Thursday, March 06, 2025

Harvest lunch at Jordan Wine Estate, Stellenbosch

A trade and media invitation we just could not refuse!

 Welcomed with a glass of Jordan Rosé or The Outlier Sauvignon blanc - or chilled water for the very thirsty on a hot day

The Jordan Rosé is made from 70% Merlot, 30% Shiraz and grown on vines that are 20-22 years old
Fresh as a daisy, lovely perfumed nose, crisp and satisfying; the red berry notes showing the varietal character so well

The Outlier is a favourite Sauvignon blanc of ours, which we often order when eating at Jordan or at other restaurants
It's a classic Sauvignon blanc, but with layers, attitude and complexity, full of some extra tropical notes 

Gary Jordan, owner of the Jordan estate, was here to see the harvest in
He said they have had such a good run up to harvest this year after a good wet winter,
almost a stress-free dream with no weather problems and slow ripening, just what is needed
It's a year of firsts. He predicts good wines

They are using drones to spray where necessary and it's a revelation which they will use in the UK,
where it will be even more valuable
Their 2024 UK vintage at Mousehall, their farm in East Sussex, was probably the most challenging in their experience
The rain started in May and finished the day after harvest at the end of October

They currently have a big replanting programme at Jordan, which started in August
Eleven hectares of new vineyards, mostly Assyrtiko, some Chardonnay
They are also replacing some vines that were planted in the 1950's

The Jordan Wine Estate, founded by the Jordan family, and Painted Wolf Wines, founded by Jeremy and Emma Borg,
have formed a business partnership, collectively hoping to make a significant and lasting impact on wildlife conservation
Painted Wolf has a strong environmental emphasis and supports the conservation of the endangered African Wild Dog
The Jordans also own a portion of a nature reserve in the bushveld and Painted Wolf fits in with this interest
The implementation of the partnership will take place over the next 12 months
It's aim is to produce the Painted Wolf wines in the newly refurbished Jordan Wine Estate cellar from 2025
and open a new brand home for Painted Wolf Wines on Jordan



They plan to make all the Painted Wolf wines on Jordan and streamline the offering

Fitting in with the Painted Wolf wine production, they are planting two hectares of Cinsault
The replanted old vineyards will house Chenin blanc and some really interesting red wines
like Mencía, a Spanish variety, which has nice, crunchy textured fruit, and Xenomavro from Greece, similar to Barolo
Gary has been very concerned about global warming and is planting varietals from the warmer European areas

As Gary said, a year of firsts; they don't even have one Pinotage vine to make the Painted Wolf Pinotage on Jordan,
so they have brought in a lot of Pinotage grapes coming from 3 different local blocks in Wellington, which was where Gary's family founded the Jordan shoes company

He told us that in the UK they are now growing up to 40 tons at Mousehall
where they planted Pinot Noir and Chardonnay in 2019

The Timepiece range, made entirely from old vines, is all fermented in Amphorae, which they started buying in 2019

We then tasted some of the Assyrtiko, first planted here in 2019

Jordan now has 6.5 hectares of the grape. It's a really impressive wine
Golden fruit on the nose with peach, apricot and loquat; freshness, liveliness and zesty on the palate
with lime and lemon, long flavour layers and salty minerality on the end
Made in two concrete egg fermenters, it's a magic food wine

The Recorder. Now electronic as those rheumaticky hands don't write as fast as they used to! 

Time to go into the cellar to taste wine, some fresh grape juice and some in ferment
Some chardonnay has come in early for bubbly and some Sauvignon blanc
Chenin blanc grapes were also coming in 
and a bit of syrah... Cellarmaster Sjaak Nelson guided us through
One tranche of Chenin has come in at 22.5 Balling and 9,5% acidity;
it has gone straight to barrel to go through malolactic fermentation.. 
We tasted some fresh juice of the newly pressed Chenin and the Sauvignon blanc

Rosie, Sjaak Nelson's thoroughbred Alaskan Husky charmed us all

The aromatic Sauvignon blanc juice showed capsicum notes; it was very sweet with some salty minerality
The fermenting Sauvignon blanc had good pyrazines, perfume and was true to the varietal
As it has just started fermentation, the sweetness is still there; the sugers had not fermented out yet
It has character and promise
The Chardonnay juice had dark sugars, almost caramel,
and a good balance of sugar and lime acidiy beneath showing its future
The fermenting juice was almost too good to believe; yeasty umami on the palate with good acid and sugar balance


MD Jacques Styeyn took us through a tasting of the Chamelion Sauvignon blanc, 
which has the classic green notes on both nose and palate
It is silky, crisp and long on the palate with lots of grapy flavours
Then the Jordan Chardonnay with richness, fullness and golden notes on the nose with a hint of lees
Golden fruit, crispness, a little pétillance, salty minerality and good golden lees roundness on the end

The Jordan Chameleon Research Bursary is an initiative started by the Jordans,
whereby the tuition and research costs of a PhD student will be funded
from the proceeds of worldwide sales of the Jordan Chameleon range
This will have a huge conservation benefit for the Cape Dwarf Chameleon

Barney, one of the two pneumatic presses; there is also another. Jacques called them fossils, still working hard.

Taking us through the complex wine making process during harvest

A pour of the fresh grape juice

Two of the interns working in the cellar, Morgan Harrison and Lou Barthes, who has come from France

Into the barrel cellar with MD Jacques to hear the ins and outs of how and why wine is matured in barrels

New French oak barrels still wrapped awaiting the juice

The Cave, with maturing wines and the reference archive of past vintages

Two wine people, Negociant John Collins (he represents Jordan and other wine farms)
and Taster, Teacher (he taught us when we were Diploma students in the 90s) and bon vivant Dave Swingler

Time to go down to the tasting room which had been set up as the lunch venue for the media and trade that day




Marketing manager Bianke Ohle with the Inspector Péringuey Chenin blanc and the Chardonnay

Lots of older vintages to taste with lunch. The first one we tasted was the 2017 Long Fuse Cabernet sauvignon Magnum
Dark and opaque, with mulberry cherry , blackcurrent and incense wood
It still has tight tannins, a zing of red berries, freshness, chalkiness and then even more berry fruit. It has years to go

Next the 2022 Prospector Syrah from the mother block. Very perfumed ("I'd wear it", says Lynne) some pepper
On the palate. it is full of layered fruit, with pepper and spice. Acidity support and wood too

Then the masterpiece, the 2017 Cobblers Hill Bordeaux blend, which was passed to us to taste blind
"Thats GOOD!", Lynne  said, not knowing what was in the glass
Incense wood, cherries, berries and so satisfying. It went beautifully with the food as well

The whole wine range was there to taste, including the excellent Timepiece range of Old Vines wines - Sauvignon blanc, Chenin blanc, Chardonnay and Cabernet sauvignon

The Harvest lunch menu

A map of the Jordan vineyards showing the current and new plantings
The Timepiece vineyards are shown with colour codes

Tsatsiki and tomato pesto

The Lebanese Bulgar and Parsley salad

Potato wedges

A platter of very good roasted Mediterranean vegetables

Unusual spanakopita filled with smoked snoek, and the Lamb Koftes drizzled with Tahini

Dave Swingler on his phone, taking food and wine pictures
The sweet endings were tiny crisp boat shaped pastries filled with lemon curd, a delight
They disappeared too fast for a photograph

On the way back, along the Stellenboschkloof Road, this herd of Cape buffalo has been resident for several years

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Friday, February 21, 2025

A day trip to Kalk Bay and Constantia

Our Dutch friends Péter and Yvonne have returned for their annual stay at the Cape
so we decided, as the weather is so perfect, to have a jaunt to the other side of the Peninsula
and headed to Kalk Bay for some lunch at one of our favourite restaurants, Kalky's on the quayside

A view over False Bay from the Muizenberg end, taken from Boyes Drive


and so, on to Kalk Bay

Some of the boats were loading up to go fishing, others were arriving with their catch

and you can buy superb fresh fish on the quayside, which they will fillet for you if you wish
We saw fresh and smoked Snoek, Silvers, and pink fish, which we think were Carpenter, on sale



There were lots of flecked fish hanging in rows on the quayside
They had been deboned and soaked in salt water and then hung out to dry briefly, then frozen. These were snoek
It's done to preserve them and they are a real Cape favourite to cook on the Braai (barbeque)

The outside tables are mostly in the shade and we were lucky to get one reasonably quickly
Kalky's on the pier is a famous institution serving the best Fish and Chips and other sea food
It's not smart; because it is so popular, it takes time to get an outside table and your food, which comes freshly cooked 

You decide what you want, queue, place your order and receive a receipt with your number
It is delivered to your table when ready. Keep your ears open for the waitress calling out the numbers

They have rules! They don't sell alcohol but are happy for you to bring your own with no corkage
We take our wine in a cold box and our own wine glasses as the alternative is styrofoam cups
And, yes, the fish and the seafood are that good, so worth the effort

And in a world that is fast becoming cashless, that is all they take. But they do have an ATM inside the restaurant!
And, thankfully, NO smoking

If you can't get an outside table, there are plenty inside

Crayfish and chips on special at R150. Not very much meat on the crayfish, but enough to enjoy this superb crustacean
When we were kids growing up, it was so plentiful and cheap
Sadly, now almost poached out around our coast even though the waters are a protected no catch zone

Calamari, hake and chips - an enormous  special at R125

Groote Post SeaSalter
a perfect companion to seafood

Kalk Bay pier

Then replete with food, we ventured to Buitenverwachting in Constantia, so busy with this year's fantastic harvest
We had a lovely relaxed tasting in the cool tasting room. Some glorious wines and the purchase of a bottle or two
Elated to get the award winning 1769 Muscat de Frontignan, it sells out fast

It won the Best Dessert Wine Trophy at the 2024 Investec Trophy Wine Show,
and we agree that it is the best Constantia wine of its kind and it is also the least expensive
Their Sauvignon Blanc is very special this year, full and layered, a classic expression of the grape and delicious, so some was purchased
The blend of Sauvignon Blanc and 11% of Chardonnay also really impressed
The Christine 2017 is a really high end Bordeaux blend which really sang to us
Expensive French oak shows as incense on the nose, smooth layers of a beautifully made wine filled with dark berries,
some umami and a little spice, impressive
As always we and all the other visitors were superbly looked after by Shantall Ball,
who runs the Buitenverwachting tasting facility, and her staff 

A surpise was to catch up with Danie Keulder, Groot Constantia cellarmaster
He had come to swap bottles of Sauvignon blanc, needed for a tasting

The back of Danie's 2025 harvest T shirt

The gable of the Buitenverwachting manor house peeking through the trees

A striped brown hawk moth (theretra cajus) on a camellia plant at our home
We see the huge green caterpillars with painted on eyes each year in our garden and then, later in summer, the moth

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