Monday, April 07, 2014

Taste of Cape Town opening night

We all met at the entrance gate and bought our vouchers to exchange for dishes and drinks. No one knew why they were called "crowns" and have now been renamed "scoins". Everyone was wrapped up well as the April weather was a trifle chilly
There were enormous oysters to taste
Many more wine farms than before made it easy to enjoy tasting wine. Paardenkloof was a new label for us. They had very enthusiastic promoters who did not seem to know much about wine
There were good incentives to taste bubbly (a feminine point of view!)
and this bubbly from Domaine des Dieux in the Hemel and Aarde was very good
A new development this year was a large craft brewery stand with local and imported beers
Many people preferred to stick with brands and food they knew
We received a very warm welcome on the Waterford stand and tasted some lovely wine there
Some farms had paired their wines with chocolate tastings and even jam
like Whalehaven
who had friendly staff to pour for us
The lovely ladies on the Ken Forrester stand also gave us stunners to taste and drink with our food...
... as Ken and Allan Forresters Restaurant, 96 Winery Road, the first Pop Up restaurant on Thursday, was our first port of call
Our first taste was the 2 pan fried prawns with pea purée, mushrooms and apple cured bacon. Good flavours but a small portion
Next we chapped to Kit Austin and his mother from Noble Hill whose restaurant, Cosecha, had an interesting Mexican flavoured menu
This is their Huevos Rancheros dish, which was one of the 8 vegetarian dishes available at the festival
Sun International had a very large stand with different dishes and drinks being prepared on all four corners
These were some of the choices you could order

The Pick ‘n Pay Sponsors’ Chefs’ Theatre had shows you could book for and attend
Andi Foulkes’ Dish Food & Social had Lamb pies to delight
They were very busy all through the show days and worked incredibly hard
Interesting Argentine dishes
Dulche de Leche is condensed milk, often caramelised
and we ate a plate of paella. But we did wish she wouldn’t have kept stirring
Friendly smiles and staff and good wine from Paul Francisand Keelyn Gibbons at Morgenster
Next we stopped at Camissa, the hotel restaurant at the Table Bay 
and shared a plate of the herb coated lamb cutlets,
Sitting down to eat at this festival is always a treat as mostly you have to stand. We then learned from a friend that they also had crayfish curry which was not on the menu, so Lynne went to get some
Justine Drake, one of the organisers of the festival, seen at the Table Bay stand
And their sommelier, Byron Krynauw, gave us tastes of the hotel’s own label wines
The lamb cutlets on a pea puree with a polenta cake
Our next visit was a treat – the Lindt stand - to which we returned later for a warming cup of hot chocolate and bought some bars of Lindt chocolates with our remaining scoins
The staff were making bon bons on the stand and we tasted some. They were delicious
A view of the tents and marquees
We were fascinated by the Big Green Egg ceramic cookers, presented by Thomas Hancock, the importer. Somewhere between a Weber braai and a pizza oven, these charcoal fired babies can get up to 1400°C, if you know what you are doing. You can do meat and fish, tandoori, pizzas, bread and other barbecue food. We have twice seen Chef Bertus Basson use one at functions and tasted the delicious result
Next - to Azure restaurant at the Twelve Apostles Hotel for a dish of rich char sui glazed pork belly
This was, at last, a lovely good sized portion. It was also on a pea puree, obviously the most in fashion accompaniment of the festival, along with the dreaded polenta (we have never been huge fans of any form of mieliepap
Neil Grant, owner of Burrata restaurant at the Biscuit Mill, the second Pop-Up restaurant on Thursday entertained us on his scooter and gave us a very generous helping of their wonderful burrata mozzarella
Another fairly minimalist dish we bought turned out to be one tempura prawn for 7 scoins, a bit expensive
And we so enjoyed this slice of chocolate cake from Burrata
A good friend is Shelley Sandell, owner of Tierhoek wines in the Cederberg, who was showcasing her wines at the festival alongside her sister-in-law Carol Mills, who had her Limoncello on show
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© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

Thursday, April 03, 2014

140403 Main Ingredient's MENU - Lunch in Gordon’s Bay, John’s Wine Tours, Thelema trade day, Farewell Supper Party,La Boheme, Pork belly

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A gemsbok (Oryx gazella) at Groote Post, Darling Hills
In this week’s MENU:
* Lunch in Gordon’s Bay
* John’s Wine Tours
* Thelema trade day
* Farewell Supper Party
* La Boheme
* Pork belly
This week’s Product menu - The weather seems to be changing rapidly into winter, missing out our short Autumn. So menu thoughts are turning towards more substantial dishes.  We stock several different rices and they can all be used as the base of some amazing rib sticking food. There are creamy Violone Nano and Carnaroli rices from Italy for risotto or suppli balls, Bomba rice from Spain for the perfect paella and black rice from the East.
If you can find it in the supermarket, we don't usually stock it, just the products you would struggle to find.... Check our online shop to see more details and prices.
Lunch in Gordon’s Bay     We took our visiting Dutch friends through to Somerset West to have morning tea with a favourite aunt and decided to go and have some lunch afterwards.  We had recommendations from friends in the area for good places to go and we ended up in the harbour at Gordon’s Bay, as it was a really beautifully sunny day and we like good views with our lunch. The original destination was called The Tavern, but has been renamed and was full of smokers. It was a bit dark, grimy and pub-like, with not many people eating, so we fled the smoke for a very clean and quite clinical looking place, also in the harbour called, appropriately, Harbour Lights. It was purchased a couple of years ago by a South African Italian who runs it. They have a very casual fish and chip take away/cafe downstairs, but we wanted a table and some wine so headed upstairs. The menu  is a little limited and even a little bit scary, as the prices are rather high, even for seafood, but it turned out that they had a seafood stew special for R165. Each dish was topped with 2 crayfish tails and we all plumped for this. Redolent of garlic and a little chilli and cooked by their two Angolan chefs, we enjoyed it very much. We had a good view of the harbour and a bottle of Sophie Te’blanche and might just return there one day. See it here
John’s Wine Tours     John runs extremely personalised wine tours, goes to places the normal public would never get. His clients get to meet people normally in the background like the winemakers and owners and gets to taste wines unavailable to most visitors, often from tanks and barrels in the cellar. He is ably assisted in this by our many friends in the wine industry who really push the boat out for him and his tour clients. Last Friday, a repeat booking, he took an American client who had previously joined him on a  tour and wanted to go somewhere different. She was on the cruise liner Crystal Serenity with her husband for a round the world tour. They brought along two fellow passengers. This is what they did. A big tranche of gratitude is due to all the wonderful people of Darling whose generosity made this tour so successful.
Thelema trade day     This was held at Dear Me restaurant in Longmarket Street on Tuesday 1st of April and we tasted through the entire range of Thelema and Sutherland wines. They have some absolute crackers and you will be sorry if you don’t source some of them soon before they sell out. The Thelema 2012 Chardonnay is already sold out although there may be some in good wine shops and you will certainly find in on good wine lists at good restaurants. We think the Thelema Shiraz may well win awards, the Merlot 2010 is probably the best Merlot  we have tasted this year, soft, fruity, no stalky green notes, and no lactic either. The Thelema Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 is an absolute classic, full of all the forest floor and dark berries one expects.  The Mint Cabernet is also one to try, different and good with food we think, lots of chocolate and mint flavours.. The Sutherland Viognier Roussanne is excellent, the Sauvignon Blanc  a lovely example of what Elgin grapes can do. There are Rieslings from Thelema and Sutherland. Both are very good, but the Thelema 2011 showed a little more terpene on the nose than the Sutherland - perhaps because it comes from a warmer area, although the 2009 Thelema we tasted a little later had less terpene than the 2011. Pictures of the tasting are here
Farewell Supper Party     Last Sunday, we gave a small supper for our friends who departing to Holland after a month’s holiday here and their local relatives. Lynne made Snoek pâté, braised pork belly, duck fat roast potatoes, roasted Mediterranean vegetables and a raspberry jelly. No one was driving. Taxis had been arranged, so we pushed the boat out as far as wine was concerned. Our welcome drink was L’Ormarins Blanc de Blanc MCC. We had some delicious 2010 Cape Point Reserve Sauvignon Blanc with the fish pâté served with crudités, and two bottles of 2009 Beaumont Shiraz Mourvedre. We opened a bottle of Nuy White Muscadel 2006 with the dessert, a variation of Lynne’s red raspberry jelly, made this time with a bottle of Laborie’s Lazy Days Rosé, and then we moved on to Italian Gorgonzola, so some port had to be found. As the first bottle of Overgaauw 1998 was judged a little dry, we put that aside for a soon to be cooked venison in port recipe we love and opened a Landskroon 1995. Then it was time for coffee and we broached the new bottle of Laborie Alambic brandy we bought on our stay there last week. It was a lively party, not too inebriated as people were doing small portions, but it is so nice to be able to do this once in a while and not worry about people driving. We took a few photographs
La Boheme     Our friends wanted to make sure they had a good supper before the flight back to Europe on Monday, so we suggested one of our favourite haunts - La Boheme in Sea Point’s Main Road. We had a good early evening meal and then it was time to head for the airport.  Click here to see what we ate.
This week’s recipe     Lynne thought you might like her recipe for the Braised Pork Belly.  She has adapted this over the years from Ruben Riffles recipe in his cookbook Reuben Cooks (credit and respect where credit is due) and it works every time.
Ruben only used 500g of pork which feeds two, Lynne usually doubles or even quadruples the quantity of meat for a dinner party. She finds that the quantities of the marinade/cooking liquids work for up to 1 kg of pork; if you increase it, then adjust the liquid quantities accordingly.
1 kg Pork Belly, preferably pre- boned - 2 cups chicken stock – zest of one orange – juice of 1 orange – 1 cup of light soya sauce – 3 cm piece of fresh ginger, finely grated or chopped – 1 whole, but broken star anise – 1 x 5cm cinnamon stick, broken in 2 or 3 pieces – ½ cup sugar
Mix up all the ingredients. Put the pork, skin side up, into a deep roasting pan or dish which is quite a good fit, with just a little space around the pork. Pour over the marinade and cover with foil.  Roast in the oven for 4 hours at 160°C. Inspect every hour or so and make sure it does not dry out. Just add a little water to keep the cooking  juices liquid if you see them drying out. You need them for a sauce later.
Remove from the oven and if there are any bones in the pork, remove them carefully now. Then replace the pork in the pan with the sauce, recover with foil and place a brick or any other heavy object that nearly covers the pan on top. Lynne uses a large plastic container filled with water.  Leave in the fridge for 3 hours or until completely cool. Or overnight. Skim off any fat on top. Carefully remove the skin. Transfer the meat into a serving dish, pour on the sauce and reheat in the oven until hot. Then serve.
You can try to make crackling with the skin.
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. 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, then you pay and then we deliver or post. 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. Click here to see our OnLine Shop.
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. 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. Events outside the Western Cape are listed here.
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. Karen Glanfield has taken over the UnWined wine appreciation courses from Cathy. See the details here
Chez Gourmet in Claremont has a programme of cooking classes. A calendar of their classes can be seen 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





26th March 2014
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 online shop 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 and standard 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.

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Supper at La Boheme


Our friends wanted to make sure they had a good supper before the flight back to Europe on Monday so we suggested one of our favourite haunts La Boheme in Sea Point Main Road. We had a good early evening meal and then it was time to head for the airport.
Succulent Duck confit leg on spinach with cubed sweet potato and two duck wontons. Perfect if you are on a Banting diet – just give the wontons away to someone who isn’t
Kingklip in a good sauce on dauphinoise potatoes
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014


Lunch in Gordon's Bay

We took our visiting Dutch friends through to Somerset West to have morning tea with a favourite aunt and decided to go and have some lunch afterwards.  We had recommendations from friends in the area for good places to go and we ended up in the harbour at Gordon’s Bay, as it was a really beautifully sunny day and we like good views with our lunch. The original destination was called The Tavern, but it has been renamed and was full of smokers. It was a bit dark, grimy and pub-like, with not many people eating, so we fled the smoke for a very clean and quite clinical looking place, also in the harbour called, appropriately, Harbour Lights. It was purchased a couple of years ago by a South African Italian who runs it. They have a very casual fish and chip take away/cafe downstairs, but we wanted a table and some wine so headed upstairs. The menu  is a little limited and even a little bit scary, as the prices are rather high, even for seafood, but it turned out that they had a seafood stew special for R165. Each dish was topped with 2 crayfish tails and we all plumped for this. Redolent of garlic and a little chilli and cooked by their two Angolan chefs, we enjoyed it very much. We had a good view of the harbour and a bottle of Sophie Te’blanche and might just return there one day. The restaurant is bright and airy, clean and neat
With lovely views of the yacht harbour and the coast beyond.  The sun shaded doors slide open for more fresh air
Our seafood ‘stew” consisted of mussels, fish, prawns, calamari and two crayfish tails each. Lots of garlic, a little chilli and fresh herbs
A view from the harbour
The owner treated us to a dessert of torta, a light Italian sponge cake topped with chocolate and sandwiched with crème patisserie and fresh fruit.
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

A Farewell Supper Party

The table laid with suitable glasses for the wines to be served
Long and slow braised pork, served in its cooking sauce
Duck fat roast potatoes with an outer shell as crisp as glass
A medley of roasted vegetables. Lynne always roasts them whole, drizzled with olive oil and strewn with fresh herbs, then slices them and deglazes the pan with a little more olive oil and a small amount of wine vinegar, which makes a good dressing for them.
Clockwise from 12 o’clock are butternut, aubergine, sweet potato and whole roasted garlic, red onion cut like a flower, red pepper, carrots, courgettes and another aubergine
Guests helping themselves
  and enjoying the meal
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

A tour to Darling

We'd made appointments with Ormonde, Charles Withington in his lovely Darling Wine Shop and Groote Post. Leaving the harbour at about 9 am, we reached Ormonde about an hour later. Zia du Toit, the marketing manager met us and introduced us to Adré Rheeder who took us into the vienyards.

Ormonde General Manager Adré Rheeder talks about the terroir of the farm
We tasted the Alexanderfontein, Ondine and Ormonde wines with chocolates made to suit the wines 
Marketing Manager Zia du Toit led the tasting
After this great experience, we paid a visit to Charles Withington
at the Darling Wine Shop
who gave us some of his own wines to taste and his 7 year old potstill brandy. 
From there, we moved to Groote Post for lunch at Hilda's Kitchen in the old Groote Post manor house
A starter plate of Darling charcuterie
Salmon trout salad
Mushroom quiche, another choice as starter
A seafood pie, made with kingklip, mussels and calamari
The Old Man's steak roll served with garlic crème and hand cut chips was chosen by two of us. It was so good that John tucked in before he remembered to take a picture. It was delicious, the meat being well-matured, full-flavoured and very tender, served medium rare

After lunch, we moved to the winery for a tasting with Wimpie Borman. As we walked in, we were surprised to see Lukas Wentzel, the winemaker. As it was mid-harvest, we did not expect to see him, but he interrupted his busy schedule to give us a taste of the fermenting semillon and sauvignon blanc from the tank,
after which Wimpie led us through the range of Groote Post wines
Groote Post is not only a wine farm. Peter Pentz, the owner, is a dairy farmer who also grows wine with his son Nicholas. A large part of the farm is a nature conservancy, with a good number of animals living in a natural environment. Wimpie took is in their safari vehicle 
for a tour of the farm
They have a breeding herd of quagga. These are  a subspecies of the Plains Zebra (Equus Quagga) which does not have stripes on its rear quarters. It became extinct through excessive hunting in the 19th century. It is being revived through selective breeding and there is a small herd on Groote Post
as well as other animals such as eland, wildebeest, springbok and oryx
After the tour, we hit the road for Cape Town harbour and the ship, with a cheery farewell from Nick Pentz and Lukas Wentzel
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

Thelema wine trade tasting at Dear Me


This was held at Dear Me restaurant in Longmarket Street on Tuesday, 1st April and we tasted through the entire range of Sutherland and Thelema wines. They have some absolute crackers and you will be if you don’t source some of them soon before they sell out. The Thelema 2012 Chardonnay is already sold out although there may be some in good wine shops and you will certainly find in on good wine lists at good restaurants. We think the Thelema Shiraz may well win awards; the Merlot 2010 is probably the best Merlot  we have tasted this year, soft, fruity, with no stalky green notes, and no lactic either. The Thelema Cabernet Sauvigon 2009 is an absolute classic, full of all the forest floor and dark berries one expects. The Mint Cabernet is also one to try, different and good with food, we think, lots of chocolate and mint flavours.. The mint is a characteristic we have always found in Thelema cabs. The Sutherland Viogner Roussanne is excellent, the Sauvignon Blanc a lovely example of what Elgin grapes can do. 
The interior of the restaurant
Welcomed by a glass of a Thelema classic - their 1994 Blanc de Blanc MCC. We had a good bottle, very rich and full of elegant notes of citrus
The trade loves tasting and discussing wine
The Thelema Sutherland wines are distributed by John Collins, seen here with Kyle Martin, one of his representatives
Marketing man Thomas Webb  and Diaan van Zyl
Amanda Visser  wearing the Thelema symbol of the phoenix rising from the fire
Thelema owner and cellarmaster Giles Webb
A stairway to madness?
The menu for Dear Me, photographed by the door under streetlights
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014