Tuesday, April 18, 2017

What's on the MENU this week: Classic Tarte Tatin

Cool Autumn weather has been showing its face this week and we were entertaining over the Easter Weekend. We had been given a bag of lovely Elgin apples so the choice of our dessert was easy. This recipe is very original, from the French; it uses lots of wicked things like sugar and butter and is absolutely irresistible. Lynne usually uses short crust pastry but decided this time, as time was short, not to make the pastry but to buy the (you need a small mortgage) butter puff pastry from Woolworths. It rose like a dream, but was thin and, despite leaving it in the oven a bit too long - the apples were melting - was still soggy when turned out. The Americans have made adaptations to the recipe which Lynne does not like. They always want things easier and quicker. They are using huge chunks of apple and are cooking them in a butter and sugar caramel before applying the pastry, which is always puff. We prefer a paté brisée (a rich short crust pastry) and normal sliced apples. Peel them if you like, don't if you prefer. Lynne makes this is in a heavy bottomed sauté pan with two handles. First you make caramel in the pan, then you arrange the fruit, then top with pastry. Remember, Caramel is not pale, honey-coloured, nor is it dark burnt brown. A nice red brown is enough
Rich Shortcrust Pastry
175g plain flour - 50g icing sugar - a pinch of salt - 90 g butter - 1 egg yolk - 2 tablespoons iced water - squeeze of lemon juice
Sift flour and sugar with the salt, then rub in the butter until it looks like fine breadcrumbs. Mix the yolk and 1 tablespoon water with lemon juice and mix into the flour with a knife. Use one hand to quickly and gently press into a firm dough. Add more water if necessary, but do not make the pastry too wet. Wrap in cling film and chill till ready to use. You can also make this in a food processor.
Making the caramel : 1/2 cup white sugar
Have ready a bowl full of cold water large enough to take the base of the pan, so that you can cool the caramel quickly to stop it burning. Put the pan on the heat and cover the base with half a cup of sugar. Watching it carefully, allow it to turn itself into caramel. Do not leave it alone, never stir and do not let it burn. Do not touch it, you will get burned. When the caramel has reached a good red amber colour, turn off the heat and put just the base of the pan into the cold water to stop the caramelisation. Do not get any water into the pan. Let it cool to a hard set
1 kilo Granny Smith apples - 2 t lemon juice - 50 g butter - 50g brown Treacle or Demerara sugar - 50g vanilla castor sugar - 25 g butter
Preheat the oven to 200°C
Peel, core and slice the apples, approx 2 cm thick half moon slices. Sprinkle with lemon juice. Put small teaspoonfuls of the soft butter on the base of the pan on top of the set caramel, sprinkle over the treacle sugar. Then arrange the apple slices in tight concentric circles in the pan, on top of the sugar and the butter. Sprinkle with the vanilla sugar and add the 25g of butter. Roll out the pastry into a circle just larger than the pan and lay it on top of the apples, tucking the edges in down the sides of the apples. Put into the oven for half an hour or until the pastry is golden and crisp
Turning out. You will need a dish larger than the pan, with a good lip - Lynne uses a very large quiche dish. Put the dish over the pan and, using tea towels to protect your hands, carefully and quickly flip the pan over so that the tart upends into the dish. Do this over a sink and make sure you flip away from yourself. This is where you get loud applause from anyone looking. Get someone to help you if you are nervous. There is always someone brave at a dinner party. There will be lots of buttery caramel juices. Serve immediately. We always flame the apples with a little calvados or brandy. Serve with thick cream and or real vanilla custard. Serve with chilled calvados or a Noble Late Harvest dessert wine

MENU's Wine of the Week. Meerlust Chardonnay 2014

We enjoyed this wine at the farm two years ago at a lunch with owner Hannes Myburgh and talented winemaker Chris Williams. We loved it then and it has become even better. We had it again last week at the Degustation Dinner at Azure Restaurant. What a superb wine. It was a beautiful match with the food it was paired with: a lightly citrus and vanilla cured Norwegian salmon with roasted hazelnuts. We knew the wine in the pairing was a Chardonnay of great provenance, but did not guess it correctly as we thought it was from a cool area like Hemel en Aarde or Elgin

Indeed it was great, the elegant Meerlust 2014 from Stellenbosch, served in Riedel Montrachet glasses, was weighty, full, with some beautiful oaking, the clean lemon lime Chardonnay flavours shining through, silky and intense but not blousy or over ripe as Chardonnays from warmer areas can be sometimes

Degustation dinner launch at Azure Restaurant, The Twelve Apostles, Cape Town

Food for Fanatical Foodies: A Degustation Menu at Azure Restaurant at The Twelve Apostles Hotel
From the 5th of May and on every first Friday of the month thereafter, The Twelve Apostles Hotel is offering you the chance of experiencing a six course degustation menu. Limited to between six and 12 guests, you will have the experience of eating at the Chef's Table in Azure restaurant. Hosted by Chef Christo Pretorius who is ably accompanied by Head Sommelier and co-host, Gregory Mutambe, a six-course surprise menu - all about textures and flavours, will be prepared especially for the guests. Each dish will be paired with a selection of South Africa’s best wines, chosen by Gregory. The cost to book an exclusive place at the Chef’s Table is R2150 per person - price includes meal, wine/tea pairing, water and gratuity. We think that this might also suit the corporate market when they need to entertain overseas guests
We were invited last week, along with other members of the media, to sample the food and wine that will be on the Degustation menu. This complex meal with excellent fine wines, all served in Riedel glasses, was quite a tour de force.
We were welcomed with Avondale's Armilla MCC 2009 Blanc de Blancs from organically grown Chardonnay. This Biodynamic farm on the edge of Paarl produces some excellent wines. This was crisp and long, with hints of apple, citrus and nuts, with a fine mousse and very sophisticated, just right for the occasion.
Gifts on the table were chocolates and everyone was presented with an Azure apron signed by the staff
The lovely table setting with lots of fresh flowers
We chatted with Joanne Hayes, PRO for Red Carnation Hotels, and the other guests while waiting for latecomers
On another table, very, very happy customers with the Grilled Seafood Platter for two, a huge selection of seafood . You will find the details on the À La Carte menu
Head Sommelier Gregory Mutambe tells us that the wines will be a surprise, all from his cellar; he has selected them to go with each course and will reveal them to us as we drink them
The menu
The Amuse was a succulent sous vide Saldanha Bay oyster, gently poached in 60⁰C water, served with an oyster mayonnaise, miso caramel, compressed cucumber, passion fruit and wild rice puffs. Lynne was served with dish without the oyster. The miso caramel was very good
With the next course we were served Le Lude's Rosé NV MCC from Franschhoek which is clean and sparkling with hints of richness and strawberries on the nose, full of berries on the lean palate
It had been paired with a Chicken and Ham terrine with herbs, slight smokiness, so well made, still with good texture on both meats and held together with aspic, dressed with pickled shiitake mushrooms, tarragon mayonnaise, a honey mustard emulsion, compressed Granny Smith apple, a cured egg yolk and topped with micro greens. So great to be served a good terrine. We don't get enough of them in South Africa; if well executed they can be delicious, as this was. The wine pairing was faultless
John's dish, sans the shiitake mushrooms
Then a demonstration of roast and raw cauliflower. Some had been curried Cape Malay style, was dressed with a Cauliflower crème, plump pickled sultanas, and rather strangely topped, with grated aged parmesan cheese, which did add some savoury umami to quite a sweet spicy dish. This was served with an onion dhaltjie (a small deep fried chick pea flour savoury donut with onion, also known as a chilli bite or an onion bhajji).
We guessed what the next wine was, both the cultivar and the region to Greg's amazement, but then it is one of our favourites, Creation's 2016 Viognier, perfect with spicy food. Its aromatic peaches and nice warmth are lovely
The third course of citrus and vanilla cured Norwegian salmon with a yoghurt coconut curd flavoured with molasses, roasted hazelnuts - unusual but good with the fish, fennel fronds, pickled beetroot and stem ginger and lemongrass. Still not convinced about vanilla with savoury food, we find it masks the food's flavour and makes you think of sweet dessert. Apparently local trout is a problem at the moment with the drought, which is why they used imported salmon. Chef likes to use only local produce
We knew the wine pairing was a Chardonnay of great provenance, but we did not guess it correctly as we thought it from a cool area like Hemel en Aarde or Elgin. Indeed it was great, the elegant Meerlust 2014 from Stellenbosch, served in Riedel Montrachet glasses, was weighty, full, with some beautiful oaking. the clean lemon lime Chardonnay flavours shining through, silky and intense but not blousy or over ripe, as warmer areas can sometimes be
Time for a pause and a palate cleanser. This is one of the signatures of Azure restaurant. A green apple pear sorbet with a dry ice fountain
Onward into the meat zone. A perfectly pink loin of venison served pulled venison, so rich, accompanied by parmesan gnocchi, roast butternut puree, squash custard, confit baby leeks, a seed crumble and a shiny maple and coffee jus. Its richness nearly defeated several of us but it was a well made dish. Sommelier Greg served us the Hannibal 2014 from Bouchard Finlayson, made by Cellarmaster Peter Finlayson (the farm is owned by the Tollman family). It has the perfume of Pinot Noir's fresh cherries and the spice cranberries and cherries of the Sangiovese and other grapes that go into this extraordinarily good blend of many layers and surprises. The blend is 33% Sangiovese, 22% Pinot noir, 18% Shiraz, 17%n Nebbiolo, 6% Mourvédre, 4% Barbera.
Time for a savoury cheese course before the dessert. Boerenkaas (farmers cheese) Biscuit made by Gina Marziani the pastry chef. This was served with pickled plums, a plum gel and watercress with a toasted macadamia mousse. The wine served was Boplaas NV Cape Tawny, a port style wine, made by Margaux Nel from Tinta Barocca, Touriga Nacional and Souzao
The 12 Apostles team who so generously cooked, served and entertained us. Gina Marziani, pastry chef; William "Bwana" Chintu, waiter; Hilton Ruch, F&B Manager; Gregory Mutambe, Head Sommelier; Christo Pretorius, Executive Chef; Michael Nel, General Manager

Time for dessert. Another rich and indulgent course: a Valrhona Chocolate crémeux, with gingerbread, a salty dulcey crème rocher on top, macerated berries and tiny vanilla meringue kisses, again perfectly matched with Peter Bayly's Cape Vintage port (we recognised it, but then we have had quite a lot of this lovely port, having occupied the stand next to Peter's at the Biscuit Mill market for several years). The port is spicy, full, layered and full of red and black berry fruit, a great match for chocolate. It wins competitions and is so well respected in the industry. Thank you Greg for showing us your favourite wines, we loved them
Another courses: Mignardises (petit fours) served with coffee. Tiny macarons, fruit jellies and chocolate enrobed raisins, nuts and marshmallow
You do need to book for this very special meal well in advance. This Chef's Table is not served in the kitchen but in a special area of the very chic Azure restaurant. Contact them on 021 437 9000 or restaurants@12apostles.co.za. They do also have a seasonal à La Carte Menu or try the innovative ‘Taste of the Earth’ vegetarian and ‘Taste of the Sea’ pescetarian four-course tasting menus

The Magic of Chenin and All that Jazz! at The Grand Beach, V&A Waterfront

A marvellous Chenin party with the Chenin Blanc Association
We were so delighted to see the Chenin Blanc Association open up their annual Chenin Blanc tasting to the public.  This was held last week at The Grand on the Beach in the Waterfront from 5 to 10 and was sensational.  A chance to taste Chenin from every member of the association, old and new and some very different .  We had a ball
David Trafford and Sijnn winemaker Charla Haasbroek show the artwork for a new Sijnn label. Charla is also wearing the artwork, which is on the silk scarf around her neck
Chenin, sunset, service and sea side.  Perfection
We were early; lots of room for arriving guests. Canapés were served throughout the evening
Kleine Zalze cellarmaster Alastair Rimmer and friends


Owner winemakers David Trafford of De Trafford and Sijnn and Jeff Grier of Villiera
Both were showing very, very good Chenins
Wine tasting counters were arranged at all the bars
Inside the shed there was a pay bar for those who wanted to drink something else...?!
The jazz band played on all evening
Watching the sunset cruise boats coming back to harbour
Hannes Meyer of Simonsig
Ken Forrester, Chairman of the Chenin Blanc Association in beach attire, gets the ball rolling on the evening
Bruwer Raats with his son
Adam Mason of Mulderbosch chats to two media members
Chilling on the beach with Chenin.  There was a very good magician Larry Soffer circulating and amazing people with his mind reading and Légerdemain
Edo Heyns, Strategic Marketing Manager at AdVini South Africa with L'Avenir Single Vineyard Chenin blanc
A taste of Kleine Zalze
Hobbits also attended
Aletté van Vuuren of Ken Forrester with Anthony van Schalkwyk of Kleine Zalze
At the Ken Forrester stand there was a huge push to taste Ken's Dirty Little Secret
Cathy van Zyl MW enjoys a joke with Danie Steytler Jr of Kaapzicht
Full moon rising over the bay.  The weather was balmy.  All we needed  was an owl and a pussycat.  OK, it's not pea green...
La Colombe sommelier Joseph Dafana and journalist Jeanri-Tine van Zyl
A superb chance to taste some of the very best Chenin Blancs currently on sale in South Africa. We hope that they will do it again next year and that you can come

Breakfast at Newport deli

On a fairly miserable morning after a night of (much appreciated) rain, we ventured out to Mouille Point to Newport Deli to try their breakfasts.  We did not realise that they keep a kosher menu so were a little bit disappointed to discover no bacon but turkey macon, something we avoid. We are not fans of pretend food and miss the fat on the bacon!
We were directed to an inside table.  Lynne had tried to make an on-line reservation and to phone them, but neither worked.  Luckily, they were not full
The essential black coffee on arrival
The menu
They do a good Shakshuka , which is what our vegetarian friends come for - spicy Tomatoes and peppers with eggs, an Israeli or north African speciality.  There are only a few hot breakfast options on the menu:  Poached eggs with bread, Scrambled eggs with bread  or on a croissant (which we both went for), Croissant French toast, Hot Oats and the Shakshuka.  Everything else is extra:  Cheese  R 15, Grilled Tomato  R8, Turkey Macon  22, Spinach  R15, Avo  R20, Feta  R20, Salmon  R65, Banting Bread Add R 10.  There are lots of healthy cold options

The scrambled eggs are cooked without butter (we assume not kosher) and were rather disappointing and thin, rather than creamy.  Neither is the croissant served with butter and we must assume not made with butter either?
The hot oats are served with baked apple, sweet dukkah and honey
A view of the deli from above
There are lots of tables
The bill