Tuesday, June 16, 2015

The launch of Perdeberg Winery’s new barrel cellar

We returned to work this week in time to take up our invitation to Perdeberg for the launch of their new Barrel cellar, with lunch. We have always loved their wines, especially their Chenin Blancs and we sold cases of them when we had our shop, Main Ingredient, so we knew we were in for a good day. They had organised a bus to take us out to the farm from town, for which we are always grateful, as tasting wine all day and then driving home means John cannot enjoy the day as much as he would like
The new Barrel cellar
Filled with lots of barrels of wine maturing and a table set for the lunch
We assembled in the tasting room waiting for others to arrive, enjoying some coffee and, for some of us, a glass of the Dry Land Chenin Blanc
Then we climbed back into the bus and drove to Eenzaamheid farm (it means solitude) which is one of the oldest farms in South Africa. Founded in 1692 and given by Adam Tas to his sister Sarah. It is currently owned by Christo Briers-Louw, whose family has owned the land since 1775. This is where the Dry Land Bush vine Chenin is grown
Happy travellers and lots of interesting discussions on the bus
It is a classic Cape Dutch farmhouse
We were welcomed by Gerhard van der Watt CEO of Perdeberg and PRO Karey Evett
and with a good glass of Perdeberg's 2009 Brut Reserve MCC, made from Chenin Blanc
Served with some large fresh oysters and some smoked salmon canapés
Christo Briers-Louw and his wife Marietjie with Gerhard van der Watt. He told us some of the history of the farm. Their Chenin vines were planted in 1977 and are the oldest in the Dry Land and the MCC they have 150 hectares of vines, 60 of which are Chenin Blanc. They also have a 15 hectare nature reserve for the Geometric tortoise
Viticulturist Heinie Nel told us about the growing conditions in the area. The old vines grow on deep soils with good stored moisture. It is a hot area getting up into the high 40s during the growing season but every afternoon they have cooling constant South Westerly winds which bring the temperature down to 30 degrees allowing slower ripening, more concentration and higher quality., the vine are not stressed and the grapes can be left for later harvesting. the quality of the grapes is the pruning of the bush vines t give a lower crop is also very important, as a cover crop which reduces the need for unnecessary chemicals
On the terrace listening to Heinie. Perdeberg converted from a Co-op in 2012 to a Company, marketing lead rather than just a production outlet. They have 3,000 hectares and are aiming for premium brands internationally. They are obsessed with quality. They have quite a wide supply base in the Paarl area and 38% from the Swartland. There is a gap in the overseas market and there is also a growing excitement overseas about our Chenins. Perdeberg is beginning to win prestigious local and overseas awards including a Decanter Gold and the International Trophy for Chenin
Then it was time for a tasting of some of the wines: The Waka Waka white blend; SAAM 2014 blend of Chenin and Muscat de Alexandrie; Perdeberg Chenin 2015; SAAM 2014 Chenin and the Perdeberg Vineyards 2014 Chenin. Lynne has written on her notes for this last wine BUY! and we did and took a case home
It was pleasant enough weather for the tasting to be held outdoors
We were joined by celebrity chef Jenny Morris, who has become an ambassador for Perdeberg
Cellarmaster Albertus Louw talked us through the tasting
Afterwards, we had some canapés." Smoked oysters on cream cheese mousse, and mushroom paté on small polenta cakes
Smoked salmon and smoked chicken with cucumber
The spread
Some of their past awards and trophies
A collection of writers, all taking notes
Two of the wines we tasted. Pairs of bottles were positioned along the table
Jenny Morris
Michael Fridjhon
Jenny Morris and her husband David examining the bottles
We then returned to Perdeberg for lunch and a glass of bubbly was waiting our return
Cool and crisp
It's Perdeberg's Pinot Noir Rosé, which won them a double gold at Michelangelo and an Old Mutual Trophy Silver
The welcoming committee, Brand manager Fergill Fortuin and CEO Gerhard van der Watt
who told us about the new cellar
Michael Fridjhon does sabrage on the MCC Pinot Noir Rosé
No glass in the bottle
We went into the cellar for lunch
Chef James Shipton of Salt and Pepper Catering telling us what is on the menu and how he made the food and wine pairings
The Menu, which lists the wines paired with each course. The most popular wines of the day were the Dry Land Collection Barrel Fermented Chenin. This is winning award after award. People also really like the SAAM Middelberg 2013 Single Vineyard Chenin. SAAM is a joint venture with Charles Back
The Trio of Fish
Karoo Rack of Lamb with very sickly candied sweet potatoes and fine green beans.
CEO Gerhard van der Watt tells about the wines we are to taste
Dessert was Crème Brulée, a mini lemon tart and Budino di Cioccolato - a deep dark chocolate ganache
Fergill Fortuin reminds us that Perdeberg also produced good red wines, especially their Shiraz. We hope to taste some of these soon
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© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2015

Thursday, June 11, 2015

150610 This Week's MENU - Aegean Odyssey Part 1, Turkey. Muratie Karoo Lamb and Venison Experience

A hooded crow takes a bath at Topkapı Palace, Istanbul
In this week’s MENU:
* Aegean Odyssey. Part One: Istanbul
* Learn about wine and cooking
We write about our experiences in MENU, not only to entertain you, but to encourage you to visit the places and events that we do. We know you will enjoy them and we try to make each write up as graphic as we can, so you get a good picture of what is on offer at each place, restaurant, wine farm, festival we visit. To get the whole story with photographs, please click on “Read on.....” at the end of each paragraph, which will lead you to the related blog, with pictures and more words. At the end of each blog, click on RETURN TO MENU to come back to the blog version of MENU.
Our Odyssey in Turkey and Greece     We are back from our Odyssey, slightly fitter (we did a LOT of walking) and well rested and tanned. We had a wonderful holiday, although Lynne says that John didn't relax as much as he should have, as he took so many photographs which he had to edit each day or you would not have seen anything for weeks. He says that photography is what he wants most to do, so it is his relaxation!
This week, we have attached the five days of our Turkish exploration in Istanbul. We stayed in a small self-catering apartment in the old Armenian section of Istanbul. We saw as many historic monuments and places as we could get to, explored parts of the city on foot, perhaps more than we wanted to. It has a very good network of transport, but all the maps are worthless as they don't connect the different transport systems on one map. The trip on the Bosporus was superb and is a must if you are in the city. It is a very beautiful city at a distance, the history is all around one, but we did find it rather dirty and untidy and not a little financially depressed, which we expected to see in Greece, but didn’t.
The food was not as good or a varied as Lynne had experienced in the past in other places in Turkey, but was consistent and not too expensive, except in the high end restaurants, where it was stratospheric. We had one fine dining experience at Asitane, which serves Ottoman Palace cuisine "fit for a Sultan" from the 15th Century, which we absolutely loved and where we did manage to taste some fine Turkish wines. It scores 4½ stars in all the travel sites, so if you go to Istanbul you must try to visit. Read on by clicking these blog titles:
Karoo Lamb and Venison Experience at Muratie Estate in Stellenbosch     We managed to squeeze in an event at Muratie on Saturday after our return and so want you to see the photos of this amazing day learning how to butcher, prepare and cook a whole sheep and a haunch of Venison. We then had a delicious lunch of the resulting dishes.
This day costs R500 a person and, if you are interested in doing this, contact Muratie, they are planning another of these excellent hands-on demonstrations, preparation and cooking experience, which is followed by lunch with Muratie wine and all the food prepared. We were also able to take home some of the other meats prepared by us but not needed for lunch. Read On, but be aware that some of the photographs may upset sensitive viewers, especially vegetarians.
This week's Recipe     No recipe this week but, next week, we promise to publish the recipe for a dish we ate on our travels.
COMING EVENTS:
Thursday, 11th June   Taste the Helderberg 2015. Limited tickets for Taste the Helderberg 2015 are available at the cost of R80 per person. The ticket includes an elegantly branded wine glass and access to tasting some of the best wines in the country. Numerous restaurants will tempt the taste buds with mouth-watering portions of their signature delights which will be on sale throughout the evening. Tickets will also be available at the door. For more information visit www.wineroute.co.za or call 021 886 4310
Thursday, 11th June, 18h15 for 18h30 French & SA Chenin tasting at Caroline’s. Sebastian Beaumont from Beaumont Wines, the home of the Hope Marguerite Chenin, will present this week’s tasting. Taste the legendary Chenins of Huet and Moulin Touchais. Standing proud in this company are four local wines which will be selected by Sebastian. COST:  R300 p/p.  Please email carowine@mweb.co.za for a booking form or call Lyzette on 021 419 8984 to make a booking. 
Friday, 12th June, 18h00 to 21h00 Old Mutual Trophy Wine Show Public Tasting - Cape Town at CTICC – Exhibition Hall 1B, Convention Square, 1 Lower Long Street, Cape Town. Secure underground parking available in CTICC Parkade. Ticket sales via Computicket.com or call 0861 915 8000. Tickets cost R175 each and limited tickets will be available at the door. Ticket includes tasting glass and  unlimited tastings. No entry allowed for under 18s, babies or prams. Enquiries:  011 482 5936. www.trophywineshow.co.za; www.outsorceress.co.za. Wines can be ordered at show prices at the Makro desk at the show or online. Light meals are for sale at the tastings.
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
The Hurst Campus, an accredited school for people who want to become professional chefs, has a variety of courses. See the details here
In addition to his Sense of Taste Culinary Arts School, Chef Peter Ayub runs a four module course for keen home cooks at his Maitland complex. Details here
Nadège Lepoittevin-Dasse has French cooking classes in Noordhoek 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
Nicolette van Niekerk runs baking courses at La Petite Patisserie in Montague Gardens
George Jardine will be running a series of winter cooking courses and other activities at Jordan. Details here





10th June 2015
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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.
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We apologise if MENU caused your phone to bleep in the early hours. To send to our huge list of subscribers takes a long time and many of them receive it in the middle of the night. Might we suggest that your phone should not be activated to receive messages from us or from other sources in the witching hours? If your boss needs to contact you at that time, (s)he’s intruding on your valuable personal time.
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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Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Karoo Lamb and Venison Experience at Muratie Estate in Stellenbosch

If you are a vegetarian and/or averse to raw meat, this is an early warning, you may not enjoy seeing this blog

We managed to squeeze in an event at Muratie on Saturday after our return and so want you to see the photos of this amazing day learning how to butcher, prepare and cook a whole sheep and a haunch of Venison. We then had a delicious lunch of the resulting dishes
This day costs R500 a person and if you are interested in doing this, contact Muratie, they are planning another of these excellent hands on demonstrations, preparation and cooking experience, which is followed by lunch with Muratie wine and all the food prepared. We were also able to take home some of the other meats prepared by us, but not needed for lunch
An early morning start for our day at Muratie to experience Karoo Lamb and Venison
Welcomed by Muratie owner Rijk Melck, a coffee and a muffin to sustain us
We learnt that we were there to learn how to butcher lamb and venison and then produce food for lunch. We leave our bags in the dining room, don aprons and proceed to the cellar where it was all to take place
On the way we drew tasks from a bag. Lynne got deboning and butchery, John decided to stay with photography, he knew he couldn't do both
A Kudu haunch and a whole mutton carcass awaited us
There were more cuts on the tables awaiting preparation
Some fillets and a loin of lamb with some already rendered meat for stuffing, samoosas and sausage rolls
Our teacher for the day was Annatjie Reynolds, who began by showing us how to take off the belly flaps of the sheep, which were then cut up and turned into Kaaiings
The difference in size: on the left a kudu fillet, on the right, one from a Springbok
Ado Wessels and Ellen Raubenheimer, editor of GetIt! magazine
This was how to begin to take off the shoulders
Future butchers watching in rapt attention
Now, using garden secateurs, off came the ribs and the breast. Breast of lamb or mutton is one of our favourite roasting cuts
A glass of Muratie bubbles to sustain us
We learn about shanks and how to cook them
Marise & Charla Kriel, learning a new skill
How to make salami. Lynne missed this lesson as she was busy deboning
Exposing the chops, the loin and the saddle
Kim and Rijk Melck with guests
Cutting up the belly for kaaiings (scratchings)
The tale of the tail
Now a lesson on deboning ribs
Use a sharp filleting knife and cut away from oneself
And this is how you debone a neck
Time to learn how to cut the haunch of Kudu into fillets
You cut along the muscle divisions
Kim Melck's apron says it all. Many of us wanted one
Hold tight while removing the sinews and the silver skin
Here is a large muscle for cooking (silverside), the silver skin needs to be carefully peeled off
Showing us the beautiful meat
On with more filleting
Annatjie shows us how to butterfly the joint so it can be stuffed
Now it is our turn. Lynne had been taught by her English butcher how to debone a shoulder, so she picked up a sharp knife and began deboning her shoulder, trying to remove the blade bone in one, leaving a pocket for stuffing. Ado Wessels works on deboning a neck
The kudu meat is cut into more manageable pieces
The Melck dogs were amazing, they didn't beg once. Perhaps they knew they would be rewarded later, when lunch was cooked
Fire is on, table is laid, now all we have to do is prepare lunch
We were provided with all sorts of ingredients to stuff and wrap the meat in. Lynne stuffed the lamb with slivers of fresh garlic, lemon juice, fresh thyme, prunes, port and a line of herb stuffing down the middle and lots of salt and pepper
T giving a demonstration of how to make venison sausages
And how to tie them into loops
Setting up the smoker
Adding moisture to a roast, as most game has very little fat and can be very dry
Fat is pumped in between the muscles
Ready for the oven
Making sausages. Spices are added with the meat in the mincer
Rijk and Kobus Reynolds were tasked with cooking the sausages and the lamb ribs on the braai
An expert at deboning ribs
Sausage ready for the braai
Stuffing the deboned ribs
Meanwhile, upstairs in the kitchen, another crew was making samoosas and small meat turnovers
More deboning and stuffing of joints
Topped with spinach, bacon and herbs
Everyone had a different idea of the perfect stuffing
A nice fillet of kudu stuffed with spinach, feta, mushrooms and peppadews
Sausage rolls for lunch
Prepared by banking experts, Yvonne van Wyk and Rabia Friend, aided by some Muratie red wine
and assisted by Grant Kilian
Kim Melck with a huge salad
A loin wrapped in bacon goes on the braai for lunch
All these smells are making everyone hungry, so surgeon Rijk cuts up the cooked lamb ribs so that we can have a pre-dinner snack
They were delicious
Another joint goes on the coals
and, primed by some Muratie wine, we all supervise the cooking
Watched over by Jack, who supervised us
Turning the meat
Adding another grid
What you have another one going in the Weber? Looks too big to cook in the time remaining
Jack takes a nap on Kim's lap
Is it ready?
The huge salad, and two versions of carpaccio of venison
Cookbooks for sale by the author, Annatjie Reynolds
A stew underway
Time to add the sausage to the meat
Life went on in tasting room while we were all preparing lunch, and there were lots of visitors for lunch in the garden restaurant as well
A display of Muratie’s wines and ports
Ready to serve? Hougaard Pieterse and Danie Kriel
Wonderful home-made bread
The food was laid out buffet style so we could all help ourselves
Jaco Laubscher and friend showing why aprons have pockets
Crisp samoosas
Meat turnovers
Kim carving the loin while service begins behind her
Just a small taste please
A nice plate of things to try for lunch. It was an incredible day and the food was very good indeed. It was a meat eaters paradise.
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2015