Wednesday, November 30, 2016

The Leeu Collection launches Marigold, Franschhoek's first authentic Indian restaurant

Franschhoek now has a good authentic Indian restaurant; not Cape Malay, not Durban Indian, but real subcontinent Indian. It opened to the public on December 8th. It is part of the Leeu Collection and is on Main Street/Heritage Square. We were invited to a media lunch just before it opened and sampled a lot of the delicious food
The prancing lion at the entrance is hard to miss
Look for the sign
A traditional Indian welcome by the Restaurant Manager, Shubhendu Vyas
Our foreheads are anointed with oil - PRO for the Leeu Collection Nicolette Waterford is the recipient ...
... a Bindi of a marigold petal is applied ....
... and more marigold petals are scattered in our hair
Then a welcoming glass of Bas Brut MCC
Jean van der Walt, Leeu Collection  Marketing Executive, Matthew Smith, Area General Manager of the Leeu Collection and social media specialist Linda Potgieter of The Squashed Tomato
Outside seating with umbrellas for shade
Hot crisp Punjabi samoosas with a tamarind dipping sauce were served as canapés
Inside, the restaurant is spacious, airy and light, with seating for 60 and 20 outside.
Lots of on trend modern touches with the touches of copper and retro chairs
A Mandala with marigold petals
Matthew Smith, GM of the Leeu Collection, welcomes us
and we meet the Executive chef, Vanie Padayachee, originally from Durban and, until recently, part of the Quartier Français culinary team.
Two of the white wines served with lunch: Mullineux Old Vines 2015 and the Kloof Street 2016 Old Vine Chenin Blanc. Both good with the spicy food
The lunch menu
Rice and chickpea poppadoms, served with a green coriander dip and a mango pickle atchar
Sitting down to eat
Enjoying the starters, Lynne with Nicolette Waterford, Myrna Robins and Siegfried Schäfer
This was our favourite starter of the day: Palak Chaat. Spinach leaves coated with gram flour batter and deep fried in oil, then topped with two chutneys and a sweetened curd. Oh, so crisp and mouth-watering with the different flavours and textures
This is Golgappa with a tamarind sauce (Pani), which you pour into the tiny, crisp, bite-sized orbs and pop whole into your mouth. They are made from potato and chick peas. Two new culinary experiences
Some Mullineux 2014 Shiraz. It is aromatic, spicy and silky, then the fruit acids arrive leaving a spicy end; also great with the Indian food
A hairnet of marigold petals
Shubhendu Vyas explains the main courses. We ate family style, sharing the dishes on the table as they arrived
Turning over the pastry top of the fragrant and fresh tender lamb biryani, steamed in a traditional Dam pot, which was slightly dry, but helped by the gravies in the other dishes ...
... the thick and creamy deboned Butter chicken (England's most popular curry dish) and the Palak Paneer (squares of paneer cheese in pureed spinach with tomatoes
Nimbu Machli Tikka; yogurt and spice marinated fish, cooked in a Tandoor oven, and fiery hot with spice. Great with a squeeze of the lemon
Jeera mutar pulao: Steamed rice with peas, tempered with cumin seeds and butter
A crowded table. On the left is a basket of Naan bread and some vegetable yoghurt Raita
John's selection. He also had a beer from the Tuk Tuk Brewery across the road, which is another component of the Leeu Collection
Dessert was pineapple baked in the Tandoor oven with a coconut and fennel khulfi (frozen) with a saffron crumb, and it was absolutely delicious. It was served with the sticky and sweet 2015 Mullineux and Leeu Straw Wine
And finally as is traditional at the end of Indian meals, Mukhwas, the fennel seed and candy sweetmeat to freshen your breath and aid digestion
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

Woolworths "Let's Get Bubbly" event at Villiera

Woolworths works very closely with excellent Cape vineyards to make special selections of wine available to Woolworths' customers. We often buy them; these special selections often win major wine awards and are top quality. The wines were to be tasted in Riedel glasses. So we were very keen to taste some of these at a function arranged at Villiera, who produce many great MCCs for Woolworths. John had a wine tour that he was booked for months ago, so Lynne took advantage of the transport Woolworths arranged, and took her camera along
A warm welcome from Cathy Brewer CWM (née Grier) and her husband Julian, who imports wine. She heads the sales, marketing and export divisions of Villiera. The winemaking is done by Jeff Grier CWM and his cousin Simon Grier is the viticulturist. Besides the Stellenbosch Farm, they also have a farm in the Roussillon region in the South of France, Domaine Grier.
We started in the wine cellar with two Villiera bubblies which are sold in Woolworths, the Light Brut MCC (only 9% alcohol) and Lynne's choice, the Domaine Grier made from Macabeo, a white grape grown on either side of the Pyrenees and in Rioja. This is the first bubbly made from that grape in France, so they created a new category. It is clean, crisp and complex, yeasty on the nose, with notes of raspberry and limes on the palate, with a fine mousse and some slight chalky French terroir. R179.95 in Woolworths. We drank out of the new style tulip shaped glasses which do show more flavour and character to sparkling wines
Winemaker Jeff Grier
Alan Mullins, CWM, wine buyer and consultant to Woolworths since 1990, is a recognised authority on Champagne, MCC and sparkling wine. He is also a wine judge in many competitions
Cheese platters were put out to prepare us for the tasting to follow
Riedel glasses for the tasting. Four champagne glasses in front and behind them, L to R, a Sauvignon Blanc glass, a Chardonnay glass, a red Shiraz glass and a stemless red wine glass  We did mix and match the wines in the different glasses and there is a marked difference in the wines if they are tasted in a glass not especially designed for that particular wine
Opposite Christian Eedes of Winemag.co.za is Raphael Graugnard from Domaine Grier. We began the tasting with the Woolworths 2012 Villiera Brut Natural (R134.95). It is 100% Chardonnay, so Blanc de Blanc. It is bready , yeasty, leesy on the nose with toast and cooked fruit - that's the age showing - and has a great crisp mousse and is lovely and bone dry, No dosage added and no sulphur either. Second in the flight was Woolworths 2010 Vintage Reserve Brut (R159.95) . Woolworths gets involved at the dosage and age levels of the wine. This has a lovely nose nutty, leesy, buttery brioche and long clean flavours of limes, lemons and some chalk. There is red fruit but in the background. It is the same wine as the first, but this has a dosage added
Jeff Grier telling us about the wines . Next was the Woolworths Brut, the biggest seller and available in small 'splits' of 375 ml (R69.95), full size (R94.95) and in 1.5 litre magnums (R189.95). Made from 50% Chardonnay, 30% Pinot Noir and 20% Pinotage. Bready on the nose with a crisp mousse, slightly sweeter than the previous wines but still dry, perfume of lilies and roses on the palate with crisp citrus acidity and good fruit. Then, a challenge. Apparently all the top French marques are adding a demi-sec (semi sweet - only up to 33 g/l sugar allowed) bubbly to their repertoire because of demand. That demand is growing in South Africa too. We can't say we enjoy them a lot, but we keep an open mind. This wine is a case in point as to why we should. Bready brioche with dusty raspberries and pears on the nose, then lovely pure raspberry juice with a good mousse on the palate. No sticky oversweet syrup. A lovely introduction for wine novices and it was absolutely perfect accompaniment for the soft, rich chocolate cake dessert that was to follow the tasting
The four Villiera MCCs
Time to learn to taste in Riedel glass with Tarryn Vincent of Reciprocal Trading. We started with the extraordinary Ghost Corner Sauvignon Blanc by David Nieuwoudt at Cederberg Private Cellars. A classic expression of how green a Sauvignon Blanc can be: Pyrazines, green leaves, green peppers, elderflowers, some spice, this wine gives so much. It is full, then crisp, then floral on the palate, lean and mean with long green and fig flavours. We love it and the style. (R149.95).The glass highlighted all those aromas and flavours. Then, in its special Chardonnay glass made for oaked wines, Hartenberg's lightly oaked Chardonnay (R99.95). Wood whiffs, butter limes and nuts on the nose, a silky texture on the palate with lots of oak, butter, limes, chalk and marmalade with the dark wood end. So rich and asking for rich food. In the first glass, it had only smoke and was a light chardonnay with less in every way
A representative had joined us from Riedel in Austria, who told us more about the different ranges of Riedel glasses. We then tasted the Saronsberg Shiraz, 'Life is Fine" (R129.95) from a poem by Langston-Hughes which ends "Life is fine! Fine as wine! Life is fine!" We can see this label selling lots of wine. And it will be worth buying. It's a rich and big nose-ful of fruit, spice, red cherries, umami notes with cream. It has silky sweet fruit, spicy, peppery with lots of fruit layers with chalky grippy tannins.. Then the Delaire Graff Cabernet Merlot (R129.95) wood hints, Cassis berries and leaves, violet perfume, vegetal forest floor and white pepper on the end. Rich red fruit, pure cassis, a lovely, lovely display of this wine. In the Shiraz glass, more wood showed, less fruit, more tannins and chalk. Still all right but not as superb as in the correct glass.
Rebecca Constable of Woolworths buying team with Julian Brewer
The wine and lunch menu
Time for lunch. which was small bites paired and served with the MCCs and also another six Woolworths wines. Of special note were the Cherry glazed duck steamed buns with Miso dressing - Lynne managed to get another, they were delicious...
and the tiny Chocolate cake, with the Demi-Sec MCC
These were the other two desserts, both jellies:
The line up of lunch wines
The line up of the Woolworths Villiera MCCs
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2016

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