cappero’s Gattopardo dinner     This Sicilian restaurant in Barrack Street has been running a three course special all week long and pairing each course with a glass of Italian wine. We went on Tuesday night to find the restaurant full of well known and also not so well known (to us) diners. Two friends of ours arrived and were allowed to join our table. There were three starters on the menu, so we ordered one each and did our usual swop half-way through. John had the Caponata de Melanzane salad – layers of fried aubergine sauced with tomato, capers, olives and pine nuts, soft and rich. Lynne ordered the artichokes in four juices, a very unusual way to cook artichoke hearts in a rich and very tangy sauce made from orange, lemon, clementine juices and white vinegar with capers and anchovies added. Both of these went perfectly with the recommended Pinot Grigio. Again, we had three main courses to choose from and went for the Swordfish and the Prince’s Pasta. Both came wrapped in parcels of quite substantial pastry. The swordfish had sweet raisins and onions, capers and olives in the parcel which made it taste like a meat rather than a fish, but it was very pleasant. It was surrounded by a trail of puree of courgette. Lynne’s pie, Timbala di Principe (the Princes Pasta), was filled with macaroni, small pieces of chicken, chicken livers, mushrooms, ham and quail eggs. It was interesting, if a little dry, and cried out for a sauce of some sort. John had the recommended chardonnay – very light and low in alcohol, slightly buttery, Lynne’s dish came with a very typically Italian red wine, Nero d’avola Sedara; soft, light and fruity with characteristic hints of violets on the nose , which we all liked so much that we ordered a bottle (R180). Service was a little slow due, we think, to the restaurant being so busy, and our desserts came quite late. John had a Cassatine di Ricotta with almond marzipan and Lynne Gelo di Anguria, a rather solid jelly made from watermelon with jasmine flavour, on a base of what tasted like coffee grounds. Both were very sweet indeed. We paid R575 for our meal, including service but excluding the bottle of red wine, the price of which we shared with our friends. The 1963 Visconti movie Il Gattopardo (The Leopard) starring Burt Lancaster - wearing an hysterical wig - an amazingly handsome and young Alain Delon and a sensational teenage Claudia Cardinale played on the flat screen in the corner while we ate. All in Italian without subtitles, it nevertheless added a bit of atmosphere to the meal. Pictures of the dishes are here.
Tonight, we had duck breasts. Lynne glazed them with the new Protea Hill Farm Cream – the balsamic reduction made from their wonderful fruit vinegars. She used the Orange Cream as a glaze and, if you want to try the recipe, we have this on our stall at the markets or you can order it from us on line. Collect from our home or we can post it to you. We have not given exact quantities, it is very much a ‘taste and see’ recipe and is for 2 duck breasts, adjust quantities as necessary.
Duck in Orange Cream Glaze
Butter – canola oil – 2 duck breasts – juice & grated rind of one orange – 100 ml good chicken stock – Five Spice powder – Protea Hill Farm orange Cream balsamic reduction – honey – salt and pepper
In a heavy bottomed frying pan, melt a little butter, enough to coat the base of the pan. (Do add half and half oil and butter, or just oil if you have health concerns). Season the duck all over with the pepper and salt and a light dusting of Five Spice or Quatre Epice powder. When the pan is hot, place the duck breasts skin side down and let them cook on a medium heat till the fat renders down completely and the skin is nice and brown and caramelized but not burnt. Turn them over and continue to cook for 2 to 3 minutes. Duck is much better served pink as, if it is overcooked, it can be tough. Remove the duck breasts, coat the skin with a little Orange Cream and put them into the oven at 180°C for 10 minutes then remove, put into foil and rest for 10 minutes. Add the orange juice and stock to the pan and let it deglaze and emulsify with the juices in the pan. Taste and adjust the seasoning, adding a teaspoonful of the 0range Cream and do add a little honey if the juice is too sharp. Prepare your vegetables and then at the last minute, slice the duck and place on the warm plate. Pour over the sauce from the pan and serve. It had a wonderful flavour, was beautifully tender and we matched it with one of the best current bargains in wine: Drostdyhof Chardonnay 2010, which won a Gold medal in the Decanter Awards in England and cost us R30 at Checkers. The duck breasts came from the Neighbourgoods Butcher, Salvin Hirschfield. Talk to him at the market on Saturday, if you’re in Cape Town.
The Eat In DSTV Food Network Produce Awards aim to acknowledge and celebrate outstanding, independent South African producers for putting South Africa on the international food map with their integrity, care for the environment, passion and innovation. Of course, an outlet is a vital connection between the producers and public, which is why the awards also recognise the stores, shops and market for their vital role in the process. If you think that the bread from your local bakery or fresh veggies from your Saturday morning market is worthy of some praise, now's your chance to speak up! We are very proud of being winners in a few previous years. Nominate your favourite producer, product or outlet in this year's Eat In DSTV Food Network Produce Awards. Read more about it and submit your nomination at http://www.eat-in.co.za/Awards/Nominations
Our products. The Protea Hill Farm balsamic reductions, ‘Creams’, continued to have a very good reception last week, especially the raspberry and the lemon. We have just received another delivery. Come and taste them at one of our market stalls. You won’t find them anywhere else and we know some of the top chefs are already using them enthusiastically.
We have Carnaroli rice at last, as well as the Violone Nano, both excellent for risotto and also the more familiar Arborio. The Spanish Bomba paella rice continues to sell well. Goose fat has arrived, and we have hazelnut oil in 125ml bottles, as well as truffle oil in very user-friendly 55ml bottles. We have ample supply of duck fat and the delicious French patés, duck confits, cassoulet and other delicacies.
We have a lot of fun putting MENU together each week and, of course, doing the things we write about, but making it possible for you to enjoy rare and wonderful gourmet foods is what drives our business. We stock a good range of ingredients and delicious ready-made gourmet foods. So, please have a look at our Product List and see what you need. You can contact us by email or phone, or through our website. We can send your requirements to you anywhere in South Africa.
Our market activities     You will find us at The Place at Cavendish this Friday, the 28th from 10h00 to 17h00. Our dates at Long Beach for November will be Fridays, 4th and 18th November. We will be at The Place at Cavendish on Fridays 28th October and 11th and 25th November. We will be at the Old Biscuit Mill’s brilliant, exciting and atmospheric Neighbourgoods Market, as always, every Saturday between 09h00 and 14h00. The Neighbourgoods market has been rearranged. The tables have been arranged at right angles to the way we have all become used to, with all the aisles running straight down from the entrance, which has improved the flow of visitors through the market. Lynne will be wearing a gold plastic crown (again) in order to help you find us.
There is a huge variety of interesting things to occupy your leisure time here in the Western Cape. To help you choose an event to visit, we have taken our list of Interesting Food and Wine Events online. All the events are listed in date order and we already have exciting events to entertain you through into the new year. Click here to access the list. You will need to be connected to the internet.
Many of the specials in our list of restaurant special offers are continuing through summer and we have been told that there will be some new summer menus soon. Click here to access it. These Specials have been sent to us by the restaurants or their PR agencies. We have not personally tried all of them and their listing here should not always be taken as a recommendation from ourselves. If they don’t update us, we can’t be responsible for any inaccuracies in the list. When we have tried it, we’ve put in our observations. We have cut out the flowery adjectives etc. we’ve been sent, to give you the essentials. Click on the name to access the relevant website. All communication should be with the individual restaurants.





27th October 2011
Remember - if you can’t find something, we’ll do our best to get it for you, and, if you’re in Cape Town or elsewhere in the country, we can send it to you! Check our product list for details and prices.
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
Our Adamastor & Bacchus© tailor-made Wine, Food and Photo tours take small groups (up to 6) to specialist wine producers who make the best of South Africa’s wines. Have fun while you learn more about wine and how it is made! Tours can be conducted in English, German, Norwegian or Dutch flavoured Afrikaans.
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 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. Our Avast! ® Anti-Virus software is updated at least daily and our system is scanned continually for viruses.
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 and keep our mailing list strictly confidential. If you wish to be added to our mailing list, please send us a message, inserting "subscribe" in the subject line. If you wish to be removed from our mailing list, please send us a message, inserting "remove" in the subject line

Thursday, November 03, 2011

Elgin Gardens weekend

Everything blooms in the fruitful vale of Elgin as we discovered this last weekend when we went to the Elgin Open Gardens weekend.
The roses growing everywhere are quite, quite amazing. From huge hedges to pergolas to individual beds and standards, we could not stop gasping at the glorious show of both old and new style roses. Don’t forget to smell the roses as some of the older varieties have sensational perfumes.


We started at Fresh Woods, a garden we have delighted in before, where the show of different plants, both rare and local, and planted landscapes is amazing.
Out came our cameras and we snapped away like crazy. Lynne’s favourite was seeing the very rare tulip tree from the USA in full bloom and because there were low flowering branches, she was able to see the ‘tulip’ flowers in detail. She has only ever seen this tree in Kew and the flowers there were high in the canopy.
They have a lovely Japanese Acer garden being established and this has rather inspired us.
 Next we were off to Eikenhof
for a bite of lunch – gammon and salad or quiche and salad and the most divine apple tart swimming in honey.
Their formal gardens have a very English flavour – we just missed the bluebells - and is at its peak at the moment. There was an exhibition of stunning, detailed botanical art and it is selling very well. Don’t miss the birds everywhere and the bees building their nest in an oak tree.
Then we went down to the opposite end of the valley to see the lovely water gardens at Lorraine

where we bought some real (organic) farm butter and some of the best fresh apple juice either of us have tasted. On to the nursery at Keurbos for a look at the plants and their very wild garden
and then it was time to join our hosts for the weekend, the very hospitable Paul and Nicky Wallace of Elgin Vintners, at their house

for a delicious dinner and probably far too much good wine,
including Paul’s extremely dark and delicious licorice and mulberry Black Dog Malbec.
Next morning, we were shown their farm from the bank of their hill top dam and John took lots of photos of their local blue cranes, our national bird.
We then visited their friends at Duncan’s roses and picked up two pale cream climbing roses to put around our front door.


Then on to our friends the Gowers on their farm,


and the Wallace’s friend Andrea Semple of Topiary Creations, who makes super décor items out of leaves and branches
and, finally, on to the Elgin Vintners tasting room for a tasting of the wines.