Thursday, September 21, 2017

Afternoon tea at the Leeu Collection, Franschhoek

How can one refuse an invitation to take tea with friends? We were invited to try the afternoon tea at the Leeu Estates this week with other members of the media and they kindly arranged transport from Cape Town to get us there and back. Should you wish to partake of this lovely experience, the tea costs R190 per person and includes a pot of tea. Afternoon Tea will be served from 2pm to 5pm every day of the week. The Leeu Estate is the 17-room country house retreat and boutique winery in the Franschhoek valley and it is part of the Leeu Collection owned by Mr Analjit Singh
It was a lovely day, the gardens are looking splendid and the vineyards have the buds breaking. Mr Singh is a partner in award-winning Mullineux & Leeu Family Wines which are located on the property
The views of Franschhoek from the terrace are lovely. You can see the Franschhoek pass winding up the mountain in the distance.
The invited media group was welcomed with a glass of Bas MCC from the Mullineux & Leeu Family Wines - this is the nickname by which Mr Singh is affectionately known
or some sherbet if you did not want alcohol
It makes a very pretty picture
PRO Nicolette Waterford chats to Journalist/publisher Ingrid Jones
The Estate is filled to the brim inside and out, with art, some of it very whimsical like this sculpture
Diana letting loose the Dogs of War
The main Leeu Estate building
Time for tea, or perhaps something a little stronger? Refreshments for the hotel guests
We were seated in the main dining room
which has two magnificent lion sculptures
Executive Chef Oliver Cattermole came to chat to us and tell us about the tea
Martin Senekal, who is a well known and respected chef has joined the Leeu Estates and is the pastry chef
The Afternoon Tea Menu
One of these three tiered cake plates served two or three of us. It is an overwhelmingly good selection, and vast. Lynne has been watching a TV programme where professional pastry chefs compete for the top award, many of these fine classic French and English pastries were part of that programme and made one's mouth water. Now we had a chance to taste them
On the top tier were Leeu Pina Colada macarons, a guava Paté de fruit 
a fruit jelly topped with a crumble and fresh cream
On the next tier you can see a pastry shaped like a little nun or choir boy, this is a Religieuse - the lightest crisp choux pastry, crusted with nuts, filled with crème patissière (flavoured confectioner custard), given a cream frill and topped with its own white chocolate halo; scrumptious. The strawberry gateaux are more like a strawberry jelly and they are filled with a lovely tart passion fruit gel
On the other side of the second tier are the chocolate gateau, so light and fluffy and very chocolatey, topped with roasted hazelnuts. And the Mille-feuille (thousand leaves), thin layer of puff pastry sandwiched with creamy pistachio custard and given a chocolate sail anchored with a pistachio nut.
On the bottom tier is the savoury selection - more Lynne's cup of tea. Spicy Coronation Chicken sandwiches, tiny, well seasoned spinach and feta quiches with crisp, crumbly and buttery short crust pastry. There are mini Bacon, Lettuce and Tomato baps, small oak smoked salmon sandwiches on Banting seed loaf with pickled cucumber and dill crème fraiche - could have done with more of those. And then there are the lightest scones most of us have ever tasted. Made with buttermilk, they nearly float off the plate. They are accompanied with fig or apricot jam and real clotted cream
Mr Singh came to meet everyone
And both chefs had to answer lots of questions about the pastries and other treats. It really is a magnificent tea. Three of us shared one cake tier and we each just had half of each of the pastries. And half a scone each. This normally would have been far to many sweet things for Lynne but because they are so light and delicious, she coped. We drank some lovely Earl Grey tea on our table, John stuck to water and another glass of BAS MCC. If you come for the tea, the wine and bubbles are extra
Carriages awaited outside the reception area
Journalists Anel Grobler and Ingrid Irma Jones enjoying some sun while waiting

A Pop up Lunch at The Homestead

Elaine Rousseau is one of our best caterers in Cape Town. Her company, Food Fanatics, has 18 years of experience. She has a lovely venue on Constantia Road in Wynberg, which you can book for events, and we were invited to join her and some of her family, customers and friends for lunch last weekend
She has an amazing garden, most of it turned to vegetables and fruit
Elaine's brother, Andre Rousseau, was the Viticulturist for Constantia Uitsig wine estate for many years. He is now making his own wines from grapes he buys in and we were there to taste them. He currently makes two Sauvignons Blanc, 2017 Grace (named after their mother) which is unwooded, with grapes from Durbanville and Darling and 2016 Sacharia (named after a grandmother) which is lightly wooded from grapes grown in Elgin, of which he made 300 cases. He is making both of them in a rather French style, they have good fruit and some maturity from lees contact. The unwooded has crisp acidity and figs and fig leaves, typical Elgin characteristics
The outside venue with its shade cover up and a bar at the end
Winemaker Andre Rousseau
Inside the Homestead venue, two long tables had been laid for the lunch
Trained barmen were there to sell us anything we wanted to drink
The Rousseau coat of arms on the wine boxes
Canapés of sour dough ciabatta, nectarines, Burrata mozzarella, topped with prosciutto
Good crisp arancini rice balls on a butternut purée. We ate far too many canapés while we waited for lunch, they were hard to resist
On the table were these whipped butters flavoured with chives and sprinkled with sumac and chive blossoms. The sour dough bread was excellent, with a lovely crisp and chewy crust
In the library corner
Lovely flower arrangements on the tables
Lots of chatting with friends and family before lunch
Elaine Rousseau
John slipped into the kitchen to get a preview of the dishes which were to be served family style on the tables. This is the Beetroot, quinoa, kale, broccoli and charred Brussels sprout salad, with dollops of torn mozzarella
Elaine supervising the preparation of the main course of roast pork belly
On goes some gravy
This was a superb dish. Crisp crackling, soft pork belly with most of the fat cooked away, served with roasted red onions and topped with baked ginger plums which were inspired, a lovely fruity sour contrast with the pork
Cumin and honey glazed baby carrots and behind them crisp roast potatoes and whole roasted garlic cloves
The Menu
Our starter of pan seared Kabeljou on white cannellini beans, lightly braised fennel with avocado and grapefruit. Interestingly, served cold and beautifully cooked
John's main course selection
Chatting over a long relaxed lunch
And then came dessert. Enough for 100 people. It was billed on the menu as a chocolate box. It nearly made some people faint with delight. Everything was chocolate
Three flavours of solid chocolate truffle, some chocolate and nut doughnuts
A sticky chocolate and caramel tart with buttery crumbly pastry
Chocolate mousse on top of chocolate brownies served with cream in dessert glasses
Close up of those truffles
Three tiers of delight. We ate well and too much, had some good double Espresso coffee and headed home for a nap. Thank you so much Elaine and Food Fanatics and Andre with your wine