Thursday, June 11, 2009

Eating the wine route

In training for the Stellenbosch Wine Festival this month, Nancy Richards does a whistle-stop tour of the new dining spots in the vineyards.

’Glass of bubbles?’’ It’s 10.20am and we’re early for our gourmet tour of Stellenbosch, starting at the recently revamped house of mousse, JC le Roux.

“Or perhaps a quick look around first?”

As effervescent as the product, Rozanne Hackart guides us through the tasting room and aerial restaurant and into the lightly chilled processing chamber, where racks of tilted bottles are mid remuage, the twist-and- turn process that settles the sediment in the neck.

“This is the bit that gets frozen, the ice plug is then popped out, the bottle topped up, capped, foiled et voil€! One visitor wanted to know if he could buy the ice plugs to use as lollipops!”

It’s all irresistibly fizzy at JC — fresh, white, blond and light with a bubble motif sandblasted on the glass, with plush pink the accent colour.

We feel the first frisson of a 2004 pinot noir in the silver-white Oyster Bar, followed by a peach-bloom rosé (98% pinot noir, 2% cab merlot) to wash down the platter of shucked, iced molluscs.

But the experience isn’t over till the scintilla sings — the royalty of the range has a dedicated tasting room in green-and-black velvet, where Hackart outlines the plans for sweet and sparkling pairings of their wines with nougat, rose water Turkish delight, fudge and caramel cashews.

On December 24 last year, the winery was struck by lightning. One can only imagine that Bacchus must have been feeling impatient — or jealous.

But not as jealous as he might have been at Dornier, where Zeus himself is immortalised on the wine label, metamorphosing into a twin-headed swan to attract the lovely Lira.

But let me not get ahead of myself. The drive to Bodega (ex La Masseria) on the Dornier estate was an opportunity to let the bubbles settle and find out about our guide, Stellenbosch Wine Route’s CEO and festival organiser Annareth Jacobs, whose wedding plans at this stage are eclipsed by the forthcoming Wine Festival.

Conversation is arrested as, from the homestead’s wide verandah, we take in the magnificent view of the undulated wine cellar and waterfall tumbling down the Helderberg.

Like the wines, stories flow thick and fast here. Swiss owner Christoph Dornier’s father was a well-known aeroplane designer back in the day, and the Zeus/swan logo derives from a painting by Christoph of his son Raphael, who oversees the estate and the restaurant, where the kikoi and Kente- cloth décor make it as colourful as a packet of jelly beans.

The “entry-level” chenin, Cocoa Hill 2008, comes with another story about one-time resident Long Ben the pirate, but gets interrupted by the arrival of a gorgeously, thick and creamy mushroom-and-broccoli soup, matched with another, more wooded chenin.

Twin glasses, splashes of pinotage on the right, merlot on the left, come together with starter rows of vertical prawn and roasted- vegetable spring-rolls; aubergine- wrapped pepper and goat’s cheese with pesto-and-wild-rocket topping; butternut strips with a red onion fan and feta.

Louine du Toit, restaurant and wine-lounge manager, whose years in the trade have given her an impressive savoir, talks us through the Christmas-cake flavours of a 2004 Donatus flagship blend and suggests that a bottle of palette- warming pinotage should be taken neat with no food, and that a good merlot needs lamb.

Next time, she recommends we try their speciality flammenkuchen — a wafer-thin pastry base topped with crème fraîche and anything else that takes your fancy.

Chef Naas Pienaar, whose own kitchen creds could paper a dining- hall wall, emerges beaming to see how we enjoyed it, and we leave just as a small but merry party starts a wine-tasting around the fireplace.

The road to Rust en Vrede, where we are to have a main, passes hydro- ponic tunnels filled with strawberries, a mushroom plantation, the organic farmers’ market and rows of elegantly skeletal trees.

It’s hard not to be distracted by the gentleness of grey-green Stellenbosch in winter, but we focus once again at the award-winning estate — Springbok -legend Jannie Engelbrecht territory — where there’s a reverend hush of history around gables and aged oaks.

Even more so in the low-lit cellar, where, surrounded by archways filled with thousands of bottles of resting wine, we sit at an intimate table to have our l unch of courgette-and-tomato pasta topped with a grilled chicken-breast.

Article Source
Roggeland Country House

Friday, May 22, 2009

New 2009 Platter's Guide Reveals Best South African Wines

Whose wine is the finest of them all - the latest edition of the definitive guide to South African wine reveals all...

The 2009 edition of the John Platter's Guide
, South Africa's original and still best-selling wine annual, was unwrapped in Stellenbosch on 13 November along with the names of the five-star wines and the coveted awards for Superquaffer, Wine and Winery of the Year.

Now in its 29th year, Platter’s is the definitive guide to who’s who and what’s what in South African wine, with comprehensive and up-to-date coverage of most currently available brands, as well as wine cellars, winelands restaurants and accommodation, tourist attractions and more.

For the new edition, the guide’s tasting panel reviewed some 6,400 individual wines and in the process identified 85 wines as potentially worthy of the maximum five star rating. After a further round of tasting, a record 33 labels received the sought-after top grading, making them truly the crème de la crème of South African wines for 2009.

The 2009 Platter’s Guide
 five-star recipients are:

Cabernet Franc
- Buitenverwachting 2005
- Cabernet Sauvignon
- Boekenhoutskloof 2006
- Kanonkop 2004
- Thelema The Mint 2006

Pinot Noir
- Meerlust 2004

Pinotage
- Simonsig Redhill 2006

Shiraz
- Boekenhoutskloof 2006
- De Trafford 2006
- Eagles’ Nest 2006
- Hartenberg The Stork 2005
- Signal Hill Clos d’Oranje 2006

Red Blends
- De Toren Fusion V 2006
- De Trafford CWG Perspective 2005
- Kaapzicht Steytler Vision 2005
- Morgenster 2005
- Vilafonté Series C 2006
- Waterford CWG Auction Reserve 2004
- Chardonnay
- Ataraxia 2007
- Jordan CWG Auction Reserve 2006
- Uva Mira Single Vineyard 2007

Chenin Blanc

- Ken Forrester The FMC 2006

Sauvignon Blanc
- Quoin Rock The Nicobar 2007
- Semillon
- Constantia Uitsig 2007

White Blends
- Cape Point Isliedh 2007
- Nederburg Ingenuity White 2007
- Sterhuis Astra White 2006
- Tokara White 2007

Dessert Wine, Unfortified

- Fleur du Cap Noble Late Harvest 2007
- Klein Constantia Rhine Riesling Noble Late Harvest 2006
- Tulbagh Mountain Vineyards Vin Pi Two NV

Dessert Wine, Fortified
- Mons Ruber Muscat d’Alexandrie Jerepigo 1997

Port
- Boplaas Vintage Reserve 2006
- De Krans Vintage Reserve 2006

During the second round 
of tasting for five stars, the label which emerges as the clear leader is singled out for special praise as the Wine of the Year.

For the 2009 edition, the front runner (and only the guide’s 5th Wine of the Year) is the Kanonkop Cabernet Sauvignon 2004.

The guide’s other major award, Winery of the Year, is made by the editor after considering a variety of consumer-driven criteria, the aim being to spotlight a winery which epitomises the best of South African winegrowing today.

"One winery deserves special recognition. For decades it has maintained exemplary standards, remained focused and true to its terroir amid the vagaries of fashion, and produced classic, elegant, world-class wines, even in less conducive vintages. It is our privilege to honour Kanonkop Estate as Winery of the Year 2009," said editor Philip van Zyl.

In a continuing focus on highlighting value-for-money wines, Platter's tasters identify a number of entry-level wines which are exceptionally drinkable and well priced. The best of these, like the five-star candidates, go into a second round of tasting to select the Superquaffer of the Year. For the second year running, Simonsig Chenin Blanc 2008 heads the list of ultimate easy sippers.

New, tourist-friendly features of the 2009 edition include GPS coordinates for most wineries open to the public by appointment or at set hours. 

If South African wine and the Cape winelands are of interest to you, then subscribe to our Editor’s Picks Newsletter , browse our Wine and Lunch section and ourCape Winelands section for a comprehensive selection of wine news and Cape Winelands activities.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Swartland, Western Cape

Farmlands of the Swartland
Farmlands of the Swartland

The Swartland, otherwise known as the wheat and rooibos-producing part of the Western Cape, lies between Malmesbury in the south, across the Riebeek Valley to Piketberg in the north, Darling in the west, to the Oliphants Mountain at Porterville in the east. It begins only 50 kilometres outside of Cape Town making it fairly accessible to visitors, and its undulating wheat fields, vineyards and deep river valleys have been the topic of many a photographer’s lens.

This incredibly beautiful, yet often overlooked, area is named for its wide fertile plains that, after the rains in winter, turn black (swart land means black land in Afrikaans). The wide, fertile plains are filled with golden wheat fields that have contributed to its status as the bread basket of the Cape. There are as many landscapes as there are seasons and the blazing wheat is interspersed with wine, fruit and olive plantations that give rise to a patchwork quilt of colour.

Darling, close to Cape Town and the highlight of many visits to this region, is home to Evita se Perron, the popular theatre and signature landmark of long time resident Pieter Dirk Uys that combines a restaurant with a little cabaret theatre.

Many of the vines on the Swartland Wine Route, which are visibly sign-posted and stretch throughout the region, grow under dryland conditions in bush form, which means they are not watered, resulting in a particularly excellent quality and flavour of wine, much sought after for blending with wine from irrigated vineyards.

Included within the parameters of the Swartland, the Riebeek Valley has fast become a draw card for artists and those seeking alternative country-style living. Riebeek West and Riebeek Kasteel, twin towns that lie virtually on top of one another at the foot of the Kasteelberg, are extremely popular and worth a visit.

Source: SA-Venues

Cape Winelands Accommodation