Tuesday, March 21, 2017

MENU's Recipe of the week. Green Gazpacho

Lynne has done quite a lot of cooking for our visitors over the last few weeks and has tried out some new recipes and some old favourites
Last week, we were served Ottolenghi's Green Gazpacho in McGregor. This week, Lynne found the recipe, made some adjustments and this is what we had as a starter for dinner last night. Lynne halved the recipe for four people, so it does make a lot. She used a liquidiser. You might need to make this in batches, unless you have a very large liquidiser. It does sound like a lot of ingredients, but once you liquidise it, it is made. So easy after assembly. It is based on a Turkish Tarrator. You can use other nuts, like walnuts (in the original recipe), or ground almonds if you don't have blanched fresh. Lynne took the garlic down to 2 cloves (from 4) as it does show quite prominently. Do add more if you like. It is perfect for the hot muggy weather we are having at the moment
Green Gazpacho

2 celery sticks (including the leaves) - 2 small green peppers, deseeded - 1 peeled cucumber (350g in total) - 3 slices stale white bread (120g in total), crusts removed - 1 fresh green chilli (or less if you don’t want it too hot) - 2 garlic cloves - 1 tsp sugar - 150g ground or 150g blanched almonds - 200g baby spinach - 1 whole peeled ripe avocado - 25g basil leaves - 10g parsley - 4 Tbsp sherry vinegar - 1 cup/225ml olive oil - 40g Greek yoghurt - 450ml iced water - 250g ice cubes - 2 tsp salt (or more according to your taste) - white pepper
How to Make It
Roughly chop up the celery, peppers, cucumbers, bread, chilli and garlic. Place in a blender and add the sugar, almonds, avocado, spinach, basil, parsley, vinegar, oil, yoghurt, most of the water, half the ice cubes, the salt and some white pepper.
Blitz the soup until smooth. Add more water, if needed, to get your preferred consistency. Taste the soup and adjust the seasoning.
Lastly, just before serving, add the remaining ice and pulse once or twice, just to crush it a little. Serve with crusty garlic bread or crisp croutons.
With thanks to Yottam Ottolenghi

© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2017

MENU's Wine of the week. De Morgenzon Grenache

Lynne loved this wine enough to buy it when she tasted it at the farm's tasting room last week
We had it at supper last night with a warm aubergine and butternut curry. A perfect match. It is full of wild dark liquorice and rhubarb flavours, some spice, with good wood and tannin for structure. Good aging potential too. It sells for R127 per bottle from the farm. Platter has not reviewed it
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2017

Sunday, March 19, 2017

Blaauwklippen Zin & Gin at the Cape Grace

Blaauwklippen in Stellenbosch is famous for making Zinfandel. Once a year they allow the media to taste one of their iterations of this interesting grape. This year, the 10th Blaauwklippen Zinfandel tasting, it was a vertical of the sweet Noble Late Harvest from 2007 to 2014. Blaauwklippen have also been making Brandy, Eau de Vie & Grappa for several years, now they have ventured into Gin, which is currently undergoing a huge renaissance in South Africa and abroad. The tasting was held at the Cape Grace Hotel this year. We began with the tasting of 8 wines, and ended a lovely meal with a taste of the gin
The line up of the NLH Zinfandel
We began with another Zinfandel, their MCC, the Diva. Yeasty brioche, apple hints, with some lemon zest, this is enjoyable and fun
Lots of it on ice
Canapés were served with the Diva. These small choux buns were filled with a fig chutney and a goat’s cheese mousse, so crisp and melt in the mouth
Scallop, served ceviche style on avocado mousse with passion fruit, went so well with the Diva. But Lynne's got whipped away before she could finish it
Small cured salmon twirls on crisp rosti with a Hollandaise sauce. Only saw them once, they were very good
Greg Landman of Country Life wearing his gift from the queen
We take our places for the tasting to begin
Some tasty bits of news?
Cellarmaster Rolf Zeitvogel tells us how these wines began. The grapes in 2004 had very high sugar so he decided "why not try to make a port?" He employed one of SA's top port makers - Danie Malan at Allesverloren in the Swartland - as an advisor and they began. But it didn't go according to plan as a heat wave shrivelled half the grapes and increased the sugars to over 40º Balling, so they were not suitable for port, said Danie Malan. They were fermented on the skins in oak. Rolf decided to make it into a sweet dessert wine and used the fact that the grapes get the Noble Rot, Botrytis cinerea, in some years. Rolf had to convince the Wine and Spirit Board who, at first, rejected it as they ruled that there are no red Noble Late harvests. Rolf eventually persuaded them to adopt Zinfandel into this category. Similar wines are made in California, where much of the world's Zinfandel is grown. Blaauwklippen’s oldest block of Zinfandel was planted by Walter Finlayson in 1982 and these wines come from that original block. They do everything in the vineyard to encourage the Botrytis
Winemaker Narina Cloete, who started at Blaauwklippen last year, tells us about the vintage and how it is made. She took us through the 8 wines
The wines are mainly cranberry in colour except for the 2009, which is much darker. They are very sweet, some having very high residual sugar, in the region of 350 gm/l. We started with the youngest 2014 and worked our way back to 2007. The flavour can vary from Ribena, to cranberry, honey bush tea, cassis and other sweet ripe berries. Some are rather syrupy. There is one standout year, which many people in the room preferred, the 2009, where the wine is much more port like, which made everyone wonder what would have happened had they continued on this path. It has an RS of 190 g/l, the age is beginning to show well as it matures. It has a definite port nose and palate, complexity with a bit of wildness, length and depth of fruit and spice, with hints of nutmeg and cinnamon
Time to go into lunch. We cleansed our palates with another glass of Diva
 In the restaurant
The menu
The first course was a small square of tender Confit Pork Belly (not fatty), topped with a large grilled and peeled prawn, on a bed of sweet, spicy, curried pumpkin purée and a mango salsa. This was paired with the White Zinfandel, a good dry wine match for the food; crisp and fruity with citrus and loquats. Most of us wanted another one; this was a very good dish
The main course was tender seared ostrich fillet with a black pepper and coriander seed crust, so like a good steak au poivre. Lynne converted Winnie Bowman to appreciating ostrich steak. It came with a delectable thick, shiny pear & meat jus. Luckily, someone at our table called for more of the sauce. Served with good creamy mashed potato, and a crisp onion streusel for texture, broccoli spears, baby carrots, courgette, mushrooms and onion slivers. Naaaice as they say in SA. The wine paired with this was the 2015 Red Zinfandel, now in a Burgundy bottle with new packaging. Spicy cinnamon on the nose, with red berries and rhubarb and dark licorice, dry tannins, a heavyweight and heady. Perfect for steak
The dessert was made to echo the Gin flavours and was a orange semifreddo, with coffee poached pears, honeycomb, gingerbread crumble fresh orange segments and candied orange zest
And now to taste the new gin
It was served neat, and ice cold. Lots of different layers of aromas and flavours, hot alcohols, and complexity. On the nose, herbal notes, with coriander seed, Eucalypts, wormwood, some quinine bitterness and floral perfume at the end. Citrus flavours abound, juniper is there and then too many to describe. Apparently it has many, many different added ingredients. The makers did a trip from Gariep in Namibia and added some inspirational flavour notes at each of the stops! Lynne added a teaspoon of water and it changed into a much softer drink, with even more flavours and aromas
Michelle Coburn of Taste Magazine enjoying the aromas in the Gin
Michelle Coburn with Seth Shezi at the end of a good meal and tasting
With coffee we were served plates of friandise, poppy seed macarons, guava jellies and the most amazing chocolate and shattery butterscotch bark with added rosemary
The two sisters, Narina Cloete with her sister Nanette, Blaauwklippen’s Hospitality manager
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2017

Lunch at Jardine, Jordan wine estate, Stellenbosch

This has become an annual event, as our friends from Holland just love having lunch at this restaurant on Peter's birthday, which occurs while they are here for two months. We are huge fans of George Jardine's food, so we too always enjoy the day
It had been a lovely rainy morning so, initially, everyone was seated inside
The menu. It changes regularly, due to seasonal ingredients becoming available. There are now three choices per course. Previously the starters and mains had five items, which did give one a bit more choice. John cannot eat mushrooms, so he only had one choice of main this time
We were a party of 7. This was the most ordered starter, tender springbok tartare, salt and sugar cured, in an aioli served in a marrow bone. It was complemented by black garlic, picked onion, plum and radish slivers, smoky deep fried crumbed morsels of bone marrow, with dehydrated fennel. It sounds overwhelming, it was not, the springbok shone, the rest all added different tastes and textures to it
The second starter showcased two plump West Coast oysters, one in batter, the other steamed, set in chawanmushi (a gentle seafood flavoured egg custard), pickled shiitake mushrooms, marinated sea lettuce seaweed, edamame beans and ginger soy dressing
The third starter was a Porterville beetroot extravaganza. So pretty. Crisps, puréed, baked, sauced, and boiled. Served with fresh raspberries, which were also freeze dried then powdered to dust, and a Goats cheese mousse. You did have to love beetroot! We drank the Jordan Inspector Peringuey Chenin Blanc with the starters, its 'rich and ripe' a full flavoured Chenin and it went so well with all the starters, and some of the mains
On to the main courses. This was the porcini dusted East coast hake fillet, served with butter fettuccine, a roasted porcini fricassee, and a porcini velouté (a smooth deep soup) poured around the edges. Topped with parmesan cheese and watercress. Much enjoyed by the mushroom lovers, who said the fish was perfectly cooked
This was the most popular main, Tender herb crusted duck breast, pink inside, on a rich celeriac puree, with a hazelnut butter, in the centre a layered sweet potato and apple crumble and those beautiful grilled fresh figs. There was a small amount of concentrated jus, some pea shoots and then there was the controversial kale, which was young. Our Dutch friends love it, they eat it often; we are not so sure. It seems to be picked too late here, it can be like glass and getting used to that intense bitter minerality is tough for some of us
The vegetarian’s choice was pan roasted miso Gnocchi, in a mushroom bouillon, with charred leeks, fried shimeji mushrooms and compressed cucumber, topped with micro greens. She loved it
Pouring the bouillon. We ordered another bottle of the Chenin for those who wanted to stay on white wine and a bottle of the Jordan Prospector Syrah, Rhône style; it matched the duck well, adding to the experience
Ah how can one resist side order of these lovely oven roasted duck fat chips. We also had a side salad
Time for dessert for those with room left. Two had a trip to the cheese room, a great experience. You can chose five from a huge selection of great local cheeses. They said this was a superb part of their meal

This was the deconstructed carrot cake, with buffalo Chantilly, roasted peaches and peach ice cream, which rather disappointed on delivery, sadly, but not on flavour
For the birthday boy, a candle atop his portion of the Valrhona chocolate torte topped with white chocolate, with a smoked almond crumble, honeycomb, a caramel sauce and rich coffee ice cream. Lovely except for that smoky element which doesn't sit too well in a dessert. Lynne admired and tasted John's but could not manage dessert. Good coffees followed
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2017

Tasting wine and a walk in the garden at De Morgenzon, Stellenbosch

On the way to lunch at Jordan, our friends asked to revisit De Morgenzon. They loved the tasting they had there last year and are in awe at the gardens and the featured vineyard, where Baroque music soothes the vines
The wine farm's office is inside the old traditional Cape Dutch building
We spotted winemaker Carl van der Merwe standing in the doorway and he came over to chat. We hear that the harvest has been excellent. Now he has the really hard work, making their excellent wines
Vines on the far hill, now picked, are putting on their autumn colours
The tasting room is in the building next door
We had had very welcome rain that morning so chose to sit indoors for the tasting, as the outside benches were a little damp
Some of the wines we tasted. We are never disappointed by the quality and our friends bought some Sauvignon Blanc and Chenin Blanc. Lynne was enchanted by the 2014 Grenache Noir and invested in a box of six, which will take up residence in our cellar for a couple of years. Full of wild dark licorice and rhubarb flavours, some spice, with good wood and tannin for structure
Lynne was delighted to see lotus growing in the dam. She would like it to grow in our koi pond (once our swimming pool)
And water lilies - yellow ...
... and pink
A perfect lotus flower with its distinctive leaves and unusual seed pods
An open blossom. It is a sacred flower in the East. In the classical written and oral literature of many Asian cultures the lotus is present in figurative form, representing elegance, beauty, perfection, purity and grace, being often used in poems and songs as an allegory for ideal feminine attributes. And many parts of the plant can be eaten
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2017