Friday, November 04, 2016

A vertical tasting and a Japanese celebration and lunch at Stark-Condé

It was an interesting invitation. The Japanese Ambassador to South Africa, His Excellency Mr Shigeyuki Hiroki, was to present Hans Peter Schröder, joint owner of Stark-Condé with a Certificate of Commendation, on behalf of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Japan, for his role in fostering cultural relations with Japan. And, after the presentation, we would have a vertical tasting of Stark-Condé’s Three Pines Cabernet Sauvignon Jonkershoek Valley from 2000. A first for this farm. Then a Japanese themed luncheon. How could we refuse?
Stark-Condé is a true family run farm. Owner Hans Peter Schröder studied and worked for many years (over 25) in Japan. He has a Japanese wife, Midori, whom he met at Tokyo University. They have two daughters and one, Marie, is married to José Condé, the winemaker. She runs the Post Card cafe. Their other daughter and her Spanish husband also live on the farm with their children
The main building contains the wine cellar and the Post Card Cafe
The tasting room is situated on an island in the middle of the lake and you get to it over very beautiful bridges. It is shaded by weeping willows
The very Japanese roof of the tasting room with its dragons
This is where the event started
The lake is full of huge Koi
The tasting room is designed like a Japanese house
We enjoyed a glass or two of the only Estate white they produce, called The Field Blend, made with Roussanne, Chenin Blanc, Viognier and Verdelho, a Rhône style blend, refreshing with a touch of tropical
We were served many interesting Japanese canapés, all delicious. This is Chawanmushi, a gentle savoury steamed egg custard containing prawn and shimeji mushrooms
Skewers of Yakitori chicken with leeks and sesame
Soba buckwheat noodles in a broth
Rare roast beef rolled around asparagus and topped with ginger
Deep fried oysters with daikon radish and mayonnaise
Tourists enjoying the deck of the tasting room, the wines and the superb mountain views
José Condé chatting to journalist Graham Howe and Lynne
The presentation of the Commendation. It was read to us by Japanese Ambassador, his Excellency Mr. Shigeyuki Hiroki, who also made a speech. The Foreign Minister’s Commendations are awarded to individuals and groups with outstanding achievements in international fields, in order to acknowledge their contributions to the promotion of friendship between Japan and other countries of the world. Hans Peter Schröder is the only recipient in South Africa and the first ever from the Cape
The presentation
The certificates
Mr Schröder made a short thank you speech
Mr Schröder and his wife Midori are of the founders of the Cape Town Japan Club established in 2007 and, with their guidance, the Japan Club become the home, not only for the 200 Japanese residents living in and around Cape Town, but also for their South African spouses and families as well as friends of Japan. Here they are with members of their family, both daughters and José Condé
All the guests were invited to have their photograph taken with the family
A huge dragonfly hovering over the lake
Another seating area on the farm, next to the lake
The Schröders with Ambassador, His Excellency Mr. Shigeyuki Hiroki
The lunch table on the terrace
Inside the Post Card Cafe
We than moved into the barrel cellar for the vertical tasting
José Condé explains that we will taste the Cabernet from 2000 to the current release 2014. There were a couple of years when the wine was not made or is now sold out
This is the first time that media have been invited to the farm and the first time that the wines have been tasted in this order. The Cabernet vines were planted in 1990.The first five were pure, rich, deep Cabernet sauvignon, small quantities of Merlot and Petit Verdot were added only after 2007. They are intense and full of the expected cassis, vanilla, chalky tannins, (softer with age) and expensive French wood. They are aging very well indeed. The 2003 was our favourite from the first group, with the 2000 following close behind. That has lasted so well. with all the structure and fruit to go further
The second group of six wines from 2009,10,11,12,13 and 14 (still available) changed slightly with the addition of the other two grapes, more in richness and flavour with cherry from the merlot and violets from the Petit Verdot. Usually only 5% of each is added. The chalky tannins are large, but so are the wines. The 2009 scored 18 and the 2011 18.5. Lynne's description of this wine is shy initially, then vanilla ice cream, cassis and balsamic hints, then the flavour door opened to full on cassis, lovely fruit with violet and wood notes. Wines to cellar and appreciate in future. A very successful tasting
Dr Dave Swingler
Cathy van Zyl MW
José Condé talking about the wine
Some of the line up
Magnums of the older wines
Time for lunch
Sharing a laugh
Hans Peter Schröder relaxing
Lunch was clever. We were given small nori sheets,
some cooked sushi rice, ginger and wasabi,
some fresh fish and seafood and lumpfish roe,
avocado and some vegetables
You could eat sashimi or make your own rolls. It was great fun and rather delicious. no one worried about perfect rolls, we just rolled up our sleeves, the nori and had a good time
Dessert was a French flourless chocolate cake topped with green tea powder, matte. It was the lightest version we have ever had
Girls chatting
Last view of the lake

And as we left everyone was given a beautifully wrapped gift of 2 Starke-Condé wines, the Field Blend and the Oude Nektar red blend
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

Monday, October 31, 2016

This Week's MENU. Sauvignon Top 10, Robertson Wine on River, Laurel Cottage, 3 Robertson farms, Ocean Basket Med menu, Veritas tasting, Prescient Chardonnays, Caroline's White Wines, Green Wines 2016, SA wine farm conditions, Cederberg Chenin, Quesadillas

Wine farm workers fishing from a weir. Breede River, Robertson
The madness continues, but there are signs that it will soon slow down. Each week seems to bring more events that we cannot miss and this week has more stories than ever. It keeps us young and energetic, we still enjoy it and we hope that you do, so please read on... or click any of the following links to look at a story
2016 FNB Sauvignon Blanc Top 10 Awards at Nooitgedacht, Stellenbosch     Every year the Sauvignon Blanc Interest Group runs this competition, which is sponsored by First National Bank, "To celebrate and recognise excellence amongst local producers who have dedicated countless hours to perfecting their craft". This year there were 169 entries judged and this was our chance to see the winners and taste the wines. The award ceremony was held at Nooitgedacht Estate in Stellenbosch, and was followed by lunch
Robertson Wine on the River 2016     We and many of our fellow media colleagues really favour this festival. Held on the banks of the Breede River in the middle of vineyards, they put up lots of marquees and you get to sample the wares of the Robertson valley over three day. We went on Saturday and Sunday and had a marvellous time, although Saturday was perhaps a bit young and rather crowded for us. Sunday is calmer and more relaxed. We like bumping into many of our readers and like to see lots of you enjoying yourself at these festivals
A weekend at Laurel Cottage, McGregor    The Robertson Wine Valley asked us to come to Wine on the River and offered us accommodation for the weekend. We were given Laurel Cottage in McGregor and had a very comfortable stay
A day in Robertson discovering new places and old friends      When we travel long distances out of town, we reckon that, if we have paid for the petrol to drive the distance, we might as well stay over and explore the area in more depth, find new wine farms and farms we haven't visited before and re-establish old connections. This time we spent Monday in the McGregor area and in Robertson visiting three wine farms. The first was Lords Winery
Lord's near McGregor     Not to be confused with Lords Guest House, (also owned by the winery but way down the valley), Lords is set right up the McGregor Valley on the "Road to Nowhere" to the Boesmanskloof pass where you can take the long walk across the mountains to Greyton. It's a great stop for refreshment either way. We were so warmly received and entertained we really enjoyed our visit and will definitely return soon. The views from the farm are superb and the wines really impressed
Tanagra Winery and Distillery     The owners Robert and Anette Rosenbach have been pressing us to visit for several months; we were so pleased we could finally get there. It's a small farm in the McGregor valley with interesting wines and lots of different grappas and other tempting fruit and grape spirits. They also have guest accommodation and we were taken to see one of the most beautiful houses for hire, set in the middle of the wilderness. If you feel the need to get away from it all and contemplate nature, this is the place for you. Especially with a bottle or two of Heavenly Chaos red wine and some Eau de Vie de Lie
Zandvliet     We used to love going to Zandvliet as part of the Wacky Wine Weekend for their salmon braai. Paul de Wet sold the farm last year to A N B Investments owners of holding company ClemenGold and Citrogold citrus brands, a huge producer of naartjies (Clementines) and other citrus n Mpumalanga, so we were keen to go to the farm to see what its future holds
To Ocean Basket to try their new Mediterranean menu     Ocean Basket had contacted us to come and try out this new menu and what better time to go than after a three day break in Robertson area. Lynne didn't have to cook supper and the drive to Camps Bay was quick, once we had greeted the cats and unpacked our car at home
Tasting Veritas Gold and Double Gold    Shortly after the Veritas Awards ceremony comes the public tasting of the top wines, this year held in the Ballroom at the CTICC. We got to sample some old favourites, some new and innovative wines and one really old treasure - a 1933 Muscadel from KWV, a wine so thick and syrupy with age and full of robust flavours and aromas you had to change your glass afterwards as they lingered to overtake any following wine.
Prescient Chardonnay Report 2016     This annual event (now in its 6th year), sponsored by Prescient, was held this year at Smith Studio, an art gallery in Church Street and there were some really good winners who were awarded the top scores. Judged by Christian Eedes, Roland Peens and James Petersen, they tasted 60 invited wines. The competition is by their invitation only. They score the wines out of 100 and any wine getting over 90 is awarded this accolade. The wines do have more of a drier French slant, rather than some the generous buttery chardonnays that are also delighting the public (there are some, most notably the Tokara). But this is to be expected, as the wines are always tasted by the same three people and obviously they would veer more towards their personal tastes, especially as the wines are invited to enter. All of them are excellent. You will find the list of top Chardonnays on the winemag.co.za web site. We have not been sent anything
Caroline's White Wine Review 2016     The second of Caroline Rillema's annual wine reviews, this showcases her pick of the best White Wines out there, those that have scored highly in the industry with points and awards and wines she likes and sells. It is always a tour de force of amazing wines. We always struggle to taste that many wines, but it is such a good tasting
Green Wine Awards     Knowing what a long hard path you have to take to become classified as Organic or IPW (Integrated Production of Wine) in the wine industry, your respect should soar for those farms who achieve it. This achievement is lauded and celebrated every year with these Green Wine Awards now in their 8th year, held this year at Rozendal in Stellenbosch. 120 wines were entered in the two categories: Best wines made from Organically Grown Grapes and Best Wines from Integrated Production of Wine. Judges in the Best Farming Practices category looked at not only what goes into the bottle, but considered the wellbeing of farm employees and surrounding communities and the wider impact of farming on the surrounding environments. The Awards are sponsored by Nedbank and Getaway Magazine
WOW! (World of Wine) VINEXPO 2017 in Bordeaux will have an area entirely dedicated to organic and biodynamic wines
We just received this announcement from Vinexpo. A very radical move, let’s hope some of our best producers, many of the above, will be assisted by the industry and the Government to attend. We think we have lots of great wines to show the world
It's easy to distort. A Danish film about South African wine farms     A film "Bitter Grapes - Slavery in the Vineyards" has been released in Scandinavia by Danish filmmaker Tom Heinemann. It shows wine farm workers living in horrific conditions on South African wine farms. We can’t say anything about the agenda of the people who produced the film. What we can say is that it is very easy to take three farms out of over 1000 wine producers and make a story which tarnishes a country whose wine industry has more Fairtrade accredited wine producers than there are in any other country. There are bad apples in every barrel and, if left to fester, they will spoil the whole crop. By all means expose them and work to bring about change. But it is wrong to paint a distorted picture. An enormous amount of effort has gone into cleaning up the wine industry in the last 20 or so years and a film like this which emphasises the bad without telling about the much larger good side of the story can undo the benefits in a short time. It does appear that the producers of the film used obsolete material to illustrate current financial factsRead on
Tropical, aromatic, with guava, grass and granadilla on the nose, these follow through on the palate with a lovely racy acidity and warmth that deals so well with spicy food. A long lime finish too. Cellar door price is R98 per bottle
We had beef leftovers again and the need for a simple quick supper. We always keep sliced, pickled jalapenos and peppadews in jars in the fridge and tortilla wraps in the freezer. We always have grateable cheese, fresh tomatoes and we live off avocados. So this fits the bill. We have made the recipe for two, but you can double up. We used a combination of local and English cheddar and some halloumi cheese, it's what we had. As long as it melts, it will do. The main mistake most people make with tortilla wraps is that they forget to toast them first, if you don’t do this, the texture is a little slimy and raw. Do this in a dry pan for just a couple of minutes each side to warm and lightly toast; you will see small brown circles, and the tortilla will become soft and floppy and malleable - then they are done. Don’t let them crisp. If you have any basil, coriander or other micro herbs you can add those. And you can add sliced avo if you don't have guacamole. And any other cold meat or chicken would work just as well
2 wraps per person - 300g thinly sliced cold roast beef or steak - 50g grated cheese - 3 or 4 jalapeno peppers - 5 peppadews - 6 baby tomatoes, sliced - 3 T chipotle salsa - guacamole - cream cheese
Turn your oven on to 180C. You will need two shelves. Put in two dinner plates to warm. Roughly chop the jalapenos and peppadews, mix with the sliced tomatoes and the chipotle salsa. In a flat dry frying pan, toast two tortillas and put one on a hot plate, keep the other warm. Cover the base of the tortilla with half of the cheese. Spread over half of the salsa mix, top with half the sliced beef. Cover with the second tortilla and put into the hot oven. Make the second one. Leave them for about 5 to 6 minutes in the oven until the cheese has melted. Serve topped with the guacamole and the cream cheese and a simple salad. And the wine of the week





31st October 2016
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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. This electronic journal has been sent to you because you have personally subscribed to it or because someone you know has asked us to send it to you or forwarded it to you themselves. Addresses given to us will not be divulged to any person or organisation. We collect them only for our own promotional purposes. If you wish to be added to our mailing list, please click here to send us a message and if you wish to be removed from our mailing list, please click here to send us a message.

It's easy to distort a story. Danish film about South African wine farms

A film "Bitter Grapes - Slavery in the Vineyards" has been released in Scandinavia by Danish filmmaker Tom Heinemann. It shows wine farm workers living in horrific conditions on South African wine farms. We can’t say anything about the agenda of the people who produced the film. What we can say is that it is very easy to take three farms out of over 1000 wine producers and make a story which tarnishes a country whose wine industry has more Fairtrade accredited wine producers than there are in any other country. There are bad apples in every barrel and, if left to fester, they will spoil the whole crop. By all means expose them and work to bring about change. But it is wrong to paint a distorted picture. An enormous amount of effort has gone into cleaning up the wine industry in the last 20 or so years and a film like this which emphasises the bad without telling about the much larger good side of the story can undo the benefits in a short time. We hear that the producers of the film used obsolete material to illustrate current financial facts
Danish incomes cannot be used as a yardstick for comparison with ours any more than one can equate their much higher cost of living with ours. People from the Northern Hemisphere come here and tell us that everything is “so cheap”, but they don’t always take into account that their incomes are a large multiple of ours and comparisons of prices don’t work unless you also compare incomes. A fair income here would be unlivable in Europe. We have to be very careful about travelling to Europe or North America because there is very little there that we can afford, even though we, personally, have a high standard of living in South Africa. When we travel, it tends to be to countries like Greece or Vietnam where prices compare favourably with our own. Eating out in England would be an unimaginable luxury for us and Scandinavian prices have always been a multiple of England's. When John worked in Norway, he had double the income he had in London and he could not live as well in Oslo as he had lived in London. That was many years ago, but the comparison is still valid. Visiting Norway again is a dream which can only become real if we win a lottery. A typical wine farm worker's income, which is well above our legislated minimum wage, can never be compared in bare numbers with the amount needed to survive in Denmark, Norway or Sweden, let alone in the UK or France, or even Spain or Portugal
It is significant that the Swedish Systembolaget, the organisation responsible for all wine imports into Sweden, has conducted its own audit and is satisfied that the South African producers from whom it buys wine do not transgress their high standards. These producers include at least one of the producers featured in the film, Robertson Winery. Sadly, even though 26 years have elapsed since our country moved from the old, repressive regime, there are still people who see us as a soft target and use us as a subject to pursue their sensationalist ends
What a film like this achieves is to undo much of the good that has been done by the wine industry in the last 30 or more years. If it succeeds in damaging our wine industry, all it will do will be to marginalise more of our wine producers, only 35% of whom make a profit according to British writer Tim Atkin, and increase our frightening 26.6% official unemployment rate. Maybe Herr Heinemann calls that working with a social conscience
Buying our wine, or any other products made here, such as motor cars (our biggest manufactured export), gives people jobs and puts money into their pockets. Producing a film like this, even though it pretends to tell a noble story, can put people out of work and increase their level of hardship. We have a difficult enough job making enough money to survive without having to contend with destructive stories like this which can as easily be made about wine producers in other countries.If you really wish to improve the living conditions of workers in South Africa, please recognise that we make excellent products, wines that compare very well with any others in the world and win international competitions, and buy them. We don't want your charity. We do want to compete on a level playing field and win on merit
We don't need to be a soft target for sensational and one-sided story tellers. Remember the old adage about the Road to Hell and Good Intentions