Friday, November 30, 2018

The Diners Club Winemaker of the Year Awards at La Residence, Franschhoek

It was time for the 2018 Diners Club Winemaker of the Year and Young Winemaker of the Year awards, held again this year at La Residence in Franschhoek. It is always a glittering Black Tie occasion. This year’s Winemaker of the Year Finalists were Arco Laarman (Laarman Cellar Services at Avondale Wines), Ronell Wiid (Bartinney Private Cellar), Clayton Reabow (Môreson), Andries Burger (Paul Cluver Estate), Carl Van Der Merwe (DeMorgenzon) and Murray Barlow (Rustenberg Wines). The category was Chardonnay
We found fellow journo Norman McFarlane seated with a glass of bubbly on the verandah
Arco & Madeleine Laarman
Rose and Michael Jordaan, Angela Lloyd, Carl and Kathleen van der Merwe
Elizabeth and Wade Roger-Lund of Jordan Wines
Wade was Young Winemaker of the Year last year
Braveheart Bobby Wallace in full kilt and caboodle
Barcha and Rüdger van Wyk
The 2018 Diners Club Young Winemaker contenders and their ladies. They are Juandré Bruwer (Diemersdal Estate), Philip Viljoen (Bon Courage Estate), Rüdger van Wyk (Stark-Condé Wines), Philip Theron (Glen Carlou) and Bobby Wallace (Iona Vineyards)
PRO Posy Hazell and Ariane Rossouw
That Wine Girl, Leanne Beattie & her Pa, Graham
In the long hall, waiting for the awards to begin
Platter Wine Guide publisher JP Rousseau was the MC for the evening. He told us that the judges were Michael O’Connell – International judge, Carrie Adams, Debi Van Flymen, Michael Crossley, Nomonde Kubheka and Ntsiki Biyela. Also that the winning Winemaker receives R50 000 while the Young Winemaker wins R25 000. Both winemakers get two return air tickets on Delta Airlines to any wine producing region in the USA
Diners Club MD Lesego Chauke-Motshwane takes the podium. She said we were there to celebrate a love story between the makers and their produce. And to announce the winners of the Winemaker and Young Winemaker of the Year
This year's category for Winemaker was Chardonnay and the Young Winemaker category was Red Wines. These are the Young Winemaker finalists and their submissions:
  • Bobby Wallace – Iona Vineyards – 2017 Pinot Noir
  • Juandré Bruwer – Diemersdal Estate – 2017 Shiraz
  • Philip Theron – Glen Carlou – 2017 Merlot and 2017 Curator’s Collection Malbec
  • Philip Viljoen – Bon Courage Estate – 2015 Inkara Cabernet Sauvignon
  • Rudger Van Wyk – Stark-Condé Wines – 2016 Stellenbosch Syrah

Last year’s winner, Wade Roger-Lund, waits to hand over the trophy to this year’s winner
And the Winner is .... 
A surprised, delighted and shocked Rüdger Van Wyk of Stark-Condé Wines
With his award, so happy. He was given a standing ovation
and made a short and sweet acceptance speech. Rudger was born in George in the Southern Cape. He studied at the University of Stellenbosch, where he completed a BSc Agriculture: Viticulture and Oenology degree. As a Cape Winemakers Guild Protégé, Rudger worked at several high-profile local wine estates, followed by a harvest in Burgundy before joining Stark-Condé Wines as assistant winemaker in 2016. Earlier this year Stark-Condé Wines was pleased to announce Rüdger’s appointment to the position of winemaker
Judge Carrie Adams of Norman Goodfellows
The wine of Rüdger van Wyk, 2016 Stellenbosch Syrah, was then served with our starters. It is an accomplished, elegant wine full of cherries and berries, violets and incense wood on the nose. Restrained fruit initially with dark chocolate coffee and wood, minerality and some tight tannins that relax in the glass. Mulberries and morello cherry fruit, it will age well
It might have been nice to sample the wines entered while waiting? Up till then we had been served only water.
The starter of grilled lamb loin, on a watercress salad with baby rainbow beetroots, root vegetable sprouts, intense and interesting dried kalamata olives and a lamb jus gras. The wine paired very well with the dish
After the first course it was time to watch a video about the Wine Makers of the Year
and to hear the announcement of this year’s winner. The tension and excitement in the room were palpable
Last year's winner Christiaan Groenewald of Eagles Cliff/New Cape Wines came to present the award
And here is the envelope ....
And the winner is: Clayton Reabow of Môreson!
Making his thank you speech. Clayton grew up in King William’s Town in the Eastern Cape. He completed a BSc Agriculture: Viticulture and Oenology degree at the University of Stellenbosch in 2004. In between working some local vintages, he travelled to other wine producing areas such as Bordeaux in France and the Mosel Valley in Germany to broaden his horizons. On returning to South Africa, he applied for the winemaking position at Môreson in 2007 and has never looked back. In 2011 Clayton completed a Postgraduate Master’s degree in Wine Business Management, Cum Laude, at the UCT Graduate School of Business
With the award
Graham and Leanne Beattie
The winning Mercator Premium Chardonnay was served with our main course of Pan fried “Line fish” with spring vegetables, topped with an orange crisp. John's tasted like dense Kingklip, Lynne's like soft Hake and neither of them are line fish, but the dish went well with the Chardonnay
It has a golden nose with a faint wood smoke whiff. Lovely lively crisp lemons and limes on the palate and the wood follows as golden oak, not dark toast
We were encouraged to tweet and this young man won the prize for the most innovative one
He won a bottle of each winning wine
The wine served with dessert was Nederburg’s The Winemasters Noble late harvest 2018
Dessert was like a deconstructed Lemon meringue pie, without the meringue,
but with a rich granadilla and ginger gelato, a crumb and, most interesting,
a shard of the new Valrhona Ruby chocolate which is intensely fruity
The two winners get their air tickets from Delta Airlines
More photo opportunities with the Trophies
And a handshake. And then it was time for carriages home
We are very grateful for the cars that were sent to transport us there and back again

The Magic of Bubbles. Wine Concepts' Champagne Festival at The Vineyard

Oh joy, it was time to taste real French Champagne this year at Wine Concepts' "Finer Things in Life” International Sparkling Wine & Champagne Affair Celebration at the Vineyard Hotel last Friday night.
No driving long distances into the winelands for 10 coupons, only to find that it will cost you five of them if you want a small taste of real Champagne, but the chance locally to taste all of the 34 different French champagnes and a few Cavas and Proseccos. And all this for a R500 ticket, which includes canapés and a champagne glass. Oh, and a free raffle based on the number on your ticket. You can take an Uber home without bankrupting yourself or, if you are feeling celebratory, take the Vineyards special offer of a room, dinner and breakfast.. 
Maryna Calow was having fun with her friend

First in the room, Bianca Brand showed us the Billecart-Salmon Champagne, imported by Ken Forrester. There were three to taste, all excellent. We had just had a licorice chocolate from the stand next door and are surprised and please to let you know that the Brut Rosé pairs very well with liquorice. Who knew?!

A very bling Italian Prosecco from Bottega. Matching glasses too

Have you tried Drappier Champagne?

A selection of marques from Reciprocal Trading, Champagnes Forget-Brimont and Jacquinot
and their Riedel wine glasses

Yes please! Lynne’s favourite of the evening

Lots of lovely Mumm Champagne, the Brut, the Cordon Rouge, the Rosé and the Demi-Sec. It seems that the younger generation loves semi-sweet bubbles. We grew up with them and are less keen. We had too many bottles of semi-sweet “Grandma's Socks” (a play on the name of inexpensive SA sparkler, Grand Mousseux) at every birthday, christening, bar mitzvah, wedding, anniversary or any excuse for a celebration. Give us lovely, dry and crisp bottle-fermented bubblies

Broadcaster at Magic AM, Guy McDonald was the MC for the evening

JP Colmant and Marina Synnott on the Champagne Tribaut table

Therèse and Alan Mullins (Woolworths wine buyer) and their driver getting some details about Lanson

Photographer Gavin Withers brought his own Riedel glass

Nice to see Piper Heidsieck this year. Their bubbly had quite a woody note,
not what one expects, but there are fans

 On the Lanson table, you could taste...

the Brut, the White label demi sec (they tell us it is drier than some Bruts!?)
as well Louis Bouillot,a Brut Crémant from Burgundy

Mike Bampfield Duggan of Wine Concepts with Sarah Revell Marillier on the Vinimark table,
where she and Tracy James-Elphick showed Bollinger and Nicolas Feuillatte

Mike and his wife Renée

The Veuve Clicquot. Go big! It is always rather good

Guy McDonald ran the raffle while Maryna Calow drew the tickets

The oyster table was very popular. There were also two chocolate tables for tasting and purchasing

And a chance in the raffle to win a drive in one of these two beauties:

'SA launch' wine & food-pairing dinner of Aristea wines at the Alphen Hotel, Constantia

An invitation from Matthew Krone to join him and taste the new release of his Aristea wines over dinner at the Alphen in Constantia. Aristea is a partnership of three friends who each already have their own wine brands/wine ventures and many years of accumulated winemaking experience. Their aim was to make exceptional South African wines that would reflect each of their individual identities and passion for wine, Matthew, a 12th generation winemaker from South Africa who sources the grapes and makes the wine, Martin Krajewski who is British and owns Clos Cantenac in St Emilion and in 2016 bought Château Séraphine in Pomerol and Frenchman Florent Dumeau, a renowned Burgundian winemaker, who has extensive experience of winemaking and vineyard management, as well as considerable expertise in France, Italy, Greece, Hungary, South Africa, Turkey, China and Serbia. Together, they strive to produce exceptional wines in the Cape that encapsulate the wild spirit and raw beauty of this wonderful land and that make people smile. For the full story, go to https://www.aristeawines.com/
We began the evening with the Aristea Méthode Cap Classique Blanc 2015,
a blend of Chardonnay and Pinot Noir grapes
It has sophistication with brioche on the nose and some perfume, salty citrus with clean and fresh long flavours, with some minerality and a good mousse. It spends 3 years on the lees. A small portion of the Chardonnay spends some time in wood
Antique buildings in the The Alphen complex as the evening shadows lengthen at sunset
The restaurant is in this superb old Cape Dutch mansion
It is called blanko
Canapés of oysters were served with the bubbly. They came topped with red pepper, croutes
and gazpacho and, sadly, chopped raw onion, which masks the delicate flavour of the oyster
Matthew’s father, Nicky Krone, joined us for dinner. His father, NC Krone, made a very important contribution to the international wine industry, being the first winemaker in the world to implement cold, low temperature fermentation in his wine tanks. This revolutionised white wine production worldwide, and made it possible to make fresh-tasting, reductive white wines
Chatting in the lounge before dinner
Two squirrels on the wall outside surveying their territory!
Matthew tells us more about this vintage release. The wines are sold on allocation locally and in the UK, USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. They only make small quantities of each wine, 6 000 bottles of each. Only a small portion (10%) of total production is kept back every year for sale in SA
Listening to the Aristea story
The Aristea wines
The menu was paired with the wines. We were very pleasantly surprised at the quality of the food, they must have a new chef. We have not always had great food at Blanko
We were in one of the small private dining rooms
The first wine was the White blend of Sauvignon Blanc and Semillon. Matthew told us that some of the wine comes from part of a block rather than the whole block; they pay the best for the best fruit. The wine made such an impression on us that we made it our wine of the week in MENU last week. We can pay no better compliment to this wine than to say that, at the table, one person compared it to a Graves, another to a Haut Brion. It certainly is quite French in character, and very impressive. The grapes are from Elgin and they pay the best price for the best fruit. It isn’t a wine you want to pull apart and analyse; it is a full, well balanced, well integrated and layered wine, with beautiful golden stone fruit, good minerality, deliciousness and staying power. It is aged in wood for 10 months and the wood supports, not dominates.75% Sauvignon Blanc, 25% Semillon
It came with the amuse bouche of a perfectly grilled sweet but a little sandy, scallop topped with a pancetta crumb, with a pea purée and a lemon burnt butter. Wonderful pairing
With the starter, we had the Aristea Chardonnay. Beautiful fruit on the nose: golden loquats and greengage plums, whiffs of wood smoke and vanilla oak, sweet, spicy and well balanced with golden fruit on the long, long palate. This went amazingly well with the starter of beetroot carpaccio, dried beetroot chips, and baby beets topped with a creamy and delicate goat’s cheese mousse and killer candied walnuts which were an inspired addition. Neither of us is a fan of beetroot, but we can unreservedly say that this was the best we have ever eaten, and we were not alone around the table. The walnuts brought everything together
Next was the 2016 Cabernet Sauvignon from four Stellenbosch producers in the Golden Triangle of Cabernet. Tension is the buzz word in red wines at the moment and this certainly has it. Rich cassis berries and cherries on the nose and palate with liquorice wood, perfume and incense. It needs time to settle and the good fruit acids will carry it forward for many a year. We had it with herb and crumb crusted lamb chops, fondant potato, and an 'exotic' mushroom and rich lamb jus
Dessert was difficult to photograph, as it was rather phallic in shape! A melting mascarpone Semi Freddo, filled with a raspberry gel, on a cocoa nib soil, with fresh strawberry slices and basil. Not the best course, but it went so well with the wonderfully fruity, candy pink Aristea Rosé MCC. It has whiffs of smoke and is full of lively strawberry and red berry flavours. 60% Chardonnay and 40% Pinot Noir left longer on the skins and this shows on the long flavours which delight. To enjoy all summer long. Thank you Matthew for sharing these lovely wines