Thursday, August 30, 2018

A weekend in the Overberg

Once a year Lynne, who is the Secretary of our wine club, the Oenophiles, arranges a weekend away in a different wine region for members of the club. In the past we have done Paarl, Wellington, Robertson, Botrivier and this year it was the Stanford and Southern Cape area. Finding places with enough good accommodation is a challenge, as most of our couples want their own room and bathroom. We would love to go to some interesting areas but they have sparse accommodation and we enjoy staying together, which is a challenge. This year, we were a group of 16 and most of us stayed at the Stanford Valley Guest Farm where each couple had their own cottage, some self catering, others not. It is a vast place, with a good restaurant and close to the town. If you want to book with them, be very careful which booking agency you use, one of them we suspect is a fake and they wanted full payment up front - no one else does. Book direct or use an agency like Booking.com - we nearly got caught, until Lynne became suspicious
Our cottage, with its stoep and wood pile. We used the second one more than the first! it was a very cold weekend
Inside, it was comfortable and we had a very efficient wood burning stove and a space heater on the wall
Our bathroom has both shower and bath - some of the cottages only have a shower
We began our weekend not with wine, but with a good local beer from the local establishment the Stanford RePUBlic
We got there in Happy Hour and it’s a fairly traditional but smoky pub. The smokers stand on the stoep but the smoke does filter in
For reasons that we cannot fathom, the Birkenhead brewery closes every day at 5 pm. Surely, on Friday nights with the weekend trippers and weekend cottage owners coming in, they could stay open later so that everyone can enjoy their excellent beer in their fine and spacious establishment? Here, we enjoyed a refreshing glass of Birkenhead ale. It cost R78 for two 500ml and one 340ml beer, not bad
Out on the stoep with Dr Johnnie Fisher, maxillofacial surgeon, there is not much seating
Time for dinner in The Manor House restaurant on the Guest Farm
The menu was large and had lots of choices
However, as we were a big group, Lynne was asked to make three choices for the starters, main course, and dessert from the menu. It is never an easy choice, as you have to consider allergies, vegetarians, small eaters, kosher and other food related problems 
The lighting in the restaurant was very dark and John struggled to get sharp photos as shutter speeds were slow and he does not like using flash in a restaurant as he finds it very disruptive to the atmosphere. This was the dish of potato skin nachos on a bed of bobotie, with a tomato and onion salsa, sour cream, Overberger cheese and an avocado guacamole. So large that it could have been a main course. Very satisfying
The prawn, chorizo & fresh chilli risotto with lemon was very much enjoyed by those who had it
The pan seared catch-of-the-day Kabeljou with mussels, celery, apple & chives in a Cluver & Jack cider sauce was served with a warm baguette & apple butter. The fish was so fresh and perfectly cooked, many of us said they had not had better fish anywhere for a very long time. The sauce was creamy and offset the meaty fish beautifully
They are used to big parties; they had two others beside us that evening
The tender, slow cooked pork belly with a potato, turnip & wholegrain mustard bake, and a fennel & apple slaw
Up for breakfast early the next morning, we had to catch the wine farms. Not much is open on a Sunday, so we had to squeeze as much in on Saturday as possible and they also close early. First we visited the Klein River Cheese farm. They have an interesting shop selling good things. If the weather is nice and warm you can build your own picnic and sit in the gardens and eat it.. They have a childrens’ play area, and lots of animals for the children to look at
Inside the shop we all tasted and bought some cheese
Huge rounds of cheese, but portions are sold in various sizes according to your needs. The cheeses are very good
One of the many chickens wandering about. This is a very fine and friendly cockerel
Next, off to Raka Winery which is just a small distance away up the road
Winemaker Josef Dreyer was there to give us a really comprehensive wine tasting
We sat in the sun and tasted and listened and afterwards quite a few boxes and bottles made it into peoples’ cars
Lovely bright sunshine on a very chilly day
Some of this Sauvignon Blanc came home with us; it is grassy and a bit tropical on the nose; clean, crisp and satisfying on the round palate with limes and loquats
The plump farm cat sunning itself in the indigenous Plectranthus neochilus, which has a rather catty smell, and survives drought really well
Lots to chat about
Josef's father Piet Dreyer, who started Raka, is a renowned commercial fisherman and the farm is named after his favourite trawler
In the barrel cellar
They make a very good Rosé wine from Merlot, Shiraz, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc. It is summer in a bottle, with notes of rhubarb and roses with some strawberry on the nose. Almost a light red wine on the palate, with raspberries and rhubarb, it reminds Lynne of Tavel Rosé from the Southern Rhone valley. 14% alcohol and only R45 a bottle on the farm, we will be drinking this with all sorts of food as it is so versatile. It is MENU's Wine of the Week this week
Where to next? Well, we had planned and booked to go to a friend's restaurant in Napier but the chef, their son, was being rather adamant about what he would be serving us and ignoring the fact that we had people with allergies and religious and dietary restrictions. We thought that the menu had been fixed 2 weeks before with the addition of a salad. He seemed to be nervous also of feeding such a large group - 16 - and phoned as we were leaving to insist that we stick to his rigid menu of three dishes, two with chilli, and four people in our group don’t eat any chilli - they have serious health issues. Our only previous request was for the chilli to be mild or left out of the bean soup if possible. Or if that was not possible, could it be substituted by a salad? They were not attracted to the other two heavily starch laden courses. And no, he would not do a salad. Lynne was very upset and confused by his forceful, uncompromising attitude and asked him gently "Would you prefer it if we didn't come?" An emphatic YES was the answer, to which we agreed.. So where were we to eat lunch? 16 people without a booking at 11 o'clock on a Saturday
Club members who have a holiday house in the area phoned Black Oystercatcher wines and they were very happy to accommodate us. Whew, problem solved
Since we were last there, they have so extended and modernised the farm, the tasting room and the restaurant. It is very impressive
We like the sentiment -  and the milk stout called "moerkoffie" (traditional coffee, made without modern appliances, just hot water on coffee grounds in a pot). Just don't add milk and sugar
Some of us wanted a beer with lunch and had some of their Fraser’s Folly IPA craft beer
The restaurant is vast, with lots of seating outside on the terrace too
Our lovely waitress serving Oystercatcher bubbly to some of the girls, who insist on it every day
It’s a 2014 Brut Rosé with a lively bubble and spent 3 years on the lees
Most people had lovely salads for lunch, this was a sticky chicken salad with avocado, fried aubergine and humus
A lovely prawn salad with roasted baby tomatoes and chorizo and a creaming dipping sauce
A smoked salmon salad with avo and cream cheese
You need to reserve a table on the terrace, they are very popular
We sat inside near the roaring fire and everyone was very happy with the lunch. Many did a tasting of their excellent wines in the tasting room and of course we drank some with lunch. Their Sauvignon Blanc Semillon blend called White Pearl is very special, gets 4.5 stars in Platter and you can taste the southern Atlantic in its crisp, slightly salty, sauvignon flavours with that dash of fullness from the Semillon
Next we were off for our appointment at Strandveld winery. They had been very accommodating and were staying open after their normal closing time of 3 o'clock especially for our wine club group. Originally, our lunch and tasting would have meant that we were in Napier, which is quite a distance away, and we could only have got here by three. We are very grateful to them
They had set up a long table for us
And we were welcomed by Otilla Janse van Rensburg who ably guided us through the tasting
Their First Sighting Sauvignon Blanc 2017 (our Wine of the Week on 7th June) was awarded a Platinum medal and scored 97 points in this year's Decanter Awards, one of only five awarded to South Africa. It is the highest score ever awarded to a white wine at this prestigious competition, which receives just under 17 000 entries from around the world. They are very proud of it. We have bought several cases of this wine, (which we used to sell in our now-closed shop, Main Ingredient) and it is superb. It has green pepper and pea leaf aromas and a hint of the wild sea winds and fynbos. Smooth, crisp, with sea salt, limes and other citrus and minerality on the full palate. And it is sold for R80 a bottle on the farm
The Strandveld 2017 Sauvignon Blanc Pofadderbos has more fruit on the nose, more wood and vanillins too. It’s softer in style than the racy First Sighting with leanness, limes, white peach and wood on the end. We also liked their Sauvignon Semillon white blend with classic asparagus and peas on the green leafy nose, a full palate from the Semillon, figs, citrus and wood on the end with some chalky tannins. This is an old style binnebraai (indoor barbecue) cooking oven where people cooked on three legged pots as well as grids
This 2013 Pinot Noir has cola, licorice and shy fruit on the nose, soft sweet chewy fruit followed by lots and lots of smoky wood. The 2014 has savoury notes, some shy berries and a little Brett. Cola, coffee and bruléed fruit. Their Pinot vineyards are the closest to the coast in SA. They are now using all the Pinot Noir in their MCC and discontinuing the red wine. Their top wine, The Navigator 2014; a Rhône blend of Shiraz, Grenache, Mourvedre and Viognier. Vanilla oak, sweet fruit and some spice on the nose, a sweet and sour fruit balance. We enjoyed the Suikerbekkie Noble Late Harvest 2012. Herbal with cumin and fennel notes and some sesame, honey and salt which combine so well in this wine with extraordinary length; some soft chalk on the end, From Sauvignon blanc grapes matured in French oak barrels for 24 months. Alcohol 15.98%; Residual Sugar 57.2 g/litre;
Total Acidity 6.5 g/litre; pH 3.48
On the road back to Stanford we did get a little lost and ended up touring the wonderful Nature Reserve where we saw so many of these beautiful pink proteas
Majestic against the blue sky
Many still in bud
We returned to our cottages; some had a bit or a rest and some went for walks. Then it was time for dinner. We had made a booking at White Water Farm, which is just a couple of kilometres away from Stanford Valley Guest Farm. They only do dinner on Saturday nights in the winter. We ate in the glass walled dining room and were well dressed against the bitter cold outside
The menu. Each dish is shared by two people and comes with a starter for each person. The vegetables are also included in the price
The Beetroot Carpaccio, enjoyed by those who like beetroot
The rather large Thai fish cakes on a small salad and they come with a sweet chilli dipping sauce
The rump tagliata came with crisp duck fat potatoes, roasted tomatoes and salad leaves; it was tender with very good flavour
The fish was Kabeljou - obviously in season, as it’s what we had the previous night at The Manor House. We also were served a plate of mixed vegetable, carrots, leeks and roasted beetroot, some of which you can see on this plate. These are all the half portions after sharing, the portions are generous. No one could manage dessert, but a few coffees were ordered. We took our own wine and paid the corkage
After breakfast the next morning, which some people had in the Manor House restaurant and others in their rooms and one couple went to a cafe in town, we headed off to Springfontein for a wine tasting. This is their list. You choose which wines you want to taste
You do the tasting in the Wine Bar(n)
Springfontein was looking beautifully green and some of the oaks were bursting into new leaf
Indigenous yellow-billed ducks in the pond
They have good accommodation, but sadly not enough for our group as much was booked early
And they have a fine dining restaurant called Springfontein Eats. The chef, Jürgen Schneider, had a Michelin starred restaurant in Germany and his gourmet food which comes in multiple courses is very good. You need to book to eat here
This is the menu for Springfontein Eats that Sunday

The Food Bar(n) is the tasting room
We decide what we want to taste
The counter
Andrea de Pauw runs the tasting room and guided our tasting
The Pink of Springfontein is a Merlot Pinotage rosé, smells of fresh toast, then shy berries. Lovely fruit; cherry, berry, raspberry on the palate, refreshing and delish, with some Turkish delight on the end. R125 a bottle. The bunches are pressed whole, which produces more robust wines, and they are fermented on the skins. The Red of Springfontein 2012 has rich red dark berries and cherries with some fynbos and wood smoke. Dry red with chalky tannins, sour and sweet berries with long flavours
The TM Special Selection 2016 Sauvignon Blanc is fermented using wild yeast in a wine egg and a stainless steel tank. Its a little miffy, grassy and shy. It is different on the palate, not many recognisable Sauvignon Blanc characteristics, with minerality, limes, lemons, grapefruit and light wood notes
Jil's Dune is a single vineyard Sauvignon Blanc
At the end of our tasting we were delighted to see the talented winemaker Tariro Masayiti for a brief moment; he was off back to his home
Our final wine was the 2013 Terroir Selection Pinotage. Salty liquorice incense wood and spice on the nose, Good fruit, nice smoothness and a warm prickle ending with some chalky tannins
We ordered some good bar food and drank some of the White of Springfontein and the Pinotage before heading home or, for us a night in the Hemel and Aarde Valley, as we had a media function the next morning at Benguela Cove

MENU's Wine of the Week. Raka Rosé 2017

Raka on the Stanford wine route makes a very good Rosé wine from Merlot, Shiraz, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc. It is summer in a bottle, with notes of rhubarb and roses with some strawberry on the nose. Almost a light red wine on the palate, with raspberries and rhubarb, it reminds Lynne of Tavel Rosé from the Southern Rhône valley, and that is a compliment
14% alcohol and only R45 a bottle on the farm, we will be drinking this with all sorts of food as it is so versatile. We had it last night with a spicy sausage Paella

Cape Winemakers Guild tutored and public tastings

This year's Cape Winemakers Guild Auction will be held at Spier Wine Estate on Saturday 29th September, beginning at 09h00.  It is open to the public as well as the wine industry. Further registration information and details on their Telephonic and Proxy bidding options are available from the Cape Winemakers Guild Office via email at info@capewinemakersguild.com or call +27 21 852 0408

Registration for the Auction and sales of VIP Lounge tickets will close on Wednesday, 19 September 2018. We will be there enjoying the day and perhaps making a bid or two for these really special wines. There are some pre-auction events. Look on: http://www.capewinemakersguild.com/events

We were invited to the very prestigious VIP guided tasting of 37 of the exceptional auction wines, and another 11 later in the foyer. Each winemaker presented their own wine. The quality is high this year, so good prices are expected, despite the downturn in the economy. The tasting was held in the Ballroom of the Westin International Hotel in Cape Town

For details of the 2018 Auction Wines, click here
A selection of Guild members' MCCs to condition our palates
The wines were poured by student winemakers from Elsenburg Agricultural Training Institute - they are our future in wine
Behind a screen, Guild members and a few other winemakers were checking to make sure that there were no corked bottles of their wines. Leon Coetzee, Sebastian Beaumont, David Nieuwoudt, Johan Joubert and Margaux Nel Coetzee
Johan Malan of Simonsig checking his wine for any off aromas ... Behind him are Gottfried Mocke of Boekenhoutskloof and Carl van der Merwe of De Morgenzon
.... and no problems detected
The Grand ballroom at the Westin International all set for the tutored tasting
A gathering of the Clan. Wine writer Fiona McDonald and broadcaster Guy McDonald
Guild Chairman Boela Gerber opens the tasting
Starting with bubbly is always a good conditioner for the palate. Only 36 to go....
Fiona McDonald, Jan "Boland" Coetzee and Guy McDonald
Michael Bampfield Duggan of Wine Concepts and Karen Glanfield Pawley
Delectable fresh oysters served after the tasting
Some sushi too
Something interesting. A savoury donut with a nesting meatball
Tiny pastries topped with mozzarella, basil and baby tomato caprese
Derek Prout-Jones, Jeff Grier and Karen Visser
After the private tasting and a bit of socialising, we moved to the Convention Centre to spend a little time at the public tasting before going home to put MENU to bed
Bennie Howard and Gottfried Mocke
Duncan Savage

Monday, August 27, 2018

Chicken in Pomegranate with Pistachio Cous Cous

Originally published on  Friday, January 15, 2010
The following recipe is very Mediterranean in character, but simple to prepare and the ingredients are currently available

1 T oil - 4 to 6 chicken pieces - salt and pepper - 1 finely chopped onion - 2 cloves garlic - 2 T Pomegranate molasses - 250 ml chicken stock - 2 T chopped flat parsley - 2 T chopped coriander - 1 t cumin

Rub salt and pepper into the chicken pieces, then put the oil into a sauté pan and on a high heat, brown the chicken on all sides, Remove from the pan and set aside. Fry the onion till soft and translucent then add the garlic and sauté for two more minutes. Add all the other ingredients and simmer on a low heat for 45 minutes

Cous Cous
500g cous cous - 2 T pistachio oil - 2 T chopped pistachio nuts - 2T fresh pomegranate kernels (or dried cranberries) - salt and pepper

Season the dried cous cous, add the oil and stir. Then cook according to the instructions on the packet. Fork in the pistachio nuts and pomegranate and serve immediately with the chicken

Chicken and Artichoke Risotto

Today’s recipe is a solution for left-over chicken. Yes, this dish does contain carbohydrates and some vegetables and it is absolutely delicious. We find it difficult not to crave this sort of food when the weather gets cold. You could use the left-over carcass of the chicken to make the stock, or just use a good commercial stock, like Nomu Fond
A pot of light chicken or vegetable stock (about 1.5 to 2 litres) - 1 onion, very finely chopped – 1 stick of celery, finely chopped - 1 clove garlic, finely chopped – 1 t fresh thyme leaves - 1/2 T extra virgin olive oil – ½ T butter - half a red pepper, finely chopped into small cubes – 2 cups Risotto rice – 250ml dry white wine – 4 to 6 artichoke bottoms, each sliced into six pieces - 1 cup of cooked chicken in small pieces – ½ cup depodded broad beans or peas – salt and freshly ground pepper – 1 T butter
Put the stock on to simmer. On another burner, in a heavy bottomed pan, fry the onion, celery, garlic and thyme in the oil and butter till transparent and soft; then add the red pepper and fry gently for two minutes. Put in the rice and let it coat in the oil and fry for one minute. Put in the wine and let it bubble so that the alcohol burns off. Then add a couple of ladles of the hot stock. The secret is to cook the rice slowly in quite a lot of liquid and stir or shake the pan occasionally to circulate the rice. Do not let the rice dry out and, as soon as you see it becoming dryer, add more stock. If you cook too fast or on two high a heat, the rice will only cook on the outside and become very mushy. When the rice is nearly done, add the chicken, the artichokes and the broad beans and warm through for five minutes. Taste and adjust the seasoning. The risotto should be quite soupy and creamy but not mushy; the rice should still have separate grains. Draw the pan off the heat, stir in the butter and let it rest for five minutes, then serve.
Serves 4

Chicken wings in sherry vinegar and smoked paprika

Spanish flier?
We get lots of queries about how to use some of our products. Here is a recipe that uses two of them in a dish from Spain which is really quick and easy to do. Try these chicken wings when you next have friends around. We took a dish to our wine club meeting yesterday evening
16 Chicken wings - 2 T sherry vinegar - 2 T honey - 2 T extra virgin olive oil - 2 t smoked paprika - 2 cloves garlic, finely chopped – 1 T fresh thyme or 1 t dried - salt and pepper
Use the Sweet Smoked Spanish Paprika, but if you want some heat in the dish use the Hot Spanish paprika
Slash the wings on both sides. Mix up all the above ingredients and marinade the chicken in them for a couple of hours. Then bake in the oven for 45 minutes at 180°C until they are sticky and well cooked, basting once or twice
30 Roma baby tomatoes – sherry vinegar – olive oil, salt and pepper
Halve 30 baby tomatoes, put on an open roasting tray and drizzle them with the sherry vinegar, olive oil, salt and pepper and bake in the same oven for 30 minutes
2 red peppers
Grill until blackened on all sides. Immediately put them into a plastic bag; seal it and allow to cool. Then rub off all the black skin, remove seeds and slice into strips
Serve the chicken wings on a bed of drained tinned chick peas, the roasted tomatoes, roasted red pepper, de-pipped black and green olives and rocket leaves. Drizzle over some good extra virgin olive oil just before serving

Crispy Chilli Squid Tempura

This recipe is our recreation of one of the most popular dishes at the Taste of Cape Town on the Taj Hotel’s stand.
500g small squid rings and tentacles (Cut up larger rings into bite sized pieces) – 500ml milk – 1 egg – 210ml ice cold sparkling or soda water – 1/2 t salt – 25g corn flour – 75g flour – 4 ice cubes – 2t chilli flakes or 1 to 2 (depending on your taste) finely chopped fresh red chillies, seeds removed – approx 500ml canola oil for frying – good sushi mayonnaise or Hellman’s diluted with a little milk to make it more runny
Soak the squid in milk for at least an hour (this tenderises it), then drain and pat really dry. Heat the oil in a wok or a wide deep pan to 370°C. Do not leave the oil alone. Mix the water with the egg and then stir in the flour, salt and chilli flakes and ice cubes. Quickly mix up the batter; it does not have to be smooth. Immediately toss the squid into the batter a spoonful at a time to coat well and then deep fry for just a couple of minutes until it is really crisp and beginning to turn golden. Drain on kitchen paper and keep warm in the oven while you cook the rest. Then serve with the mayonnaise drizzled over it. You can also drizzle over a sweet chilli sauce

Spinach and Ricotta “Gnocchi Verdi” with Tomato and Parmesan Cream

LOW CARB DIET CONTINUES
We have had a look at recipes which we have published previously, to see if there are any that are fairly low in carbohydrates. If you are missing pasta, this is a very good substitution because it looks and tastes like a pasta, but is mainly vegetable and cheese. This recipe contains 1 tablespoon of flour, which equals 5.4gm of carbohydrate. There are 16gm of carbs in the tinned tomatoes, so 4gm per serving. It feeds four people as a starter, so you will get a quarter of that in each serving, not a heavy load. We would encourage you to use the very best quality and freshest ricotta cheese you can find, it so improves the recipe. And please do use real baby spinach, not Swiss chard. Chard works, but does not give such light and fluffy gnocchi. The trick as usual, is to handle the gnocchi as little as possible. This is a starter for 4 or a main course for 2 or 3
500gm Spinach – 200gm fresh ricotta – grating of nutmeg – salt and pepper – 1 egg - 45gm grated Parmesan – 1 T flour
Wash the spinach and cook in salted water till wilted. Drain well & squeeze till absolutely dry, then place in a food processor with the ricotta, seasoning and nutmeg; blend quickly and gently. Softly mix in egg, parmesan and flour. Chill then, using two teaspoons, shape into gnocchi quenelles. Use them immediately or cover with cling film and use within a couple of hours. Keeping them longer will dry them out
Tomato Sauce: 800g tinned tomatoes – Salt and pepper – 2 cloves garlic, chopped – 100ml cream
Put all into a pan, bring to the boil and reduce for 10 minutes, then add the cream and blitz with your wand blender. Taste and season. If you must and your tomatoes are not ripe, soften the acidity with a little sugar
Parmesan Cream: 250ml cream – 150ml finely grated parmesan. Mix together in a jug.
Boil a pot of well salted water, and when it is simmering nicely, gently drop the gnocchi into the water. Remove it as soon as it comes to the surface and drain
Take small individual serving dishes; ladle 2–3 T of tomato sauce into each. Put in 3 to 5 (depends how large you made them!) gnocchi in each, pour over the same amount of parmesan cream. Grate extra parmesan on top. Put into a preheated 180ºC oven for about 10 minutes until bubbling and the cheese starts to colour. You can cook these in one large casserole dish. You will need to increase the timing, but wait until the cheese is bubbling and starting to colour. Serve and eat at once

Avgolemono Greek Soup

With the weather starting to become a little more autumnal, we thought a soup might be in order. This is a classic Greek recipe and really lovely whatever the weather. It is often served at holidays or celebrations in Greece. You can do the whole recipe or you can start with ready-made stock and some cooked chicken, depending on how much time you have. If you are doing this, start from ## with hot stock. This makes 6 - 8 Servings
1 whole chicken, approx 1.5kg - water – 2 carrots, roughly chopped – 2 celery stalks, roughly chopped – 1 onion, roughly chopped – 2 bay leaves – 5 black peppercorns – 1 t salt – half a cup rice or orzo rice shaped pasta (optional) – 3 fresh eggs, at room temperature – juice of 2 lemons, strained – zest of one lemon – salt and freshly ground black pepper - parsley
Trim all the excess fat off the chicken, put it into a large pot with the vegetables and add enough water to cover the chicken by 5 cm. Bring to a simmer and cook for 1½ hours. Take out the chicken, remove the meat and set aside for use later. Strain the stock and skim off any fat
## Add the rice or orzo pasta, if using, and cook until tender. While the rice is cooking, whisk the eggs until very frothy then add the lemon juice in a thin stream while you continue whisking. Put 2 ladlefuls of the hot soup stock into a separate bowl then slowly add the egg and lemon mixture. This will help to prevent the soup curdling. Put this back into the rest of the soup and heat gently. Do not boil once the egg has been added or you will get scrambled egg. Taste and adjust seasoning to your own taste, then sprinkle on the lemon zest and a little chopped parsley before you serve. You can add back some of the chicken meat if you want a more substantial soup and you can, if you must, add a couple of spoonfuls of corn flour to thicken, but this is not encouraged
While the pasta is cooking, prepare the egg-lemon mixture. Using a whisk beat the eggs until nice and frothy. Add the lemon zest and the lemon juice in a steady stream while continuing to whisk
When the pasta has finished cooking, turn off the heat. Ladle about two cups of broth into a bowl or large measuring cup. Slowly add the hot broth to the egg-lemon mixture while continuing to whisk. This will temper the eggs and prevent them from curdling once they are added to the hot broth
Stir the egg-lemon mixture into the pot and heat over very low heat for approximately 5 to 10 minutes until heated through. Be careful not to boil the soup once the eggs have been added

Adjust your seasoning for salt and pepper and add more as desired
Traditionally, this soup is served without the chicken meat or vegetables. You can add them back or serve on the side as you prefer

Spicy Asian Beef salad

For when you are in Asian mood
Lynne invented this recipe when we had some left over steak. You could use left over roast beef or just sear off one small steak for a small salad
The dressing: 2T limejuice - 2 T fish sauce - 1 T palm sugar- 1 t red chilli paste or 2 finely chopped chillies (adjust to your own taste) – 1 clove garlic, crushed – 1 T sushi ginger (gari) finely sliced.
Green beans, carrots, courgettes cut into julienne strips – mixed herb salad leaves – 2 T extra fresh basil and/or coriander leaves – 2 squares of Chinese egg noodles – 1T Tamari soy sauce - 200g cold beef, sliced
Slice the beef into ½ cm slices. Mix up the sauce, then marinate the beef in half of it. Blanche the beans, carrots & courgettes for one minute in boiling water then refresh in ice cold water. Drain. Cook the noodles till they are just soft, drain, cool, then add the Tamari sauce. Mix the salad leaves, herbs and the julienned vegetables, then top with the beef. Drizzle over the rest of the sauce then top the dish with noodles and serve

Mexican peppers

In hot weather, we find that we like to eat hot, spicy food; it does seem to cool you down. There is a glut of wonderful peppers in the shops at the moment, so do try this recipe which Lynne made last week. It serves 2 to 4, depending on how hungry you are and how large the peppers are!
2 large pimento (banana) red peppers (18 to 20 cm long) – 350g lean beef mince – 1 onion, finely chopped – 2 cloves garlic – fresh oregano – 2 courgettes, grated – 2 t Mexican spices – olive oil – 3 T tomato passata – 3 t rice or rice pasta – salt and pepper
Mexican spice mix: 2 t salt, 2t cumin, 2 t cayenne pepper, 2 t brown sugar, 2 t paprika, 1 t ground black pepper, 1 t dried oregano, 1 t dried chilli flakes, 1 t sweet smoked paprika.
Mix together and store in an airtight container
Fry the onion in the oil until it is just beginning to take on colour. Add the garlic and fry for one minute. Add the beef and brown it. Add the oregano and the spices and simmer for 10 minutes. Stir in the courgette, the rice or pasta and the passata and simmer until the pasta is cooked. Taste and adjust seasoning. Halve the peppers lengthways and remove the seeds. Put into an oiled ovenproof dish. Fill the peppers with the mince mix. Put 1T water underneath the peppers and cover with foil. Bake at 180ºC for 45 minutes or until the peppers are lovely and soft. Serve with cool guacamole and a salad

Basil Pesto

We have so much basil in the garden that Lynne was able to whip up a pesto in minutes and wondered why we don’t do this more often
Pesto is very simple indeed to make and can be done in a blender in just a few moments, while the pasta is cooking. You don’t have to use basil – rocket, parsley, coriander all work well and you can vary the nuts – walnuts, almonds, pecans etc. Add a fresh chilli if you want it hot, especially good with coriander. Don’t make it too far in advance, as the colour can go very dark. You can try a squeeze of lemon, but that is not traditional. It also makes a really good cold pasta salad when used with rice shaped pasta. You need to make it in the proportions 3:1:1 herb, cheese, nuts
3 large handfuls of basil leaves – 25g grated parmesan or grana padano cheese – 25g pine nuts – 1 crushed clove of garlic – 2 T olive oil – salt and pepper

Put all the ingredients into your blender and blitz until you have a nice thick oily paste still with some texture, adding more oil if it looks a little dry, then adjust the seasoning and spoon onto hot pasta or onto a selection of lightly blanched vegetables

Cherry Compote

½ Kg cherries, pitted – 1 cup of water - 250g sugar - juice ½ lemon - 4 t brandy

Put the sugar and the water into a heavy bottomed pan and heat till the sugar has dissolved. Add the cherries and the lemon juice and simmer for no more than 15 minutes, stirring gently only occasionally so the cherries stay whole. Using a slotted spoon, remove the cherries and keep aside. Reduce the cherry liquid until it is becoming thick, then cool slightly. Stir in the brandy and the cherries and put into a bowl in the fridge until you need it

Cherry and Chocolate Pavlova

Our most successful dish over the holidays was a chocolate Pavlova which Lynne made for New Year’s Eve, when we had friends over to wish the old year goodbye. It sounds complicated; it isn’t. You can make it the day before
6 large egg whites – 300 g caster sugar – 1 T corn flour – 2 t raspberry vinegar – 25 g cocoa powder – 50 g dark chocolate, chopped – 500 g cherry compote – 250ml cream – 1T Amaretto liqueur or 1 t vanilla bean paste – 150g fresh cherries
Heat the oven to 140ºC. Whisk the egg whites until they form stiff peaks, then, adding 1 tablespoon at a time, carefully whisk in the sugar, making sure you whisk really well between each addition. When all the sugar has been added, do whisk until the mixture is really thick and glossy and stands in soft peaks. Using a large metal spoon, carefully and gently stir in the corn flour, vinegar, cocoa powder and chocolate, until just incorporated
Line a baking sheet with a piece of rice paper, baking paper or a silicone sheet. Spoon on the meringue, making a circle and building up the sides, so that you have a bowl shape which will keep the filling in. You could put the meringue into a piping bag if you want it to look really professional. Bake for 1¼ hours, then turn off the oven, open the door and leave to cool. The rice paper is edible, but do carefully remove the baking paper or silicone and put the Pavlova onto a pretty serving dish. Don’t worry if the meringue cracks a bit, that is part of its charm. It is meant to be like soft marshmallow in the centre
When ready to serve, whip the double cream and Amaretto together in a big bowl until soft peaks form. Spoon the cherry compote over the meringue, dollop over the cream; arrange some fresh cherries on top and serve

Tropical Mango and Orange Tiramisu

If you don’t like Christmas pudding and want a more modern, fresh dessert, try this. It will feed four. Increase the quantities proportionally if you have more people. Do taste both the juice and the cream and sugar mixture before using and, if it is quite sharp, do add a little more sugar or honey
1 packet boudoir (finger) biscuits – Juice of 4 oranges – 50ml orange, Amarula or Limoncello liqueur - 2 fresh ripe mangos, peeled and sliced – 1 tub of mascarpone cheese – 200ml cream – 150g sugar, vanilla if possible or add 1 t of vanilla extract – juice and pulp of 4 granadillas (passion fruit)
Mix the orange juice with the liqueur and dip the finger biscuits into it. Make one layer in the bottom of a pretty dessert dish. Mix the mascarpone with the cream and the vanilla sugar and spread a layer over the biscuits, then follow with a layer of mango slices and some of the granadilla pulp. Make another layer and finish by pouring over the rest of the juice and topping off with the rest of the granadilla pulp. Cover with cling film and keep in the fridge overnight until you are ready to serve

Spinach & Cheese Roulade

Dinner with friends
We had a lovely dinner with friends in Camps Bay last week – gosh, how the wind can howl there - and our hostess cooked some lovely food. Her starter was something we think you might like to consider for Christmas entertaining – quite retro but really delicious, and it has the usual added advantage that you can make it in advance: a very light, fluffy and moist Spinach and cheese roulade filled with herby cream cheese and smoked trout
Here is Lynne’s recipe: We used frozen spinach; if you want to use fresh, 700g should be enough. Wash well, cook, squeeze out all the moisture then chop finely. You can buy a herb cheese like Boursin and mix it with plain cream cheese. Do season well
1 box Frozen spinach, defrosted – 4 large eggs, separated – 25g cheddar cheese finely grated – salt and freshly ground pepper – a good grating of nutmeg
Filling: 200g tub of good cream cheese – 10g each of fresh parsley, thyme and dill, finely chopped – 200g slices of smoked salmon or salmon trout
Preheat your oven to 200ºC. Mix the herbs with the cream cheese and put into the fridge until the roulade is ready
Line a 33 x 23cm Swiss roll tin with baking paper, folding at the corners. Squeeze as much moisture out of the spinach as you can, then stir in the egg yolks, cheese and seasoning. Beat the egg whites with a pinch of salt until stiff then, using a large metal spoon, stir in a quarter of the egg white. Then carefully fold in the rest of the egg white, a third at a time, try to keep the mixture light and airy. Spread onto the tin and bake for 15 minutes until firm to the touch. Cover with a clean lightly damp tea towel and leave to cool. Then turn it out onto the tea towel and carefully remove the baking paper. Spread on the cream cheese and then cover with the smoked salmon. Roll it up first by folding over a small edge of the roulade and then, using the tea towel, carefully roll it up. Do not try to roll too tightly and expect it to crack slightly. Plate it and cover with cling film until you are ready to serve. This makes at least 6 large slices