Saturday, January 26, 2008
Lourensford Eden Crest Sauvignon Blanc/Chardonnay
Eden Crest Sauvignon Blanc/Chardonnay
Vintage: 2006
Residual sugar 3.76 g/l
Serving Suggestions:Serve between 13 and 15°C with salads and cold meats
Nico Vermeulen's The Right Two Whites
Often when I am over at Sian's for dinner I'm faced with wines I'd never normally see, or choose. A lot of this has to do with her being a lot more experimental with regards to wine, which means sometimes gems are discovered around her family table, and sometimes there are wines which would be better sold as vinegar.
One wine, which certainly should never be placed anywhere near the vinegar shelf, is the Sauvignon Blanc/Semillion blend from the cellar at Havana Hills under Nico Vermeulen, called The Right Two Whites.
This is a fantastic and crisp white blend, perfectly balanced; its a fantastic mid week table wine, and when ever there is a bottle open I'm more than happy to have a glass.
Sian picks it up quite cheaply at Mooiberg in the Stellenbosch winelands, but if you aren't so lucky to have a chance to shop at that fantastic wine store, then you can pick it up for approx. R50 through regular retail channels. Sian got a great deal on it, at R50 it might be a bit steep; see what you can get it for, its well worth R35 if you can get it at that.
Perhaps I'm a bit biased, but I really enjoy the wines that are coming out of the Swartland; especially Havana Hills and Spice Route (one of Fairview's labels).
I'm looking forward to a 'fact-finding' expedition to a few more of the Swartland wineries to see what is going down!
Simonsvlei Chardonnay 2007 : Brief Notes
The wine is very drinkable, very early for a chardonnay; its lightly wooded, and very 'friendly' for a chardonnay. I think it would be a good wine to give to someone who generally drinks lighter whites like Chenin or Sav. Blanc who is looking to enquire about Chardonnay.
Its a good table wine with sushi and seafood, the pairing was good (so full marks to me!), very good value (i.e. you could drink it during the week without burning a hole in your pocket), and well worth the opening.
If you are looking for a chardonnay to rock your socks off, this IS NOT IT! But as a decent balanced table chardonnay you could do a lot worse, it avoids the temptation to be too acidic in the search for complexity, which like so many of Simonsvlei wines mean that the wine is infinitely drinkable.
In Quest of Meerlust

As a young wine drinker, Meerlust can often be an intimidating wine to buy and to drink. I remember my first thoughts of Meerlust only awakening when I started working a couple of years ago, and then thinking what they charged for wine was FAR too much... i could do just fine with a R50 bottle of something decent.
But in the last year or so I've become ever intrigued; I want to see what all the fuss is about, what makes their wines so special, and if anyone should really even bother.
So Sian and I headed out this Friday for a little investigation in Stellenbosch; first we went out to Franschoek to Hillcrest berry farm for a little brunch (much needed) and then off back towards Cape Town to the Meerlust estate.
Meerlust is towards Strand, along Baden Powell, close to De Wijnlander estate, and is VERY low key in its signage, parking and tasting. Basically its absolutely great, a little off the track of the Spier, et al Wine(Disney)Worlds that seem to be consuming the Stellenbosch region. The Meerlust estate is a family affair and looks so.
We went in for the tasting (R20, and they let you taste all their wines all the way to the flagship, which I think is really respectable, and gives you an opportunity to see what the fuss is all about, rather than the usual "vintages not for tasting", i.e. "You should know why our flagship is so great"), and Meerlust let you know what they have on offer, there is no keeping of cards close to the chest. These wines mean business.
The tasting goes through from their solo Chardonnay, to their Pinot Noir (a real treat in my opinion, the colour is a little 'brown' as Pinot's often are, but the round taste is great, especially so early on), from there we headed into their 'Red' label, for the years when the Rubicon is not bottled (i.e. 'bad' years).
A quick note on Meerlust Red: its a good wine, it's worth its price. but DON'T buy this wine trying to figure out Rubicon. I've read this oft-quoted piece of advice before, and having now tasted at the farm I can safely say this is COMPLETE RUBBISH. Meerlust Red is a superb table wine, and something to keep for a mid-week occasion, but it is NOT a poorman's/student's Rubicon. If you are looking for that, there are better bottles at R100 elsewhere.
From the Red, the tasting moved onto a 1998 vintage Merlot; which I found INCREDIBLY spicy and up for it, even after a decade (this was VERY surprising to me, and was a good indication that Meerlust aren't joking around with their ageing potentials) the wine was very direct and complex, and it tasted great. I could have nursed a bottle myself.
From there we went onto their latest Merlot release, for which the Cab. Sav they used to blend in the Merlot has been replaced with Cab Franc. Sian isn't a fan of Cab Franc normally but she rated the Merlot good... tasting the younger Merlot, I can honestly say I think that Meerlust's Merlot should be cellared for a while... Not because its bad fairly young, but because it really improves with age, whilst losing little to no flavour.
Then came the Cab Sav. It's Cab Sav. It tastes like Cab Sav. Don't get me wrong... its a great Cab Sav, but this varietal isn't doing it for me the way it was 5 years ago. It was dry, plummy, dignified, but Cab Sav is a meal wine for me, and never a highlight to taste (unless you've got an aged steak marinating in the fridge and you are looking for a bottle to buy to drink that night). Their C.S. is great though, a very good one by all estimations... but there is something lacking, it's a great wine, but I suspect that all the best grapes are being kept for.... Rubicon.
You can read a lot about Rubicon elsewhere, and one of the reasons we went to the farm was for me to evaluate it before I spent R200 on a bottle for a friend. To cut a long story short, if you like classic, slightly conservative Bordeaux blends (as I do) and like your wine to be from another decade, then Rubicon is where it is AT as far as I'm concerned, wine writers be DAMNED. Rubicon is a great wine, its got brand awareness, which can inflate a wine's price (Just look at Ernie Els wines... those things aren't worth 480 a bottle), but in its case it has not. At between 180-200 a bottle depending on vintage (little birdie tells us 2003 is the best EVER) it's a steal in my opinion. Have it properly cellared.
Rubicon looks impressive as soon as it's in the glass. Both Sian and I were impressed by the colour. It simply looks the way a wine should look in the glass... it's heavy, but not too heavy. The tastes, the nose, the legs of the wine are pretty pitch perfect for what it's trying to do: i.e. be a good, solid, dependable and excellent wine. It is all those things.
If you are looking for 'excitement', have that between 60-120 a bottle at checkers. If you want to have a bottle to take out of the cabinet to drink over dinner with your girlfriend's parents asking them if you can marry their daughter, get a bottle of Meerlust Rubicon. It is Cesarean in its gait, and an excellent wine. It reminds me of what blends can achieve when well thought out, and is a wine which even the most novice of wine drinker can appreciate for its balance.
The trip was an education in not being intimidated by so-called big name wines, and instead appreciating the few private estates for what they bring to the wine merchants; great wines which remind you why South Africa is the wine world's best kept secret.
Glenwood Merlot 2004
To kick off the wine blog, I thought I’d review a wine that has been waiting for the last three years for me, and which to celebrate an evening with a friend from Up North I don’t get to see that often, as well as my brother’s Matric passing, I decided to open it up and share with friends over some warthog ribs at the fantastic Hussar Grill in Camps Bay.
This wine had a real story for me, a few years ago my partner and I were driving around Franschoek and ended up rather lost and on a gravel road in seemingly nowhere. Tucked away in the valley (little known Robertsvlei) we found our rest at Glenwood , where we had a very special tasting, greeted by the cellar manager and his great team.
We ended up buying a lot of wine, and having a wonderful afternoon of tasting and discussing the wines of the farm with those who know it best. The plantings where fairly new, the wine was expressive, and the feeling from the staff was of commitment, enjoyment and a small operation feel which is often lost in the times of ‘big label/private collection’ wines.
Of particular interest was a young 2004 Merlot from a fairly new block on the farm, it promised great things we felt.
Well it delivered, with the 2005 vintage now on sale for R55 a bottle I can recommend it to anyone I meet, the 2004 was a wonderful little merlot. The wine revels in its nature, not trying to be a ‘Cabernet-Light’, instead it’s a mellow, round merlot, perfect with a meal or on its own.
I believe wine should be enjoyed because it’s enjoyable, and not because of a label, price or varietal. This wine is certainly that. I doubt any wine snobs will be able to bring themselves to enjoy a wine at R55 a bottle, but it really is excellent, and after 3 years of lying down had lost none of its plumy, fruity tastes, and had lost some of the earlier piquant tastes if my memory serves me correctly.
I can recommend the Merlot 2004 wholeheartedly, it truly is a great wine.
Welcome to The Quaffers
I'll be trying to review a wine every week or so, along with other wine related anecdotes along the way, and hopefully will be getting some of my friends, housemates, etc. to submit some notes and stories on the great wines (and not so great) wines they've enjoyed over the last while.
