Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Summer Festival on Jordan Wine Estate, Stellenbosch

Each year, in late November, Gary and Kathy Jordan hold an open day on their wine estate in Stellenbosch Kloof. There is a small entrance fee which is used to help finance animal rescue facilities in Stellenbosch and guests are encouraged to bring dog food, cat food, old blankets for those facilities
There is always a good selection of food on the lawns, in The Bakery and great lunches in the Jardine restaurant and music from a local band
Gary Jordan and his father, Ted with visitors to the Festival
One of the delicious wine-marinaded burgers from the Jordan Bakery
Gary and Marketing Manager Thea van der Merwe doing the draw for raffle prize winners
and awarding the first prize of accommodation in the new, luxurious bungalows on the farm
John got lucky and won second prize, which was a case of Jordan wine and a CD, always much appreciated and, this year, an unexpected birthday present
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

Wine Concepts ‘Finer Things in Life’ Champagne Festival at The Vineyard Hotel

This is always a crowd puller. Where else can you taste so many good French champagnes at once for a reasonable amount of money, with canapés circulating during the evening. There is a raffle with superb prizes and oyster, chocolate and sushi to buy. The theme this year was Cats and there were some amusing renditions. The Champagnes can be bought at a discount on the night and if you missed it, you can get them all from Wine Concepts.
Everyone wanted to taste the Billecart Salmon
David and Monica Chifa having fun, Lynne saying mozarella!
The selection on the Drappier table
Guy Kedian pouring steadily
He and Jackie Rabe were pouring the Jacquinot Champagnes
A new marque for us, Liebart-Regnier, from Baslieuz sous Chatillon in the Marne region of Champagne. Unusual in that it is a blend of 60% Pinot Meunière, 30% Pinot Noir, 10% Chardonnay, lots of apples on the full nose and palate
Michael Bampfield Duggan reading out the prizes to be won
Gosset has long been a favourite with us, especially the Grand Millesime Brut 2000 which has beautiful age and richness
We so wanted to taste the Mumm but it ran out very early in the evening. Perhaps they didn't bring enough?
Our family is also very fond of the Nicolas Feuillatte Champagne
Pouring it was Sarah Revell of Vinimark
Sarah Revell with John and a Champagne enthusiast
ALWAYS time for some Bolly, Darling
Mike B-D & a fan enjoying some
Tracy James-Elphick and Ginette de Fleuriot were serving it
So nice to be able to get Lanson in South Africa again, they were absent for a few years. It is another one we love
Laurent Perrier Cuvée Rosé comes in cages this Christmas!

The Brut chilling nicely
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

The Cap Classique Association public tasting of winning wines in the 2016 Amorim Challenge

Earlier this year we were at the Amorim Awards ceremony for the top MCCs in South Africa. This was a chance formally to taste them. The tasting was held last week at the Taj Hotel by the Cape Classique Association
We began with glasses of MCC from Altydgedacht, Moreson and Villiera
Small canapés of broccoli and pine nuts. These were a little hot for tasting MCC with quite a lot of hot chilli pepper
Tiny slivers of perfectly made salmon gravadlax
A magnificent array of bottles ready for the tasting
We begin
The tasting was led by Elunda Basson, cellarmaster for JC le Roux since 2007. Seldom have we had such an informative and interesting tasting. We have studied, we have sold, read, travelled and we have experienced these wines. She taught us and many others in the room new things, new insights into the world of MCC bubbles. In a very clear and concise way
She came armed with lots of different facts and figures about the industry and the trends and the different ways of making these superb wines. It is a growing category that the Association is very proud of. Many farms are trying their hands at making these enticing wines. They must be sure that they put out the right quality and maintain standards. The Association has guidelines to improve products. The wines must be hand crafted, blended and aged, mimicking the principles and processes of Champagne, striving for quality, in a very South African way. Our grapes come from diverse regions, soils, and style differentiation. Any grape varieties are permitted here, but only hand-picked, whole bunch pressed with the softest extraction should be used. Base wine in oak or in chilled stainless steel, malolactic fermentation or not. Reserve wines may be used, a minimum of 9 months on the lees by law and a minimum of 3 bar pressure - 5 to 6 is usual.
The Colmant from Franschhoek was the winner of the Blanc de Blanc category. It smells of raisin bread with some spice. Initially sweet, then the palate clears to grape fruit and lime and a hint of raspberry. We also tasted the Rickety Bridge 2012 which is bready and perfumed with blossoms, clean and lean, very dry with lemons and limes and a nice prickle - very much to our taste. In Champagne, vintages must be called by the area, here it is the vineyard’s choice
The Krone Borealis 2013 has marmite toast and old barrels on the nose. It is sweet and sherbety, too complex with cooked pears and a short finish
Elunda talking to the Kennedys, originally from Canada but now resident in South Africa, lovers of all things bubbly. We tasted the Gabrielskloof Madame Lucy, full of peaches, pears and nectarines, warm alcohol and it tasted as though they had added a liqueur dosage. Made from Pinot Noir and some Chardonnay; it is quite salty on the palate, then umami, then lemon-lime with chalky minerality. Great packaging with a gold poodle on the bottle
Next came the Anura Brut 2011. Cooked apples and pastry on the nose. Cherries, liqueur, very mature style, sweet. salty and funky, too much age? almost going balsamic. The Bon Courage Jacque Bruère Brut Reserve 2010 has notes of rose and raspberry perfume. A complex blend with a lot of age. Salt covers the fruit - lemons, limes and English grapefruit marmalade, it is well balanced. Elunda told us that Robertson chardonnay grapes have chalk and richness from the soils, their acidity is great in barrel fermentation which is why so many farms use these grapes
The Cathedral Cellar MCC Basilica Brut from KWV really impressed. 2011 was a good year for MCCs. Perfumed with lilies and warm linen, even some wet dog, it is sophisticated and elegant. Spends 36 months on the lees and it shows the benefit. Clean, crisp, lean and dry with a long lime end and a lovely prickle, this has 85% Chardonnay, 15% Pinot Noir and partial malolactic fermentation. It then spends another 3 years in bottle
The line up of tasting glasses. We also tasted the JC le Roux Pinot Noir Rosé 2010 which has pink watermelon and roses on the nose, a crisp keen cutting bubble, and raspberry, strawberry and watermelon on the palate. Refreshing, the raspberries remain. Customers have commanded the pretty pink colour. The JC le Roux Scintilla Vintage Reserve 2008 has smoky beech wood, nuts, water biscuits. Apparently it goes through 100% malolactic fermentation which causes those woody notes. It is a pretty, well balanced wine with long flavours of raspberry parfait and cream. Only made in the best vintages
The line up of wines we tasted. The final wine was from the magnum on the end.: Graham Beck Brut 1994. Smoke from the age - it spent 13 years on the lees, pink berries, it still has crisp tiny zingy bubbles, pear blossom on the nose. A very sexy wine with long flavours of raspberry, roses, and cream. So fresh for its age. Also lots of pears on palate. So impressive, Lynne scored it 19
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

Springfield Estate releases the 1997 vintage of Méthode Ancienne Cabernet Sauvignon

In 1997, Abrie Bruwer, owner of Springfield in Robertson, made a vintage of his Mèthode Ancienne Cabernet Sauvignon. When it came time to release this wine, Abrie said it was not ready. He has been cellaring it ever since, waiting for it to mature. They even went so far as to experiment with ageing 600 bottles under the sea, corks sealed with wax, for 3 years, to see if it would speed up the maturation process. Now, after all this time, nearly twenty years, they are releasing the wine. A limited quantity is available and we were invited to taste it at a new venue in Wale Street in Cape Town. We know that South African wines can age for much more than 20 years.
This small venue is called Open Wine. It is run by an Italian, Raphael Paterniti. He explained that it is based on the Italian Vinoteque, a good wine selection, and all wines available by the glass. John Collins, Springfield's Distribution Agent and Abrie's daughter Jenna Bruwer, who handles the marketing, were there to show us the wine. There were also a few bottles of the Work of Time 2010 open for us to taste as they will be changing over to this new vintage soon
Initially, the wine is intense. Cassis on the nose first, then ripe cherries, cassis leaves, forest floor and good toasted French oak. Sweet fruit opens and finishes strongly, very concentrated and strong, with dark wood on the end of the palate as it dries
Lynne taking copious notes. We also tasted the newly released 2010 Work of Time. Perfumed, with violets and wood, cherry & cassis. Soft and silky on the palate with crisp berries and extracted long flavours of cherries and pips and nice warm alcohol. There is some grippy chalk tannin, as there should be. Ready now or to keep a while longer
The story of the wine from Springfield: "Using native yeast and berries crushed before fermentation, for the first time. This wine, with the additional extraction from the crushed berries, took much longer to mature and for the hard edges to soften. Even after two years in new French oak, and four years of further bottle maturation, it was still too closed and the tannin structure too tight to be released". After that vintage, they used whole berry maceration and the wines matured more speedily. The wine will be sold in 2 packs and boxes of six. However, they will not be releasing the wine that was aged under the sea
Some of the wine selection in Open Wine. Small snack bites and signature dishes can be provided at a charge. There is some seating in the various small rooms and, if you want to eat a different meal, food can be ordered from surrounding restaurants. They don't charge corkage, they charge "foodage"
It's an old building with some Art Deco touches in the stairwell
Raphael is proud of his bread oven
The 'menu'
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016