Entries tagged with “Jordan wine estate”.
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Mon 29 Mar 2010
A Twitter friendship with co-owner Wilhelm Kuehn, and a challenge from him to visit the restaurant to do a review, was the reason for returning for a meal at Jardine Restaurant in the Cape Town city centre, after 18-months since the previous visit.
Jardine Restaurant makes me think that it is somewhat ’schizophrenic’ - a fine-dining ex-Top 10 restaurant, which also has an informal take-away at its Jardine Bakery section, and an informal sit-down lunch at tables and benches outside the door on the pavement. Restaurant founder and co-owner George Jardine has opted out of city living, to start a new country restaurant on Jordan wine estate in Stellenbosch, and now only cooks at Jardine Restaurant ”2 or 3 times a week”, I am told, but the restaurant still carries his name. Wilhelm tells me that Waterkloof and Tokara were alternate options George Jardine had evaluated for his new restaurant.
Jardine has handed over the chef reins to Eric Bulpitt, who has worked at the Winchester Mansions Hotel, The Showroom, Ledbury in London, and at Jardine Restaurant with George. Kuehn was a lawyer, and now is the General Manager, keeping a fine eye on things upstairs, walking the floor to check that all runs smoothly.
Jardine Restaurant had to face the humiliation of falling from 3rd place in the Eat Out Top 10 Restaurant list of 2009 to between 12 - 20th place last November. One does not know if the judges felt that things had slipped, or because they felt that an award cannot go to a chef when he is not cooking there all the time any more - Jardine’s move to the winelands had been widely announced. Kuehn says the Top 10 award result last year created introspection, but Bulpitt’s new menu for the restaurant is drawing in regulars. I heard tourists, and recognised Howard Godfrey, MD of @home, as patrons, on an almost-full Thursday evening.
When one arrives one is met by Johan. I had not booked, but he made a plan to make a table available. I told him I would be out by 9 pm, but Jardine is not for fast in-and-out dining, mainly because the menu requires one to have a minimum of two courses, and I therefore only left after about two hours.
The downstairs section has never made an impact, and is set up as a bar and lounge. Upstairs the restaurant space has a central middle area, and tables against the windows, separate from the rest. It is not a particularly attractive space decor-wise, only a pop-art painting by Richard Scott on the far wall creating a splash of colour, one of a few artworks on the walls, coming from Worldart. A functional shelf holds functional cutlery holders and crockery. Close by, an old-fashioned cash register has an untidy collection of paperwork next to it. The tables have white tablecloths, and attractive and comfortable brown leather chairs. I sense a woman’s hand is lacking in the decor of the room (as I did at the Warwick tasting room recently) - all is very functional here. The chef and his kitchen crew of five work in a very small space, preparing each dish. Chef Eric is in the centre, finishing things off.
Wilhelm comes to chat and we talk about Twitter, other restaurant Twitterers, and the soon-to-open nearby Cookery School. A waitress brings the menu, printed on strong board, and it changes day by day. One chooses two (R 230) or three courses ( R 260), a 5 course chef’s menu (R 400) or a wine pairing menu (R350), the last two options not being explained by the waitress. A side salad is specified as costing R 45 extra, and other (unspecified) sides at R 35.
The menu choice was five starters and mains, and four desserts. The starters seemed esoteric (’Evita and Princess figs’ -two varieties of figs, I was told and ’vegetable patch’) or too fishy (oysters, mussels and salmon) for my taste. Main choices were line fish, Frazerburg lamb leg, seared Kroondal duck breast, rump, and grilled elf mushrooms.
An amuse bouche is served, almost over the top and ’airy-fairy’, very foamy in general, and is meant to be an olive tapenade covered by a “tomato spoon” (missed the tomato taste), white pepper and a basil leaf. It is extremely light and aerated, and I am brought another because the air will have escaped while Wilhelm and I talk too much. I love duck, and was surprised when it was served - I call it “deconstructed”, with four little bits of duck, and little portions of “parfait en croute, celeriac, pomegranate and shallot” spread out on a wooden platter. The tiniest of tiny flowers, nuts and other ingredients are sprinkled across the plate. Had I not ordered a side of the most wonderful crunchy green beans sprinkled with flaked almonds, I would have still been hungry after the main course. The parfait is outstanding, the little that is offered.
The dessert options were chocolate torte, citrus tomato minestrone, pineapple souffle flambe, and a selection of South African cheeses (gorgonzola, camembert, labare-style cheese, ash-rind goat’s cheese and gruyere served with walnut toast and watermelon konfyt). The cheese platter, served on an extremely heavy granite slab, was an excellent choice, and was an enjoyable slow eat. It was decorated with the finest apple slices, always great with cheese, and slices of strawberry and raspberries, as well as nuts and blueberries.
The waitress was very efficient in explaining the menu items, but each item has so many components, that when the dish is brought to the table, one has long forgotten what exactly the chosen dish entails (Opal Lounge has the same problem). But the waitress was patient in running through the ingredients again. One irritation is the waitress offering her personal recommendation of the duck - I know that many restaurants do not allow their staff to eat the restaurant’s food, so I always reject such “recommendations”, as tastes do differ. I chose the duck, because I love duck, not because she recommended it.
The winelist is attractively presented in a brown leather cover, matching the chairs. It is an extensive list, separating bubblies, whites and reds, each sub-divided into varietals and blends, followed by two pages of mainly French and some Spanish wines. Wines by the glass are reasonably priced - a Villiera by-the-glass costs R 40, a Tribout R 120. A Jardine (made by Paradyskloof) Unwooded Chardonnay costs R 25, a Lammershoek Roulette Blanc R 40. The La Motte Millenium and Sterhuis cost R 45 each (for 125 ml). For the tasting menu one can order 60 ml portions of wines too. Billecart-Salmon champagne is served in various options, ranging from R 950 - R 7 000 a bottle. Two Graham Beck Cap Classiques cost R 410, the VIlliera R 190. Red wine options number 35, and range from R 95 for a MAN Shiraz to R 990 for a Muemve Raats De Compostella 2006; 27 white wine options range from the Jardine Unwooded Chardonnay at R 100 to R 780 for the Platter 2010 White Wine of the Year, the Sadie Palladius. French wines start at R 1 600 per bottle, to R 8 600 for a Chateau Lafitte-Rothschild 1995.
The sommelier Jaap-Henk Koelewijn is told that I have ordered a glass of La Motte Millenium 2007, and that I would like it poured at the table (I distrust wine-by-the glass service). Johan tells me that they have actually found a bottle of 2006 - what luck! Koelewijn comes to the table, does not show me the bottle, as I ask of him twice, and just carries on pouring the small portion. I ask him if I may not taste the wine. He retorts that he has done so already! There was no “hello, my name is Jaap, I am the sommelier, let me tell you some more about the La Motte Millenium…” from him. Why is that sommeliers have such attitude and arrogance (like at Bosman’s and Reubens in Franschhoek)? The minute I started the cheese platter, he was back to offer me another top-up of the wine or a port. No question was asked whether I had enjoyed the first glassful. The empty glass was probably taken to communicate that it was good! I had to ask for a cappuccino to accompany the coffee, as this was not offered as a beverage option.
The lunch menu changes regularly too, and that of 11 March had four starters (oysters and mussels as per the dinner menu) and two salads, 3 mains (line fish, rump and mushrooms, as per the dinner menu), and 3 desserts (chocolate torte and cheese as per the dinner menu). Here the prices look reasonable, and one can order per dish. The sums do not add up if you see the lunch prices for individual menu items, compared to paying for 2 or more dinner courses. Wilhelm says the lunch menu dishes are simpler.
If Wilhelm had not come to chat, I would have left without the “connection” to Jardine Restaurant. There is some very soft music, so soft that it is inaudible. It gets progressively hotter in the room, as the airconditioning is on but the windows are open, defeating the function of the aircons. A fan is brought from around the corner, and makes a difference.
Jardine Restaurant, corner Bree and Bloem Street, Cape Town. Tel (21) 424-5640. www.jardineonbree.co.za. Twitter @JardineCapetown. Open for dinner Monday - Saturday evenings, lunch is served Wednesdays - Fridays.
Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com
Tags: @home, amuse bouche, Billecart Salmon, Bosmans, Chateau Lafitte-Rothschild, chef's menu, Chris von Ulmenstein, Cookery School, Eat Out Top 10, Eric Bulpitt, Franschhoek, George Jardine, Graham Beck, Howard Godfrey, Jaap-Henk Koelewijn, Jardine Restaurant, Jardine Unwooded Chardonnay, Jordan wine estate, La Motte Millenium, Lammershoek Roulette Blanc, Ledberry, MAN, Platter 2010 Sadie Palladius, Raats, Reubens, Richard Scott, sommelier, Stellenbosch, Sterhuis, The Showroom, Tokara, Twitter, Villiera, Warwick, Waterkloof, Whale Cottage Portfolio, Wilhelm Kuehn, Winchester Mansions Hotel, wine pairing menu
Thu 29 Oct 2009
This week marks the official launch of two competing but neighbouring restaurants in the new Cape Quarter extension on Somerset Road in De Waterkant. Cru Cafe’ (see review here) has been open since the beginning of the month, but celebrated its launch on Tuesday. Vanilla has also opened, and its launch evening is on Friday. In general, these are the two ’serious’ restaurants in this new lifestyle centre, that is set to take off as Capetonians discover its unique combination of high quality shops. Lazari is a restaurant that disappointed on a first visit, with a shrieking pink interior, and the restaurant staff and the patrons being unsure as to which of their two terraces are for smokers and non-smokers! The visible food preparation area when one enters the restaurant is enough to put one off from entering and sitting down!
This week saw the opening of the long-awaited Crepe et Cidre in Franschhoek, near Huguenot Fine Chocolates. It belongs to Robert Maingard, the largest hospitality owner in the village, also owning Le Franschhoek, and Dieu Donne, and he is also set to open a sports bar in the old station building soon. He is opening two further restaurants in Franschhoek, on opposite sides of the main road, when he completes the malls next year, one being on the current Pick ‘n Pay site and the other on the site where the Huguenot Hotel was located. Crepe et Cidre will be run by Gerhard van Staden, previously chef of the Le Franschhoek. The creperie has “imported” Yann Guyonvarch from Brittany in France to train the staff in crepe-making. His true French accent is a delight, but his stay will be a short 2 weeks. Imported French cider is served.
At La Brasserie in Franschhoek, the Friday jazz evenings will start again tomorrow (30 October), and the opening session will be dedicated to the launch of a CD ‘Tribute to Alex van Heerden’, who played with the Cape Dutch Connection, and passed away tragically.
In Hermanus the new Hermanos restaurant has opened in the building in which Joubert restaurant operated before closing down earlier this year, with a new chef and owner Wayne Spencer. He was originally the Executive Chef at Birkenhead House in Hermanus, and at Phinda Game Reserve, and worked at the Michelin-starred Port Palace in Monaco. He says of his new restaurant that it is fine-dining but that it is not intimidating, and he will not place a lot of emphasis on plating the food. He intends to come out of the kitchen, to chat to his guests, which is commendable - too few chefs do so. The menu is small, with 5 starters (R36 - 48), 7 mains (R68 - R 110), and 4 desserts (ranging betwen R 30 - R 40), and sounds interesting. The winelist is more extensive, and is very proudly-Hermanus. The restaurant is open Mondays to Saturdays for dinner only initially, and can be booked at tel 028 313-1916.
The Seafood at The Marine restaurant in Hermanus was a pleasant surprise earlier this week, when the most delicious kingklip was served. The restaurant offers a choice of two courses at R 180 and 3 courses cost R 215. A number of irritations on arrival - struggling to find the booking on the reservation list and a wobbly table - were sorted out when addressed, and the Relais & Chateaux crested butter arrived rock hard, so much so that it was unspreadable. The restaurant has no ambiance, it being too brightly lit and it not having any attempt at a decor focus. But the food cooks, and the hand of Executive Chef Peter Tempelhoff, a previous Eat Out Top Ten chef whilst at Grande Provence, is evident. The biggest surprise was the presentation of three scoops of ice cream on a block of ice, serving a functional as well as an aesthetic role. The whale-shaped biscuit served with the coffee, whilst not new, remains a cute and clever touch. The service is friendly and willing, and a miscommunication between the waiter and the kitchen was quickly rectified. No senior management was visible all evening. The cloakrooms are most disappointing for a five-star hotel, and the owner Liz McGrath would do well to invest some monies in upgrading these at The Marine.
The speculation in a previous WhaleTales blog post that Ginja is to move to New Church Street (between Buitengracht and Kloofnek Roads), into the previous Relish and Nova restaurant space, has been confirmed by the EatOut website. “Executive Chef Chris Erasmus will continue the Ginja legacy with his playful take on gastronomy, abundant with colour, texture and taste - using the finest local produce”, the website says.
Allee Bleue in Franschhoek is hosting its first Sushi and wine-pairing evening on Friday 6 November, at R 195, with a miso soup and tempura prawn starter, and five main sushi courses, each paired with a different Allee Bleue wine. The dessert is a green tea brulee. Chef Dane Newton, previously at Chamonix, is known in Franschhoek for his sushi. In addition to Allee Bleue’s Bistro, the new Winetasting Courtyard 5-item menu, and the scrumptious picnic baskets, a small beer garden menu is also available to be enjoyed with the Paulaner draught beer served at the lower end of the estate.
Jordan wine estate is opening its The Restaurant at Jordan on 21 November. The e-mail sent to announce the opening looks amateurish, and is an instant turn-off, as one is asked to commit to the food one would like to eat on that day, and the exact time slot in which one would like to eat it in. Payment must also be done by bank transfer prior to arrival. For a weekend treat, a visit to a wine estate is enjoyed in leisurely fashion, without being so prescriptive! George Jardine of Jardine is the new chef of the country restaurant.
Cafe’ Sofia is boldly advertising its seven branches (Green Point, Camps Bay, Sea Point, Rondebosch, Gardens, Greenside and Blouberg) in a striking half-page advertisement: “Come and experience our new 2010 menu, the best breakfast in town or Happy Hour Cocktails. You may be in for a surprise”. The Happy Hour cocktails are priced at R 25 for cocktails and R 15 for beer on tap between 17h00 - 19h00, while breakfasts range from R 19 - R 29.
It was a food book launch week last week, with“Franschhoek Food”, written by Myrna Robbins, featuring the main chefs of Franschhoek’s restaurants, and some of their favourite restaurant menu recipes, as well as wine pairing suggestions. “South Africa On a Plate” was also launched, a book featuring restaurants that deduct R 5 off the patron’s bill to go toward the Streetsmart charity. A three-course dinner suggestion, with the recipes, is featured for each restaurant. Grande Provence, Cafe’ 1999, Jewel of India, Auberge Michel, Ginga, Haiku, Rust en Vrede, Jardine, La Colombe, Ninth Avenue Bistro, Myoga, Mosaic, Bosman’s, Hartford House, Roots, The Saxon, Ile Maurice, and Terroir are some of the restaurants included in the book. The inspiration for the book comes from Jess Meredith-Watts and his fiance’ Louise, who were touched by beggars on the streets, and felt that they could make a difference, by giving all the profits of the book sales to the Streetsmart charity. More details about the book are available here.
Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio www.whalecottage.com
Tags: 'Franschhoek Food', 'South Africa on a Plate', Alex van Heerden, Allee Bleue, Auberge Michel, Birkenhead House, Bosmans, Cafe' 1999, Cafe' Sofia, Cape Dutch Connection, Cape Quarter, Chamonix, Chris Erasmus, Chris von Ulmenstein, Crepe et Cidre, creperie, Cru Cafe, Dane Newton, Dieu Donne, Franschhoek, George Jardine, Gerhard van Staden, Ginja, Grande Provence, Haiku, Hartford House, Hermanos, Hermanus, Huguenot Fine Chocolates, Ile Maurice, Jardines, Jess Meredith-Watts, Jewel of India, Jordan wine estate, La Brasserie, La Colombe, LAZARI, Le Franschhoek, Mosaic, Myoga, Myrna Robbins, Ninth Avenue Bistro, Nova, openings, Paulaner, Peter Tempelhoff, Phinda, Pick 'n Pay, Relish, restaurants, Robert Maingard, Roots, Rust en Vrede, Seafood at the Marine, Streetsmart, sushi and wine-pairing, terroir, The Restaurant at Jordan, The Saxon, Vanilla, Wayne Spencer, Whale Cottage Portfolio
Tue 22 Sep 2009
More restaurant opening and movement news continues to reach WhaleTales.
Klein Genot is ending its relationship with Mark Radnay, of the Overture partnership with Top 10 chef Bertus Basson, after a one-year marriage, due to the restaurant not being financially viable, says Basson. Angie Diamond, the owner of the luxury 5-star Klein Genot boutique hotel and winery called WhaleTales to say that she is taking over the Genot restaurant, with a name refinement to Genot Restaurant Cigar Bar, from 1 November, and is celebrating the opening with a Frank Sinatra tribute evening on 5 November, and a jazz evening on 6 November. Diamond says her new restaurant model is Baia, the upmarket seafood restaurant in the V & A Waterfront, but at far reduced prices. Starters range in price from R 38 for sardines to R 68 for parma ham and melon, with mussel and prawn starters costing R 58. Salads average R 48, and the fish main courses range between R 78 for the calamari and sole to R 98 for baby kingklip. Meat dishes range from R 78 for a spatchcock chicken to R 138 for rack of lamb. Pasta dishes are available at R 48 - 58, and desserts cost R 48 each. Live music will be offered on Friday and Saturday evenings. The restaurant is also offering a new service to guest houses, with complimentary transfers to the restaurant. Genot is also offering picnic baskets, to be enjoyed at 20 picnic spots along the riverbank of the wine estate.
Overture restaurant on the Hidden Valley wine estate outside Stellenbosch is going from strength to strength, and chef Bertus Basson says a younger more affluent clientele is booking at the restaurant. A sommelier starts at Overture at the beginning of October. The sister catering company has been awarded the catering for all events at Lourensford, and will be moving its operation to the Somerset West wine estate.
Chef Bruce Robertson has revealed that two of his current restaurant consulting projects are for two hotels managed by Queensgate Holdings. The Upper East Side Hotel is opening as a 4-star conference hotel in Woodstock in May 2010, and Robertson is setting up a 260-seater restaurant and kitchen. He is also setting up the 160-seater restaurant and kitchen for the hotel Queensgate is opening in Pearl House on Adderley Street, Furthermore, Robertson is setting up a gourmet picnic service at Warwick Estate in November, according to a recent tweet from Mike Ratcliffe (”Gourmet picnic project with Chef Bruce Robertson taking shape”). About the Franschhoek restaurant that he is helping to set up, Robertson is staying mum, only revealing that it is on a wine estate. Robertson has also become a gourmet tour guide, and has teamed up with Bon Appetit magazine and Ryan Hilton from AdmiralityTravel to bring tour groups from the USA to South Africa, with Robertson taking them to unusual gourmet highlights, including slowfood, outstanding herb gardens, wine biodiversity, and cooking for his guests.
More than seventy restaurants received 2010 American Express Platinum Fine Dining Awards this month, 13 of these going to new restaurants winners, reports TravelWires. The new restaurant winners in the Western Cape include Bizerca, Gold, Salt, The Pavilion in Hermanus, Grande Provence, and Rust en Vrede. Those from other parts of the country, receiving the Awards for the first time, include Mastrantonio, Osteria Tre Nonni, Sel et Poivre, Harvey’s, Roma Revolving Restaurant, and Orange. The Award winners are judged on the basis of cuisine, service, wine list, decor, ambiance and overall excellence and consistency. Standards are checked regularly, says American Express.
The Caviar Group of restaurants, which already includes Beluga and Sevruga, as well as the Caviar deli in the V & A Waterfront, is opening its first non-caviar named restaurant, to be called Blonde. Its newsletter is keeping the location of the new restaurant a secret, but hints at the decor and style as follows: it will be a 120-seater restaurant offering ‘fine-dining cuisine’, and will only be open in the evenings. It is in a Victorian building, it has a ’seductive interior of bar and lounge’, it has ’couches covered in rich fabrics, the gorgeous wooden floors and high ceilings, to the crisp white linen, designer chairs, beautiful staircase, and romantic balcony” They gush on : “One thing’s for sure. Blonde will be in a class of its own. We love Blonde!” It refers one to the website www.blondedining.co.za for more information, but there is none! Caviar’s design agency Malossol has tweeted on Twitter that they are currently designing a Caviar “group menu”, which means that Blonde could be opening soon.
Ginja restaurant, currently located off Buitengracht Street, in a building which has not benefited the image of the restaurant, and once a national top 10 restaurant, is said to move to the building in which Nova restaurant was, on New Union Street in the City Bowl.
George Jardine of Jardines is said to be opening the new restaurant on Jordan Wine Estate in Stellenbosch, and to be moving to the Winelands, for a lifestyle change.
Allee Bleue’s plans to open a fine dining restaurant lower down on the Franschhoek estate appear to be on ice, due to the economic climate. However, construction work on its second informal restaurant linked to its wine tasting venue, adjacent to the security entrance, is almost complete.
Few details are available about the restaurant which is opening at La Motte wine estate. About ten days ago Hein Koegelenberg, the owner, posted the following blog post: “Construction of La Motte’s restaurant and art gallery is coming along nicely on the grounds of the estate in Franschhoek….A bridge will connect the restaurant and the tasting room. Whilst the team …is working hard to build the structure, other teams are equally busy to make sure that the restaurant and gallery are going to be world class and offer unforgettable experiences”.
Reuben and Maryke Riffel’s baby daughter Latika was born last Monday. Congratulations go to them from all at Whale Cottage.
DoppioZero in Main Road, Green Point, has an impressive decor, with the luxury of space. It has opened a bakery in the restaurant, with breads, rolls, croissants, cakes and other sweet treats for sale. The franchisor was hands-on in the restaurant last weekend, serving customers, and checking customer satisfaction, to ensure the success of this newest restaurant in the franchise chain, having opened less than 2 weeks ago. An interesting and clever service offered by the restaurant is a “mess-bib”, Doppio branded, which is put around patrons eating pasta or any dishes with a sauce.
New restaurant Le Tique opens in the Sugar Hotel on Main Road in Green Point tomorrow. Restaurant-lovers can pay R 250 each to attend the opening. “Entice yourself with the finest gourmet from the earliest renaissance, contemporary twisted, French with a hint of European Influences. Featuring South Africa’s Finest Venison. Platinum wines of this worlds, proudly South African viticulture. Bellini’s & cocktails to lure your fantasies” is the copy contained in the invitation.
Basil O’Hagan, whose O’Hagan’s pub chain was liquidated 8 years ago, is reinventing himself and has launched a new pub and restaurant chain called Brazen Head, with 23 pubs planned for the greater Cape Town area in the next ten years, including the city center, Hermanus, Paarl, Somerset West, George, Knysna, and Tygervalley. An outlet is already trading in Stellenbosch, reports Cape Business News, and other Brazen Head pubs are already operating in Gauteng.
Bukhara was to have re-opened its restaurant in Burg Street, but the person answering the call yesterday said that there is no opening date in sight yet, it probably being another 2 - 3 weeks. Bukhara is doing renovations and repairwork after a fire caused damage in the restaurant some time ago. A restricted Bukhara menu is available at Haiku, the sister restaurant downstairs from Bukhara.
Late casualties of the credit crunch are Aqua D’or and the Franschhoek Water Company, both of which have closed down. The Franschhoek Water Company was the supplier of the L’Aubade and Franschhoek mineral water brands. Earlier this year the Franschhoek Water Company had handed over the distribution of its water brands to Aqua D’or, but took the distribution back when customers complained about the poor service from Aqua D’or. NOTE: SINCE THIS POST WAS WRITTEN, AQUAD’OR HAVE CONTACTED WHALETALES TO DENY THEIR CLOSURE. THE INFORMATION OF THE CLOSURE WAS INDUSTRY TALK, AND WHEN THE COMPANY WAS CALLED FOR CONFIRMATION, THE SALES AND ADMIN DEPARTMENT LINES JUST RANG, WHICH WAS TAKEN AS A CONFIRMATION OF THE CLOSURE OF THE COMPANY. EARLIER THIS YEAR AQUA D’OR FACED PROVISIONAL LIQUIDATION. WE APOLOGISE TO AQUA D’OR FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE WHICH THIS POST MAY HAVE CREATED.
Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com
Tags: 2010 American Express Platinum Fine Dining Awards, Admirality Travel, Allee Bleue, Aqua D'or, Baia, bakery, Basil O'Hagan, Beluga, Bertus Basson, Bizerca, Blonde, Bon Appetit, Brazen Head pub and restaurant, Bruce Robertson, Bukhara, Caviar deli, Caviar Group of restaurants, Chris von Ulmenstein, credit crunch, Doppio Zero Green Point, Franschhoek, Franschhoek Water Company, Genot, Genot Restaurant Cigar Bar, George Jardine, Ginja, Gold, Grande Provence, Haiku, Harvey's, Jordan wine estate, Klein Genot, L'Aubade, Le Tique, Lourensford, Malossol, Mark Radnay, Mastrantonio, mess-bib, mineral water, Nova, Orange, Osteria Tre Nonni, Overture, Pearl House, picnic baskets, Queensgate Holdings, restaurant, Roma Revolving Restaurant, Rust & Vrede, Salt, Sel et Poivre, Sevruga, Sugar Hotel, The Pavilion in Hermanus, Upper East Side Hotel, V & A Waterfront, V&A Waterfront, Warwick wine estate, Whale Cottage Portfolio, wine estate, Winelands, Woodstock
Mon 20 Apr 2009
Posted by Chris von Ulmenstein under Restaurant news, Wine news
No Comments
A marriage between Kathy and Gary Jordan of Jordan wine estate in Stellenbosch and Neleen Strauss, a South African restaurateur now based in London, and previously running Vivat Bacchus, has created High Timber in London, in High Timber Street close to St Paul’s Cathedral, the Tate Modern, and Shakespeare’s Globe, reports The South African.
High Timber has 40 000 wines in its cellar, many of them being from Jordan. The menu has been designed to complement the wines stocked. It has South African staples like steak, but with an international flair.
Tags: High Timber, Jordan wine estate, Kathy and Gary Jordan, London, Neleen Strauss, restaurants, South Africa, Stellenbosch, The South African, Vivat Bacchus, Wines