Thursday, July 11, 2019

Cape Bordeaux Red Blend report 2019 Awards at Morgenster, Somerset West

This year’s Winemag.co.za Cape Bordeaux Red Blend Report 2019 awards ceremony was held at Morgenster Wine Estate in the Helderberg ward of Stellenbosch. We were reminded that this was known in the past as the Red Hot Wine Awards, but this new title does explain the category a little more clearly

Morgenster's Prosecco style bubbly, made from Cabernet Franc, was a good crisp start to the afternoon
Ginny Povall of Botanica and Chris Boustred of Remhoogte had been invited to see if their wines had scored well
The awards ceremony was held on a lovely sunny day, so welcome after a cold, wet week
Jacqueline Lahoud, WineMag’s Business Manager was excited to announce some changes at Winemag.co.za
The owners, Eileses Capital, have given them a budget for a new look website
and have spent money on helping them to find their Corporate Identity and a new logo
This has taken the last six months and it is now on line for all to see. Click on this link: http//winemag.co.za
Judges Christian Eedes and Roland Peens spoke about this year’s competition
Christian told us that entries are down on last year at 65 from 53 producers (2018 was 81 from 64, but that was up on 62 in 2017), evidence of the economic distress in which the South African wine industry finds itself
The standard of wine, however, is as good as ever with 29 of the 65 wines rating 90 plus on the 100 point quality scale. This is equivalent to 44.6% of the line-up whereas, last year, 40.7% made the cut; average score 89.4 this time around, compared to 89.1 a year ago
13 wines scored 90 plus in 2016, 25 in 2017, 23 in 2018 and 29 in 2019, so their conclusion is that quality is entering the competition. Stellenbosch continues to dominate in this category, with 7 of the top 10 and 20 of the top 29 rated 90
Vintages entered: 2015 had 12 entries, 2016 had 25 entries and 13 from 2017. 5 of the top 10 are from 2017. 2015 is a much vaunted vintage internationally; Christian thinks that 2017 will surpass that. The wines of the 2016 vintage are smart, but for earlier drinking, he says. (We disagree; we think they are, to quote Monty Python "just resting". and will come alive given time). The styles of the entries vary, there is no pattern to the blend components. There is lots of experimentation. Some are using all five traditional Bordeaux varieties, but in different combinations, making it difficult to judge. Wood management and new oak vary. Time spent in oak is much less than previously, giving fruitier and fresher wines. Price in an industry in crisis is controversial. There has been a 10% decline in South Africa’s vineyards in 10 years
Roland Peens, one of the judges and the Director of The Wine Cellar, spoke about the style of the wines entered. Should the winemakers pick at 13% or sweeter and riper at 15%. SA is better at making a more classical style and we can compete with Bordeaux. But the average price of R375 doesn’t compare with real Bordeaux prices. The average cellar-door price of the 29 wines to rate 90-plus is R382 a bottle with Vrede en Lust Artisan Range Malbec Petit Verdot 2016 at R150 being the least expensive and MR de Compostella 2016 at R1 300 the most expensive. It’s a premium category, but these wines are still radically under-priced in world terms – a bottle of Bordeaux Second Growth Chateau Cos d'Estournel 2015 will cost you R3 750. How to get into the same market? How to get the prices up? We have to invest. 2015 was an early vintage with optimal ripeness, giving powerful wines. 2017 produced better balanced wines, fresher with structure and integrity. It is too early to call on which will be the best. 1997 and 1998 were his first vintages; both produced more structured wines and were vaunted and the 97 pulled away
Time to hear the results
Bruwer Raats looking pensive
The top 10 wines, in alphabetical order (with ratings alongside), are as follows:
Babylonstoren Nebukadnesar 2017 – 92
Botanica Arboretum 2017 – 94
Eikendal Classique 2017 – 92
Leipzig Grand Master 2017 – 93
Morgenster Estate Reserve 2014 – 93
Morgenster Lourens River Valley 2014 – 92
MR de Compostella 2016 – 92
Raats Family Wines Jasper Red Blend 2017 – 93
Remhoogte Sir Thomas Cullinan 2015 – 93
Vrede en Lust Boet Erasmus 2016 – 92
Alessandra Bertrand was presenting the wine certificates, this one to winemaker Henry Kotze of her own farm Morgenster
She is the daughter of Giulio Bertrand who, sadly, passed away in May last year
She and her sister have taken over the running of Morgenster
Botanica, as the producer of the wine judged best overall, won a new 300-litre Selection barrel worth €903
(equivalent to R14 330 at the time of writing) from Tonnellerie Sylvain, presented by Melanie Sauermann of Tonnellerie Sylvain

The top wine and the only one at 94 points, was winemaker owner Ginny Povall's 2017 Arboretum from Botanica in the Devon Valley in Stellenbosch. It was quite an emotional award for Ginny. Her wines have been gathering high points internationally and scoring well in Platter


We tasted the wines and this is very worthy of top place. A blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Petit Verdot
It is jam packed with cassis, incense and richness, silky on the palate; it fills the mouth with fruit and gentle soft tannins
Built to last. And, as we have come to expect from Botanica, very pretty labels
Remhoogte Sir Thomas Cullinan 2015. 93, from Stellenbosch. This also has beautiful integrated fruit with a few violets on the nose,
initially shy on the palate then good classic Bordeaux fruit, tannins and licorice wood
Built to last a long time and only a Merlot Cabernet Sauvignon blend
The back label shows the blend and the percentages used
Raats Family Wines Jasper Red Blend 2017 – 93, from Stellenbosch
Another classic Bordeaux nose from Bruwer Raats with violets and incense wood
It is restrained, silky on the palate, with initial umami savouriness, chalky tannins, then the fruit opens on the end,
full dark berry flavours and tannin remain
The back label with the same information
Morgenster Estate Reserve 2014 – 93, from Stellenbosch
A blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc with a little Petit Verdot
Violets and berry fruit on the nose, berry and rhubarb fruit on the palate
with grippy tannins and long fruit flavours indicate a long life 
Leipzig Grand Master 2017 – 93 was a wildcard for many
This Merlot, Cabernets Sauvignon & Franc and Petit Verdot blend from the Nuy Valley doesn't often appear in competitions
Lots of wood and smoke on the nose, it has good presence on the palate. Soft sweet cassis and mulberry fruit,
with freshness belying the wood notes on the nose. Enjoyable
Boet Erasmus 2016 Vrede and Lust
MR de Compostella 2016 – 92 from Mvemve Raats in Stellenbosch. another classic Bordeaux nose, with soft sweet fruit
and some chalky tannin grip on the teeth and cheeks, with complex wood on the end. Another one built to last, and last
Morgenster Lourens River Valley 2014 – 92 A blend of Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot
On the nose, Cabernet Franc wildness with some spice, violets and intense incense wood
Lovely juicy fruit, length and depth with hints of chocolate mocha wood on the end
Eikendal Classique 2017 – 92, from Stellenbosch. A blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot
Another classic Cassis nose and palate with lots of fruit on the end with dark wood
Still gathering its skirts together, but shows potential
Babylonstoren Nebukadnesar 2017 – 92, on the road to Franschhoek, uses the 5 Bordeaux varieties:
Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Petit Verdot and Malbec
It is quite sophisticated on the nose and on the palate has chalky tannins, lovely soft sweet berry fruit
with a long end and some freshness. Soft tannins remain on the palate
Morgenster winemaker Henry Kotze and Bruwer Raats enjoying the wines on offer and celebrating their wins
Lots of Morgenster olives, good bread, olive paste, humus and excellent charcuterie
including their wild boar salami were there to assuage any hunger; very moreish indeed
The earlier heat and winter smog haze over the Helderberg changes to a crisper cooler picture as the afternoon wears on,
see below 
Sun sets early in winter so, when the pink sunset hits the mountain, it was time to depart;
we do not enjoy driving on the N2 in the dark
All content ©  John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus

Monday, July 08, 2019

An afternoon on the beach. Waves, wind and seagulls with a little rain


On a cold, blustery afternoon, the sound of crashing waves could be heard very well at our house, high up on Signal Hill. We took a mid-afternoon stroll on the beach at Bantry Bay

Splash!
The Hartlaub's Gull (Chroicocephalus hartlaubii) is endemic to the coast from Cape Town up to Namibia
About one half of the total population, currently estimated at about 30 000 birds, is within the Greater Cape Town area
It is a small dainty gull, about the size of a large pigeon, but has the most amazing ability to fly in any conditions
Coming in to land
Touchdown!









Snow white sea foam
An angry mid-winter sea with rain fast approaching 
Kelp clinging onto the crevices in the wave battered Cape Granite

 My favourite beachcomber, well wrapped up, looking for pretty shells
tide coming in
And a fresh wind blows back the surf on the incoming waves
A red-winged starling (Onychognathus morio), not normally seen as a seabird, on the rocks at Bantry Bay
My mother had a timeshare at the Bantry Bay resort (second block from the right) and loved it

An old tidal pool that is very popular in the summer
 Selfie
Seagulls fly, pigeons take up a sheltered position by the wall
And the wind tears the summer palm trees to shreds We have seen winter storms where the waves hit the rocks beneath the flats and hotel so hard that they crest at the 5th floor level. 
 A brave lady getting her weekend exercise 

Thursday, July 04, 2019

This Week’s MENU. Dinner with Warwick and Reuben, Mojo Market, Groot Constantia at Blockhouse Kitchen, American Meat Loaf, Warwick Prof Black


Our best wishes to our American readers. Enjoy your Independence Day celebrations

  We’re being a bit cheeky this week and we hope that we’ll be forgiven. In a, presumably, unguarded moment, someone sent us a promotional email in which the addresses of the recipients were not hidden. We reasoned that other recipients of that mail must be people who, like us, are interested in good wine and food and in travel. So we’ve added your names to our mailing list with the request that, if you don’t like our stories, please unsubscribe. We really don’t like communicating with people who don’t wish to hear from us. But we’ll be delighted, obviously, if you stay on our list, joining the very large number who do like us. And please forgive the organisation who sent us your address. They’re actually a bunch of people whom we like
  Other than that, it has been a fairly quiet week with some lovely highlights, not least among them being the beautiful rain we are receiving. We need a lot more, but what we’ve had has been wonderful; we’ve enjoyed sitting in front of the fire with a good bottle. There are a few very good bottles in these stories…

The One&Only Hotel is running The Chef and The Vine Dinner Experiences in Reuben’s Restaurant on the last Thursday of every month until the end of November. We were invited to join them for the Warwick dinner last week. Next month's event will feature Hamilton Russell, so book soon if you are interested. R625 a person. This event was extremely successful with 111 guests for dinner

Always interesting to find an event in one’s own 'Hood. The Mojo Market in Regent Road was having a wine and cheese festival last weekend, so we decided to drop in on Saturday and see what was going on. No charge, you could go upstairs and taste wine and then come down and browse the food stalls and buy some lunch. There were just a few wine and cheese stands. A good move to get more feet through the door... They have been open for over a year and we are honestly surprised they are still there, knowing the local market as we do. It is not a real market, just a place with permanent stalls selling prepared food, drink and some retail items. Don’t go there looking for fresh produce or gourmet ingredients. When they were converting a row of shops, we honestly thought we were getting a Fruit and Veg Market - which Sea Point really needs. We dropped in when it opened and were not very impressed with the selection of stalls selling their wares and food at the time. This has improved somewhat. Then we visited again, when Baskin & Robbins introduced their 57 varieties of ice cream to SA and had a counter in the centre. And that, sadly, didn’t work. We so miss the Maple Pecan ice cream...

Tasting Groot Constantia wines with Boela Gerber at the Blockhouse Kitchen, Constantia

Groot Constantia is the third oldest farm in South Africa’s wine industry and it is our oldest wine producer. It has been producing wine for more years than any of the producers in the Médoc or Champagne. Constantia was producing wine before Dom Pérignon made his wonderful discovery. So much for being “New World”! Groot Constantia is classified as an Estate, so all the grapes used in their wines are grown on the farm. None is sourced from outside the farm. The Cape Dutch manor house dates back to the earliest days of the estate which was granted to Simon van der Stel in 1685…



This week’s recipe is perfect soul food for this wet and icy weather, but it might even be a good one in the US summer on this day of celebration. Lynne found it in an old American cook book many years ago and it is one of our standards. The great thing about meat loaf is that it has two lives. The day you eat it hot and the next day, when you put a generous slice into a sandwich. She has made one adaptation which makes a lovely difference. Watching Canadian chef Michael Smith on TV this week, she saw that he included cubed cheese in the meat loaf and wow, it was superb in this recipe too

MENU’s Wine of the Week. Warwick 2018 Professor Black White Blend

We were given a preview of this soon to be released wine at the Chef and The Vine dinner at Reuben’s restaurant in the One&Only Hotel this week. Hence the picture of the bottle with its temporary label. Professor Black is a white blend of 61% Sauvignon Blanc and 39% Semillon…



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Phones: +27 21 439 3169 / 083 229 1172 / 083 656 4169
Postal address: 60 Arthurs Rd, Sea Point 8005

Recommendations of products and outside events are not solicited or charged for, and are made at the authors’ pleasure. All photographs, recipes and text used in our website and ancillary works are © John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus. Our restaurant reviews are often unsolicited. We prefer to pay for our meals and not be paid in any way by anyone. Whether we are invited or go independently, we don’t feel bad if we say we didn’t like it. Honesty is indeed our best policy. While every effort is made to avoid mistakes, we are human and they do creep in occasionally, for which we apologise.

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