Thursday, June 16, 2016

This week's MENU recipe: Boerenkool Met Worst (Kale with sausage)

Kale is all the rage. We don't know why it has become so fashionable. It is packed full of vitamins and minerals, but then so are many green vegetables. Lynne decided we ought to give it another try as our previous encounter was not good; the kale we ate was like eating glass. She was speaking on the phone to our friend in Holland when it occurred to her that kale there is one of their winter national dishes. So this is the recipe this week. It does require a smoked sausage like Rookworst but, if you don’t eat pork, you could try one of those kosher Garlic sausages. Recommendation: The flavour of kale is much improved by frost, which it won’t get here in South Africa. So put yours in the freezer the night before you want to cook this. This is real winter rib sticking food. Could you make this with sweet potato if you are Banting, Perhaps try?
500 g fresh kale - 4 large peeled potatoes - 50g fatty bacon or pancetta - oil - butter -  salt - freshly ground black pepper - 1t white wine vinegar - 1 t Dijon or sweet honey mustard - 1 Rookworst
Make sure the kale is well washed. Drain well, then chop very finely with a sharp knife, removing any thick centre cores. Put into some salted boiling water, preferably in a pressure cooker and boil. It will take about 10 minutes in the pressure cooker, 20 minutes in a covered pot. Chop the bacon very small and fry in some oil and butter till crisp. Drain but reserve some of the liquid. At the same time boil the potatoes until soft. Mash with the butter. Stir in the kale, the vinegar, the mustard and the bacon.  It is said that this is much better the following day. You cook the sausage for a few minutes in boiling water then slice and serve on top of the warm Kale and potato mix. Optional extras are fried onion and garlic 
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

MENU's Wine of the week. Edgebaston 2014 Chardonnay

David Finlayson makes the sort of Chardonnay we love to drink. 
We bought and drank lots and lots of his Honey Shale Chardonnay last year and were sad when it ran out. Tasting his Chardonnay at the Vineyard on Friday was, for Lynne, a treat. It was the best she tasted all evening and so she bought a case. It is full of golden yellow fruit and butter, with layers and layers of complexity, minerality, sunshine and a good citrus tongue-tingling bite. It is lightly wooded but has a supporting role in the background. 4.5 star in Platter. Do try it. R105 at Wine Concepts
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Wine Concepts Chardonnay and Pinot Noir Celebration at the Vineyard Hotel

Each year, Wine concepts hosts a few spectacular Varietal wine tastings at The Vineyard Hotel in Newlands. Bringing some light to the depth of winter, is their tasting of Burgundy style mostly South African wines. What an opportunity to taste some of the best the Cape has to offer at this well attended wine tasting last Friday evening

Tarryn Vincent and Chloe Canderle showing Burgundies from the Reciprocal Trading range
Carol and James Downes of Shannon Vineyards
Jackie Rabe pours a glass of Strandveld Pinot noir for Thelema & Sutherland winemaker Rudi Schultz
and Michelle Stewart gives René Bampfield Duggan a taste of Yardstick Chardonnay
Charmain Delgado always has a winning smile and a glass of DeWetshof
Hennie Coetzee enjoys a glass with Ataraxia owner Kevin Grant and a friend
Nathalie and Joris van Almenkerk with their award winning Pinot
Buitenverwachting showed their excellent wines and this pretty model farm
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

Lunch with Grand Constance at Groot Constantia

The history of the famous Constantia wines goes back to the 18th century. Groot Constantia is 331 years old and they have a purchase order from Napoleon, when the Cloete family owned the farm, and from customers as far back as the 1800s when this most sought after wine was sold to enthusiasts like King Louis Philippe and Jane Austen. We visited Groot Constantia last week to taste their recreation of the great Constantia sweet wine, Grand Constance
Setting up lanterns for an evening function in the Manor House
The wine in its elegant wooden box. It is sealed, as it would have been in the past, with Post office red sealing wax
It was a damp and cool winter’s day, so the open fire was well appreciated
A long table had been set up for lunch
Winemaker Boela Gerber sharing a joke with Broadcaster Guy MacDonald and Dr Winnie Bowman CWM and enjoying a glass of this sweet and complex wine. It is made from both white and red Muscat de Frontignan grapes, partially air dried, usually classified Natural Sweet but, sometimes, it has a little botrytis
It has a wonderful rich amber colour
The specially made bottles have a roundel in the glass which bears the word Constantia. Shards containing this mark have been found in a Delaware ship wrecked in 1774, in the foundations of a building in Germany and in very old bottles from Namur in Belgium. It contains 375ml, the historic bottle was 340ml. Boela started the move to recreate the wine 15 years ago. Was it fortified or not? No one knows. They didn't know about malolactic fermentation back then. He has tasted a 1790 and an 1821, so he knew where to take the wine
The Chef from Jonkershuis, who prepared the lunch
Canapés were substantial. Goats cheese on brioche fingers and a rich chicken liver parfait on the same brioche. There were jars of chutneys and pickles and an almond and honey praline to add to these
The fresh goat's cheese
The lunch menu
Then we were asked to assist the chef in preparing the gnudi (ricotta dumplings)
We had to swirl one in a wine glass with some flour to coat it
Swirling away. Why isn’t it wine?
At last it was time for some Gouverneur’s Reserve white, an elegant wooded blend which was barrel fermented and aged for one year, made from 76% Semillon with Sauvignon Blanc, crisp and fresh with notes of orange peel, smoke, limes and lemons. It went perfectly with the Gnudi
Jean Naude, Marketing Manager for Groot Constantia, tells us about lunch while Di Brown tweets
Boela tells us about the Grand Constance and how they recreated it. We all make notes. They sent old wines to California and Geisenheim to be analysed. They leave the grapes on the vines for 6 weeks after ripening. The whole grapes are then dried until they have shrivelled to raisins. The wine is fermented on the raisins for a week and is left for 2 years to slowly continue natural fermentation in 3rd, 4th and 5th fill barrels
It has consistently won awards here and overseas and is recognised from a quality point of view
Light cheese dumplings on a butternut emulsion with toasted pecan nuts, crisp fried sage leaves, sage butter and wilted spinach , topped off with slivers of parmesan cheese. Lots of different textures, definitely one to try at home
Jean Naude shows us pictures of the ancient Constantia bottle seals and emblems found around the world
the bottles found near Namur
and old bottles of Grand Constance
Time for the main course of Deconstructed Kudu Wellington accompanied by a strip of crisp puff pastry, porcini and red wine sauce, cauliflower mash, roasted winter vegetables ... 
... parmentier potatoes and beetroot. This was served with the well oaked Gouverneur’s Reserve Red made from Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, and Merlot. Its richness rode well with the kudu, winter vegetables and wine sauce
Dessert was a chocolate plate to astound. A warm and richly oozing Chocolate fondant with a salted caramel ice cream, a sliver of dark chocolate and orange terrine, richer than most could manage, and a gluten free chocolate cake, light as air. Of course this went well with the splendid Grand Constance! And a double espresso
A mating pair of Hadeda ibis on the ancient vineyard wall as we departed
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

A trip to the Hemel en Aarde Valley to taste Bouchard Finlayson wines

We don't often go to the winelands at night, especially if it means driving in the home-going traffic on the N1 or N2 and then driving home afterwards. But if one of our favourite and well respected wine farms offers transport, we will consider it very seriously. Which is why, last Wednesday, saw us on the road to the Hemel en Aarde for a tasting of Bouchard Finlayson’s wines on the farm. Yes, it was a long trip, but yes, it was worth it
It was held in the vaulted tasting cellar which was beautifully floodlit for the occasion
The welcome was with a glass of Bouchard's Blanc de Mer, a quirky blend of Riesling and Viognier with a splash of Chardonnay and a dash of Chenin Blanc. Very easy drinking, on many, many restaurant wine lists because it goes so well with food, especially sea food. All the other wines were placed on table around the room.
A selection of Riedel and Spiegelau glasses, all the appropriate shapes for the different wines
Cellarmaster Peter Finlayson welcomes us and tells us about what we will be tasting
Three magnums, three vintages of the Galpin Peak Pinot Noir, 2004, 2006 and 2007. This elegant wine is awarded four and a half or five stars in Platter each year and it is well deserved. Full of cherries, dark berries, minerality and a good kick of spicy acidity this is one that gets international recognition for the farm and for the valley
The audience listens attentively
Peter took us back to the establishment of the farm in 1989 when he and Burgundian winemaker Paul Bouchard (now deceased) began by planting the vines and building the cellar. The farm which has 22 hectares under vine, is now owned by the Tollman Family. It is run by Peter Finlayson and Victoria Tollman
Three vintages (2007, 2008 and 2009) of magnums of the very elegant Sangiovese led Italianate blend, Hannibal. These wines just get better and better with age and are drinking so well now
Sauvignon Blanc unwooded and unwooded, are such good examples of what this grape can do. Three chardonnays, unwooded, wooded and the complex, layered Mission Vale all impress. We also tasted the Kaaimansgat Chardonnay and the award winning Tète de Cuvée Galpin Peak Pinot Noir, which has years to go and was showing huge potential and strength
Assistant Winemaker Chris Albrecht chatting to a guest
Peter in discussion with one of the guests
Fellow travellers from Cape Town, Tony Da Costa and Ezra from Liquor City, Claremont
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

Monday, June 13, 2016

A tasting of Constantia wines in the Ellerman House cellar

When we had our wine and food shop, Main Ingredient at the bottom of Kloof Road, we often had the chef and the sommeliers from Ellerman House visit us. We were invited to come and see the fantastic wine cellar but somehow never managed to get there. Finally, last Monday, we could see it when we attended Constantia's trade wine tasting there. What a splendid place for a wine tasting and what great wines they produce in the valley and on the hills of Constantia. Ellerman House is a ultra luxury boutique Hotel on Kloof Road in Bantry Bay.
Different Constantia wineries dotted around the room, plenty of good tasting glasses and some cheese and charcuterie to take the edge off hunger.
All local cheeses
Some new to us, some not
Smoked ham, salami, and an assortment of bread and crackers
Soft cheeses (could have been a little riper)
Different hams and salami
olives, pickles, relishes, chutneys, figs
Discussing wine while tasting with Alan Wickstrom of Klein Constantia. It's one of our favourite things to do
Lovely ladies on the Steenberg table
Gavin Withers having a rest from wine in the small lounge. A good place to decide what wine you fancy having for supper that night
We suspect a wine deal was being struck here
Stuart Botha from Eagle's Nest showing his wines and Restaurateur Neil Grant of Burrata, Open Door and Bocca restaurants tasting wine with the Johann Olivier of Beau Constantia. There were two mystery wines we had to identify as well as several older Constantia wines to taste
A host of awards on this 2013 Groot Constantia Chardonnay
An entire vine on show, but it's a metal sculpture
The double helix wine rack in the temperature controlled glass room
Wines fill both sides and the helix has seven whorls
Below is a limestone cellar filled with treasures; the limestone was imported from Champagne
A great selection, as the guests may request any wine they like and Ellerman prides itself in being able to supply it. Where price is of no object
Rian du Plessis of Pick n Pay in the V&A Waterfront having a happy time, as were we
Oh to be let loose in there...
The marvellous view of Bantry Bay from the hotel as the light fades into dusk
Enjoying a last glass in the garden
Ellerman House sits on the cliff top above the remains of what used to be a botanical garden
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016