Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Lunch at Pierneef à La Motte

John escorted two cabinet ministers from another country on a wine tour to Franschhoek last week. The tour included lunch at Pierneef à La Motte. La Motte was awarded the 2012 Great Wines Capital Best of Wine Tourism Award for Art and Culture

The menu concentrates on local produce with inspiration from traditional influences. Most of the fresh produce is grown on the farm. We drank the wines recommended on the menu, all of which had been tasted earlier with the winemaker, Michael Langenhoven

It was a beautiful warm, clear day and we were shown to a table on the open verandah which has the river on one side and the garden on another. We were joined by members of the Franschhoek wine and tourism fraternity

The food was very well presented and prepared and everyone enjoyed it.











 © John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2013

Monday, May 13, 2013

Japanese dinner at Kyoto Garden

The front of the Kyoto Gardens restaurant. It is an authentic Japanese fine dining restaurant with well trained and experienced chefs, rather than a very good sushi bar 
Warm lighting, and comfortable seating this is a view of the bar and the sushi station. The kitchen is on the left.
They can accommodate larger parties in a private dining room
A view of the other side of the restaurant and our helpful waiter for the evening
And so we begin... the first page of the menu
We started with The Sea – a pale miso soup tasting of the sea, containing a beautiful selection of seafood and seaweed: Scallops, razor clams, mussels, octopus, prawns and clams add a depth of flavours and complexity even though the dish is very simple.
Our next course was a very simple raw ceviche of kabeljou in fresh lime juice.  So fresh and so delicious
In between courses, a dish of warm steamed edamame soya beans lightly salted.
This is one of the main reasons to return to Kyoto gardens.  A mix of fresh vegetables, bay scallops and prawns cooked in the crispest tempura batter.  Served with a lime wedge, grated daikon radish to refresh the palate and a bowl of ponzu with ginger added to it.

The Japanese version of Kimchi - pickled and spiced cabbage served as an appetiser

Our main was steamed fish served in a basket. Again wonderfully fresh fish, filleted and just cooked to perfection. Topped with seaweed.
We could only manage a small plate of sushi and we shared it.  Mainly nigiri and sashimi the quality of the fish was again exemplary.
We drank a bottle of Krone’s new release Chardonnay Pinot Noir which we had been sent to try by Krone’s Public Relations company.  It went very well with all the food. The components are the same they put into their MCC bubblies but with slightly riper grapes.  Reminded us of a similar one from Franschhoek.
The restaurant has three simple niches or home altars honouring the ancestors and the Zen gods called Butsudan.  You find these in many Japanese homes
Our extremely helpful and attentive waiter Conor, a true professional – but he is also a student
Conor and the owner, Scott Wood, taking an order from the next table
The dessert Menu is also followed by the most extensive list of Japanese Whiskeys we have ever seen in South Africa
Lynne’s choice was a Green tea crepe with Green Tea Ice cream. She drinks green tea every morning so is very familiar with the fresh hay and grass flavours of green tea. The crepe was very green and very light and the ice cream also had vanilla flavours.
John’s choice was Cherry Blossom Ice cream and chocolate beans. The ice cream had a lovely deep cherry flavour and the beans were dark and delicious with goji berries inside them.
We will be returning.  This tour de force of the menu would have been expensive, but they do have a special running at the moment and we probably would limit ourselves to just two or three courses next time.
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2013

Note: the colour in these photographs is quite yellow. The light level in the restaurant is very low and neither Nikon’s nor Photoshop’s white balance software could cope.

The Old Mutual Trophy Wine Show feedback at the Grande Roche, Paarl

Pictures of the judges during the feedback session:
Francois Rautenbach of Singita
Gary Jordan of Jordan Winery
Oz Clarke from the UK and Convenor Michael Fridjhon
Michael opens proceeding and begins to give us the feedback on what they have tasted over the last week and what the trends were.
Tom Carson, General Manager and Chief Winemaker of the Yabby Lake Vineyard in Australia
Wine Journalist Angela Lloyd
Gary Jordan tells us about the panels he tasted on and what they found in general
Oz Clarke had some very amusing comments about the tasting and complimented the SA wine industry
Eric Goettelmann, Chef Sommelier Exécutif at Bernard Loiseau, Saulieu, Burgundy, France
Wine writer Christian Eedes
A full room of journalists and wine industry people, but no one ever wants to sit in the front row unless they have to.
Belthazar sommelier James Pietersen
Rianie Strydom of Haskell Vineyards
Lots of people taking notes and listening intently
After the reporting session, we went down to the terrace on the front of the hotel and had lunch. An interesting menu and a selection of wines were served.  This should be a chance for the media to meet the judges
The starter of pan fried squid, and salmon trout on a black squid ink tagliolini with a tomato caper vinaigrette and a saffron foam. However we had prawns rather than squid.
Some of the white wines on offer with lunch.
Main course was an oven roasted tender Chalmar beef fillet on vanilla carrot puree and Pommes Dauphine (small potato croquettes). We are not sure we like vanilla with savoury courses, it certainly is a controversial debate. Some people adore it, we find it too sweet.
Judge Oz Clarke with Celia Gilloway, who has ably organised these Feedback sessions for years and who now works for Classic Wine magazine.
The judges having a last lunch together
It was a lovely day to have lunch on the terrace with the Grande Roche Rose garden in full autumn flower
Norman McFarlane amuses Joanne Gibson and this year’s event organiser Alex Mason-Gordon, who finally has a minute or two to relax over lunch.
Dessert was meant to be a fruit dumpling in a red wine sabayon and a Cape gooseberry ragout. Our dumplings appear not to have been cooked.  They contained a whole strawberry
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2013