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Showing posts from February, 2018

Brick Lane Music Hall

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To Brick Lane Music Hall with Probus for adult pantomine Aladdin with afternoon tea. Coach was late because of the snow, but we got to Silvertown in time. The music hall is in an old church, riotously decorated inside with lights, signs and brick-a-brack. It was a good afternoon. Painted wall in the gents

Journey home

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Joan waiting for her dinner Late dinner on homebound plane,  service very slow. Good wines, though, including Ch Lynch-Moussas 2009 and Ch Filhot 2011 Sauternes. Then a good sleep until arrival to the freezing cold.  

Woolworth's Water Rationing

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Zero Day is pushed back to 9 July thanks to  residents reducing water consumption.  This sign in Woolworth's today shows they have doubled customers allowance since we arrived. We've seen people filling containers from a roadside stream in the mountains above Franschhoek and from an outlet pipe on Gordon's Bay beach. .

Breakfast on the Balcony

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Breakfast sitting on the balcony overlooking False Bay is a mix of fresh fruits - today mango, papaya and banana - followed by toast or a roll and Houw Hook Seville orange marmalade. View towards the Helderberg

Ocean Basket Again

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Back to Ocean Basket . It's a lovely walk along Sunset Bay beach then round the bay by the sand dunes to the new harbour. And Joan loves the King Prawns.   Waiter T K remembers us from last year and he and colleague Travis look after us right royally This what I have, 200g Kingklip dusted with Cajun spices and chips. We also have a Village Salad (R50 £3) - cucumber, onions, tomatoes and olive and no Feta for me. Ocean Basket also bring bread rolls with butter, tartare sauce, and a  chopped green chilli sauce. We ordered from the wine list Durbanville Hills 2017 savvie (R144 £8.33) which is their most expensive wine. We went one more time, the day we let and that time BYO with Springfield Estate 'Life from Stone' Sauvignon Blanc 2017 (R149 £9.03 from the wineshop opposite Spar) This is Ocean Basket taken from the end of the harbour breakwater, with Gordon's Bay in the background across the bay From the breakwater you can see the G B and anchor on the hills above Gordon&#

Lunch at Delheim with Eleanor and Mark Cosman

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Mark & Eleanor Cosman and Peter & Joan May at Delheim After a morning at Kanonkop Estate Eleanor and Mark Cosman and ourselves drove to neighbouring Delheim for lunch. This time I had the Delheim salad that Jeanette ordered on our first visit this trip. It's a pile of roasted veg and leaves, yummy and filling, and matches well with a glass or two of their Pinotage. We didn't see Victor Sperling this time as he was in the vineyards. They were harvesting Pinotage and a tray of sweet plump grapes were at the winery entrance to taste.  The Cosman's will remain in the Cape for a few more weeks before going to Namibia.

Lunch at Houw Hoek Farm Stall

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To Houw Hoek Farm Stall again for lunch and to see if we could get some marmalade that tasted of oranges. Woolworth's best is orange in colour but could be made of anything. Houw Hoek is on the high pass of the N2 between Gordons Bay and about 10 km from Bot Rivier. They have a wide range of intriguing own label jams, many made of fruits I have never tasted such as wild fig.  I always try to buy my absolute favourite Hanepoot, made from whole Muscat of Alexandria grapes (aka Hanepoot) to take home, though they quickly sell out.  There's a huge range of chutneys and sauces, freshly baked breads, cakes and pies, local olives and olive oils and fresh fruits and vegetables. And there's a wine shop featuring local wines at good prices. This year is the first time I have not been tempted to buy a wine as they seem to have fewer choices than previous years. In their restaurant we both chose the starter portion of 3 Bobotie Spring Rolls, which come on a bed of tasty mixed  salad wi

Harbour Lights: Good Food but BYO Wine

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Entrance to Harbour Lights To Harbour Lights restaurant for lunch. It's on the first floor, overlooking the boating activities of Gordon's Bay old harbour. It used to be the premier restaurant in Gordon's Bay offering old fashioned elegance and service with a wide ranging, eclectic, interesting and tempting wine list. When we arrived at 13:10 there was not a soul in the place and we had to shout into the kitchen to eventually rouse a waitron. The menu hadn't seemed to have changed, but the winelist looked sponsored by one of the big distributors. There are only four Sauvignon Blancs - reliable but boring brands Beach House & Tall Horse, plus Franschhoek Cellars and Niel Joubert. But only Beach House was available by the bottle. The other three had already been opened for previous diners (when?) who'd bought by the glass. Non delivery by their supplier was blamed. Hummpph. We're in the Cape and there are hundreds of great wineries within a short distance with

Spier Eight Restaurant

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To Spier and their Farm-toTable Eight Restaurant for lunch. I had made a booking and had received email confirmation but that hadn't reached the restaurant.  The welcome was muted at best, but we were given a table. We ordered Farmer Angus pasture-reared beef burger with double smoked bacon, coleslaw, hand cut chips. No cheese, thank goodness. Offered a choice of still or sparkling water and requested second. Still water was brought and poured. The bottle for this interestingly said it was captured from the air and sterilised by ultra-violet. Seems to be water from a de-humidifer unit in the restaurant. Wine was offered chilled or room-temperature. We chose chilled (the room temperature was in the high 20s) and the superb 21 Gables Pinotage 2016 was served cool. The burger meat was excellent, with a good bun covered in a thick mix of seeds. Coleslaw was mostly mayonnaise and plastered thickly on the lower bun-half making it soggy. The bacon was 99% fat, white, not crisp. Quite hor

When it's Yellow, Let it Mellow

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Sign seen in toilets of Dock of the Bay restaurant, Gordons Bay

Fizz 'n' Burger at The House of J C Le Roux

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Finding Spier restaurant closed we drove up to Devon Valley and sparkling wine specialist  The House of J C Le Roux . It was a hot day and so we sat in the air-conditioned inside, rather than the deck we've sat in the past. There was a good view over the car park and valley to the distant mountains The place was very quiet, with just one car in the car park and one other table occupied at 13:30 but more people came later. Champagne flutes were on each table and asking for a sparkling wine was insufficient since the wine list had 16 with just two token still wines as guests. Joan selected the J C le Roux MCC Brut, a blend of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay made by the Method Cap Classique, i.e. traditional method of secondary fermentation on the final bottle. It was delicious Champagne quality wine. To eat we chose the hamburgers without the bacon, cheese and avocado (?) toppings, but with a green salad. Sweet bread and individually wrapped in waxed paper sticks of butter came first. The

Desalination Pipes Installed

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On Sunday this inlet pipe was in the harbour car park. Monday it had gone. Midweek the harbour was clear of pipes, ships and inflatables.  One of the workman told me they had been using Gordons Bay old harbour to assemble the pipeline.  At the weekend the water inlet pipe had been delivered, and that had gone on Monday, taken out to sea by one of the ships moored in the harbour. I'd seen two of the pipes  being attached to each other on Monday and  being pulled out by an inflatable. They were working into the dark and we could see the lights of the two rig ships all night in the bay. So, the water inlet is around 800 metres off the coast, the sea water pumped through 800m of pipe to Monwabisi Beach, by the township of Khaeyitsha where it will be processed to create 7 million litres of drinking water every day which will be pumped using underground pipes via a reservoir for Cape Town. This is the first of 7 such projects and is a month ahead of schedule. They now just need to test t

Back to Ocean Basket

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Second time to  Ocean Basket this trip, which is a pleasant walk on the sand around the curve of Gordon's Bay to the new harbour. We sat outside this time and Joan had her favourite ofsix King Prawns with chips (R179 same as last year but favourable exchange rate equates it to a pound less at £10.85) with a Village Salad. I had cajun (i.e. blackened) kingklip and chips and Village Salad and we shared a bottle of delicious Durbanville Hills Sauvignon Blanc 2017 (R144). View from our table over new harbour View from our table over harbour breakwater and False Bay to Hottentot Hollands mountains. Ship in bay is laying desalination pipes .

Gordons Bay Desalination Pipeline

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Taken today.  They're constructing a 80 metre pipe at Gordons Bay old harbour to bring in sea water to a desalination plant. It's supposed to be live in March producing drinking quality water......   There are about half a dozen workers there, a couple of divers, forklift truck driver, supervisor and a couple on the pipe in the background. Not a lot of urgency and I would lay money its not going to be live by March this year.   It's not clear to me where the desalination plant will be located, newspaper reports suggest it will be at Harmony Park resort which is 4 km along the coast from Gordons Bay harbour (?) .

50 Litres of Water from Today

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From today,1 February, our limit from the public water supply falls to 50 litres per person per day. Sign in our bathroom There's the expectation that water will completely run out on 12 April -- Day Zero -- leaving people to collect a 25L ration from tankers or standpipes. I find it hard to visualise 50 litres, but that equates to flushing the toilet just five times. The 50 litres is not just for that, but also bathing, washing clothes, drinking, cooking and everything. We only flush the loo when necessary. We don't let any water go down sink plugholes and scoop water we use to wash, dishwash and teeth clean from sink into a bucket which we pour down loo after No. 1s.  Instead of boiling veg we're buying ready prepared veg that is microwaved in its bag. We're buying ready meals that can be microwaved and are eating them out of their containers to save washing plates.  In the big Pick'n'Pay supermarket several people were buying huge plastic drums to store water

Marine Hotel, Hermanus

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Another tradition is to drive from Gordons Bay on the dramatic coastal road to lunch at The Marine Hotel  perched on Hermanus's cliffs overlooking Walker Bay. The restaurant has a new name - Origins - but some of the old dishes remain. Richmans (always one word) Fish and Chips, taken from hotel owner Liz McGrath's  cookbook  has lost its title and the chips no longer come in a Hermanus Times paper cone, but the chips are mega crispy and so is the hake's craft beer batter. Joan had Grilled LM prawns on fragrant rice with chilli jam , and a bottle of Southern Right Sauvignon Blanc 2017 from the vineyard just a few miles down the road is a perfect match. It's overcast in Hermanus with a brisk breeze, but these trees on the pavement cheer us with their colourful plate-sized flowers. .