Tuesday, August 01, 2017

The Sommeliers Selection Awards Ceremony & Tasting

These annual awards of places in the coveted Sommeliers Wine list are now in their 3rd year. The ceremony, attended by representatives of many wine farms and the media, were held in the beautiful Hofmeyr Hall in Stellenbosch. The sommeliers who chose the wines do not categorise wines by cultivar on the list, rather grouping them into flavour and economical categories
The list is four pages long
People beginning to arrive
The awards are organised by Darielle Robinson and PRO Pippa Pringle. Darielle made the opening speech of welcome
The judges
Chairman Joakim Blackadder, his first year in the chair. They have selected 679 elegant, classy wines, he said
Lots of space to sit as they tell us about the winners and how they were chosen. It is quite a random selection but (mostly) the wines do deserve to be there. Some of the reds could be older, but then those are not often available. And of course it does depend on what is entered into the competition. Oh and this year there are also some craft beers - applause, not everyone is a wine drinker
All of the wines on the list were open for us to taste. These are four (of five) of the Economically Savvy Wines by the Glass - White
The Fresh and Crunchy White wine category winners (Yes, we are unsure about Crunchy in reference to wine too) But we like the selection
Four in the Elegant and Classy Whites category
A new wine for us, and a goodie, Arco Laarman's own 2016 Cluster series Chardonnay
Some food was supplied. Bread, cheese, coppa and bressaola, and lots of strawberries
Oh dear, those mini pies and 'pizzas' that appear far too often. We avoid. And strawberries
A very good camembert, perfectly ripe, a nice Gouda and some good bread. And strawberries
More strawberries. They are just coming into season
Popcorn. Next to the strawberries

A visit to Bellevue in Bottelary

An impressive tasting of Bellevue Wines
We have not visited Bellevue wine estate in Bottelary for a while. John does take wine tours there to taste the superb Pinotages; it was where the original commercial plantings of Professor A I Perold's Pinotage were made in the early 1950s. The first Pinotage, made and bottled by P K Morkel, was grown on Bellevue. The original vineyard, planted in 1954, is still producing quality grapes. Pinotage is a cross of Cinsaut and Pinot Noir and is a truly South African grape. Dirkie Morkel saw our write up of Kaapzicht and invited us to come to the farm to taste some wine. So, as we were in the area after our dinner at Rhebokskloof, we made a date for 11 am the next day
The Morkel farmhouse is dated 1803. It is a national monument
The modern tasting room; a restaurant will be opened here very shortly
The verandah which will be used for the restaurant and tasting
A lovely place to relax and enjoy the sun
Pizzas will be on the restaurant menu
We sat inside as the day was still very chilly. Cellarmaster Wilhelm Kritzinger guided us through the wines. Dirkie joined us a little later. We began with the just-bottled 2017 Estate Sauvignon Blanc, made by winemaker Anneke Potgieter. It has granadilla, guava and fig leaves on the nose, and is crisp and herbal on the palate with English gooseberries. It has a round mouth feel, almost as if some Semillon has been added (none has) and is a nice middle ground Sauvignon with both green and tropical notes. R60
The impressive line up of wines we were to taste. We followed with the unwooded Chardonnay, which has had good lees contact and is a bargain at R45 a bottle. We bought 6, we liked it so much. It has a nice tingle on the tongue, is bone dry, restrained and elegant in the French style
Then came the (now rather fashionable grape) Cinsaut 2015, which Bellevue has been making for several years. It is dusty on the nose, but shows lovely raspberry and strawberry flavours and is long and soft, not as harsh and tannic as some we have experienced. We think this wine has a potential to age too. So we bought six, at R70 a bottle
Enjoying tasting and talking about wine with Dirkie Morkel and cellarmaster Wilhelm Kritzinger. We tasted the 2014 Pinotage with its powerful nose; flavours of rhubarb, plums and vanilla from the oak. Lots of fruit, no metallic tastes, dark licorice on the end and some nice chalky tannins. Interestingly, they use French-made American oak barrels. They say they are much better than American made oak barrels
Then the Shiraz, A classic sandalwood nose with bacon and spice; very attractive, a silky mouth feel, beautiful ripe fruit. This is food wine and pumps well above its station at only R60 a bottle

We liked the Malbec too with its wildness (a characteristic of the Bellevue Malbec since we first tasted it about 20 years ago), warm linen, salt, mulberries with a touch of buchu. So fruity on the palate with those mulberries, cherries, chalky tannins, wild herbal fynbos and a hint of maraschino on the end. A site specific wine, says Wilhelm. R100

Then the PK Morkel 2010 Pinotage, their flagship wine. Expensive incense wood on the nose, dark fruit and spice. On the palate, splendid fruit, fresh berries, then Christmas pudding with some marzipan, and some malt. Juicy and silky, so satisfying; this is what Pinotage should be, for us. R225 a bottle. Very good value compared to some others in the industry
We also tasted the top of the range PK Morkel 2010 Petite Verdot . Unmistakable with the expected violets on the nose, they are accompanied by incense wood and pencil shavings. It has sweet berry fruit, tayberries, boysenberries, lots of violets, and the expensive wood is supporting this elegant wine, full of minerality and soft chalky tannins to last, with a hint of licorice drop on the end. R175 a bottle

So nice to spend time with them and taste through these really good wines, not a bad one in the bunch. It has been too long since our last visit

Rhebokskloof Wine Club dinner

We had an invitation from Rhebokskloof to join them for a tasting of their new releases, followed by dinner. The event was an opportunity to thank their loyal customers, who are the highest purchasing members of their Loyalty Club
We don't drive home in the dark after events like this, so we booked an AirBnB room in Paarl on what must have been one of the coldest nights of the year! 
The winery
Roosting Guinea Fowl in the tree, escaping from ground predators. In our family they are known as Guinea fools; just watch the panic as they lose their minds as they try to cross a road!
The Werf with the tasting room
The restaurant was closed
The event was held in the next building
A welcoming glass of 2008 Rhebokskloof MCC; a crisp and dry sparkle from 100% barrel matured Chardonnay. It spent 5 years on the lees in the bottle. They don't make it every year. We liked it a lot
Happy smiling serving staff
The Canapé Menu
Said Canapés: Sticky and crisp sweet tomato tarts, a very rich mushroom duxelle and good rare beef with horseradish cream The 2016 Cellar Selection Hillside White was served
Dinner was in the Hospitality Centre
Our jovial host for the evening was Henrico van Lill, the Tasting Room Manager
Winemaker, Rolanie Lotz then led us into the wine cellar to taste the three new wines
At the entrance are these amazing rocks, still crumbling.
The first wine was introduced to us by Rolanie and her new assistant Karen
It was the 2017 Chenin Blanc, still unlabelled but about to be released. Yeasty green melon and guava on the nose; while very young, the wine is nicely made, complex and layered, with flavours of honeycomb, greengage and plums
Then we tasted the Hillside White, a blend of Viognier (54%), Chenin blanc (32%) and Sauvignon blanc (14%). The blend is still shy on the nose and all three varietals speak at once, which is a bit confusing, so it will need to settle a bit with time, ripe grapes, with honey on the nose and flavours of yellow peaches on the palate
We had a great time tasting the wines and chatting to club members
Then the top of the range 2013 Black Marble single vineyard Syrah. Toasted plums on the nose, rich red berries, plums and cherries on the palate, black pepper mid palate and a hint of molasses on the end
Rolanie explaining how she makes the wine
Time for dinner at the Long Table. The food was to be paired with the three wines we had just tasted
The menu
Lively discussion with dinner
The starter of Slow roasted ginger tomatoes with a spicy red curry, mascarpone and cashew nut crème on baby spinach. It looked simple; it was not, lots of different textures and complex Asian flavours. A good pairing with the wine
The main course of slow braised short rib of beef on the bone with a good jus, seared onions and herb mash and carrots
Dessert, we must admit, sounded a bit daunting. Goat’s cheese can be very funky. But it was not at all. The panna cotta with the jelly topping was creamy and set, the pecan brittle gave good flavour and texture to the cheese. The stone-like pips in the stewed guavas did rather stick between the teeth, but the flavours were good. Served with the 2017 Chenin blanc, a surprisingly good match
The chef and her kitchen staff
Then off we went to our AirBnB self catering room near Nederburg. Special mention must be made of Duane Hendricks, Head Sommelier at Grande Roche and his assistant Shirl, whom we met at the dinner. They were behind us on the very dark road and saw us take a wrong turn down a road which might have been dangerous. They came after us, turned us around and escorted us to the farm on which we were staying. Thank you both so much
Our accommodation was absolutely freezing. Thank heavens for the hot water bottles they left and a small electric fire to warm up the room. Probably lovely in the summer.... The temperature the next morning was 6.5ºC. The large tiled bathroom was like a fridge. 
We had to have some breakfast, so we headed off to Spur in Paarl
They serve this lovely breakfast for R34.90 which also includes two slices of toast and marmalade, (sadly with margarine rather than butter), but it has very fresh eggs and really good flame-grilled bacon. The chips are awful - those made up from mashed potatoes, but who needs chips in the morning anyway. And bottomless real coffee is R19.95
 John had the fluffy scrambled eggs
Then we proceeded to an appointment with owner Dirkie Morkel and winemaker Wilhelm Kritzinger at Bellevue wine estate in Bottelary