Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Dinner at Volare, Peddlars & Co, Constantia

Volare, Oh Oh Oh

Peddlars on the Bend has been a well visited pub in Constantia for years. It has now been acquired by Chef Brad Ball (who is also the CEO) and partners Steve and Rob Fleck and has been renamed Peddlars & Co. Their new upmarket Italian themed restaurant, Volare, has recently opened and we were invited to visit and dine last Friday evening. Soon there will be four venues on the property: Volare, The Local  - a bar serving craft beers and platters, The Oak Terrace offering Al Fresco dining and Graciales offering small delicious plates for sharing 
We arrived to find that Klein Constantia had a small tasting of their Rosé at the door of the Restaurant
and had a warm welcome with a glass of Steenberg’s MCC bubbly from Chef Brad Ball, who explained their concept and told us of some of the things they are doing now and plans for the near future at Peddlars with the four venues. The staff were also very warm and welcoming and we really loved our waitress Amelia who has lots of character
The Italian concept menu is impressive. Chef Brad says he concentrates on local fresh food with the focus on the ingredients. It is arranged in the usual four courses you might find in an Italian Restaurant: Antipasti, Primi, Secondi and Dolci. He wants to do sophisticated cutting edge food that will appeal to people
We certainly had no trouble choosing from this menu
and a very good wine list with local wines and some imported. We applaud the fact that they also serve 250 ml carafes of wine (approximately a glass and a half) for those of us who want both a white wine and a red wine without needing a bottle of each. We think that these are very reasonably priced
We decided to share all our courses. This was the crisp fried arancini rice balls with gooey melted mozzarella cheese inside them. They were on a thick tomato and basil base. The truffle oil promised was slightly shy
Tonno crudo: Beautifully presented yellow fin tuna (locally caught and very plentiful this year) carpaccio topped with capers, a scattering of minute chopped shallot and a basil emulsion, tasted of the sea and was very fresh and light
John had a carafe of Spier’s Signature wooded Chardonnay (we went there and back in a taxi) while Lynne stayed with her glass of Steenberg bubbly
The restaurant was fully booked and is light and airy with a slight colonial feel – must be all those ceiling fans
There is a multiplicity of different lights and lamps plus candles on the tables. The seating is comfortable and we applaud the fresh white linen tablecloths and napkins
and there is a temperature controlled glass fronted wine room
The Primi course: Ricotta gnudi (lightly fried cheese and flour gnocchi) light and fluffy, served with braised tongue in a red wine and cream sauce, topped with rosemary pangritata (crisp fried breadcrumbs) which add great texture to the soft dish
Pork Ragu with Pappardelle. Lynne had seen this cooked on the Food Channel this week, so was very keen to try this. The pork ragu (a pork and tomato stew) is cooked long and slow until the meat is falling apart and then the thickly cut pappardelle noodles are incorporated. We loved the addition of the fennel seeds which go so well with pork. It is a very rich and substantial dish, almost (but not really) too much for those of us who have sworn off pasta for the last year but very good indeed. It was topped with a melting goats cheese fondant
We could not resist ordering carafes of the Villa Travignolli Chianti Ruffina Sangiovese DOCG from Tuscany to accompany this course and the next and it went perfectly, cutting through the richness of the dishes and adding a good fillip to the food of Italy. Very well priced at R63 a carafe, comparable to the local reds on the wine list
Then came the pièce de résistance of the meal, and one we thoroughly recommend that you go and try for yourself. The menu reads Caledon Lamb, caponata, ravioli, peas, onion condito, bagna corda, jus. The lamb arrived glazed with a thick glistening burgundy coloured sauce. Lynne tasted and then had to asked Chef Brad to confirm that it was indeed in a master stock. He cooks the lamb long and slow with a mirepoix. He then dips it into his four day much reduced master stock and serves it topped with a single ravioli, onions, peas and pea puree and a creamy foam. The marmitey master stock is superb and so unctuously concentrated, it almost sticks your lips together. It is one of the best ‘jus’ we have tasted in a very long time. A triumph of a dish
Our other main course was not too shabby either: Tender roast porchetta with crisp crackling – the pork from the acorn fed pigs on Oak Valley farm in Elgin, topped with a crisp piece of Parma ham and accompanied by artichokes, crisp sage leaves and sprouting broccoli
We just wish we had more room to venture into the desserts, which all sound very delish, but we were finished!
This is the outside terrace bar
Full on a Friday evening with people enjoying themselves
John sneaked into the very orderly kitchen at the end of service
and watched Chef Brad dressing a dish of the lamb
He is really enjoying running his own restaurant
And then, after two double espressos, it was time for our carriage home to Sea Point. Lovely for John not to have to drive so he could enjoy more than a glass of wine
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2015

Thursday, February 05, 2015

150205 Main Ingredient's MENU - Hartenberg Riesling Rocks, Creation Pinot, Delheim Harvest fest, Herb Oils, The AfrAsia Bank Auction

The sunset at Babylon’s Peak, seen from Creation in the Hemel en Aarde Valley

In this week’s MENU:
* This week’s products: More Spanish delights
* The AfrAsia Bank Cape Wine Auction
* This week’s recipe: Herb oils
* 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 of our story, please click onREAD 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.
This week’s Product menu      Still in Spain this week, we have the difficult to find Smoked Spanish Paprika in tins - it comes as sweet or hot and costs R70 a tin and the best authentic Spanish saffron in 1 gram boxes for R95, great value and  marvellous for paella or exotic fish or seafood dishes. Find them here
What a weekend that was!     We know we do push the envelope a bit sometimes but, as Lynne said on Facebook, we are getting old(er) and we are determined to pack as much as possible into our lives and enjoy it to the maximum. And tell you all about the experiences, of course, so you can try some of them for yourselves.
Riesling and Rarities Rock     We started on Saturday at Hartenberg on the Bottelary Road for this annual gem of a festival. They only sell 500 tickets, so we always feel honoured to be invited, and they sold out again. It is held in their beautiful gardens and, this year, they added some wines made from grape rarities (in South Africa) to the Riesling and there were some really interesting wines to taste. Lots of food was available to buy and we were provided with two very generous picnic boxes. Read on
Sadly we had to leave at 3 to get to our next appointment in the Hemel and Aarde by 5!
Creation Pinot Noir Panache     The entire Hemel & Aarde valley celebrates Pinot Noir each year for three days in February. You really have to be in the know however, as they only sell 150 tickets but for the princely sum of R1800 you get to spend Friday evening and all day Saturday and Sunday at farms tasting Pinot Noir, attending comparative, vertical, horizontal and foreign tastings and eating superb food. We did hear it said that they would like to widen the audience in the future and we hope they do. We certainly would like to experience more Pinot Noir but were delighted to be invited to Creation’s event on Saturday evening, where we tasted four vintages of their 4 different Pinot Noirs and had an excellent dinner Read On
A night in Hermanus     As we were not prepared to drive back to Cape Town, we managed to find some good self catering accommodation for the night on Bookings.com in Hermanus and enjoyed a good night’s rest. We also had a superb breakfast in Spur! They offer bargain breakfasts for R24.95 and, with the addition of bottomless coffee for R14.95, we don’t think you can go wrong. Read on
Delheim’s Harvest Festival     Then it was time to go back the way we had come on Saturday, back to Stellenbosch to attend this very real harvest festival, where they also have fun and games for the children – it is a really child friendly farm, lots of swings and a climbing frame We were welcomed with a glass of Pinotage grape must (the newly picked and just beginning to ferment juice with traditional mosbolletjies, a soft bread made with the yeasty must as its rising agent. Then there was a lovely buffet lunch, accompanied by their good Pinotage Rose and Chenin Blanc wines, after which we watched the hilarious grape stomping competitions. Read on
SA Wine Industry raises its GDP contribution, generates more jobs     On Tuesday this week we attended a press briefing HOW THE SA WINE INDUSTRY IS CONTRIBUTING TO GDP AND JOB GROWTH. You might find these facts and figures very interesting or very dry and complex. We are happy to attach them to a blog for those of you who want to see how the Wine industry is affecting our national GDP, it is a very interesting picture but, for those of you not very interested, we wanted to distil some of the information into facts that might be of interest.
To quote the report: “The industry, that remains one of South Africa's leading agri-exporters, accounted for 1,2% of the national GDP in 2013. In that year it contributed R36,1bn to the economy, (including wine tourism) via agriculture, manufacturing, trade and hospitality, while generating direct and indirect employment for close to 300 000 people”. Did you know that you can help to grow employment in the country by drinking wine? The employment growth is not just directly in the vineyards or on the estates but in the peripheral parts of the industry in your own areas, like your local wine shop or bottle store, in distribution, hospitality, sales and marketing. It is the age old trickledown effect. Yes, the Western Cape does contribute the most to the wine industry, followed closely by Gauteng, but it is encouraging to learn that growth in wine and spirit consumption in all the other provinces does help grow their employment too. The briefing was held at Cassia restaurant complex on Nitida wine estate in Durbanville. See the venue and snacks here
Magda Naude, wife of Francois Naude, winemaker at L’Avenir for many years and now associated with Rhebokskloof and other entities, died last week after a long illness. She was a wonderful cook and a lovely person. We will miss her and wish Francois and their son Francois strength while they come to terms with their loss.
This week’s recipe:  Herb oils     It’s a simple one and now that it is high summer and the soft herbs in the gardens are rampant, this is the time to make them and freeze them for use in the winter. You can soak herbs in oil but we find they can go cloudy, start to ferment or go rancid very quickly. We had lots of basil last year and Lynne froze small pots of this and used it in pesto, salads and with mozzarella cheese all winter and it keeps perfectly. You can do mint, marjoram, oregano, parsley, chervil, tarragon or the herb of your choice which is not around in abundance in the winter like thyme and rosemary. The herb keeps its fresh flavours and aromas. Drizzle oregano on pork, or mint on lamb, marjoram on chicken and roast. Yum.
You will need good olive oil and handfuls of fresh herbs (washed under a running tap but then left to dry off in a tea towel so you don’t mix water with the oil). In a liquidiser or using a stick blender, blitz them together so you end up with thick green oil – a ratio of 1 cup of oil to 2 cups of herbs is about right. Don’t season, just pack into very small containers. Addis make small inexpensive 120ml containers with lids that are perfect. The oil defrosts quickly and you can refreeze if you don’t use it all. It does also keep for a while in your fridge once defrosted. We don’t recommend that you do garlic, it can be dangerous.
The AfrAsia Bank Cape Wine Auction, which set a philanthropic precedent in the South African wine industry when it raised an astounding R7.045 million for education in the winelands, at its inaugural 2014 event, is set to raise the bar this year when 34 ‘once-in-a-lifetime’ lots go under the hammer at the historic Boschendal Estate on Saturday 14th February. With only 350 Auction tickets available at R3 000 per head, the 2015 Auction’s sophisticated online bidding platform, through Gavel&Grand, will extend the bidding to international wine aficionados and philanthropists, creating a new high-water mark for a charitable fundraiser. Anyone in the world will be able to place online bids in the weeks leading up to the Auction, from 15th January until 13th February: 12h00 South Africa (CAT), 05h00 New York (EST), 10h00 London (GMT) and 18h00 Hong Kong, and then via telephone on the big day.
All the proceeds from the Auction, without offset or deduction, go to educational charities in the South African winelands. Charity beneficiaries to date include the Pebbles Project, the MAD Charity, the Click Foundation as well as 10 other charities. To join the excitement of The AfrAsia Bank Cape Wine Auction and to make a difference, place your online bid at www.gavelandgrand.com/thecapewineauction
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
Chez Gourmet in Claremont has a programme of cooking classes. A calendar of their classes can be seen here.
In addition to the new 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.





5th February 2015
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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Night and morning in Hermanus

As we were not prepared to drive back to Cape Town, we managed to find some good self catering accommodation for the night on Bookings.com in Hermanus and enjoyed a good night’s rest. We also had a superb breakfast in Spur! They offer bargain breakfasts for R24.95 and with the addition of bottomless coffee for R14.95, we don’t think you can go wrong.
We found our accommodation, Whale Coast Lodge in Flower Street in Westcliff on Bookings.com which we use often. So often that we now get good discounts.  It doesn’t provide breakfast as it is self catering and we were too busy to take food with us
So off we went to Spur for breakfast
Spurs entrance is in a very bleak car park in the centre of Hermanus and Lynne said to John what a pity it didn’t have a sea view. When we were seated next to the window we discovered it has a really lovely view of the sea over a small park
Our breakfast. This is the special which is a plate of eggs bacon chips and tomato. Sunny side up for Lynne, scrambled for John. The chips are not great, but everything else is good with very fresh eggs. The coffee could be stronger, but it’s not bad
Afterwards we just had time for a short walk along the front. It’s a lovely place to watch whales in the season. The sea was roaring and it smelled fantastic
A few ‘bungalows’ along the sea font. Rather expensive bungalows with this sort of view.
The old washing pools (wasbakkies) on the beach below
The plaque with the information
We walked on the boardwalk but are concerned that, although it is made from recycled boards, they are buckling and some are missing
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2015

Briefing on how the SA wine industry is contributing to GDP and job growth

On Tuesday this week, we attended a press briefing HOW THE SA WINE INDUSTRY IS CONTRIBUTING TO GDP AND JOB GROWTH.  You  might find these facts and figures very interesting or very dry and complex. We are happy to attach them to a blog for those of you who want to see how the Wine industry is affecting our national GDP, it is a very interesting picture but for those of you not very interested, we wanted to distill some of the information into facts that might be of interest.
To quote the report” “The industry, that remains one of South Africa's leading agri-exporters, accounted for 1,2% of the national GDP in 2013. In that year it contributed R36,1bn to the economy, (including wine tourism) via agriculture, manufacturing, trade and hospitality, while generating direct and indirect employment for close to 300 000 people.”  Did you know that you can help to grow employment in the country by drinking wine?  The employment growth is not just directly in the vineyards or on the estates but in the peripheral parts of the industry in your own areas, like your local wine shop or bottle store, in distribution, sales and marketing.  It is the age old trickle down effect. Yes, the Western Cape does contribute the most to the wine industry, followed closely by Gauteng but it is encouraging to learn that growth in wine and spirit consumption in all the other provinces does help grow their employment too.
The view of the lake from Cassia restaurant’s deck on Nitida wine farm in Durbanville
Arrival
Welcomed by Yvette van der Merwe of SAWIS
Professor Nick Vink of the University of Stellenbosch was there to interpret the figures for us
After the press briefing we enjoyed one of our favourite  wines, the Nitida Sauvignon Blanc and some Cabernet sauvignon was also available
Lynne and Winnie Bowman CWM chat to Professor Vink over a plate of great canapés
Snoek pate and salmon sashimi topped with sushi ginger
Salmon mousse topped with salmon caviar and savoury filled pancakes
Tiny muffins
Siobhan Thompson, WOSA CEO in discussion with a colleague
Mushrooms and blue cheese
Samoosas and really delectable lamb and almond meatballs with a chakalaka or sweet chilli dipping sauce
Spoiling us with small squares of chocolate ganache topped with vanilla crème
Sauvignon blanc grapes coming in to the farm cellar. So sweet and so pungent with figs and elderflowers
RETURN TO MENU
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2015