Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Dinner at The White Room at Dear Me

On Friday night, we visited The White Room at Dear Me, having been invited to taste the Five Course food and wine pairing menu at this Cape Town restaurant, which has just been placed in the Eat Out top 20 list of best restaurants in South Africa, and is nominated for a place in the top 10. The timing couldn't have been better
Chef Vanessa Marx is over the moon with joy at her nomination and, having tasted the food, we think she deserves it. Two of her dishes really intrigued, amazed and delighted us.
The two tasting menus. We decided to share the menu and, where there were two alternative dishes, we had one of each and swapped plates and glasses during the meal. This is not ideal, as the tasting portions of wine come early on and your partner watches as you demolish your share before the food arrives!
It is a very white room, peaceful and serene
First, a bread board with parsley pesto, sundried tomato pesto, butter and pink salt with good bread. We also received an amuse of tiny deep fried rice balls (Suppli) with mayonnaise, but we ate them before we remembered we needed a picture. It happens

Starter No.1:  a fresh ceviche of kabeljou, dressed with lime, chilli and sesame seeds, sprouts and a dash or two of lime mayonnaise. It was the perfect match for the Colmant Brut Reserve NV MCC, highlighting all its wonderful flavours
Starter No.2: A very thin slice of pork terrine ‘mosaic’. It was delicious, but we could have demolished half an inch in depth!  The orange segments and the crispy pieces of pork were great accompaniments, but we don’t like vanilla with meat; we find it very cloying. It is easy to avoid on the plate. The matching wine, Thorne and Daughters Rocking Horse Cape White 2013 was a new wine for us. It’s a blend of Roussanne, Chardonnay, Semillon and Chenin blanc from different vineyards in the Western Cape and is in the oxidised style which we think works with food, but not without. They are negociants
This was the dish of the day, week and month for Lynne. It took a while to get one’s head around the combinations, but when you did, the penny dropped and all the band started to play. It was like being Peter Rabbit in Mr McGregor’s vegetable garden, demolishing all his baby vegetables. You start with tiny spring vegetables, perfectly cooked, so they are still sweet. Then you encounter the cocoa and truffle crunchy ‘soil’, initially sweet and chocolatey until the earthy truffle kicks in. And then there is the pond of fresh courgette, pea and mint veloute. Different textures, different tastes all came together perfectly. The CWG Cederberg Semillon 2010 could not have been a better match; full, elegant and crisply lime, it highlighted the dish.
Yes, we did eat the next course and enjoyed the pea and herb risotto very much, especially with the earthy Crystallum Pinot noir 2009. We cannot always “Bant” at good restaurants
Main Course No.1: S’Kaap tjoppie (Cape lamb chop) with a rich jus and some interesting vegetable chips, mushrooms and cream sauce. The Thelema The Mint Cabernet Sauvignon 2011 was as smooth as silk and the intense fruit really brought out the best in the meat and added some mint!
Main Course No.2: Poached trout in a weak broth with seaweed and shiitake mushrooms. This was served with a rather sweet draught Hakutsuru Sake
Vanessa visits each table with the dessert. We had a long chat with her about her food and the awards. She has had this special light box made to shine through the whole honeycomb which is then melted and poured warm over the dessert.
A very innovative way to present pure honey
That dessert! So special, so unexpected and so delicious. Caciotta cheese panna cotta with no sugar added was more of a nearly set puddle of light cheese cream on the plate. It is sprinkled with roasted sunflower seeds; freeze dried raspberries which add piquancy and perfume; and crushed ‘honeycomb’. The warm honey from the comb is then poured over it. It gives you a mouthful of so many different textures and flavours and temperatures and is wonderful. Picture before the honey is added
After the honey. It was served with the D’Aria Lullaby 2013, a NLH made from Semillon with an RS of 145 gm/l. Its honeyed flavours well matched the dessert. We do need to compliment the Sommelier Joseph Dafana, who put these matches together with the food. He will be a huge loss to the White room as he is joining the new La Colombe. Someone whose career we will watch with interest
The White Room and Dear Me will be found at 165 Longmarket St, Cape Town
Phone:  021 422 4920
Text and Photographs © John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

Lunch at Mariana's, Stanford

After our visit to the Elim Festival, we spent the night at a friend’s daughter’s holiday house in De Kelders, where we had a lovely relaxing evening and morning, reading papers and our books, cooking huge prawns for supper, watching whales and poachers, getting some sun while doing the crossword and then it was time to head over to Stanford, where we had managed to get a reservation for lunch. We have not been for several years, as this small restaurant is amazingly popular (deservedly so) and bookings are hard to get. We were warmly welcomed by Peter Esterhuizen and given a lovely table outside on the vine-covered terrace, facing Mariana’s legendary vegetable garden. Then came the wonderful food.
A whale in the bay with its calf
Chilling with the Sunday Times crossword
The entrance on Du Toit Street, Stanford
The impressive vegetable garden, flanked by mulberry trees laden with fruit and birds
The stoep
Overflow seating in the garden
Our table for (most of) lunch
Chef Mariana bringing fresh herbs to her kitchen
The lunch menu. It is fresh, real food and there is something for everyone. We loved the literal - Peter had not noticed that he had written Waterblop soup instead of waterblom.
Peter explains the food
and takes our orders
We took wine from our cellars. The first bottle was an excellent Oak Valley 2011 Sauvignon blanc, which was followed by one of Lourens van der Westhuisen’s magnificent 2011 Barrel-fermented Chardonnays
Then, from our cellar, a magnificent 2001 Malbec from Fairview. A bit of sediment, but glorious fruit
The cork broke on removal so it had to be strained and presented in a jug. Lovely aromas, no faults and its flavour lasted in the jug
The very beautiful broad bean quiche
We shared two starters. The first was the Stanford starter: Dolmades, good salami, olives and fresh-from-the-garden broad bean humus
The second was the savoury and rich Springbok Rillette served with seed bread and cucumber pickle
The Waterblom soup with a breadstick
Rows of broad beans and beans in the garden with the mountains in the distance
Tempting broad beans
And lovely lettuces interplanted with what looks like tarragon and a rouge arum
Their house is the other side of the garden
Umbrellas up under the pergola as rain was expected
A wheelbarrow planting
Lynne having a laugh at the weather. What was supposed to be a forecasted minute of rain turned into rather a long and heavy thunderstorm. We didn’t mind at all
Main courses arriving. Confit duck for John on a bed of carrots and grains, a broad bean salad and some preserved kumquats
Perfectly cooked trout with waterblom, braised leeks and new potatoes
The cheese roulade stuffed with spinach with oven baked tomatoes
Lynne had the simmered lamb shoulder with a great green pesto, fresh beetroot, white butter beans and roasted tomatoes
The rain made it impossible to stay outside, so we moved, with nearly everyone else, inside
The chef, Mariana Esterhuizen, who is the heart of the establishment, came to see if we were enjoying ourselves. We were
There was one table who braved the elements on the stoep. It was cosy inside, but all were having a good time
Rabbit décor
The garden in the rain
An important notice at the front door
Um, I thought that said "no dogs"? A cute Boston terrier puppy, carried in a bag by a young customer. Maybe she was too small to count
Dessert choices
Mulberry season in the garden
enjoyed by an olive thrush
“We really don’t mind the rain”
Welcome shelter from an early summer storm
Of course, John had the chocolate "Chocup"! Rich, warm and gooey, served with marmalade and almond Langue de chat biscuits
Ronnie could not resist the Doodskoot (lit. translation Dead shot) Double Espresso, served with a shot of local grappa and some homemade vanilla ice cream with almond cantuccini biscuits
It’s so rare to see Mulberries on the menu, so Lynne and Loraine had to have the Mulberry Trio. Dark and intense mulberry sorbet, a mulberry marshmallow and a tiny mulberry tart with superbly crisp pastry. A superb lunch
The sun came out and all was fresh and new
We will definitely be back. This is the food that all the top chefs are trying to achieve
Text and Photographs © John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014