Thursday, March 10, 2016

Wine tasting: Creation revisited

Our Dutch friends love Creation's wines, so we took them for another visit to replenish their cellar

No not this time but it is tempting. A double magnum of the 2014 Syrah Grenache
Going for a long walk home?
Danielle guided us through the tasting
The chefs were doing some menu planning. We hear that they are doing some amazing food using foraged local flora and fauna
JC Martin briefing his staff. They are in the middle of harvesting their red grapes, the Cabernet and the Grenache seem ready to pick
Looking at the wine list
and deciding what to buy
Prices in Holland are high but worth paying if you love the wine and it is as good as this, said our Dutch friends. They ordered 10 cases of assorted wines and say it might just last a year
Carolyn Martin looking very pretty
A beautiful erica in the indigenous garden
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus

Fish lunch at Bientang's Cave, Hermanus

To Bientang's Cave for lunch and a view of the Ocean

This is where you want to lunch in Whale season; they will swim almost up to the rocks in front
We didn’t see any in Hermanus this time, although there are lots on the Atlantic seaboard at the moment
as they return from the Antarctic with their newly born calves and head north

You should know that it is quite a steep climb down to the restaurant and a huge one back up
but we did discover a much easier path a little way to the right of this entrance
It is definitely worth the trip. Lynne nearly at the bottom

Two tiers of tables and umbrellas, and plenty of room inside if it should rain

You have 180 degree views of Walker Bay

A bottle of one of our favourite Chenins, from Ken Forrester
This 2015 Old Vine Reserve went beautifully with the seafood

Crisp calamari and not so crisp chips, served with tartare sauce. However, they use cucumber in it rather than gherkins, not right

Lynne chose a salad rather than chips and it was generous

Most chose the battered hake and chips

This is the easier pathway along the cliffs, with smaller steps and not so steep



A very large Dassie (rock rabbit or hyrax) sunning itself on a wall

He seems to be saying "Make my Day!" in a Clint Eastwood sort of voice....

and a flight of Antarctic terns above the rocks



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Restless River in the Hemel en Aarde Valley

They have coots in the farm dam
and lots of the indigenous blue water lilies
A well thought out indigenous waterwise garden
Although it looks like an old building, Anne and her husband Craig built this house when they bought the farm in 2004. They have 20 hectares. Some of the vines were already there when they arrived, having been planted by the previous owner in 1999, making them the oldest Cabernet Sauvignon and Chardonnay vines in the valley.
Lightning must have hit this gum tree and cleaved it
Wonderful views of the Babylonstoren mountains
It's not all fun!
The small barrel cellar, which contains the currently fermenting Chardonnay. this will stay in barrel for 8 - 9 months. The Cabernet Sauvignon is fermented on the skins in open tanks then fed to the basket press and then into 225 L French oak barrels, some new.  Since 2013 the wines have scored 4 or 4.5 stars in Platter
and some recreational equipment
It's going through a nice slow fermentation
The house and wine cellar fit so well in the landscape.  In 2013 they planted a single vineyard registered block of Pinot Noir. Craig is self taught and makes all the wine himself. He is committed to making only single varietal wines.
We went inside to taste the two wines currently available. The annual production is very small and normally sells out in 3 to 6 months. They are sold in Cape Town at Wine Concepts but most sells from the farm, in good restaurants like the Test Kitchen and La Colombe or overseas
These are the current releases
The 2013 Chardonnay is very French in character, rather like a Chablis, creamy and leesy with limes and melons on the nose, crisp minerality with some soft chalky tannins, the palate has limes, lemons and some soft wood notes on the end.  It has elegance and quality. 3866 bottles, all numbered, it sells for R275 a bottle. We liked it immensely
The 2012 Cabernet Sauvignon has cooked plums and herbs on the nose with cassis and plums on the palate and some tight chalky tannins and good wood so it needs time.  It sells for R290 a bottle
Some beautiful wall plates a couple of centuries old.
The outside veranda
Its a very elegant place to taste good wine
Their characterful Staffie, Frankie
The ripening Cabernet Sauvignon looks great and nearly ready to pick
Wonderful colour.  Anne gave us the two opened bottles to take home and we really enjoyed them with our supper that night.  Thank you for taking time to show us your wines
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus

Tasting the wines of Waterford

Waterford wines are worth tasting
On the way back down the mountain from Keermont and De Trafford, you come to Waterford and, as we had a friend from Australia with us, we went in for their superb tasting
The classic Tuscan style entrance
The fountain is the logo on all the Waterford wines
A tasting under the plane trees
or on the shaded terrace
In the tasting room
Where they post news of the current harvest
A table set for a larger group
We decided to do the combined tasting, which includes their famous chocolate and wine pairing. Their excellent Shiraz, Cabernet Sauvignon and Natural Sweet wine are paired with dark and milk chocolate. We particularly liked the rose geranium chocolate with the natural sweet Heatherleigh blend of Muscat d’Alexandre and Semillon. The entire tasting is a tour de force
The tasting was superb and we were so well taken care of by Nick Battle, who works in the tasting room. He started work here while he was a student at Stellenbosch University and now has lots of experience of the Waterford wines and what the customers' needs are. Do go and treat yourself to this tasting, you will love it. Or you can do a wine drive around the estate in their Game Viewing Land Rover
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus

Oak Valley Poolroom revisited

We stopped off for a proper lunch this time at the Pool Room on our way to a stay in the Hemel en Aarde Valley. It certainly was worthwhile

The view from our table under the umbrellas next to the pool. It was a lovely warm day, so we did not have starters
The bread selection
Lynne’s choice of fried gnocchi in a rich cream truffle and mushroom sauce, topped with courgette ribbons. She was not feeling too well, so a great comforting choice
Pan fried line fish, which was Bronze bream served with olive tapenade, Mediterranean vegetables  on humus
The rest of the party all ordered the Rib eye steak which is the Wagyu beef farmed on Oak Valley. They raved about its flavour. The chips were pretty special too, really crispy and the right potatoes were used. We had a salad for the table. We drank a little Oak Valley Riesling and a bottle of their Shiraz
Kyle Martin, who handles sales for Oak Valley, was also there enjoying lunch under the trees with his family
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus