Thursday, March 31, 2016

MENU's Wine of the week. Alvi's Drift Viognier

Wine of the week. The wine that impressed us the most was Alvi's Drift Viognier from their Signature range (a Platter 4 star), which we had with a prawn feast we enjoyed with friends. The wine is unusual, and keeps surprising as you taste. It is initially full of luscious white peaches and apricots then there is a bump of bitterness and finally grapefruit and limes take over and the bitterness disappears. It opens up in the glass beautifully , remains aromatic and faintly tropical and is perfect with seafood.
Aged wine of the week I: KWV Pinotage 1988
Our Dutch friends, who are about to return home,  invited us to join them for a small rijsttafel. Another friend also a guest, brought along this bottle, which she found in her late uncle's collection. It was extraordinary: a perfect cork, beautiful deep garnet colour and rich stewed plum flavour which was a perfect match for the spicy dishes. As we have so often said, Pinotage is the perfect red wine for spicy food and it ages better than any other wine in this country. Still full of fruit and freshness, it amazed us and it went perfectly with the spicy Nasi Goreng and Babi Ketchup we were eating

Aged wine of the week II: Nederburg Bukettraube Noble Late Harvest 1983. From the same source as the Pinotage. The cork was perfect, but the slight pressure of the two-pronged opener pushed it into the bottle. The wine had turned to a dark brown colour. It was rich and unctuous with silky honey, layered with good crisp limes and was the perfect foil for Lynne’s rather sweet Ile Flottante
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus

This week's MENU Food fact

We do not have good duck in South Africa. Even our local Chinese restaurant has given up and imports his duck from China. It was with delight that Lynne found six duck breasts (packs of 2) in Woolworths. And they were not too fatty, she was able to render the fat on the breasts down well, but the skin did not crisp up. Why? And the portions were a disaster. In each pack was one very large breast and one small. Woolworths, thank you for providing the duck breasts, often impossible to source but please, pack them in even sizes. They are incredibly expensive, so to avoid having the small ones overcooked and the large ones under, it is so, so important to time their cooking accurately and, when you are in the middle of a lively dinner party, this is often not possible. Please do what they do overseas: allow us the choice of size
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus

MENU's Easter Break

We have had a lovely Easter, spending it with friends from overseas and those who live locally, eating and drinking - mostly at home as the March weather turned very wintry so there was not much incentive to go out. We have also had some incredible wines. Our Easter meal with family was on Saturday night when a friend brought a prawn and avocado starter which we had with Magdalena Sauvignon Blanc 2009 from Gabrielskloof. Lynne prepared duck breasts with pomegranate molasses and five spice seasoning and this went so perfectly with Newton Johnson 2008 Full Stop Rock (Shiraz Grenache Mourvedre) that we demolished 2 bottles. Our recipe for today is the dessert we had, Ile Flottante, one of Lynne's favourites, often relished in France in years gone by. It is a floating island of baked meringue in a lake of creamy vanilla custard. We were incredibly lucky to have been brought a bottle of an iconic aged dessert wine by a guest, a Nederburg NLH 1983 which had silky honey layered with good crisp limes and was the perfect foil for this rather sweet pudding.

We went to an Easter lunch party on Sunday and Lynne's contribution was a large Greek Easter spinach and cheese pie, known as Spanakopita, that will be our recipe next week
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus

Recipe of the week: Ile Flottante (Floating island)


Nowadays you often see this recipe presented as small portions or quenelles of meringue in each plate. Traditionally however it is one large meringue island floating in warm vanilla custard to be shared. This is a much easier option as well, as you don't individually poach the meringues; you bake it whole.
For the meringue:
1/2 t butter - 4 egg whites - 225g caster sugar
Turn your oven on to 180⁰C. Lightly butter the inside of a deep oven proof 15cm round cake tin or bowl with straight sides. Coat the inside with a little of the sugar. Beat the egg whites until stiff, then gradually whisk in half of the sugar till thick and glossy. Then, using a metal spoon, carefully fold in the rest of the sugar. Gently spoon into the tin.
Place the filled tin in a roasting tray filled with 3cm of boiling water and put into the centre of the oven for 30 minutes. Remove and allow to cool. As the meringue (which may be golden and a little crisp on top) cools, it will shrink, so you should ease the sides away to allow it to move, gently using a pallet knife or your fingers.
The custard
4 egg yolks - 25g caster sugar - 250ml single or pouring cream - 1 t vanilla extract or 1 vanilla pod
Beat the egg yolks with the sugar. If using a vanilla pod, cut it open and extract the seeds and add them and the pod to the cream in a small pot. Heat the cream with the vanilla gently till just below boiling (it must NOT boil), then pour it on to the egg mixture. Stir well to blend, then strain into a glass bowl set over simmering water. The bowl must not touch the water. Stir till cooked and thickened, it should coat the back of your spoon. It does take several minutes, so do watch it carefully or you will end up with scrambled egg. Let the custard cool.
To assemble the pudding
In a deep serving dish a few cm's wider than the top of your meringue, carefully upend the meringue island. Drizzle over hot caramel (*see below) in a thin random pattern. If you can do sugar work, you can make spun sugar, but just randomly drizzling caramel is fine. You can also make a flower or whirl on greased paper to top the pudding with the caramel. All this can be done in advance. To serve, surround it with the warm custard and enjoy the praise.
*Caramel
50g of white sugar

 Put the sugar into a clean, dry, small heavy bottomed pan, add heat and let it turn into caramel. Do not stir till it is all molten, but you can swirl the pan to make the colour spread. It does need to be a good dark caramel colour, but be careful not to let it burn. Be careful, caramel is molten sugar so do not touch it, you can be badly burned
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus

Having your cake and eating it - Just desserts

There is a new bakery opening in town this week, where you can sample all, including the fruits of your labour. You will be able to build your own cake favourite from the selection of different ingredients on offer. Do you want jam with it? Sprinkle over some gold dust or sparkly diamonds on the designer icing. Chocolate or sour plum or plain sponge? What or who is flavour of the month? There is even a Halloween design with lots of little skeletons hanging in the cupboard. Or you can get your own slice of the pie. Great served with really expensive French Champagne. We hear the Imi Peachment pie is all the rage. All you have to do is submit a tender offer and it’s yours. It is going to be in April Street in Town and is called Gupthazum, opening for offers tomorrow. We were asked to promote it, for which we will be rewarded. There are lots of fruit cakes on offer in the Cabinet too. And, of course, if you don't like what you have been sold, they will pay back the money. To mix metaphors: A mess of pottage is often served cold. Happy April 1st.
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus

This week's MENU: MediterrASIAN sushi, Myoga, Ile Flottante, Old wines

Heavy clouds off Sea Point bringing us very welcome rain - Change is in the air!


 Wines of the week
 Coming events

Easter Break      We have had a lovely Easter, spending it with friends from overseas and those who live locally, eating and drinking - mostly at home as the March weather turned very wintry so there was not much incentive to go out. We have also had some incredible wines. Our Easter meal with family was on Saturday night when a friend brought a prawn and avocado starter which we had with Magdalena Sauvignon Blanc 2009 from Gabrielskloof. Lynne prepared duck breasts with pomegranate molasses and five spice seasoning and this went so perfectly with Newton Johnson 2008 Full Stop Rock (Shiraz Grenache Mourvedre) that we demolished 2 bottles. Our recipe for today is the dessert we had, Ile Flottante, one of Lynne's favourites, often relished in France in years gone by. It is a floating island of baked meringue in a lake of creamy vanilla custard. We were incredibly lucky to have been brought a bottle of an iconic aged dessert wine by a guest, a Nederburg NLH 1983 which had silky honey layered with good crisp limes and was the perfect foil for this rather sweet pudding.

We went to an Easter lunch party on Sunday and Lynne's contribution was a large Greek Easter spinach and cheese pie, known as Spanakopita, that will be our recipe next week
A fusion of flavours at Myoga     We were invited to lunch at Myoga, (Japanese: Ginger flower) Chef Mike Bassett's gourmet restaurant by overseas friends who were staying at the Vineyard Hotel. It is quite a while since we last visited and we looked forward to his always adventurous food and were not disappointed. He fuses Asian with modern fresh cuisine in exciting and different combinations. We all had the set 5 course lunch (R275) which has choices for all. You can see pictures and descriptions of the food here. We have now been invited to sample their new seven course dinner menu in April and will also be writing about it in MENU.\
‘Mediterrasian' Sushi at Ocean Basket     We love eating fish and seafood at Ocean Basket but, in the past, their Sushi has been less than perfect, often clumsily made hours or a day in advance, with mushy rice and minimal fillings. We are very happy to report that this has now changed. Last month, at the press launch we were invited to meet international sushi chef Pepi Anevski of Umami restaurant in Copenhagen, Denmark. He is a sushi master and was named Chef of the Year at Japan's first World Sushi Cup. He was employed by Ocean Basket to come and train all their staff in how to make good sushi. This has taken more than a month, as he travelled around South Africa doing the training. We were embargoed from telling you about this until today, but can now pass on the information and you can see some of the excellent sushi we were served by him and the staff at Ocean Basket in Camps Bay in February.
Having your cake and eating it - Just desserts     There is a new bakery opening in town this week, where you can sample all, including the fruits of your labour. You will be able to build your own cake favourite from the selection of different ingredients on offer. Do you want jam with it? Sprinkle over some gold dust or sparkly diamonds on the designer icing. Chocolate or sour plum or plain sponge? What or who is flavour of the month? There is even a Halloween design with lots of little skeletons hanging in the cupboard. Or you can get your own slice of the pie. Great served with really expensive French Champagne. We hear the Imi Peachment pie is all the rage. All you have to do is submit a tender offer and it’s yours. It is going to be in April Street in Town and is called Gupthazum, opening for offers tomorrow. We were asked to promote it, for which we will be well rewarded. There are lots of fruit cakes on offer in the Cabinet too. And, of course, if you don't like what you have been sold, they will pay back the money. To mix metaphors: A mess of pottage is often served cold. Happy April 1st.
Nowadays you often see this recipe presented as small portions or quenelles of meringue in each plate. Traditionally however it is one large meringue island floating in warm vanilla custard to be shared. This is a much easier option as well, as you don't individually poach the meringues; you bake it whole.

For the meringue:
1/2 t butter - 4 egg whites - 225g caster sugar
Turn your oven on to 180⁰C. Lightly butter the inside of a 15cm  deep oven proof round cake tin or bowl with straight sides. Coat the inside with a little of the sugar. Beat the egg whites until stiff, then gradually whisk in half of the sugar till thick and glossy. Then, using a metal spoon, carefully fold in the rest of the sugar. Gently spoon into the tin.
Place the filled tin in a roasting tray filled with 3cm of boiling water and put into the centre of the oven for 30 minutes. Remove and allow to cool. As the meringue (which may be golden and a little crisp on top) cools, it will shrink, so you should ease the sides away to allow it to move, gently using a pallet knife or your fingers.
The custard
4 egg yolks - 25g caster sugar - 250ml single or pouring cream - 1 t vanilla extract or 1 vanilla pod
Beat the egg yolks with the sugar and vanilla. If using a vanilla pod, cut it open and extract the seeds and add them and the pod to the cream in a small pot. Heat the cream with the vanilla gently till just below boiling (it must NOT boil), then pour it on to the egg mixture. Stir well to blend, then strain into a glass bowl set over simmering water. The bowl must not touch the water. Stir till cooked and thickened, it should coat the back of your spoon. It does take several minutes, so do watch it carefully or you will end up with scrambled egg. Let the custard cool.
To assemble the pudding
In a deep serving dish a few cm's wider than the top of your meringue, carefully upend the meringue island. Drizzle over hot caramel (*see below) in a thin random pattern. If you can do sugar work, you can make spun sugar, but just randomly drizzling caramel is fine. You can also make a flower or whirl on greased paper to top the pudding with the caramel. All this can be done in advance. To serve, surround it with the warm custard and enjoy the praise.
*Caramel
50g of white sugar
 Put the sugar into a clean, dry, small heavy bottomed pan, add heat and let it turn into caramel. Do not stir till it is all molten, but you can swirl the pan to make the colour spread. It does need to be a good dark caramel colour, but be careful not to let it burn. Be careful, caramel is molten sugar so do not touch it, you can be badly burned.
Wine of the week. The wine that impressed us the most was Alvi's Drift Viognier from their Signature range (a Platter 4 star), which we had with a prawn feast we enjoyed with friends. The wine is unusual, and keeps surprising as you taste. It is initially full of luscious white peaches and apricots then there is a bump of bitterness and finally grapefruit and limes take over and the bitterness disappears. It opens up in the glass beautifully , remains aromatic and faintly tropical and is perfect with seafood.
Aged wine of the week I: KWV Pinotage 1988. 

Our Dutch friends, who are about to return home,  invited us to join them for a small rijsttafel. Another friend also a guest, brought along this bottle, which she found in her late uncle's collection. It was extraordinary: a perfect cork, beautiful deep garnet colour and rich stewed plum flavour which was a perfect match for the spicy dishes. As we have so often said, Pinotage is the perfect red wine for spicy food and it ages better than any other wine in this country. Still full of fruit and freshness, it amazed us and it went perfectly with the spicy Nasi Goreng and Babi Ketchup we were eating
Aged wine of the week II: Nederburg Bukettraube Noble Late Harvest 1983. The cork was perfect, but the wine had turned to a dark brown colour. It was rich and unctuous with silky honey layered with good crisp limes and was the perfect foil for Lynne’s rather sweet Ile Flottante
Nederburg Bukettraube Noble Late Harvest 1983. From the same source as the Pinotage. The cork was perfect, but the slight pressure of the two-pronged opener pushed it into the bottle. The wine had turned to a dark brown colour. It was rich and unctuous with silky honey layered with good crisp limes and was the perfect foil for Lynne’s rather sweet Ile Flottante
Food fact: We do not have good duck in South Africa. Even our local Chinese restaurant has given up and imports his duck from China. It was with delight that Lynne found six duck breasts (packs of 2) in Woolworths. And they were not too fatty, she was able to render the fat on the breasts down well, but the skin did not crisp up. Why? And the portions were a disaster. In each pack was one very large breast and one small. Woolworths, thank you for providing the duck breasts, often impossible to source but please, pack them in even sizes. They are incredibly expensive, so to avoid having the small ones overcooked and the large ones under, it is so, so important to time their cooking accurately and, when you are in the middle of a lively dinner party, this is often not possible. Please do what they do overseas: allow us the choice of size


Our Events Calendar has information about interesting wine, food and related events happening in the Western Cape and, occasionally, in other areas. It is as up to date as the information we have received from the various organisers. Accuracy in the descriptions of events listed here depends on the information given to us by the organisers or their publicity agents. Some of this information comes to us in hugely verbose communiqués which we have to précis to make it easier for you. We will not be held responsible for any inaccuracies, however caused





31st March 2016
PS If a word or name is in bold type and underlined, click on it for more information
Phones: +27 21 439 3169 / 083 229 1172 / 083 656 4169
Postal address: 60 Arthurs Rd, Sea Point 8005
Our Adamastor & Bacchus© tailor-made Wine, Food and Photo tours take small groups (up to 6) to specialist wine producers who make the best of South Africa’s wines. Have fun while you learn more about wine and how it is made! Tours can be conducted in English, German, Norwegian and standard or Dutch-flavoured Afrikaans.
If you like the photographs you see in our publications, please look at our Adamastor Photo website for our rate card and samples from our portfolio
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 these newsletters and our blogs are © John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus. Our restaurant reviews are usually 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. Our Avast! ® Anti-Virus software is updated at least daily and our system is scanned continually for viruses.
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MediterrASIAN sushi at Ocean basket

We love eating fish and seafood at Ocean Basket but in the past their Sushi has been less than perfect, often clumsily made hours or a day in advance, mushy rice and minimal fillings. We are very happy to report that this has now changed. Last month at the press launch we were invited to meet international sushi chef Pepi Anevski of Umami restaurant in Copenhagen, Denmark who is a sushi master, was named Chef of the Year at Japan's first World Sushi Cup. He was employed by Ocean Basket to come and train all their staff in how to make good sushi. This has taken more than a month as he travelled around South Africa doing the training. We were embargoed from telling you about this until today but can now pass on the information and you can see some of the excellent sushi we were served by him and the staff at Ocean Basket in Camps Bay in February.
The view from Ocean Basket in Camps Bay on a warm afternoon.
Meeting Pepi for the first time with Winnie Bowman CWM and her sister Lynne
His credentials
Handsome, intelligent, multi-lingual and he loves food
Ocean Basket Marketing Lead Jean Sloane introduces him and their concept to the media. “As seafood procuring experts, we are in a position to offer a superior product at an affordable price and now we can also claim a fresh new menu with a unique blend of flavours that remain true to our Mediterranean cuisine.”
He explains the new concept to us. Sushi can be made with anything as long as you have the basics of seaweed, rice, wasabi and soy sauce and ginger. “I thought of how many fusion restaurants I had been working for that had learned to combine sushi with local flavours. We decided to stop imitating other Japanese restaurants; to respect the sushi basics and then insert Mediterranean flavours… perfect!”
Then it was time to taste some of the new sushi. The new menu includes the following items: Wasabi prawn gunkan; Tarama gunkan with calamari heads; Sesame salmon gunkan with zucchini and tempura; Calamari gunkan with spring onions; Crunchy Athena with pickled red onion; Salmon Tomato roll with fresh basil and grilled green pepper; Kypro prawn roll with Romaine lettuce and origanum sauce; parsley prawn roll; volcano roll and Lemon salmon roll.
All were being prepared by the sushi staff of the restaurant
And served to us in abundance
Why not shaved carrot and courgette instead of wasabi to wrap the rolls? and crisp baby squid tentacles on tramasalata. Breaded calamari on courgette. These were some of the early ideas we sampled
Salmon sesame and tomato and basil rolls, prawn with pesto
Then some rolls with crisp topping and some salmon and mayo with Mediterranean flavours
 Oh those crisp baby squid tentacles with lemon juice
It was a nonstop feast of sushi
You have to try these topped with crunchy Athina
Supervising in the Camps Bay restaurant's very small sushi kitchen
We had been asked to bring along some interesting ingredients so Pepi could make us unusual sushi and he got some really different options
He tried lots of different combinations
We all agreed Strawberry sushi works wonderfully, especially with a touch of wasabi
How about Parma ham topped with sundried tomatoes and baby mozzarella balls served on a leaf of chicory
Who wants to taste?
And voted the best - chopped Biltong topped avocado and lettuce rolls, with basil
A wonderful place to watch the sun go down ...
... with a platter of sushi and some good crisp white wine. Now head off to Ocean Basket to sample the new flavours
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Lunch at Myoga, The Vineyard Hotel - A fusion of flavours

We were invited to lunch at Myoga, (Japanese: Ginger flower) Chef Mike Bassett's gourmet restaurant, by English friends who were staying at the Vineyard Hotel. It has been quite a while since we last visited; we looked forward to his always adventurous food and were not disappointed. He fuses Asian with modern fresh cuisine in exciting and different combinations. We all had the set four course lunch which had choices for all. You can see pictures and descriptions of the food here. We are now invited to sample their new 7 course dinner menu in April and will also be writing about it in Menu.
We had the best table in the house in the open French windows, with a view of the gardens and the mountains beyond. It was a day of all four seasons in one, so we protected from the wind and showers but enjoyed the sunshine. We started lunch with a bottle of Steenberg 1682 MCC
Our amuse bouche of a creamy oat and mushroom 'risotto'
The 5 course lunch tasting menu
The current à la carte lunch menu, which does change with the seasons
A beautiful pot ...
... revealed a dish of many mushrooms with shaved truffle, truffle asparagus glaze, and oblongs of crispy chilli tofu
This dish of spicy ancho chilli garlic chorizo prawns, mild buffalo wings, blue cheese spuma, avocado butter, crushed tortilla prawns was much enjoyed
salmon, pickled daikon, apple atchar, edamame gel and the three beautiful raw salmon Shiozuke with green edamame gel, crisp and sour daikon pickle and apple achar. The plating is always immaculate and proves the point that you eat with your eyes first. This also had "elements of thai snowball" which was a snowball of creamy fragrant thai spiced coconut and lemongrass "ice cream" atop the salmon
Chilled miso tuna, flavoured with wild African garlic, coconut jalapeno ponzu, on a japanese sesame salad, here being spritzed with lemon oil
Our palate refresher was a sorbet of lime and lemongrass with a kick of alcohol
On to the main courses. We shared a bottle of Stellenzicht Golden Triangle Syrah, which went very well with all the varied choices
Lynne’s choice of the lemongrass ginger boneless lamb loin, crisp coriander sesame arancini, meltingly tender steamed Korean mini eggplant with labneh was a great combination. The plate was dusted with ash & asparagus dust
Pancetta wrapped goucho fillets of springbok, with salted caramel, carrots, broccoli rabé puree, port jus, a crisp pomme Anna, accompanied by a savoury Tin Roof magnum ice cream on ice was the main enjoyed by the other three at the table.
Time for dessert. One to rush back for was the coconut sphere, coconut moelleux, coconut panna cotta, butternut churros, burnt orange sauce, coconut marshmallow. Any different textures and sensations but all combined to give one the kiss of a well remembered toasted coconut marshmallow with warm caramel

The “death of strawberry shortcake” strawberry bombe, strawberry coulis, white chocolate sponge, vanilla ice cream strawberry gel, strawberry pastille, soft strawberry fizzer assorted summer berries arrived under a cloud of spun sugar
And when the warm sauce was poured over it, the cloud dispersed revealing the dessert below. Rather sweet but wonderful.
We can't wait to try the 7 course dinner menu
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus