Tuesday, November 29, 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

This Week's MENU. Lunch at Glenelly's new Bistro, Hemel-en-Aarde Chardonnay Celebration, 2016 Diners Club Winemaker of The Year, AirBnB, Landskroon Shiraz, Pepper Steak Pie

A Cape white-eye (Zosterops virens) in a white strelitzia in our garden
Off to the country      It has been another rollicking week in the media. It has been a very long and busy media season this year, starting in May and now continuing into December, with a flurry of end of year events. So many, too many to contemplate, stretching time to include in our diary but some just have to be given priority. So it was this last weekend. We had been invited to lunch at Glenelly's new Bistro in Stellenbosch on Friday. We had also committed to attending the Diners Club Winemaker of the Year in Franschhoek. And then we were invited to the Hemel and Aarde Valley's Celebration of Chardonnay, also on Saturday, but during the day in Voëlklip near Hermanus. Could we do it all? Was travelling those quite large distances to fit it all in even possible? Well, you know we are a little crazy, so we did it. It took careful planning, two AirBnB bookings and a mad last minute dash from Hermanus to Paarl on Saturday, so please read on... or click any of the following links to look at a story
Lunch at Glenelly's new Bistro "The Vine" with a tasting of the wines      Christophe Dehosse has recently opened his Bistro at Glenelly and we were invited for lunch to see what he is doing, sample the food and taste the Glenelly wines with Cellarmaster Luke O'Cuinneagain. Glenelly is owned by Lady May-Éliane de Lencquesaing who fell in love with South Africa on a visit and subsequently bought the farm. She wanted to start from scratch and aims to make the best wines the land can produce, using only grapes grown on Glenelly. She was previously the owner and manager of the esteemed 2nd growth Wine estate Chateau Pichon Longueville Comtesse de Lalande in Pauillac in Bordeaux, which was sold in 2004 to Louis Roederer. She trained in Oenology at the age of 35. She is now 91 and amazing for her age. She is one of our icons
A Celebration of Chardonnay from the Hemel and Aarde Valley      South African Chardonnay has been though ups and downs in popularity and quality over the last 20 years and, thankfully, now seems to be firmly entrenched as one of our best producing noble varieties, as long as wood is used judiciously. But is it better grown in some areas of the Cape than others? We were invited to this Celebration last weekend and certainly is does shine in the Hemel and Aarde Valley with quality, great purity of fruit and finesse. Regardless of which part of the valley it is grown in, it thrives and produces great wines if handled correctly and this the valley is doing
Diners Club 2016 Winemaker of the Year Awards      Diners Club is the sponsor of this prestigious annual event and each year they set the categories of wine to be entered for the Young Winemaker of the Year and the Winemaker of the Year. This year, they asked for a red blend from the Young Winemaker of the year (under 30 years of age) and a Chenin for the Winemaker of the Year. The gala dinner and awards ceremony was held, again, at La Residence in Franschhoek. It was a sparkling evening full of anticipation, joy and celebration
AirBnB in Voëlklip and then a mad dash to Paarl and our overnight accommodation there      Lynne didn't want John to have to get up at the crack of dawn to drive to Voëlklip for the Celebration of Chardonnay at 10 am and then have to drive to Franschhoek, so we booked a tiny room in Voëlklip for Friday night. The drive there after lunch in Ida's Valley was lovely, we stopped off at the magnificent Woolworths Waterstone Mall in Somerset West and bought some picnic snacks. Then, to avoid the Friday night traffic, we drove along the coastal route to Hermanus, passing Gordon's Bay, Rooi Els, Pringle Bay, Bot River and onwards. Hardly any traffic and such a lovely road. And a simple picnic by the sea for supper. OK, the wind was blowing, so we did sit in the car, admiring the surfing and the view before an early night
You can never time the end of an event, especially if it is enjoyable, they continue and it is very hard to drag oneself away. We meant to leave the Celebration of Chardonnay at 3, after lunch; we finally hit the road at 3.30. We had booked another AirBnB in Paarl, which was affordable at R580 for the night. There was nothing in Franschhoek under R2 500 a night, so on our pensioners budget, Paarl was the best option. But the drive there is long and winding and takes you around the woefully empty Theewaterskloof Dam near Villiersdorp and, following the trail the elephants took centuries ago, up and over the magnificent mountain pass to Franschhoek. We were very stressed when we arrived in Paarl at 5.35 and had 10 minutes to shower and change (it was Black Tie formal) and then get back in the car to return to Franschhoek for the event at 6. We arrived there at 6.15
Wine of the week - Landskroon Shiraz      We have had some really amazing wines this week, not all of them are still available and some are rather pricy. This is one that impressed us a lot - we buy it and keep it for a couple of years as it improves wonderfully and is very reasonable. While we are enjoying the 2010 from our cellar, the current vintage is 2014. From the farm R62 a bottle. It is friendly, soft and spicy, full of good sweet, dark berries and goes so well with this week's recipe
The MENU Recipe of the Week: Pepper Steak Pie      Something traditional this week. This is our choice of pie flavour when we are out and about and need a quick lunch “on the hoof”. But Lynne decided to see if she could make a large one for supper during the week. Serves 4
1 kg beef steak, cubed - 1 T plain flour - 1 t flaked salt - 1 t ground black pepper - 1 large onion, chopped - 1 peeled carrot, chopped into 1/2 cm dice - 1T coconut or canola oil for frying - 3 T brandy - 1 cup red wine - 1 cup of good beef stock - Freshly ground black pepper to taste - 1 t fresh thyme leaves - a roll of flaky pastry - 1 egg yolk
Mix the flour with the salt and pepper and toss the meat in it to cover well. Brown the meat in the oil, then set aside. Add the onion and a little more oil if necessary and cook slowly with a little salt until it is beginning to caramelise. Put back the beef with any juices and deglaze the pan with the brandy, then add the wine stock, the carrot, seasoning and thyme. Add some black pepper, about a teaspoon, cook, simmer covered on the top of the stove for half an hour and then add more to your taste, some might like it more peppery than others. Turn your oven on to 220C. Roll out the cold pastry into a circle. Spoon filling into a 20 to 22cm deep pie dish, grease or butter the rim. Cover the pie with the pastry. Cut a cross in the centre to let the steam escape, use a pie funnel if you have one. Crimp the edges of the pastry on the edge and decorate the top if you want to. Lightly whip the egg yolk and brush the pastry with it. Put into the oven to bake for about 30 to 40 minutes or until the pastry is crisp and golden and cooked through. Serve with creamy mash or cauli mash and lots of fresh vegetables. And a good robust red wine. The Landskroon Shiraz, for example
In MENU next week: Keermont new releases, Cap Classique Association public tasting, Springfield Lost Vintage, Woolworths Wine Event, Wine Concepts Champagne, Jordan Summer Festival and more





28th November 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.

Monday, November 28, 2016

AirBnB in Voëlklip and a Mad dash to Paarl and our overnight accommodation

Lynne didn't want John to have to get up at the crack of dawn to drive to Voëlklip for 10 am and then have to drive to Franschhoek, so we booked a tiny room in Voëlklip for Friday night. The drive there after lunch in Ida's Valley was lovely, we stopped off at the magnificent Woolworths Waterstone Mall in Somerset West and bought some picnic snacks. Then, to avoid the Friday night traffic, we drove along the coastal route to Hermanus, passing Gordon's Bay, Rooi Els, Pringle Bay, Bot River and onwards. Hardly any traffic and such a lovely road. And a simple picnic by the sea for supper
OK, the wind was blowing, so we sat in the car, admiring the surfing and the view before an early night
You can never time the end of events, if they are enjoyable, they continue and it is very hard to drag oneself away. We wanted to leave the Celebration of Chardonnay at 3, after lunch; we finally hit the road at 3.30. We had booked another AirBnB in Paarl, which was affordable at R580 for the night
There was nothing in Franschhoek under R2 500 a night, so on our pensioners' budget, Paarl was the best option. But the drive there is long and winding and takes you around the woefully empty Theewaterskloof Dam near Villiersdorp and, following the trail the elephants took centuries ago, up and over the magnificent mountain pass to Franschhoek. It seemed even longer because the car's air conditioning decided to become defunct and it was a hot day
We were very stressed when we arrived in Paarl at 5.35 and had 10 minutes to shower and change (it was Black Tie formal) and then get back in the car to return to Franschhoek for the event at 6. We arrived there at 6.15

The comfortable sitting room which led to our bedroom
under the eaves 
in this 18th Century House
Next morning, off down the road to the Spur for their R30 breakfast
always well prepared and amazing value
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

MENU Recipe of the Week - Pepper Steak Pie

Something traditional this week. This is our choice of pie flavour when we are out and about and need a quick lunch “on the hoof”. But Lynne decided to see if she could make a large one for supper during the week. Serves 4
1 kg beef steak, cubed - 1 T plain flour - 1 t flaked salt - 1 t ground black pepper - 1 large onion, chopped - 1 peeled carrot, chopped into 1/2 cm dice - 1T coconut or canola oil for frying - 3 T brandy - 1 cup red wine - 1 cup of good beef stock - Freshly ground black pepper to taste - 1 t fresh thyme leaves - a roll of flaky pastry - 1 egg yolk

Mix the flour with the salt and pepper and toss the meat in it to cover well. Brown the meat in the oil, then set aside. Add the onion and a little more oil if necessary and cook slowly with a little salt until it is beginning to caramelise. Put back the beef with any juices and deglaze the pan with the brandy, then add the wine stock, the carrot, seasoning and thyme. (Add some black pepper, about a teaspoon, cook, simmer covered on the top of the stove for half an hour and then add more to your taste, some might like it more peppery than others). Turn your oven on to 220C. Roll out the cold pastry into a circle. Spoon filling into a 20 to 22cm deep pie dish, grease or butter the rim. Cover the pie with the pastry. Cut a cross in the centre to let the steam escape, use a pie funnel if you have one. Crimp the edges of the pastry on the edge and decorate the top if you want to. Lightly whip the egg yolk and brush the pastry with it. Put into the oven to bake for about 30 to 40 minutes or until the pastry is crisp and golden and cooked through. Serve with creamy mash or cauli mash and lots of fresh vegetables. And a good robust red wine. The Landskroon Shiraz, for example
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016