Entries tagged with “Cape Royale Luxury Hotel”.
Did you find what you wanted?
Sat 14 Aug 2010
We have been tracking recent restaurant opening, closure, and restaurant and chef change information in Cape Town and in the Winelands on our Winter Restaurant Specials blog post, but have decided to do an update for those not looking for specials necessarily.
Restaurant openings
* La Mouette has opened at 78 Regent Road in Sea Point.
* Brio is a new jazz restaurant, in half of the ex-Riboville in town (on the Adderley Street side)
* Liquorice and Lime has taken over the other half of ex-Riboville (on the St George’s Mall side)
* Van Hunks has opened at 1 Union Street, off Kloof Street in Gardens
* Cafe Nood has opened in Wilderness Road, Claremont
* shu has opened next to Doppio Zero on Main Road, Green Point.
* Ryan’s Kitchen has opened at Rusthof guest house in Franschhoek - the chef Ryan Smith is ex-Mont Rochelle.
* Madame Zingara has re-opened at Century City, after a two-year absence.
* The House of Meat has opened in the Pepper Club Hotel, corner Long and Bloem Streets, offering a full braai for R 295
* Spiros has opened in Hout Bay
* La Cantina has opened in the Alliance Francaise.
* The De Leuwen Jagt restaurant on the Seidelberg wine estate outside Paarl has opened The Fabulous Bakery.
* Gesellig has opened on the corner of Church and Regent Roads in Sea Point, serving breakfast, lunch and dinner.
* Indochine has opened at the Delaire Graff wine estate in Stellenbosch.
* The Long Table Restaurant and Cafe has opened at Haskell Vineyards in Stellenbosch.
* The Wild Peacock Food Emporium has opened in Stellenbosch.
* De Oude Bank Bakkerij has opened in Stellenbosch.
* Knife Restaurant has opened in the Crystal Towers Hotel & Spa, a sister restaurant to Fork.
* Sommelier Restaurant has re-opened, after a two-year closure, at Sante Hotel & Wellness Centre
* Illyria coffee shop has opened in the Eikestad Mall in Stellenbosch
* Pierneef a la Motte will open at La Motte in Franschhoek on Saturday.
* The Artisan Cafe opens inside Table Thirteen in Green Point on 30 August, with a barista
* The Fish Shack opens in The Paddocks, Milnerton
* Reuben’s at One&Only Cape Town opens on 1 October
* The Satay Bar has opened where Zucca used to be on Kloof Street
Restaurant closures
* Josephine’s Patisserie on Loop Street
* Ginja on New Church Street
* maze at the One&Only Cape Town
* Panarotti’s and Shimmi’s Bar in Hermanus
* Bouillabaisse in Franschhoek.
* Yum in Vredehoek.
* Cape Town Fish Market in Camps Bay
* Vista Mare in Camps Bay
* La Table de France in Sea Point
* Miguel’s in Plettenberg Bay
* La Brasserie in Franschhoek
Restaurant name-changes/take-overs/chef changes
* Leaf Restaurant and Bar has opened where The Showroom/Portofino used to be.
* Mason’s Cafe and Grill has opened where Cafe Gainsbourg used to be
* On Broadway has moved to the New Space Theatre building, and is using the ex-Anytime restaurant space as one of the restaurants its patrons can eat at before the show.
* Camil Haas, the co-owner of Camil’s in the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, has left the restaurant and is doing wine and food pairing evenings with wineries in Franschhoek.
* Tank in the old Cape Quarter is to get a new name.
* Luke Dale-Roberts is no longer the Executive Chef at La Colombe, but will consult to the restaurant.
* Cafe Rouge in Franschhoek has been renamed Chez d’Or.
* Richard Carstens has left Chez d’Or in Franschhoek, and will be the Executive Chef and Wilhelm Kuehn the owner of Tokara Restaurant in Stellenbosch, from October
* Buena Vista Social Club has moved to the top end of Portswood Road in the Waterfront.
* The Restaurant at One&Only Cape Town has taken over from maze, until Reuben’s at One&Only Cape Town opens on 1 October.
* Cafe Le Chocolatier has taken over from Cafe Vendome in Place Vendome in Franschhoek.
* Dutch East has taken over from Burgundy in Franschhoek
* Cafe des Arts has taken over Topsi’s in Franschhoek.
* Amazink, ex-Roots, in Khayamandi in Stellenbosch, has opened, with Bertus Basson from Overture an advisor.
* Chef School owner Kevin Warwick has taken over Kate’s Village in Hermanus, now called The Class Room
* Luigi’s from Hout Bay is said to be opening where Vista Mare was in The Promenade in Camps Bay
* Satay Bar has opened where Zucca was in Kloof Street
Restaurant winter break closures
* Camil’s in Green Point re-opens on 1 September.
* The Mount Nelson’s Cape Colony re-opens with a new interior and new menu on 1 November.
* Reubens in Franschhoek is closing on certain dates: 3, 4, 10, 17, 18, 25, 26, 31 August and 1 September
* Vaudeville is closed between August and October, and is set to re-open only on Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings.
* Massimo’s Pizza Club in Hout Bay is likely to reopen in November, in a new yet-to-be-announced venue in Hout Bay.
* The Salmon Bar in Franschhoek is moving to a main road outlet in The Yard (part ex-Bouillabaisse and Pam Golding), and is closed for renovations, re-opening on 1 November
* Bistro 1682 is closed until 5 September
* The Grand in Camps Bay has closed for renovations, and re-opens on 31 August
* Cafe Max in Green Point is closed for renovations from 23 - 31 August
* Rust en Vrede closes between 5 - 28 September
* Madame Zingara leaves Cape Town shortly, for Johannesburg.
* The Sandbar in Camps Bay has closed until 16 September
NOTE: This information will be updated regularly, as we receive new information.
Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com
Tags: Alliance Francaise, Amazink, Anytime, Bertus Basson, Bistro 1682, Bouillabaisse, Brio, Buena Vista Social Club, Burgundy, Cafe des Arts, Cafe Gainsbourg, Cafe Le Chocolatier, Cafe Nood, Cafe Rouge, Cafe Vendome, Camil Haas, Camil's, Camps Bay, Cape Colony, Cape Quarter, Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, Cape Town, Cape Town Fish Market, Century City, Charly's Bakery, Chef changes, Chef School Kevin Warwick, Chez d'Or, Chris von Ulmenstein, Crystal Towers Hotel & Spa, De Leuwen Jagt, De Oude Bank Bakkerij, Delaire Graff, Doppio Zero, Dutch East, Fork, Franschhoek, Gesellig, Ginja, Haskell Vineyards, Hermanus, House of Meat, Hout Bay, Indochine, Jardine, Josephine's Patisserie, Kate's Village, Knife Restraurant, La Brasserie, La Cantina, La Colombe, La Motte, La Mouette, La Petite Tarte, Leaf Sushi and Chinese Restaurant, Liquorice and Lime, Long Table Restaurant and Cafe, Luigi's, Luke Dale-Roberts, Madame Zingara, Marika's, Mason's Cafe and Grill, Massimo's Pizza Club, Maze, Miguels, Mont Rochelle, Mount Nelson, New Space Theatre, On Broadway, One&Only Cape Town, Overture, Pannaroti's, Pepper Club Hotel, Pierneef a la Motte, Place Vendome, Plettenberg Bay, Portofino, Restaurant closures, restaurant name changes, Restaurant news, Restaurant openings, Reuben's at One&Only Cape Town, Reubens, Riboville, Richard Carstens, Roots, Rust en Vrede, Rusthof, Ryan Smith, Ryan's Kitchen, Sante Hotel & Wellness Centre, Satay Bar, Sea Point, Seidelberg, Shimmi's Bar, shu, Somerset West, Sommelier Restautant, Spiros, Stellenbosch, Table Thirteen, Tank, terroir, The Artisan Cafe, The Class Room, The Fabulous Bakery, The Fish Shack, The Grand, The Promenade, The Restaurant at the One&Only Cape Town, The Salmon Bar, The Sandbar, The Showroom, Tokara, Van Hunks, Vaudeville, Vista Mare, Waterkloof Winery, Whale Cottage Portfolio, Wild Peacock Food Emporium, Wilhelm Kuehn, Winelands, Winter Break, winter restaurant specials, winter specials, Yum, Zucca
Wed 4 Aug 2010
In my Hausfrau past, I was a mean Beef Wellington preparer for dinner parties. When I saw this dish advertised as the new Winter Special (at R 99 with a glass of sparkling wine, until the end of the month) at 1800 Restaurant at the 5-star Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, I had to have it! We had tried the Winter Special almost a year ago, and were disappointed then (read review). Unfortunately our return visit was no different.
It started when we arrived - I was finishing a call in the car, and a staff member of the hotel interrupted my call and hassled us about parking, even though we were in a legitimate bay outside the hotel. He was intimidating, and I asked him to step back. Two security staff we walked past upon entering the hotel did not greet us. The manager seated us at a table next to one of those odd “confession” screens, which allows one to be heard, and to hear every word of the table on the other side of the screen, near a drafty entrance to the restaurant.
We had barely settled in, when we received a complimentary glass of sparkling wine as a “token of our appreciation for dining with us tonight” - nice touch, but the rest of the introduction sounded straight off a script. When I asked what we were drinking, I was told by the waiter Alex that it was “Kleine Zalze”. From the little I know about wines, I could not recall a sparkling wine made by this wine estate, and asked him to bring the bottle to the table - it was a Kleine Parys Cuvee Brut in fact!
The bread was brought to the table immediately, really not exciting at all, and I left it to one side. We received a sermon about the location of the cloakrooms, the meaning of the name of the restaurant (steak is prepared at 1800F), and the menu. The waiter talked us through everything, including the eight special sauces of which one can order one for free, and did not mention the Beef Wellington special we had come for. For the special, there is no choice of sauce - you must have it with the Red Wine jus, as prescribed. The restaurant service is affected by this long introduction to the restaurant, as no other tables close by can be served. I ordered a starter and the special, and the starter arrived within 5 minutes, commendably quick (compared to the slow service for the rest of the evening). I had not even placed the order for the wine. Three spiced salts were brought to the table as well, but the waiter only knew the origin of them (smoked paprika salt from Africa; Sumac salt from Arabia; Allepo salt from South America) but could not describe their taste to us.
The focus of 1800 is on steak, and the restaurant’s website states: “Owner, Paschal Phelan, brings with him many years of experience in the meat industry in Ireland, and under his direction, his team ensures the best quality by inspecting suppliers’ farms to maintain the highest standard of their meat offering. The restaurant’s succulent beef and other selected meats are grass reared and then grain fed for a short period to enhance the flavour and ensure tenderness. It is then matured to perfection in the grill room’s temperature controlled storage”. I could not help thinking of Carne when I read this.
Prior to the starter being served, an amuse bouche served on a spoon was brought to the table - it was a smoked paprika cheese and mash ball with sweet chilli sauce, a non-event. The starter Duck Rillettes were served on white toast. I was attracted to the description of the dish on the menu: “Duck liver parfait, toasted pecan nut and honey broiche and brandied sultanas”. The toast looked like ordinary white bread, and there was no sign nor taste of nuts nor honey in it, even when the manager brought us an untoasted slice of the “brioche” to taste. The manager could not answer when I said that this was not as described in the menu.
The service problem came from there being no heavy-weight manager on duty. Our waiter of last year, Emmanuel, whose service we were not happy with then, now is the manager, out of his depth we felt. The owner of the hotel was also dining at the restaurant, and perhaps the staff had their attention focused on him and his party. The music was far too loud, and not pleasant, but luckily was turned down as soon as the owner arrived. Nothing has changed in terms of the decor in the year since our last visit.
The “Beef Wellington” at 1800 Restaurant is not made with pate de foie gras, nor are the duxelles mixed with leeks, nor do they cover the whole steak - a tiny teaspoonful of the mushroom mix was placed on the top of the fillet, underneath the puff pastry, like a crown! The steak was prepared medium, as specified by the waiter. I asked the manager why there was no foie gras, and the answer he brought back from the chef was that it would make the dish costing too high - a con! We felt that the portion of steak also was not close to the advertised 200 gram. When the plate of food was brought to us, the mash and the vegetables on the plate were cold, so we sent them back. The second set of vegetables was extremely salty. The red wine jus had a very rich dominant taste, and I felt that it spoilt the taste of the steak.
We ordered the Allee Bleue Shiraz 2007, at R 50 a glass, and while the portion served was very generous, it was not a particularly pleasant wine. The “Wine Portfolio” (nice name) is divided into wine type, and then by wine region within that, with listings of local and international wines. The house wine is a Capaia Blue Grove Hill Sauvignon Blanc (R35/R140), and its Merlot/Cabernet Sauvignon blend (R40/R160). Graham Beck’s sparkling wines are listed under Stellenbosch and not Franschhoek! Champagnes range from R680 for Lacombe and Leillier to R 2400 for Dom Perignon. Some of the wines are expensive, but I counted eight white and seven red wines by the glass that cost less than R40, which is good value, especially as none of the red wine vintages were younger than 2007. One can indulge in such international wines as Giovanni Corino Barolo Vigne Giachini, Domaine Ussegilo Chateauneuf-Du-Pape Imperial Cuvee, Chapoutier St Joseph Les Grantis Rouge, and Alain Chavy Puligny-Montrachet les Purcelles, all upwards of R 1000.
The manager could not answer our challenge that serving the “Beef Wellington” short of its identifying ingredient was dishonest. The Executive Chef Jonathan Gargan, who took over the restaurant only about three months ago after service on cruise ships, was not on duty, and his deputy Chad Booysen (ex-Beluga) clearly was not coping with the room full of diners.
We knew it a year ago, and we should have known better in returning to 1800 Restaurant. What they are offering as a Winter Special is dishonest, and does not do their reputation, nor that of the 5-star Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, by whom it is owned, any good. The staff and manager need a serious training hand, and the Executive Chef should be on duty on busy weekend nights. The name of the chef of a year ago (Lindsay Venn) is still on the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel website, while the restaurant website does not mention the chef’s name at all!
In re-reading my review of a year ago, it is clear that little has changed - the special is not mentioned when one arrives, the service slows down as the restaurant fills up, and the wait for the main course is long. The prices have not moved much compared to a year ago, which is commendable - the price of the 200 gram fillet has come down to R120, that of the 400 gram has remained the same, while that of the 300 gram has increased. The price band of the starters (Paternoster mussels, Franschhoek salmon trout, baby calamari, Kalahari springbok carpaccio, two salads and chicken livers), being R40 - R69, has not changed much. The linefish price has however increased by 19 % to R115, while the cheapest dessert has come down to R28 now, to a maximum of R45. Desserts include ice cream and sorbets, souffle cake, cheese cake and a plateful of miniature desserts.
1800 Restaurant, Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, Main Road, Green Point, Cape Town. Tel (021) 430-0506. www.18hundreddegrees.com. Monday - Saturday.
POSTSCRIPT 4/8: Read the reply to this review from Jonathan Gargan, Executive Chef of the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, in the Comments section.
Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com
Tags: 1800, 1800 Restaurant, Alain Chavy Puligny-Montrachet les Purcelles, Alex, Allee Bleue Shiraz, Allepo salt, amuse bouche, Beef Wellington, Beluga, brioche, Capaia Blue Grove Hill, Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, Cape Town, Carne, Chad Booysen, champagnes, Chapoutier St Joseph Les Grantis Rouge, Chris von Ulmenstein, confession screens, dinner parties, Dom Perignon, Domaine Ussegilo Chateauneuf-Du-Pape Imperial Cuvee, Duck Rillettes, Emmanuel, executive chef, Franschhoek, Giovanni Corino Barolo Vigne Giachini, Graham Beck, Green Point, hotel, Ireland, Jonathan Gargan, Kleine Parys Cuvee Brut, Kleine Zalze, Lacombe, Leillier, Lindsay Venn, mushroom duxelles, Paschal Phelan, pate de foie gras, Red Wine jus, restaurant, restaurant review, smoked paprika salt, sparkling wine, spiced salts, Stellenbosch, Sumac salt, website, Whale Cottage Portfolio, Wine Portfolio, wine region, wine type, Winter Special
Sat 29 May 2010
Within the past two weeks restaurant couple Camil and Ingrid Haas have closed down their well-known Bouillabaisse restaurant on the main road of Franschhoek, and have left Camil’s, their restaurant in the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel carrying Camil’s name. While this is sad news for Camil’s followers, it is an useful case study of restaurant management.
Background: Ten years ago Camil and Ingrid came to South Africa (they have just celebrated this anniversary), and settled in the gourmet village of Franschhoek. They set up a guest house in an old mission station on Akademie Street, and called it Klein Oliphantshoek, the latter part of the name once having been the name of the village. Camil set up a kitchen in the guest house, and it became renowned for its excellent tasting menus, long before such had become fashionable. Ingrid would pair and pour the wines, mainly from Franschhoek, and they had a perfect highly regarded business.
Lessons in restaurant management
1. Do not over-extend yourself/Small is Beautiful
When the Haas’ opened Bouillabaisse on the main road about four years ago, it was meant to be a day-time Oyster and Champagne Bar, for the day-trippers coming to Franschhoek, and at night (mainly over weekends) Camil would be in the Klein Oliphantshoek kitchen. Bouillabaisse took off, and it was decided to do dinners as well. A great concept, but Camil had the misfortune that a number of his new chefs at Bouillabaisse walked out in the opening month (this is a Franschhoek affliction all players in the hospitality industry have to deal with in the village), it was rumoured at the time. This meant that he had to spread himself thin, being at two locations at the same time. End result: the dinners at Klein Oliphantshoek were closed down, and the guest house was sold about a year later.
2. Be nice to patrons
The stress of the new Bouillabaisse venture seemed to have gotten to Ingrid Haas in particular, and she was very prescriptive to the locals and tourists that supported the tiny restaurant - one could not combine or mix and match between dishes off their tapas-style menu, one could not book outside tables, and the rules seemed quite heavy, as was her attitude. In early days, on a Valentine’s Day, when we sat at a (seemingly) unreserved table outside - that was the rule - we were rudely sent away, saying the table was booked, without it having a Reserved sign on it. I stayed away for a few months after that, but started going back, and went to the Green Point restaurants regularly thereafter. I have progressed to hugs and kisses now!
3. Choose a pronounceable name
Bouillabaisse is a fun name, and reflects Camil’s love for fish cooking. But, for locals, and guest house staff having to make bookings for guests for dinner, it was a nightmare, meaning that staff chose not to mention that restaurant as one of the options to guests, because they could not pronounce its name.
4. Be a big fish in a small pond
We are all tempted, present company included, to expand the business. Not having learnt from the first problems in having two restaurants, the Haas couple opened up a Bouillabaisse in The Rockwell building in Green Point, a beautifully appointed restaurant with fishy decor, in January 2009. Not satisfied with one restaurant only, they opened a restaurant for Ingrid, called Crepe Suzette, in a French Cafe style, next door to Bouillabaisse. It was beautiful, unique, and affordable. Franschhoek may have 25 restaurants, but Cape Town has hundreds, if not more. It was a whole new ballpark to start operating in a city in which the Haas couple was reasonably unknown. (Matthew Gordon, by contrast, keeps opening new restaurants in Franschhoek, having interests in four establishments already, a different, very focused, approach to location choice).
5. Location, location, location
The Rockwell is set off Somerset Road, opposite the new Cape Quarter as the crow flies, but the building has no branding on the outside, so it is not known nor visible to Capetonians. The brainchild of the infamous Conrad Gallagher, the ground floor of The Rockwell was conceptualised by him as an indoor epicurean market, operating 7 days a week, of purveyors of organic foods and wines, which was an outstanding concept. Bouillabaisse, Crepe Suzette and two other restaurants were to be part of the concept. Gallagher ran away from Cape Town under a cloud of debt, no other food shop or restaurant opened, two decor shops did, but no one could see Bouillabaisse and Crepe Suzette hidden in The Rockwell. At that time Somerset Road in Green Point was a nightmare area to be avoided, given the building work happening at the Cape Quarter. The bite of the recession was worse than anyone had expected, and this affected business too.
6. Branding is key
Suddenly it was announced last September that Bouillabaisse and Crepe Suzette had closed down in The Rockwell, and were re-opening elsewhere. The new location was kept secret until two months later, when they opened in the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel on Main Road in Green Point, but…… as a newly named Camil’s and Ci Casa. This meant they had to start branding all over again. From a brand perspective, throwing away a respected brand name Bouillabaisse, while still operating with this brand name in Franschhoek, was not understandable. Further, Camil Haas is not well-known as a chef in Cape Town, and opening under his own name was a big risk. Camil’s menu was very different to that of Bouillabaisse, described in a review on this blog as not conventional. The new location worked better, in that guests staying in the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, as well as locals, were better able to see and support the new restaurants. The decor of Camil’s was not to the liking of everyone. Establishing three new brands, as well as the move of a known Franschhoek brand to Cape Town in the space of a year, would have challenged even the most experienced marketing expert. (In a desperate attempt to attract attention to Bouillabaisse in Franschhoek, the restaurant exterior was recently painted in a most shrill purple, quite unbefitting of the quality of the restaurant).
7. Be careful about who you get into bed with!
I was surprised when I heard that the Haas couple had gone into a partnership with Jochen Buechel, previous owner of the Place on the Bay in Camps Bay and a property developer, not that I had heard anything untoward about him (although a Google search indicated a Noseweekexpose about a controversial development in Sea Point in 2006), but because I could not see the personalities jelling. The Buechels had been regular clients of Bouillabaisse in Franschhoek, and are well connected in Cape Town, and the Camil’s opening function in November, co-ordinated by their PRO Dagmar Schumacher, saw dignitaries such as Helen Zille attend (my invitation, with those for other food writers, had been sent, but had got lost in the post, we were told!). After writing the review after a visit soon after the opening of Camil’s, during which Ingrid had told me that she and Camil were running the operational side of the restaurant, and that the Buechels were doing the marketing, I received a call from Jochen Buechel, asking me to keep his involvement in the restaurant low key. I did not alter my review.
“Hearing between the lines”, if there is such an expression, it would appear that the relationship between the Haas couple and the Buechels has broken down, and this may have led to Camil Haas’ departure from his restaurant. The staff remain, and Buechel now is the full owner of the restaurant (or maybe was that anyway?). Camil and Ingrid Haas are said to have returned to Franschhoek.
POSTSCRIPT 31/5: Whilst having a cappuccino at Camil’s today, Jochen Buechel asked to speak to me on the phone, to let me know that the Sea Point development referred to in Noseweek is one of the most successful developments in Sea Point. He was very frank in answering my questions about the reasons for the breakdown, and it appears that Camil was inflexible about his menu items - Camil liked the “differentness” of his menu items, while Buechel wanted a menu that would make patrons come to the restaurant once or twice a week, and not once or twice a month, as was the case. Buechel regards Camil highly, and said that he is “a fantastic pianist but not able to conduct the orchestra”. He also indicated that whatever money Bouillabaisse was making in Franschhoek in summer would be lost covering expenses in winter, probably a common curse of the hospitality industry. Camil’s menu will change tomorrow, being simplified by the General Manager and Head Chef Werner, who has been at Bouillabaisse and Camil’s in Cape Town since the beginning. It is likely that the creperie Ci Casa will be incorporated into the Camil’s menu, and that the Ci Casa restaurant name will be dropped.
Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com
Tags: Akademie Street, Atlantic seaboard, Bouillabaisse, Camil and Ingrid Haas, Camil's, Camps Bay, Cape Quarter, Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, Cape Town, Chris von Ulmenstein, Ci Casa, closure, Conrad Gallagher, Crepe Suzette, Dagmar Schumacher, epicurean, Franschhoek, French Cafe, Google, gourmet village, Green Point, guest house, Helen Zille, hospitality, Jochen Buechel, Klein Oliphantshoek, Matthew Gordon, Noseweek, organic foods and wines, Oyster and Champagne Bar, Place on the Bay, recession, restaurant, restaurant management, The Rockwell, Werner, Whale Cottage Portfolio
Tue 13 Apr 2010
Cape Town’s restaurants are feeling the hospitality winter blues, with a large number of restaurants announcing their restaurant specials. The winter has claimed its casualties too, and there could be more in what has been a poor winter for many businesses.
La Mouette has opened at 78 Regent Road in Sea Point. Brio is a new jazz restaurant, in half of the ex-Riboville in town (on the Adderley Street side), while Liquorice and Lime has taken over the other half of Riboville (on the St George’s Mall side). Van Hunks has opened at 1 Union Street, off Kloof Street in Gardens. Cafe Nood has opened in Wilderness Road, Claremont. shu has opened next to Doppio Zero on Main Road, Green Point. Ryan’s Kitchen has opened at Rusthof guest house in Franschhoek - the chef Ryan Smith is ex-Mont Rochelle. On Broadway has moved to the New Space Theatre building at 44 Long Street, with a new restaurant where Anytime was. Buena Vista Social Club has moved to the top end of Portswood Road in the Waterfront. Madame Zingara has re-opened at Century City, after a two-year absence. The House of Meat has opened in the Pepper Club Hotel, corner Long and Bloem Streets, offering a full braai for R 295, from 3 pm every day. Amazink, ex-Roots, in Khayamandi in Stellenbosch, has opened, with Bertus Basson from Overture an advisor. Spiros has opened in Hout Bay. Mason’s Cafe & Grill has opened in the ex-Cafe Gainsbourg. La Cantina has opened in the Alliance Francaise. The De Leuwen Jagt restaurant on the Seidelberg wine estate outside Paarl has opened The Fabulous Bakery. Gesellig has opened on the corner of Church and Regent Roads in Sea Point, serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Chez d’Or has opened in Franschhoek, with Richard Carstens as consultant Chef, scheduled to stay until September, but he left on 28/7. It has been confirmed that Carstens will take over the running of Tokara in October, given that Etienne Bonthuys is set to open a new restaurant on Dorp Street in Stellenbosch. Gesellig is a cosy and friendly new eatery in Sea Point. The Restaurant at One&Only Cape Town has taken over from maze. Indochine has opened at the Delaire Graff wine estate in Stellenbosch. The Long Table Restaurant and Cafe has opened at Haskell Vineyards in Stellenbosch. The Wild Peacock Food Emporium has opened in Stellenbosch. Knife Restaurant has opened in the Crystal Towers Hotel & Spa, a sister restaurant to Fork. De Oude Bank Bakkerij has opened in Stellenbosch. Cafe Le Chocolatier has taken over from Cafe Vendome in Place Vendome in Franschhoek. Leaf Restaurant and Bar has opened where Portofino/The Showroom were located. Epicerie Fine is the new name of the L’Ermitage Deli in Franschhoek, and has a new owner. Sommelier Restaurant at the Sante Hotel and Wellness Centre has re-opened. Illyria coffee shop has opened in the Eikestad Mall in Stellenbosch. Babylonstoren is to open a restaurant in October, next door to Backsberg. The Fish Shack has opened at The Paddocks in Milnerton. Reubens at One&Only Cape Town opens on 1 October. Luigi’s from Hout Bay is said to be opening where Vista Mare was in The Promenade in Camps Bay. Satay Bar has taken over from Zucca in Kloof Street.
Portofino, which opened where The Showroom was, has closed its doors. The first review of Portofino appeared on this blog. Cafe Gainsbourg on Kloof Street, Anytime on Long Street, Josephine’s Patisserie, Ginja, maze at the One&Only Cape Town, La Table de France in Sea Point, Panarotti’s and Shimmi’s Bar in Hermanus, Miguel’s in Plettenberg Bay, and Bouillabaisse and La Brasserie in Franschhoek have also closed down. Camil Haas, the co-owner of Camil’s in the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, has left the restaurant, but is doing food and wine pairing evenings in Franschhoek. Yum in Vredehoek has closed down. In Camps Bay the Cape Town Fish Market and Terra Mare have closed down. Luke Dale-Roberts is no longer the Executive Chef at La Colombe, but will consult to the restaurant. Tank in the old Cape Quarter is to get a new name. Cafe des Arts has taken over from Topsi’s in Franschhoek. Satay Bar has taken over from Zucca in Kloof Street.
Some restaurants are closing to have a winter break after the World Cup. The Mount Nelson’s Cape Colony re-opens with a new interior and new menu on 1 November. Vaudeville is closing between August and October. Marianna’s in Stanford is re-opening on 14 October. The Salmon Bar in Franschhoek re-opens on 1 November, undergoing renovations in a new location (parts of ex-Bouillabaisse and Pam Golding venue). Massimo’s Pizza Club in Hout Bay has gone into winter hibernation, and is likely to reopen in November, in a new yet-to-be-announced venue in Hout Bay. Bistro 1682 re-opens from its break on 5 September. Rust en Vrede is closed from 3 - 28 September. The Sandbar in Camps Bay is closed until 16 September.
The following restaurant specials have been announced (NOTE: This Specials list is updated continuously). We have seen our list used without acknowledgement on other bloggers’ blogs - please acknowledge Whale Cottage Portfolio Blog as your source:
CAPE TOWN
* The Cru Cafe in the Cape Quarter: breakfast for 2 for R 85, 2 pasta dishes + 2 glasses of wine for R 119, all days of week, lunch and dinner, until 30 September
* Wang Thai: half-price sushi and cocktails, Mondays - Thursdays 12h00 - 18h00, at V&A Waterfront, Constantia, Somerset West, and Lagoon Beach branches
* Five Flies: Pay for one main course and get the other free, on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, until September.
* Andiamo in the old Cape Quarter: R 49 breakfast special (juice, cooked breakfast, cappuccino), until 11h30 daily; 2 pizzas or 2 pastas with 2 glasses of wine R 125; Basil, chilli chicken/salmon salad with bottle of water or colddrink R 59, until 31 October. Tel (021) 421-3687
* Pure at Hout Bay Manor: 3 course dinner for R 220, and R 280 with a glass of wine added
* Catharina’s at Steenberg Hotel in Tokai: 2 course lunch at R 135, 3 course lunch R175/3 course dinner R195, May - September
* Vanilla in the Cape Quarter: 50% off the second person’s main course, and 1/2 price sushi 12 - 6 pm
* Tuscany Beach in Camps Bay - 50 % off second person’s main course, and 1/2 price sushi 12 - 6 pm, until August
* Pepenero in Mouille Point : sirloin and chips R 79, seafood platter R 129, prawn platter R 99, oysters R 9 each, half-price sushi
* Sinn’s Restaurant at Wembley Square: lunch (6 options) at R 50, including a glass of fruit juice. Dinner (5 options) at R 95, including a glass of wine.
* La Colombe : 3-course lunch at R 280 and 5-course dinner at R 380, with a carafe of wine, Mondays - Saturdays, May - September.
* Hussar Grill, in Camps Bay and Green Point: 1 kg ribs or kingklip plus chocolate mousse for R 99.
* Pepper Club on the Beach in Camps Bay: “Nip and Tuck promotion” - Prawn platter R98; Potjies R79,95; Sirloin and Prawn combo R89,50; Seafood platter R139,95; half-price sushi - until end September
* Kuzina in the new Cape Quarter: Meze platter for two plus bottle of wine R 189, Mondays - Fridays 12h00 - 18h00 and Sunday evenings from 18h00. Tel (021) 418-8000
* Saul’s Sushi@Vegas, 118 Main Road, Sea Point: “Eat as much as you like” sushi R 120 Mondays and Tuesdays, “two for the price of one” sushi Fridays and Saturdays
* Cape Town Fish Market: Salmon special, 1 course R 54,95, 2 courses R 69,95, 3 courses R 89,95. V&A Waterfront Cape Town, Parkview Pretoria. Eastgate Johannesburg, Hemingways East London.
* Cassis in Garden Centre: Lunch Box special - coffee/juice/colddrink + savoury tart (quiche/tomato tart/sandwich) + sweet tart = R 40, Mondays to Sundays
* Theo’s on Beach Road, Mouille Point: oysters R 6 each, 1 kg prawns R 99, line fish R79, for lunch and dinner. 300 gram sirloin steak, spatchcock chicken peri peri and 500 gram spare ribs all R 79 for lunch only. Tel (021) 439-3494.
* Salushi Intaba, 25 Protea Road, Claremont: 50 % off sushi on Mondays, Tuesdays and Sundays, from 12h00 - 17h00 (until end May), and other days of the week. Springroll + noodle dish R 70 on Wednesdays.
* Sevruga in the V&A Waterfront: Sole special, between R89 - R180, half price sushi 12h00 - 18h00 Mondays - Saturdays
* 1800 in the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, Main Road, Green Point: Sparkling wine + 200 gram “Beef Wellington” + parking for R 99 (be warned - this is not a classic Beef Wellington - just a small fillet with a few chopped mushrooms and wrapped in pastry, no pate de foie gras). Until August.
* Myoga at Vineyard Hotel, Newlands: lunch: 2-courses R 95, 3-courses R 125, or salad or soup with bread at R 55, Mondays - Saturdays
* Myoga at Vineyard Hotel, Newlands: 6 course dinner for R 150, Mondays - Saturdays
* Tank in old Cape Quarter: 2 courses R R140, 3 courses for R 165, both with a glass of wine, until end September. Tel (021) 419-0007
* Beluga, The Foundry, Green Point: Prawn & Kingklip R 99, 24 sushi pieces for R 89. Tel (021) 418-2948.
* Butler’s Pizza, Newlands, Rondebosch, Wynberg, City Bowl, N1City, Bellville, Tableview: 3 pizzas for the price of 2; 2 medium pizzas + 4 toppings each at R 89.95; 2 large pizzas + 3 toppings each at R 109.95, Sundays - Thursdays.
* The Kove, Victoria Road, Camps Bay: 2-course meal with glass of wine R120; Fish and chips R 79, 400g ribs R75, Oysters R 9, Seafood Platter R129, Rump 250gm R 79, Rump 500gm R 109, 1kg of prawns R 99, Lamb chops R99. Tel (021) 438-0004
* St Elmo’s: 2 large regular pizzas cost R 105. 2 Dipping Strip pizzas and 3 dunking sauces R 99,90. On Tuesdays 2 large pizzas out of a choice of five cost R79,90. At lunch buy one pizza with Coke for R 29,90 Monday - Friday, until 16h00. Belgravia, Brackenfell, Claremont, Durbanville, Fishhoek, Gardens, Hout Bay, Kuilsriver, N1 Value, Paarl, Parow, Plumstead, Rondebosch, Somerset West, Stellenbosch, Strand, Tableview, Three Anchor Bay, Tokai, Tygervalley, Woodstock and Worcester.
* Cafe Sofia in Camps Bay, Green Point, etc: All pasta dishes R 49, 250 ml soup + ciabatta toast R 19.
* 221 Waterfront: two drinks for price of one, Mondays - Fridays, 16h30 - 18h30, two dishes on “Lite” and Sushi sections of menu for the price of one
* River Cafe, Constantia: four courses lunch + a carafe of wine R 195, 4 courses dinner + wine R 225. On Mondays to Thursday 1 child eats free, Mondays - Saturdays, May - September
* Diva Pizza, 81 Buitenkant Street: 2 pizzas + 2 toppings each take-away special price R 75
* Pastis in High Constantia Centre, Constantia: free glass of wine with meal.
* Trattoria Luigi in Hout Bay: margherita pizza plus Savanna for R 45 on Wednesdays. Mondays - Fridays pizza and pasta half price, until 31 August
* Constantia Uitsig: 3 courses and wine R 260 for lunch, and R 290 for dinner, until end September*
* Jakes in the Village/on Summerley, in Steenberg and Kenilworth, respectively: 25 % off all dishes, 5 - 7 pm only, Mondays - Saturdays, until end September
* Buitenverwachting in Constantia: 2 courses R 149, 3 courses R 169, 4 courses R 199, until 31 August
* Duchess of Wisbeach, corner Main and Wisbeach Roads, Sea Point - free bottle of wine for a table of four
* Salt, Ambassador Hotel, Bantry Bay : 2 courses R 140, 3 courses R 170, Mondays - Sundays, lunch and dinner
* Le Restau Paradiso, Kloof Street: Marie’s Menu 3 courses R 110; Capetonian Menu 3 courses R 130; French Classics Menu 3 courses R 150, until December.
* A Tavola in Claremont: 50 % off all pasta dishes on Mondays, prices reduced by R 4 - R14 per dish on menu (except for desserts)
* The Lookout Deck, Hout Bay: 1 kg tiger prawns R 125 (lunch and dinner), 6 oysters R 36 (5 - 7 pm only)
* La Mouette, Regent Road, Sea Point: 6 courses for R 175. Express Lunch - 2 courses (with 2 choices each) at R 99. Monday - Saturday dinner, Tuesday - Sunday lunch, September
* Blonde restaurant, Hatfield Street: “two …blondes are better than one” promotion of 33% off the bill, until September
* Lagoon Beach, Milnerton - 2 course meal from R 75, “all-you-can-eat” Sunday buffet R 99
* Jardine, Bree Street: 3-course dinner at R 150, Tuesdays - Saturdays
* The Round House in Camps Bay : 7 course menu for R 245, until 30 September
* Berthas in Simonstown: 1 kg mussels, 1 kg Queen prawns or 1 kg mini seafood platter cost R 99 each
* Ricks Cafe Americain, lunch special for R 39, Mondays - Saturdays, until 31 October
* The Square Restaurant, Vineyard Hotel, Newlands: 5-course dinner costs R 165. 2-course lunch R116, 3-course lunch R145. Tel (021) 657-4500
* Adega Sea Point, corner Main and Glengariff Roads:1 kg Tiger Medium prawns, R99. 300g Mozambican Pepper Fillet R79. Oysters R4,90. 21-piece Sushi Platter R 99. Lunch and dinner, until 31 August.
* Pepperclub Luxury Hotel & Spa: 6 oysters and a glass of bubbly R60, Fridays from 16h00, with jazz
* Aubergine: 2-course lunch R184, 3-course lunch R235, Wednesdays - Fridays
* Balducci’s: All pizzas (except Flaming Prawns) R49, 26-piece Platinum Sushi Plate for R99, Burgers from R55. Monday - Sunday, 12h00 - 18h00, until September.
* Ferrymans, V&A Waterfront: 3-course pairing meal, with wines matching starter and main course, at R200, until September.
* Bukhara : 2 course lunch or dinner plus glass of wine R125, Monday - Saturday, Sunday lunch
* Haiku: 2 course lunch or dinner plus glass of wine R125, Monday - Saturday, Sunday lunch
* Cafe Caprice, Victoria Road, Camps Bay: two burgers for the price of one, Mondays - Thursdays, 12h30 - 22h00
* Saul’s Taverna: for every meal ordered from main menu, the second person get’s a free main course from chef’s special menu
* Caviar Deli in the V&A Waterfront is offering 2 ready-made meals for R40 (one costs R25)
* Societi Bistro: “Tour of France” - 3-course French menu R 150, until October
* Chapman’s Peak Hotel, Hout Bay: 1kg Tiger Prawns R99; order 2 steaks, and get a bottle of wine and 2 Amarula creme brulees for free. Tel (021) 790-1036
* Quay 4: Snoek and chips R59, until October
* Black Marlin: Snoek on braai R55, half crayfish on braai R75, Saturdays and Sundays; 3 course meal plus glass of sherry R125, until October
* Hildebrand: 2 courses R 89, 3 courses R 120; 2 pastas for the price of one with a glass of wine, until September
* Chenin Restaurant and Bar: Sirloin steak R60, until September. Tel 021 425-2200
* Leaf Restaurant and Bar : 51 % off sushi from 11h00 - 16h00, and all day on Sunday.
* Cafe Chic: half-price off all dishes except Tapas, until 31 August.
* Gesellig, Regent Road, Sea Point: 2 courses plus soup or dessert = R 90 for dinner; lunch costs R40 for dishes usually costing R65 - R77 12h00 - 14h00
* The Fish Shack Restaurant and Wine Bar, Paddocks, Milnerton: Shack Platter and glass of wine R 90
* Blowfish in Blouberg: Seafood platter R 179, 20-piece sushi platter R99, 500g rump steak R 95, Lamb shank R95, Fish & chips R59, Prawn curry R69, Seafood Paella R79, until September. Tel 021 556-5464
* Ocean Basket: Starter, seafood platter, and bottle of Two Oceans wine for 2 for R 235 (only at Hout Bay, Plumstead, Tygervalley and V&A branches), until 31 October.
THE WINELANDS
* Reubens in Franschhoek : 3 course meal for R 150, or R 220 for a glass of wine per course. Mondays - Fridays, May until August. Tel (021) 876-3772
* D’Vine Restaurant at Willowbrook Lodge, Somerset West: 1 course R100, 2 courses R145, 3 courses R170, includes a glass of wine. Dinners only
* 96 Winery Road between Stellenbosch and Somerset West: 3-course meal plus a glass of wine for R 165, Mondays - Saturdays, lunch and dinner
* Terroir at Kleine Zalze, Stellenbosch: two-course meal at R 165, and 3-course meal at R 195, until the end of September
* Allee Bleue, outside Franschhoek: choice of four 250 gram steaks at R 99, including a glass of estate wine, May - September
* Allee Bleue, outside Franschhoek: 3 course meal plus a glass of wine, at R 130.
* Mont Rochelle Hotel in Franschhoek: 2006-priced 3-course dinner, each course accompanied with a glass of wine, as well as water, costs R 2006 for a party of six persons (R 334,33 per head).
* Olivello, Klapmuts, outside Stellenbosch: 2-course meal R 99, 3-course meal R 119.
* Mon Plaisir @ Chamonix in Franschhoek: 2 courses at R 170
* Le Bon Vivant in Franschhoek: 2-course meal for R 115, 3 courses for R 150
* iCi at Le Quartier Francais in Franschhoek: 2 courses cost R 120 and 3 courses R 150, Monday - Friday, until August
* Grand Provence in Franschhoek: Chef’s Table for 8 or more persons, 4 courses R 200 per person, June - August, lunch and dinner
* Warwick Winter Bistro, Warwick wine estate, Stellenbosch: Butternut soup R 30, Bobotie R 57, Steak and Mushroom pie R 70, Mushroom Risotto R 75. Mondays - Sundays.
* Jordan Restaurant with George Jardine, Jordan wine estate, Stellenbosch: 3 course Menu de Jour lunch R 180, R220 with 2 wines. 2-course a la carte lunch R 200, 3 courses R225. Wednesday - Saturday lunch, May - August
* Cuvee, Simonsig wine estate, outside Stellenbosch: 2 course lunch or dinner + glass of wine R 170, 3 courses R 200, August - October
* Clos Malverne wine estate outside Stellenbosch: autumn special - 2 course meal + quarter bottle of wine R 125, 3 course + half bottle of wine R 155, Tuesday - Saturday lunch and Wednesday and Friday dinner
* Bosman’s, Grand Roche Hotel, Paarl: 3-course lunch and 2 glassses of wine for R 260, Sundays
* Lanzerac Hotel in Stellenbosch : 2-course lunch R 145, 3 course lunch R 175, includes a glass of red wine. Chef’s soup of the day with rolls and house wine R 55. June - September
* French Connection, Franschhoek: 2 courses R 95 and three courses R 125
* Le Petite Ferme, Franschhoek: 2 courses R 100, 3 courses R 150, plus carafe of wine, every Friday evening
* Fyndraai at Solms-Delta wine estate: 2 course lunch R 135, 3 courses R 155.
* Ryan’s Kitchen at Rusthof, Franschhoek : 3 course meal and glass of wine at R 195, until August.
* Boschendal in Franschhoek: Buffet reduced cost R 145 (R 50 extra cost for dessert and cheeses)
* Noble Hill, Klapmuts: Farmer’s Lunch costs R 62, Mondays - Fridays
* Restaurant Christophe, Stellenbosch: business lunch - 2 courses R130, 3 courses R 150, Tuesday - Friday, served within one hour, all year
* Rickety Bridge Restaurant in the Vines in Franschhoek: 3 course lunch for R 150, and R25 extra for three Rickety bridge wines, paired per course. Monday - Sunday, until end September
* Allora in Franschhoek: 3 course winter menu at R89. Main course lunch plus live music plus ”drink” for R100 Saturday lunches. Tel (021) 876-4375.
* Epicerie Fine Deli/Coffee Shop, L’Ermitage, Franschhoek - bowl of pasta plus salad plus homemade bread plus glass of wine = R 45. Tel (021) 876-9200
OTHER AREAS
* Season in Hermanus: 2 course meal R 75, bredie of the day R 48, Sunday roast R 65, 3-course Sunday lunch R 110. Tel (028) 316-2854
* Mediterrea in Hermanus: 2-course R 105 and 3 course meal R 135, Monday - Thursday dinners and Sunday lunches, April - August
* Nguni in Plettenberg Bay: main course R 50, different every week, Wednesdays.
Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com
Copyright: Whale Cottage Portfolio
Tags: 1800, 221 waterfront, 96 Winery Road, A Tavola, Add new tag, Adega Sea Point, Allee Bleue, Allora, Amazink, Andiamo, Anytime, Aubergine, Backsberg, Balducci's, Beef Wellington, Beluga, Bertha's, Bertus Basson, Bistro 1682, Black Marlin, Blonde restaurant, Blowfish, Boschendal, Bosmans, Bouillabaisse, Brio, Buena Vista Social Club, Buitenverwachting, Bukhara, Butler's Pizza, Cafe Caprice, Cafe Chic, Cafe Gainsbourg, Cafe Le Chocolatier, Cafe Nood, Cafe' Sofia, Camil's, Camps Bay, Cape Colony, Cape Quarter, Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, Cape Town, Cape Town Fish Market, Cape Town Restaurant specials winter 2010, Cassis, Catharina's, Caviar deli, Chapman's Peak Hotel, Charly's Bakery, Chef's Table, Chenin Restaurant and Bar, Chez d'Or, Chris von Ulmenstein, Ci Casa at camil's, city center, Clos Malverne, Constantia Uitsig, Cormac Keane, Crystal Towers & Spa, De Oude Bank Bakkerij, De Waterkant, Delaire Graff, Delheim, Dutch East restaurant, Eikestad Mall, Epicerie Fine, Ferrymans, Five Flies, Fork, Franschhoek, Freedom Hill, French Connection, Fyndraai, Garden Centre, Gesellig, Ginja, Grand Provence, Grande Roche, Green Point, Haiku, Harbour House, Haute cabriere, Hermanus, Hidden Valley, Hildebrand, hospitality, House of Meat, Hout Bay, Hout Bay Manor, ici, Illyria, Indochine, Intimate Theatre, Jakes in the Village, Jakes on Summerley, Jardine, Jordan, Jordan restaurant, Josephine's Patisserie, Karoo lamb, Khayamandi, Klein Steenberg, Knife Restaurant, Kuzina, L'ermitage, La Brasserie, La Cantina, La Colombe, La Mouette, La Petite Tarte, La Table de France, Lagoon Beach, Le Bon Vivant, Le Petite Ferme, Le Quartier Francais, Le Restau Paradiso, Leaf Restaurant and Bar, Liquorice and Lime, Long Table Restaurant and Cafe, Luigi's, Luke Dale-Roberts, Madame Zingara, Mariana's, Marika's, Massimo's Pizza Club, Maze, Mediterrea, Miguels, Mon Plaisir, Mont Rochelle, Mount Nelson Hotel, Myoga, Newlands, Nguni, Noble Hill, noby, Ocean Basket, Olivello, On Broadway, One&Only Hotel, Overture, Paarl, Pam Golding, Panarotti's, Pastis, Pepper Club Hotel, Pepperclub on the Beach, Plettenberg Bay, Portofino, Pumphouse Shiraz, Pure, Quay 4, Restaurant Christophe, restaurant specials, Restaurant winter specials, restaurants, Reuben's at One&Only Cape Town, Reubens, Riboville, Richard Carstens, Rickety Bridge Restaurant in the Vines, Ricks Cafe Americain, Rumpsteak, Rusthof, Ryan's Kitchen, Salmon Bar, Sante Hotel and Wellness Centre, Satay Bar, Saul's Sushi@Vegas, Saul's Taverna, seafood platter, Season, Sevruga, Shimmi's Bar, shu, Sinns, Societi Bistro, sole, Solms Delta, Somerset West, Sommelier Restaurant, Spiros, St Elmo's, Steenberg, Stellenbosch, sushi, Terra Mare, terroir, The Cru Cafe, The Fish Shack, The Goose, The Grand, The Grand on the Beach, The House of Meat, The KOve, The Lookout Deck, The Restaurant at One&Only Cape Town, The Round House, The Roundhouse, The Showroom, The Square Restaurant, Tokara, Trattoria Luigi, Tuscany Beach, V&A Waterfront, Van Hunks, Vanilla, Vaudeville, Vineyard Hotel, Wang Thai, Warwick Winter Bistro, Waterkloof, Wembley Square, Whale Cottage Portfolio, Wild Peacock Food Emporium, winter restaurant specials, winter specials, World Cup, Yum, Zucca
Mon 15 Mar 2010
The Rhubarb Room is the cutest decor/coffee shop hidden away on Upper Buitengracht Street in Bo-Kaap. It attracted attention again, after previous visits, when its logo was spotted on the @2oceansvibe blog, listed as one of the sponsorship logos ”Seth Rotherham”, the blog owner who uses this pseudonym (his real name is Will Mellor), lists on his blog. Mellor is the “king” of bloggers, and has a large following, both on his blog and on Twitter. A @2oceansvibe sponsorship can be worth gold, given the top brands that are listed as sponsors, their fees affording Mellor to enjoy a lifestyle without work, mainly hanging out in Camps Bay in general, and at Caprice in particular.
I asked Lauren Marshall, the Rhubarb Room co-owner, how she got to get her brand on the @2oceansvibe website. She appears to have a trade-exchange deal with Mellor, resulting from her boyfriend, Jason Slinger, being a friend of Mellor. Slinger negotiated the use of the penthouse in the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel for Mellor. Lauren sounds chuffed about the news of her branding on the illustrious website. She admits that she has not yet embraced social media marketing, and Twitter in particular, and she is given a shorthand course and a set of notes!
The Rhubarb Room has more than half of its space dedicated to a decor shop, as well as a clothes shop in a separate room. One feels at home immediately, sitting in the shop, or on the terrace looking on to Table Mountain, at non-matching eclectic tables and chairs, adding to the charm. The far wall has a rhubarb-and-white stripe painted pattern, which is the only evidence of the name. I asked co-owner Sone’ Jacobs how their name came about, and she explained that the building exterior was the colour of rhubarb originally, when Lauren and her mother Maureen Marshall first used the building as an interior decor shop. The building has since been painted a brown colour.
The menu is so informal that it is not on paper. Lauren tells you the options as far as salads and sandwiches go for lunch, as well as a selection of cakes, some of which come from Jardines, she admits. The coffee is Illy, and the cappuccinos are excellent. Lauren types up the menu so that I can take a copy with me. She says that the menu changes daily. For breakfast one can have fresh fruit and muesli at R 32, a fresh fruit smoothie at R 18, or muffins. Sandwiches cost R 38, and a choice of Gypsy ham, cheddar cheese and onion marmalade; and roast chicken, rocket and parmesan is offered, while salads cost R 45 for two choices: parma ham, nectarine and parmesan; and roast chicken, feta, red pepper and rocket (the salad was served with balsamic vinegar, and the olive oil was optional - I would have preferred it the other way around) - yet was very tasty. Cakes include fresh blueberry and coconut; baby chocolate cakes with pistachio chocolate icing; and apple slices, all costing R 20.
Lauren’s mother Maureen and I connect, around having a dentist (Dr Toni Bedford) in common, and knowing two persons who have just passed away. When I left it felt as if I had spent the whole afternoon at the Rhubarb Room and not just an hour, and really enjoyed the friendliness and the connections.
Rhubarb Room, 142 Buitengracht Street (i.e. Upper Buitengracht Street), Bo-Kaap, tel 021 424 2004, www.rhubarbroom.co.za. Open Mondays to Fridays from 9h00 - 17h00, and on Saturdays from 9h00 - 14h00.
Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com
Tags: @2oceansvibe.com, balsamic vinegar, blog, Bo-Kaap, cakes, Camps Bay, Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, Caprice, Chris von Ulmenstein, coffee shop, decor shop, Jason Slinger, Laura Marshall, logos, olive oil, Rhubarb Room, Seth Rotherham, social media marketing, sponsorship, table mountain, trade-exchange, Twitter, Whale Cottage Portfolio, Will Mellor
Wed 16 Dec 2009
One of the fringe benefits of writing is that one meets some very special persons. One such lady is Melissa Genevieve Nelsen, who has just launched the first vintage of her new Genevieve Methode Cap Classique.
Melissa grew up in the lovely fruit-farming valley of Elgin, dreaming of becoming an air hostess. Her late mother challenged her to think big, and to become a pilot rather than a hostess. Despite the financial challenge of paying for the flying lessons, paid for by waitressing, Melissa persevered, and qualified with a commercial pilot’s licence, flying for a small charter company in Johannesburg.
When her mom became ill, Genevieve came back to the Cape to nurse her, and started doing beading. She also planted buchu on her stepdad’s smallholding, the buchu oil forming the organic foundation of artificial flavouring. This was followed by a stint at Wildekrans, where she ran the tasting room, and took over the marketing for the wine estate when the Marketing Manager moved to Plettenberg Bay.
Her boyfriend from school, Leon Engelke, a viticulturist at Beaumont in Bot River, entered a Garagiste Cabernet Unfiltered wine he had made at the Michelangelo wine awards, and to his surprise, won Double Gold for it. This inspired Melissa to make her own wine too, and she decided that it should be a sparkling wine. Using chardonnay grapes from a smallholding in Bot River, Melissa made her first Genevieve (her second name) Methode Cap Classique, receiving advice and support from Colmant, High Constantia and Ross Gower Wines.
The Genevieve 2008 MCC was launched at the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel 3 weeks ago. It is made of 100% chardonnay, utilising “whole bunch pressing ensuring quality juice”. A minimum of 18 months yeast contact time was allowed “before disgorgement”. The sparkling wine was made at Ross Gower cellars in Elgin, it was riddled at Avondale, and is stored at Luddite.
Her tasting note says:”Delicately elegant, with fresh and subtle aromas of white fruits. This 100% Chardonnay combines the characteristics of the grapes along with extensive time on the lees to bring depth and flavour to the wine.” Her first vintage has a production of 5 500 bottles.
Genevieve MCC: www.genevievemcc.co.za , cell 083 302 6562
Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com
Tags: Avondale, buchu oil, Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, chardonnay, Chris von Ulmenstein, Colmant, Elgin, Genevieve MCC, High Constantia, Leon Engelke, Luddite, Melissa nelsen, Michelangelo wine awards, Ross Gower, sparkling wine, Whale Cottage Portfolio, Wildekrans
Thu 12 Nov 2009
When one experiences a new restaurant, one likes to have a handle on it, to define the restaurant, to place it in a box. Camil’s Restaurant defies definition and categorization, its menu being unique, and is likely to evolve over time.
Camil and Ingrid Haas started Bouillabaisse in Franschhoek, after owning Klein Oliphantshoek guest house for a number of years and cooking for their guests. They sold the guest house, concentrated on Bouillabaisse, and at the beginning of this year bravely opened Bouillabaisse in the Rockwell Centre in De Waterkant in Cape Town, as well as the creperie Crepe Suzette. They were major tenants in a centre that was designated to become the Epicurean Gourmet Emporium, under the guidance of Conrad Gallagher, a great concept in that various small shops would surround the restaurants, all selling organic products. Nothing materialised when Gallagher left the country under a cloud of debt shortly after the restaurants opened. After nine months the Haas’ closed shop and announced that they would re-open at a new location. Quickly word spread that the new location would be the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel on Main Road in Green Point, diagonally opposite the Cape Town Stadium.
The restaurant opened last week, and a surprise was that the Haas couple have decided to start from scratch, bravely throwing away their two Rockwell brands, and renaming it Camil’s Restaurant. Bouillabaisse Franschhoek remains as it is. New too is that Camil and Ingrid have entered into a partnership with Jochen Buechel, who used to own the Place on the Bay in Camps Bay. The Haas’ will run the operational side of the restaurant, while the Buechels will look after the marketing.
The first impression on arrival was not a positive one, in that parking is difficult to find on Main Road. Outside the hotel most of the parking was blocked off with traffic cones, and an attempt to park in the garage underneath the hotel was rudely and abruptly denied, despite a previous dinner at 1800 giving one access to this parking garage. It was a wet and rainy evening, and the person at the parking entrance waved his arms and pointed to the opposite side of the road for parking. On summer days parking availability, or lack off, could be a major problem for the restaurant.
Each of the two restaurants in the Cape Royale (1800, Camil’s) has its own entrance off the street, and it was hard to see how to get into Camil’s. Three glass doors give access to the restaurant, but the main entrance door is the middle one, at the bar. It could leave the clients stranded outside if one does not have a staff member at the door, as the bar counter blocks the staff’s ability to see someone arriving.
The interior was a surprise, if one is expecting a Bouillabaisse. The restaurant space has been divided into two sections, the smaller section recognisably containing the lovely Crepe Suzette furniture, giving it a relaxed and welcoming feel. The larger area only has one recognisable feature - the ‘fishy’ light fittings from Bouillabaisse. The space is open and uncluttered, as opposed to its neighbours 1800, and has a light peppermint colour on the walls. All tables have brown tablecloths, and square tables have a white sheet of paper on the tablecloths, over which a red or a brown cloth is placed. All benches against one wall are covered in a brown fabric, and an attractive green and brown striped fabric covers the wall, to dampen the echo in the space. The same colours are replicated in the cushions on the benches. Two strong red columns are visible in the middle of the restaurant. The kitchen is open and visible, but one cannot sit at the food preparation area as one can/could at Bouillabaisse. One can hear chef Camil instruct and guide his staff, some new, some old.
One receives two menus - one lists all the cocktails and 13 wines-by-the-glass : the Graham Beck Brut costs R 35, the Ordine Merlot R 45, Brampton Shiraz R 27, and R 45 for the Neil Ellis Elgin Sauvignon Blanc and the Haute Cabriere Chardonnay Pinot Noir. Overgaauw is the house wine, costing R 25 for a 200 ml caraffe of white and R 29 for the red wine.
The creperie section is called ‘Crepes and Things’, and the menu lists sweet crepes ranging in price from R 35 for a cinnamon to R 65 for a Swiss dark chocolate and apricot crepe. The Crepe Suzette is still on the menu, at R 62. Only three savoury crepes are served, ranging in price from R 48 - R 68. Pancakes are also offered, and a crispy duck salad will be tried on a next visit.
The second menu welcomes one to Camil’s Kitchen, and one senses branding confusion - is the name Camil’s (on the bill), Camil’s Restaurant (on the website) or Camil’s Kitchen (on the menu)? The menu states that “good food and wine should not cost the world”, and therefore they have introduced “prix d’ami”, the menu says, defined as a “mix of flavours from around the globe, priced for friends”. The opening hours are stated as being from 12h00 - 16h00 for lunch, and from 18h30 - 22h00 for dinner. The creperie is open from 11h00 - 23h00. Interestingly, the exchange rate is listed for the Rand against the Dollar and the Euro, but surprisingly not for the Pound. A service charge of 10 % is added automatically, the menu says, for tables of 10 or more, and corkage of R50 per bottle is charged. Children under 10 are not welcome, unless they are restaurant-trained! These house rules precede the menu, and should prevent any problems.
The second menu has a full wine list, but is restricted to about two or three wines per variety. The Southern Right Sauvignon Blanc costs R 160, Brampton Shiraz R 97, and the Mont Rochelle Shiraz R 158. The food follows the wine listing, and refers to a chef’s menu, a type of surprise menu, subject to one’s dietary restrictions, at R 295 for 3 courses, R 350 for 4 courses and R 395 for 5 courses. Twelve unique oyster starters are offered, each with a catchy name, e.g. Beauty and the Beast (citrus and basil), China Town Fireworks, etc. Five starters include Zucchinni carpaccio at R 42 and a prawn burger at R 59. Seven unique salads are served, ranging in price from R 48 (tatsoi salad) - R 89 (wonton layers and scallops). Two soups are offered: Mulligatawny (R 28) and Red paprika and goat’s cheese crumbs (R 35).
Main courses are divided into eight “Medium Mains”, costing R 52 for quail’s legs to R 97 for seared scallops, and “Serious Mains”, ranging from R 65 for a lamb skewer to R 125 for a halibut with foie gras. An oven-roasted rib of veal can be shared between two persons, at R 250.
An amouse bouche was brought to the table, together with tasty crispy rolls, cleverly presented in a basket with Southern Right olive oil, Camil’s branded balsamic vinegar, salt and pepper. The crayfish tail sandwich was meant to be served with sourdough bread, which was not in stock yet, so Camil asked permission to substitute the bread with rice, which was lightly curried and included chopped nuts, served with a garlic mayonnaise and a small salad of green leaves and grapefruit - an unusual combination that worked wonderfully, and it defines Camil’s - it is Camil’s choice, with a touch of something different and unique. Camil says he purposely cut himself off from the previous Bouillabaisse by not putting any of its dishes on the Camil’s menu.
Camil’s needs to focus on its brand name and stick with one name, it needs to address its parking problem (a meeting with the new Cape Royale GM is imminent), and it needs to build brand awareness for Camil Haas, an introverted chef well-known in Franschhoek but not in Cape Town, and for Camil’s. The website is thin on information, only providing the address and contact details.
The cost of the glass of Graham Beck Brut, the crayfish tail sandwich and a capuccino was R 175. Camil’s is located at the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, 47 Main Road, Green Point. Tel 021 433 1227. www.camils.co.za
POSTSCRIPT 31/5: Camil Haas, chef and co-owner of Camil’s, left the restaurant three weeks ago. Read the story here.
Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com.
Tags: 1800, Bouillabaisse, Brampton Shiraz, Camil and Ingrid Haas, Camil's restaurant, Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, Cape Town, Chris von Ulmenstein, Conrad Gallagher, Crepe Suzette, Crepes and Things, De Waterkant, eil Ellis Elgin Sauvignon Blanc, Franschhoek, Graham Beck Brut, Haute Cabriere Chardonnay Pinot Noir, Jochen Buechel, Mont Rochelle Shiraz, Ordine Merlot, Overgaauw, Place on the Bay, restaurant, Rockwell Centre, Southern Right, Whale Cottage Portfolio
Mon 9 Nov 2009
An unlucky restaurant location for the Cape Town branch of Bouillabaisse, and new sister restaurant Crepe Suzette, in the Rockwell Centre in De Waterkant in Cape Town, in what was meant to have become Conrad Gallagher’s Epicurean Gourmet Market before he fled the country with huge debts, resulted in both the restaurants closing down in September. These restaurants have fused, and have just opened as Camil’s Restaurant, ironically in the previous location of Gallagher’s Geisha Wok in the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel on Main Road in Green Point. Whilst now fused into one restaurant, a creperie menu and an a la carte menu will be offered to all patrons. Camil and Ingrid Haas are to run the operational side of the restaurant, while the new partner Jochen Buechel, previous owner of the Place on the Bay in Camps Bay, will look after the marketing of the restaurant. It is bold to close two restaurant brands which were marketed jointly, off the base of the respected Bouillabaisse brand in Franschhoek, and to start from scratch with the new Camil’s brand. A review of Camil’s will follow.
A new “Caffe”, which opened five weeks ago, is L’Aperitivo, a wine and cocktail bar that serves breakfast, and light lunches and dinners from “9h00 till late”, the sign on the door says. Owners Andrea Gargiulo (Italian) and Stef Rau (Swiss) are charming hosts. They met two years ago, on a cruise liner, and fell in love with Cape Town. Before setting up their restaurant, they ran the Primi Piatti in the V&A Waterfront for two years. It is located next door to the Bang Bang Club, a favoured haunt of teenage disco lovers, adding a free bonus to L’Aperitivo patrons, if they enjoy the music and watching the youngsters coming and going from the venue from Wednesdays - Saturdays. The food menu is written onto a blackboard: the base Insalata L’Aperitivo costs R 30, and R 40 when tuna or chicken mayonnaise are added, and R 55 if salmon is added. The Frittata costs R 40, the Chicken Parmigiana and a salad (just some green leaves) R 55, Roast Beef with baby potatoes and salad costs R 58, and sandwiches R 45. For dessert the choices were an Affogato at R 22 and half a pineapple and ice cream at R 25. Every day fresh ingredients are bought, and the menu changed to reflect what is available. L’Aperitivo only stocks the very good Glen Carlou wines at the moment, Stef having a close relationship with the Swiss owner Hess. They plan to offer 30 - 40 wines-by-the-glass, a commendable goal (Stef used to work at Belthezar, known for its wide selection of wines-by-the-glass). Andrea was previously a ‘mixologist’, he says, a cool word for a barman! His favourite restaurant is Aubergine. L’Aperitivo stands for fresh quality food, and good and prompt service. An ordered take-away Parma ham and brie roll turned out to be a salami roll when opened, a disappointment in an otherwise good experience! Its brochure states: “L’Aperitivo is a Wine & Cocktail Bar with a Caffe providing a variety of freshly produced food, and which encapsulates a European style of life. Enjoy the gathering of like-minded people to understand the way of life. The setting is intimate, comfortable and relaxing, to ensure you enjoy your stay at whatever time you visit L’Aperitivo”. L’Aperitivo, 70 Loop Street, tel 076 574 1805/082 898 7079. Open Mondays - Saturdays.
Vanilla officially opened in the Cape Quarter just over a week ago, to a record crowd of 250 guests, the launch invitation being such a hit that the expected one-third no-show did not happen. This created a problem for the owners initially in coping with serving the drinks and excellent snacks, but was quickly addressed. It is a shame that the City of Cape Town cannot get the paving completed outside the main Somerset Road entrance to the Cape Quarter. In fact, the main entrance to the centre was closed off on Thursday evening, meaning that one would have to find the entrance from the street behind the centre. Franschhoek chef Matthew Gordon is the consultant chef to Vanilla, while its chef is Evan Coosner, previously with Reubens in Franschhoek and at Ginja. A review of Vanilla is to follow.
The Grand Cafe’ branches in Plettenberg Bay and Camps Bay are soon to be joined by a third branch in The Water Club in Granger Bay, adjacent to the V&A Waterfront.
Franschhoek is set to see the opening of a new bakery and cafe’ in the building which once housed the Franschhoek Tourism Bureau and, more recently, Winelands Experience. The new La Place Vendome, a stylish center set to open at the entrance to Franschhoek soon, will house another new coffee shop, a deli and food hall, and a champagne bar.
Genot restaurant on Klein Genot wine estate in Franschhoek was relaunched last week, with the owner Angie Diamond taking over the management of the restaurant. It is beautifully located above the wine cellar, with a view of the vineyards and surrounding Franschhoek mountains when one sits on the terrace outside. Inside no expense has been spared in the large restaurant space, with lots of chandeliers perhaps making it too bright at night. The restaurant’s model is Baia, a well-known seafood restaurant in the V&A Waterfront, but at far more reasonable pricing. Angie feels that Franschhoek does not offer its visitors a good selection of fish dishes. The winelist is restricted with about five choices per variety, one of them being the Klein Genot, where applicable. The Klein Genot Shiraz is the lowest priced, at R 158 per bottle, but is still very young, being a 2007 vintage. The chefs come from Malawi, Mocambique and Zimbabwe, and they add an African feel to dishes, Angie says. Eleven starters are priced from R 38 (chicken livers, sardines) to R 58 (mussels, and a delicious prawn cocktail), with oysters costing R 18 each. Five salads (Caprese, Greek, etc) cost about R 48 and three soup choices are also offered, at R 48. Eight seafood main courses range in price from R 78 for the calamari to R 228 for a seafood platter, and include two kingklip dishes. The baby kingklip was huge, and came on the bone, which re-created an old childhood fear of bones. The restaurant would have filleted it, had one requested it. Steaks cost R 138 for a 500 gram fillet, and R 78 for a stuffed chicken dish. Eight desserts (excellent Pavlova being one of them) cost R 48 each. On weekend nights live music will be offered, and a Frank Sinatra interpretor Andre Ahlers entertained the fully booked restaurant. It was a pleasure to meet a fellow Twitterer @MarcKatzy, who came over to introduce himself. Genot, Klein Genot estate, Franschhoek, tel 021 876-2738, www.kleingenot.com
Rust & Vrede has just been named the best Restaurant of all wine regions in the world, in the 2010 Best of Wine Tourism Awards, organised by the Great Wine Capitals Global Wine Network. It was lauded for its “welcoming, top quality restaurant”. It is the only South African entry to have won an accolade. Will it become South Africa’s Top restaurant of the Eat Out Top 10 Restaurant Awards, presented on 22 November?
Steenberg Winery is opening a new restaurant this week, called Bistro Sixteen82, serving breakfast, lunch and tapas seven days a week, its ad says. Reservations tel 021 713 2211.
Beefcakes is a new restaurant with a large space on Somerset Road in Green Point, close to Limnos. It is clearly set to cater for hungry soccer fans when they walk along Somerset Road to and from the Cape Town Stadium for the 2010 World Cup!
Ginja has made the move into its new premises at the previous Nova/Relish location, at the start of New Church Street. Chef Chris Erasmus and executive chef Michael Bassett run the restaurant, which now also serves lunches.
Bukhara has re-opened in its Burg Street location in Cape Town, after a fire necessitated a renovation lasting about three months. “Bukhara Cape Town is proud to announce the opening of their new look restaurant”, its ad says. Tel 021 424-0000.
Doppio Zero has a special Breakfast offer of R 35 for a cooked breakfast, or fruit and yoghurt, with toast and a cappuccino or a fruit juice, at its Main Road, Green Point branch, from Mondays to Fridays. Tel 021 434-9581, www.doppio.co.za
Clos Malverne wine estate is one of a number of wine estates to open a restaurant this month (George Jardine opens The Restaurant at Jordan next week). The restaurant opened last week on the Stellenbosch Devon Valley estate, simply called “The Restaurant”. It offers a choice of five starters, ranging from R 39 - R 44, seven main courses, ranging in price from R 89 - R 98, and four desserts, at R 35 - R39. The ad refers to the restaurant as follows: “…this Contemporary South African cuisine style restaurant will truly tantalize your taste buds”. The Restaurant is open on Tuesdays - Sundays for lunch only. Tel 021 865-2022.
Reuben’s in Robertson was a refreshing pit stop on a trip to Plettenberg Bay last week. The 30-seater restaurant is located in the 10-bedroom Small Robertson Hotel, a beautifully renovated historical building creating an oasis in an otherwise dreary town. The staff at all levels were extremely friendly. The menu design is the same as that of the Reuben’s Franschhoek branch, but the menu items differ vastly. Four starters range in price from R 58 for a salad of beetroot and goat’s cheese to R 70 for salmon sashimi. Five main courses start with R 78 for a gnocchi, to R 135 for the veal fillet. Two cheese courses are offered, at around R 65, and four desserts range in price from R 30 - R 62. Whilst our party of four loved our food and the good service, one was left with a feeling that the prices may be too high for a small town restaurant, no matter how good it is, and that its menu may not be appropriate for someone wanting a good light lunch, having a further 2 - 4 hours to travel to the Garden Route or to Cape Town. As per the Reuben’s menu in Franschhoek, the menu lists Reuben Riffel as the Concept Chef. The Reuben’s Robertson team are Aviv Liebenberg as the Executive Chef, and Christien van der Westhuizen as the Pastry Chef. An interesting feature of the menu not seen on the Franschhoek menu is a listing of the suppliers of the fruit and vegetable, dairy and olive products, and the pork (including Happy Hog!). Reuben’s Robertson is located at 58 Van Reenen Street, tel 023 626 7200. www.therobertsonsmallhotel.com.
Reuben Riffel has been a Brand Ambassador for South African Tourism, in its campaign on CNN. Erstwhile Top 10 chef Richard Carstens is said to be cooking at Reuben’s in Franschhoek. Recently he was helping out at Roots restaurant in Gauteng, after Nova closed down.
Alle’e Bleue in Franschhoek has a new surprise every few weeks, and the latest is its menu for its beer garden adjacent to the picnic area at the bottom end of the wine estate. One can order Paulaner beer and a spinach and smoked chicken salad, a quiche and salad, a Swiss sausage salad or a local cheese platter, at prices ranging from R 45 - R 59. It hosted its first sushi/wine pairing dinner on Friday, and its first High Tea yesterday.
Grande Provence received a rave review in the Weekend Australian last month, journalist Susan Kurosawa describing it as the “best restaurant in South Africa’s winelands”. She makes one odd comment about the Grand Provence menu: “The menu is seasonal but, for this being South Africa, expect cute wildlife to be involved. ….. I can’t pronounce much of it, let alone countenance eating Bambi’s relatives”!
Allora in Franschhoek, an Italian restaurant that is part of a chain with a number of branches in Johannesburg, has introduced a restaurant booking incentive called the Allora Miles Program. The Allora Miles Card will be handed to accommodation staff, and they will receive points each time they make a booking for guests (who arrive!). Prizes are awarded on the basis of points accumulated, and include airtime and Allora vouchers, vouchers for shopping at Woolworths and Pick ‘n Pay, and electrical appliances. Feedback supplied to the restaurant is that the incentive programme is ‘too Johannesburg-like’ to be a success in Franschhoek.
Col’cacchio Pizzeria makes delicious pizzas (in Camps Bay at least), and all eight branches in the greater Cape Town area, including Franschhoek and Stellenbosch, are offering a special “Mix & Match” lunch offer, with two courses on the lunch menu for R 99 on Mondays - Thursdays, between 12h00 - 17h00.
Baraza in Camps Bay is to relaunch itself next week as Sapphire.
Nando’s, South Africa’s most creative chicken restaurant chain, is turning up the heat in Turkey, when it opened its first branch in Istanbul last week, reports the Hurriyet Daily News of Turkey. The company aims to open 60 Nando’s in Turkey, to add to its total of 850 restaurants in 26 countries. Known for its sharp marketing and cheeky advertising campaigns in South Africa, the Nando’s co-founder Robert Brozin said at the Istanbul opening: “I think that we are representing our leader Nelson Mandela with our restaurants. Nando’s is like a messenger of South Africa. With each new restaurant that Nando’s launches in other countries, Mandela sends a signed letter to us”! Nando’s in Knysna has just closed down, reports CX Express.
Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com
Tags: 2010 World Cup, Allora, Andrea Gargiulo, Angie Diamond, Aubergine, Baia, Baraza, Beefcakes, Belthezar, Best of Wine Tourism Awards, Bistro Sixteen82, Bouillabaisse, breakfast special, Bukhara, Camil and Ingrid Haas, Camil's restaurant, Camps Bay, Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, Cape Town, Cape Town Stadium, champagne bar, Chris Erasmus, Chris von Ulmenstein, Clos Malverne, Col'Cacchio, Conrad Gallagher, Crepe Suzette, Doppio Zero, Eat Out Top 10 Restaurant Awards, Franschhoek, Geisha Wok, Genot. Klein Genot, Ginja, Glen Carlou, Grand Cafe, Grande Provence, Great Wine Capitals Global Wine Network, L'Aperitivo, La Place Vendome, Limnos, Michael Bassett, Nando's, Nelson Mandela, Nova, Pick 'n Pay, Place on the Bay, Plettenberg Bay, Primi Piatti, Relish, restaurants, Reuben Riffel, Reubens, Richard Carstens, Robert Brozin, Rockwell Centre, Roots, Sapphire, Small Robertson Hotel, Steenberg Winery, Stef Rau, Stellenbosch, The Restaurant, V&A Waterfront, Vanilla, Water Club, Whale Cottage Portfolio, wine estates, Winelands Experience, Woolworths
Tue 8 Sep 2009
Restaurant closures seem to have ground to a halt, the last being the final liquidation of celebrity chef Conrad Gallagher’s Geisha Wok in the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, and his Sundance coffee shops. His departure from Cape Town and his shady business dealings have also influenced the operation of Crepe Suzette and Bouillabaisse in the Rockwell Centre in De Waterkant, which opened on the basis of Gallagher setting up an Epicurean Food Market on the ground floor, around the two new restaurants. This deal fell flat earlier this year already, just as the restaurants were moving into the building.
Last month Reuben Riffel opened his second Reuben’s restaurant, in the new Small Hotel in Robertson. Nook is the cutest ’cosy eatery that specialises in homemade pastries, cakes, sandwiches and a wide variety of daily specials’, that also opened last month in Stellenbosch’s Van Reyneveld Street, where the Greek Kitchen used to be. The owners Luke and Jessica are young, and this is their first restaurant venture. They are refreshing in the way they connect with their clients, and understand customer relationships.
Last week Portofino opened where the Showroom used to be in De Waterkant, by fun and hands-on owner Cormac Keane with chef Stephen Kruger, previously working with Richard Carstens, in the kitchen. See the review on this blog.
Yesterday the 12th branch of Doppio Zero opened on Somerset Road, Green Point, in a lovely renovated Victorian building with modern lighting, and is fantastically positioned opposite the Green Point stadium. Doppio Zero is a franchise operation, which has an impressive website that is upfront about what the company stands for. Its promise is “to consistently deliver beyond your expectations”. The company’s vision is to be a “leader in our industry and in the market in which we trade, and to imprint the Doppio experience in the culture of our guests.” Its mission is to ensure that guest satisfaction is “number 1″, to offer staff growth opportunities, to offer uncompromising best quality food, service and people, to develop lasting relationships with guests, to continuously improve, and to make a “fair profit.” Its values are passion and enthusiasm, integrity and honesty, an unconditional commitment to the brand, and individual responsibility and accountability. These are strong words, and one hopes that the company can keep its promises, especially as they are stated so publicly.
Bruce Robertson’s Showroom Cafe and The Quarter on Long Street are doing well, and he was bubbling last week about four restaurant openings he is consulting on, all scheduled for October. October also sees the opening of Vanilla, owned by the Newhouse father and son duo from Tuscany Beach in Camps Bay, in the new Cape Quarter building on Somerset Road. Cru Cafe will also open in the center.
Kathy and Gary Jordan from Jordan Wines in Stellenbosch will also open a restaurant for light lunches in October, on their wine estate, reports The Sunday Independent. Critically, they comment:”Too many people chase Michelin stars, but I am not a fan of that system. To win those stars, you have to throw away your food from one sitting, and start again in the evening. To me, it is just a waste. It adds a huge cost to the restaurant bill. Almost all the food rejected is still perfectly good. I can’t stand seeing food wasted.” Their restaurant will “offer simple, well-cooked, wholesome food”. The Jordans are co-owners of the High Timber restaurant in London, with Neleen Strauss, and “a significant percentage” of the 40 000 wines in the restaurant are Jordan wines.
The Waterkloof wine estate in Somerset West, which belongs to one of the largest wine importers in the UK, Paul Boutinot, and who calls himself the “Custodian” of the wine estate, according to its website, will open its restaurant in November, with chef Gregory Czarnecki in the kitchen and Julian Smith from Grande Provence managing the restaurant. Czarnecki was previously at The BIg Easy in Stellenbosch, the restaurant belonging to Johan Rupert and Ernie Els, amongst others, and left when he was expected to cook hamburgers, it is said. He worked with 3*** Michelin chef Alain Senderens at Lucas Carton. Waterkloof’s website states that it makes ’slow wines’, with fermentation taking place between one to eleven months instead of the usual 20 days, and it would be excellent if its new restaurant embodies “slow food”.
Little has been said or written about maze and Nobu locally lately, and one wonders what the effect of the poor reviews Gordon Ramsay’s restaurants in the UK got in the 2010 edition of The Harden’s restaurant guide will be on the local restaurant in the OneandOnly Cape Town hotel. According to a report in the Daily Mail, the guide has placed four of Ramsays’ restaurants on the “10 most disappointing restaurants” list. Three of the restaurants also featured on the ‘most overpriced’ list. The author of the guide, Richard Harden, said of maze and of Ramsay that it is suffering from “imperial over-reach” and feels that ‘it has deep-seated problems’. Harden continues about Ramsay: ”He wants to be an international film star and be accorded Beckham levels of international fame yet he wants to run this internationally recognised group of restaurants.” Ramsay’s profits fell by 90 %, according to the report, in the last year, and received negative feedback when it was discovered that some of his restaurants serve mass-produced food, prepared off-site and delivered to the restaurants.
Word about Stellenbosch town is that Etienne Bonthuys will not be at Tokara restaurant in the Helshoogte Pass for much longer. He is opening up a new restaurant in Stellenbosch later this year, it is rumoured. No doubt Tokara owner GT Ferriera will look for a heavyweight chef to counteract the competition from Delaire Graff across the road.
A late-comer to social media marketing is Le Quartier Francais, which announced with fanfare that it was starting a blog at the beginning of this month. It has only posted two posts, of which one has already been removed again. Perhaps the owner does not know that a blog needs a dedicated commitment to regular posting to be credible and to help with search engine optimisation.
Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com
Tags: 'slow food', 'slow wines', Add new tag, Alain Senderens, Beckham, Big Easy, Bouillabaisse, Bruce Robertson, Cape Quarter, Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, Conrad Gallagher, Cormac Keane, Crepe Suzette, Cru Cafe, Delaire Graff, Doppio Zero, Emile Bonthuis, Ernie Els, Geisha Wok, Gordon Ramsay, Greek Kitchen, Green Point Stadium, Gregory Czarnecki, GT Ferreira, Harden's guide 2010, High Timber, Johan Rupert, Jordan wines, Kathy and Gary Jordan, Le Quartier Francais, Lucas Carton, maaaze, Michelin, Newhouse, Nobu, Nook, One&Only Cape Town, Portofino restaurant, restaurants, Reuben Riffel, Reubens, Richard Carstens, Richard Harden, Robertson Small Hotel, Rockwell Centre, Showroom Cafe, Stellenbosch, Stephen Kruger, Sundance, The Quarter, Tokara, Vanulla, Waterkloof wine estate, Whale Cottage Portfolio, wine estate
Thu 20 Aug 2009
Conrad Gallagher, celebrity chef and youngest chef ever to win two Michelin stars, has had his restaurant Geisha Wok and Noodle Bar in the Cape Royale Luxury Hotel in Green Point provisionally liquidated. Affected by the liquidation too is the collection of Sundance coffee shops, which also belongs to Gallagher - the Sea Point and Buitengracht Street branches in Cape Town are definitely closed.
Gallagher owes the hotel rental, as well as MacBrothers for equipment. In addition, his staff walked out during a meal, as they had not been paid for two months.
In addition to his restaurant in Cape Town, and his coffee shops, Gallagher was a consultant to the Atlantic restaurant in the Table Bay Hotel, and was a consultant to the Sun International Hotels and the Trump Group.
Gallagher has fled to his home country Ireland, reports the Cape Times, but Gallagher claims that he will return to Cape Town. It is reported that Gallagher initially left Ireland with a trail of debt.
Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com
Tags: Atlantic restaurant, Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, Cape Town, Conrad Glaagher, Geisha Wok and Noodle Bar, Green Point, liquidation, MacBrothers, Michelin, Sun International, Sundance coffee shops, Table Bay Hotel, Trump Group, Whale Cottage Portfolio