Friday, July 05, 2013

130704 Bubbles with Bubbles Classic lemon tart, KLM postscript, flat to let

MENU
Main Ingredient’s weekly E-Journal
Gourmet Foods & Ingredients
Eat In Guide’s Five time Outstanding Outlet Award Winner
+27 21 439 3169 / +27 83 229 1172
A pair of ducks in a Hemel en Aarde pond
In this week’s MENU:                                                              
*       Bubbles with Bubbles Ferreira
*       Classic lemon tart
*       KLM postscript
*       Sea Point flat to let
To take a look at our Main Ingredient blogs, follow the link: http://adamastorbacchus.blogspot.com/ because to tell our whole story here would take too much space and you can also read earlier blogs. Click on Bold words in the text of this edition to open links to pictures, blogs, pertinent websites or more information. Follow us on Twitter: @mainingmenu
This week’s Product menu: The exchange rate is biting. We have already had some massive price increases, especially on French poultry products (we were warned a while ago) and we are seeing rises on some of the more ordinary products as well. The adage “buy while stocks last” was never more true. We are also seeing the more slow-moving products being discontinued, and we have started to remove some of these items, like aged balsamics, from our online shop. We saw the increases on the shelves in France and the dip in the value of our own currency amplifies the effect. One of the wine dealers who imports wines from Europe has discontinued all imported labels for the present.
Buying from us on Line 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 which you are unlikely to find elsewhere in South Africa. You can contact us by email or phone, or through our on line shop. We can send your requirements to you anywhere in South Africa. Please do not pay until we have confirmed availability and invoiced you. When you make an eft payment, make sure that it says who you are. Use the form on the website to email us your order and we will send you the final invoice once we’ve made sure stock is available. Click here to see the shop.
Our market activities Come and visit us at the Old Biscuit Mill’s wonderfully exciting, atmospheric Neighbourgoods Market, as always, this Saturday and every Saturday between 09h00 and 14h00. Tip: Some visitors tell us how they struggle to find parking. It’s quite easy if you know how. Click here for a map which shows where we park. Sadly, the market in Long Beach Mall, Sun Valley, Fish Hoek has not been working for us and the expenses have outweighed the income, so we will not be there again until we see better potential.
Making Bubbles with Pieter Ferreira at Graham Beck      Pieter (Bubbles) Ferreira makes some of the best bubbly in South Africa, which gets a lot of international kudos and recognition and more importantly, sales. Yesterday, at the Westin Grand Hotel, we tasted seven of his best at a serious tasting for the media. All were made by the Methode Cap Classique method – the same way Champagne is made - and one thing that sets the Graham Beck wines apart from most local and French bubblies is that they do not go through malolactic fermentation, a process which reduces the fresh crispness of the wine, so all the GB bubblies show a very lively freshness and, we find, added complexity.
We started the tasting with a slide show titled “In Search of the Perfect Bubble” and Pieter led us through his methods from the vineyard right through to bottling and marketing. They grow 85% of all their grapes on the Graham Beck properties and source the rest from 12 different geographical areas in the Western Cape. Pieter is very hands-on and believes that the terroir, healthy soils, the right clones, the grape selection in the vineyards and the health of the vines all contribute greatly to the final quality of the wines. The juice forms the basis of the best bubbles. During harvest, he travels over 3 to 4,000 kilometres every month visiting all the properties that supply their grapes, and his challenge is to keep finding better grapes.
Every vintage is an expression of the best production of the year. Every block he uses is like a business unit. It must perform or be declassified.
He then tries to get the whole bunches into the press within 20 minutes of picking and the grapes are pressed very lightly. He told us that from filling a press to emptying can take four hours as they are looking for quality fresh juice. Where they do use barrels, they all come from the Tonnelier in Champagne who supplies Bollinger: Jean Prieur of Tonnelerie Artesanal. Graham Beck has an allocation of only 15 barrels a year, which are given a very light toast. They have a stock of 190 barrels used on only 8% of the wines and the average age of the barrels is 9 years. Cuvée Clive gets more new oak and for longer than any other wine. Pieter follows biodynamic processes and uses wild or natural yeasts. Prestige cuvées are wines with no rules, they are made by gut feel, specific to the conditions each year.
Their bottling line is very impressive and they have specialist machines to freeze the caps. They also use giro pallets for remuage. Pieter says he likes cork, it is a very tight fit, as it is compressed from a diameter of 30mm to a tightly compressed 19 mm. He has not seen a better closure for MCC’s and he would also miss the romance of popping them.
Pieter does have a wine that has been 10 years on the lees and wants to release it as a cork matured wine which will be called RD (recently disgorged) So: in their words “ The journey continues..... “
We then proceeded to taste their seven Methode Cap Classiques and then on to lunch where the same wines were paired with the food. Click here to see our tasting notes and the photographs.
This week’s recipe is a Classic Lemon Tart
Lynne has been searching for something new to make, instead of our usual winter favourites and this was inspired by our visit to France where it is a classic.  Please note, this is NOT a lemon meringue pie. As we are in the middle of the citrus season, you can also use limes or other citrus to make this tart. Lynne does not like zest in the custard but you can put it in if you like the rather gritty texture. She prefers a silky smooth custard. DO NOT OVERCOOK or this becomes like cheesecake. It should still have a good wobble in the centre when it comes out of the oven.
Sweet shortcrust pastry
120g plain flour – a pinch of salt – 20 g icing sugar– 80g butter, cubed – zest of 2 lemons –1 egg yolk a little iced water
Sieve the flour, salt and sugar into a food processor, add the cold butter and the lemon zest, and blitz using short bursts until it resembles breadcrumbs. Add the egg yolk and if necessary a few drops of iced water and blitz again until the pastry starts to come away from the sides. Gather it gently together, wrap in cling film and rest in the fridge for 30 minutes. Roll out and line a greased and floured, loose-bottomed flan tin. Do not trim the edges. Lightly prick the base with a fork and rest again in the fridge for another 30 minutes. Line with baking paper or foil and fill with baking beans to bake blind at 160°C for 15 minutes. Remove the beans and paper and put the tin back into the oven to crisp up the bottom for another 15 minutes or until biscuity and pale gold. Brush the bottom of the tart with milk or beaten egg to seal it. Cool.
Lemon filling
5 eggs – 140g caster sugar -150ml double cream – juice of 2 or 3 lemons (about 100ml)
Beat the eggs and the sugar together till the sugar has dissolved then add the cream and the lemon juice. Heat the oven to 160°C. Slowly pour the mixture into the pastry base (Lynne does this in the oven to avoid spills) and bake for 30 minutes or until just set. Carefully trim off any excess pastry. Cool and slice.
If you want a traditional decoration, slice two lemons and poach the slices gently in a sugar syrup (50% water to 50% sugar) till they are soft, then put them around the edges of the tart with one in the centre).
A short postscript note about KLM. We went through merry hell booking our tickets to France as the prices kept rising, so we checked KLM’s partner Air France and were quoted a much cheaper price - in the same seats, on the same KLM plane, on the same day. It definitely pays to shop around. The last quoted (cattle class) KLM return fare for the two of us, Cape Town – Bordeaux, was R73 000 and Air France quoted R24 000. KLM told us no, that is our summer rate, we are full, take it or leave it. So we left it and paid Air France. And, after we booked, we found out that we could have gone through Pick ‘n Pay using our Blue shoppers card and the fare would have been R20 000 plus the added points. The airline food was horrible except that, on the way back, we actually had the first edible airline pudding we have ever had. A light vanilla mousse topped with profiteroles, stuffed with cream and covered in chocolate sauce. At last we can say “Well Done” on one count! And they do keep you topped up with lots of water, juice and snacks throughout the day or night. We love the daytime flight back and would love to fly that way in both directions in future.
The Fourth of July    We hope all our American readers are having a wonderful holiday. We were very pleased to welcome your President last week.
Flat to let  We have a small studio flat in Sea Point that will be available from August 1st.  It is 54 square metres in size, with a large main room, a good kitchen, a dressing room and a bathroom with shower over the bath and loo, so it is quite spacious, has been kept immaculate by the wonderful tenant we have had for four years and is in a very good block, right behind the Winchester Mansions. We renovated it after we bought it. It is only available for a 6 months or longer let (a condition set by the body corporate) and we do require good references. Contact us quickly if you are interested or know someone who is looking.
There is a huge and rapidly growing variety of interesting things to occupy your leisure time here in the Western Cape. There are so many interesting things to do in our world of food and wine that we have made separate list for each month for which we have information. To see what’s happening in our world of food and wine (and a few other cultural events), visit our Events Calendar. It needs updating and we’ll do that tomorrow. All the events are listed in date order and we already have a large number of exciting events to entertain you right through the year.
Learn about wine and cooking We receive a lot of enquiries from people who want to learn more about wine. Cathy Marston and The Cape Wine Academy both run wine education courses, some very serious and others more geared to fun. You can see details of Cathy’s WSET and other courses here and here and the CWA courses here.
Chez Gourmet in Claremont has a programme of cooking classes. We plan to visit their French establishment after Vinexpo. A calendar of their classes can be seen here. Pete Ayub, who makes our very popular Prego sauce, runs evening cooking classes at Sense of Taste, his catering company in Maitland. We can recommend them very highly, having enjoyed his seafood course. Check his programme here. Nadège Lepoittevin-Dasse has cooking classes in Fish Hoek and conducts cooking tours to Normandy. You can see more details here. Emma Freddi runs the Enrica Rocca cooking courses at her home in Constantia. Brett Nussey’s Stir Crazy courses are now being run from Dish Food and Social’s premises in Main Road Observatory (opposite Groote Schuur hospital). Lynn Angel runs the Kitchen Angel cooking school and does private dinners at her home. She holds hands-on cooking classes for small groups on Monday and Wednesday evenings. She trained with Raymond Blanc, and has been a professional chef for 25 years. More info here





4th July 2013
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 and our blogs 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. We own our mailing software and keep our mailing list strictly confidential. If you wish to be added to our mailing list, please click here to send us a message and if you wish to be removed from our mailing list, please click here to send us a message.

Thursday, July 04, 2013

The Graham Beck MCC Experience

A magnum of Cuvee Clive, 2007 Graham Beck’s most prestigious and exclusive vintage Method Cap Classique 81% Chardonnay 19% Pinot Noir
Pieter (Bubbles) Ferriera, Cellarmaster of Graham Beck with journalist Neil Pendock
The media gather in the hall of the Westin Grand for the tasting and lunch, ably organised by Nicolette Waterford who manages Graham Beck’s Public Relations
Chris du Toit, CEO of Graham Beck, welcomed us all
Pieter Ferreira takes us through his excellent selection of MCC bubbles.
and the tasting begins
In search of the perfect bubble
A slide on the warm and cool areas of the Cape Province
Nicolette helps with the pouring of the MCC’s
There were seven to taste
Lots of colour variation
After the tasting we moved to the Executive Club dining room on the 19th floor for lunch, paired with the Graham Beck Methode Cap Classiques.











The chef takes us through his very complicated menu
The small second course of quail salami topped with an interesting soft butter or pate was served with Cuvée Clive 2007, which is full of toffee, brioche and citrus on the nose, is very silky and has good flavours; citrus on the palate shows finesse and some age
The next course was not universally liked. A sharp oyster nage (broth) with some overcooked squid and a strange bready dumpling It was matched with one of our favourite wines, the 2009 Blanc de Blanc with its complex rich bready, slightly perfumed nose, tasting of lemons and limes with long, long lean aftertaste.
A tiny cup of pear sherbet with soft pecans (don’t know where the baked pudding was) was served with the non vintage Brut – the wine most of us drink regularly at home. More brioche, limes, lemons and toffee on the familiar nose with crisp limes on the palate
Another very small (main?) course of Rabbit loin and rabbit chasseur topped with a quenelle of poached and minced langoustine and a rather tough onion and potato stick and pickled mushrooms. The Brut Rosé 2009 has slight smoky notes with a leesy character and shy fruit on the nose, but is full of strawberries and ripe red cherries on the palate. It has nice complexity and shows some age on the end. It just grew and grew in complexity and depth as it stood in the glass.
Guests at the table awaiting more wine and food! Ingrid Jones and Anel Grobler
Ah ha it has arrived, happy faces.
This is the cheese course: a  tiny spoonful of whipped brie with a crisp sago biscuit but, sadly, served on what appeared to be raw burnt carbon, a known carcinogen. Why?  Most of us left it and enjoyed it with the lovely Brut Rosé NV, which smells of spun sugar and fresh strawberries and tastes the same, but is bone dry with a lovely soft mousse and nice complexity. This is an excellent food wine.
Dessert was a lovely soft lemon and rosewater buttermilk pudding.  The chef used to be a pastry chef. They served this with the Bliss Demi sec (slightly sweet) NV. Although this wine has 34 g/l sugar, it is not very sweet and, when put with desserts, has a good crispness that highlights rather than competes with the dessert. Soft sugar and fruit with some violet notes on the nose with a good mousse.








Pieter and Winnie Bowman toast another great round of MCCs

Guy McDonald and Ingrid Jones enjoyed the day
And finally:  the course no one could get enough of – a ganache block of rich chocolate and caramel with a little pinch of salt.
Served with the star of the show: the excellent Cuvée Clive 2007
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2013


Friday, June 28, 2013

130615 Main Ingredient's MENU - Back from Cognac, Vinexpo, Bordeaux, St Émilion & Médoc, Fish soup recipe

MENU
Main Ingredient’s weekly E-Journal
Gourmet Foods & Ingredients
Eat In Guide’s Five time Outstanding Outlet Award Winner
+27 21 439 3169 / +27 83 229 1172
The view from our B&B at Cherac
In this week’s MENU:                                                              
*       Flying from Cape Town to Bordeaux
*       Chérac and Cognac
*       Ile d’Oléron
*       La Rochelle
Bordeaux, here we come   This week’s MENU has a different format. We are back from France and thought you would like to hear some of what we did while there. Most of it is links to blogs, where we will let the pictures tell the story. Click on the links to see it or just catch them at www.adamastorbacchus.blogspot.com or follow us on Twitter, @mainingmenu
On Sunday night 9th of June, we flew out of Cape Town to Bordeaux, via a short stopover at Schipol airport, Amsterdam. It was very tiring; the seats were extremely uncomfortable in the Boeing 777, better in the smaller second-leg plane. We picked up our hire car, a diesel Renault Kangoo estate. Highly recommended, it was in the cheapest category - an up-specced van - and had loads of space and all the mod cons we needed: a TomTom (invaluable for finding new places) cruise control, air conditioning, very comfortable seats and it was amazingly quiet and very economical. Diesel in France is cheaper than petrol at about €1.27 a litre. We just had to get used to using a clutch again. We had a two hour drive through lovely green countryside with roses everywhere and arrived at about 7.30 at our first B&B, 2 Route du Puits des Brousses in Cherac with hosts Claudy and Alain Caillaud, between the towns of Saintes and Cognac. After supper in a local restaurant, we retired to a much needed bed after being up for more than 37 hours as neither of us could do more than doze on the plane. See more here.
Cognac   Next day, we drove down the road to a small local producer of Cognac and Pineau des Charentes, a sweet fortified wine. After a tasting, we drove through to Cognac, where we visited a couple of markets. The quality of the produce is so much better than anything we see. Everything is fresh and immaculately presented. More here.
Then the highlight of our day, a visit to Cognac producer H.Mounier, where we were privileged to have a detailed tour of the establishment and to taste some very old and special cognacs from the barrel. They have three websites: www.hmounier.fr  www.polignac.fr   www.reynac.fr . Then via a brief look at Remy Martin, back to Cherac for an al fresco supper of delicious things we bought in the markets.
Saintes is a very pretty town on the River Charente. We visited a very innovative small negociant who buys cognacs of different ages from small producers, bottles and markets them. Guilhem Grosperrin took over his father’s business ten years ago, when he was 23. His father had multiple sclerosis and the business was failing. He is very entrepreneurial and has revived and grown the business. We tasted some superb single vineyard, varietal and very old cognacs. More here.
After this visit, we drove west to the Ile D’Oleron, a largish island linked by a causeway to the mainland where we planned to have a real holiday. More here.
Next day, we explored more of the island and you can see what we saw here.
One day we drove to La Rochelle, an ancient town about an hour to the north, which John visited in 1971. We knew that prices in the restaurants round the harbour would be scary – they were – so Lynne made baguette sandwiches for us, which we enjoyed with a beer on the harbour’s edge. After a few hours’ walking round La Rochelle, we returned for a long walk on the beach on the Atlantic side of the island. Pictures here.
Internet access was sporadic in Oléron and in Cherac, we were able to receive emails, but had difficulty in sending them, so we apologise for any lack of response while we were away. We wanted to send the first part of this edition of MENU, but our mailing software is linked to our South African mail service so, unless you saw it when we posted it as a blog, you’re getting it now.
On Sunday we headed back to Bordeaux, quite early, to be at the start of Vinexpo, which lasted five days. And wonderful, exhausting days they were, walking several miles every day to taste some superb, some OK and frankly just a few really shocking wines. We sampled wines, champagnes and cognacs from France, wines from all over Europe, North and South America, New Zealand and one from Australia (who did not have official representation), and some South African. Our conclusion: You do need to taste wines from all over the world to get wine into perspective but we know that we produce really good wines in South Africa and this visit confirmed it.
Following Vinexpo we had three further days in Bordeaux of which we took one day to motor to St Émilion and the next up to the Médoc and taste some wines there. It has not been a good start to summer in the areas we visited and we experienced a very damp, cold and wet France. We had exactly one and a half days of sunshine and we feel for them. As we left we saw that the rivers have started to flood: the Loire, the Gironde and Dordogne. They were extremely full with all the heavy rain we have had. Another issue was the prices which for South Africans are heavy at R13.40 to the Euro. We only had one dinner and three lunches out, the food at the level we could afford was not great and in fact the best surprise was a simple lunch in a place we thought would be a terrible rip-off, and that was in St Émilion. The supermarkets and street markets are amazing – if only we could have that level of freshness and quality, and it was universal. Gleaming tomatoes, superb vegetables and seasonal fruit, gorgeous cheeses and patés, super fresh fish with shining eyes and seafood displays to amaze and excite. We bought sparingly but we did sample as much of it as we could. Lynne cooked at home after the first few days, as we needed real food. Although the cheeses and charcuterie are fantastic, you can overdose on bread and pastries and one needs freshly cooked, hot food, vegetables and salads. We were saddened to see the results of the recession with so many shops closed and boarded up, even local bakers in Bordeaux seem to have disappeared and the rise of the dreaded Pizza place and hamburger joint can be seen everywhere.
We do have a recommendation. We booked our accommodation mainly through Booking.com and they are worldwide. The descriptions are very detailed and mostly very accurate and they back them up with lots of reviews. We had a sensational apartment in the historic centre of Bordeaux, in the square with the original Cathedral. It was booked through Homelidays. It was spacious and comfortable and we even had a terrace and a garden full of flowers and birds; we just didn’t have the weather to take full advantage of it, sadly. It belongs to an advocate whose chambers are next door, so we had access to her wifi. We can give you her details if we need them. We paid less that we would have had to pay for an inferior hotel at “exhibition prices”. The difficult part about Bordeaux is the parking. It is all either pay or residential so you have to be out of it by 9 every morning and only back after 7 pm unless you want to pay a Euro per half an hour. Only on Sundays is it free.
This week’s recipe is a classic fish soup we had while on Ile d’Oléron. Lovely for this cold time of year, this is a substantial main course. It looks like a fiddle to make but actually once you have all the ingredients assembled, it is not. The shellfish trimmings and the alcohol are not essential but they do add lots of extra flavour. Next time you are peeling prawns or eating crayfish or crab, freeze the shells
French Fish Soup
5 T olive oil - 3 onions - 3 leeks - 1 fennel bulb – 1 stick of celery – 3 garlic cloves – 500g ripe jam tomatoes or a tin of chopped tomatoes - ¼ t fennel seed - a good pinch saffron, soaked in 2 T warm water - a 3cm wide strip orange peel - 1 T tomato purée - 8 black peppercorns - 1kg fish trimmings and bones, including heads (use white, not oily or smoked fish) - shellfish trimmings such as prawn shells, or crayfish shells (we freeze ours for soup) - 450g skinless white fish fillets (such as hake, monkfish, yellowtail, angelfish, kob, gurnard), cut into chunks (you can mix the fish) – 1 tot of Pernod, Ricard or brandy
Rouille
3 garlic cloves, roughly chopped - 2 egg yolks - ½ tsp cayenne pepper - 150ml olive oil - 4 tsp tomato purée - lemon juice
Grated Gruyère cheese – French baguette slices, toasted
In a frying pan, fry your shellfish trimmings in some olive oil till they are beginning to take on colour and they start to give off a lovely caramelised smell. Chop up all the vegetables and, in a large heavy-based pan, fry them gently in the olive oil until they are soft but not coloured. Then add the garlic and the tomatoes and simmer for 10 minutes or until the tomatoes are soft. Add the fennel, saffron, orange zest, tomato puree, pepper and fish bones and trimmings and shellfish trimmings. Add 2 litres of water and bring to a boil. Let this simmer gently for 45 minutes, stirring often.
Strain off the liquid through a fine sieve, pressing the bones and vegetables well to extract the maximum flavour. Discard the solids. Bring the fish liquid to a simmer and poach the fish fillets in it for about four minutes. Add the tot of Pernod and then blitz the soup in a blender and season to taste.
For the Rouille: In a blender blitz the garlic with the yolks and the cayenne then add the oil drop by drop until you have a garlic mayonnaise consistency. Add the tomato puree and then lemon juice to taste then season. You can cheat and use good ready-made mayonnaise to which you add the garlic, tomato puree, cayenne and lemon
Serve the soup hot with toasted French bread slices topped with rouille and gruyère which you then float in the soup.
There is a huge and rapidly growing variety of interesting things to occupy your leisure time here in the Western Cape. There are so many interesting things to do in our world of food and wine that we have made separate list for each month for which we have information. To see what’s happening in our world of food and wine (and a few other cultural events), visit our Events Calendar. It needs updating and we’ll do that tomorrow. All the events are listed in date order and we already have a large number of exciting events to entertain you right through the year.
Learn about wine and cooking We receive a lot of enquiries from people who want to learn more about wine. Cathy Marston and The Cape Wine Academy both run wine education courses, some very serious and others more geared to fun. You can see details of Cathy’s WSET and other courses here and here and the CWA courses here.
Chez Gourmet in Claremont has a programme of cooking classes. We plan to visit their French establishment after Vinexpo. A calendar of their classes can be seen here. Pete Ayub, who makes our very popular Prego sauce, runs evening cooking classes at Sense of Taste, his catering company in Maitland. We can recommend them very highly, having enjoyed his seafood course. Check his programme here. Nadège Lepoittevin-Dasse has cooking classes in Fish Hoek and conducts cooking tours to Normandy. You can see more details here. Emma Freddi runs the Enrica Rocca cooking courses at her home in Constantia. Brett Nussey’s Stir Crazy courses are now being run from Dish Food and Social’s premises in Main Road Observatory (opposite Groote Schuur hospital). Lynn Angel runs the Kitchen Angel cooking school and does private dinners at her home. She holds hands-on cooking classes for small groups on Monday and Wednesday evenings. She trained with Raymond Blanc, and has been a professional chef for 25 years. More info here





27th June 2013
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 and our blogs 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. We own our mailing software and keep our mailing list strictly confidential. If you wish to be added to our mailing list, please click here to send us a message and if you wish to be removed from our mailing list, please click here to send us a message.