Wines of South Africa on show in the UK, October 2010

Wines of South Africa will be showing some of the 2010 vintages in Edinburgh and London in October 2010.


South Africa – A Decade On
The South African wine industry has arguably gone through more change in the last ten years than any other wine producing nation. As the country comes down from the high of hosting the FIFA World Cup and is still basking in the most positive global image to date, we take time to reflect on the past ten years and ask what the future holds.  Wine industry pioneers 
Kevin ArnoldPeter Finlayson, Kathy Jordan and Adi Badenhorst will present wines that encapsulate the developments of the industry and give their own personal views and experiences on how South African wine has been transformed. 
Places are limited for the seminar, so please book your place if you would like to attend. 


Venue: The Merchants’ Hall, 22 Hanover Street, Edinburgh
Date:  Monday 25th October 2010
Time:  10am – 5pm

Venue:  The Great Halls, Vinopolis, No. 1 Bank End, London
Date: Thursday 28th October
Trade tasting: 10.30am – 5pm

Trade and media only 

searching for the American dream, from the top of the Paardeberg…

Adi chats to Neil Pendock about his recent trip to the United States, and the dream of breaking into the American market with a small South African brand.

From Pendock’s blog on Times Live...

Is selling wine in the US any different to selling wine in SA?
Not many people in the US know who Tin Tin is, but the principles remain the same – building relationships for the long term and working with people you like. These people must understand your wines/story/philosophy and be able to relate to these, in your absence, to the consumers. And, of course, you want good wine ratings.
Do blends work in the US?
Our two premium wines under the AA Badenhorst range are both blends – a red and a white – and the response to these was fantastic. At the price they are selling in the US, they will probably move mainly through the restaurant trade, and blends give sommeliers a lot more to say to entice their customers. Blends allow sommeliers and restaurant owners to see another side of South African wines and realise it’s not only the wines from Europe that show the nuances of terroir.
Why did you decide to DIY and not sign up with a distributor, such as Cape Classics?
We have signed up with Broadbent Selections and a South African company, Knauth and Visser, which, like us, is a small company. But we share the same vision for our wines.
What do Americans make of SA wines?
There is a tremendous amount of interest in the wines coming out of SA. The enthusiasm is contagious and all of the people I met, from big specialist wine stores to the tiniest of restaurants, want to know more about South Africa and its wines. My feeling is that South Africa is ideally poised to make a bigger impact in this market than any of the other so-called new-world producers.
Did the 2010 Fifa World Cup raise American awareness of SA wines?
Without a doubt. With so many of the World Cup participants being wine-producing countries, most of the wine outlets ran concurrent tastings during the particular countries’ games.

Under the Influence of the Swartland


If you live in Cape Town or surroundings, be sure to book NOW for the Under the Influence of the Swartland wine tasting at the Roundhouse Restaurant in Camps Bay on September 22nd.


Brought to you by Under the Influence – this tasting promises to show you that the Swartland is producing some of South Africa’s most exciting wines, with its old bush vines expressing a lot of intensity of fruit. 


Producers such as Scali, Lammershoek, Spice Route and Sequillo will be explored alongside our very own wines. This is not a tasting to be missed!


The first ten bookings will even be Chauffeur driven to and from the tasting in luxurious Lexus vehicles at no charge…


Date:    Wednesday 22nd September
Time:   Starting at 6:30pm for 7pm
Venue: The Roundhouse Restaurant, Kloof Rd, Camps Bay
Cost:    R100 per Guest (includes wine and a light snack)



See here for more details


Adi fighting for the US market…

Adi returned from America on Wednesday, but here is a very nice article by American wine writer James Molesworth on Wine Spectator


I have decided to post the whole article here, since you need to be a subscriber to the site to read it all, and it is a nice insight into South African wines making name and getting a foot in the door of the US market. (And because he says some lovely things about Adi – and no, I am not refering to the wooly bear comment…)


Enjoy…



A Sit-Down with South Africa’s Adi Badenhorst

Making wine in Swartland, the Cape’s winemaking frontier
Posted: Jul 27, 2010 3:01pm ET
There are plenty of rock-star winemakers—cool guys and girls with cultivated hipster images making cool wines. And then there’s Adi Badenhorst, of South Africa’s A.A. Badenhorst family, who sat down with me here in my office today.
There’s nothing cultivated about his image: He’s a wooly bear, with a pony tail that looks like it’s been wrestled into submission, pork-chop sideburns and a former rugby player’s body. Talkative, loud, engaging and fully immersed in making wine, Badenhorst is currently carving out his own little corner of the Swartland in South Africa, working on the northern side of the Voor-Paardeberg ward, neighboring his good friend and fellow winemaker, Eben Sadie.
I first met Badenhorst, now 37, when he was working at the prominent Rustenberg winery, though he eventually left that cushy gig to start his own project, buying a 60-hectare, run down farm that caught his eye for its old bush vines, a motley collection of everything from Grenache, Syrah and Cinsault to Colombard, Fernão Pires, Verdelho, Palomino and Muscat.
“The place was pretty beaten up when we bought it in 2007,” said Badenhorst. “So it will take a while to get it back into shape. Stuff like Palomino and Muscat are there from when the older workers would graft vines here and there—good eating grapes for when they were out in the vineyards.”
“But the Grenache is the oldest planted in the Swartland, from 1951, and I’m buying in a little Chenin Blanc from 30- to 45-year-old vines too. There’s some great stuff here. We’re keeping everything but the Cabernet. We’ll add more Chenin, as well as Grenache Gris, Roussanne and Carignane,” he said.
After starting his own label, it took a while for Badenhorst to get his wines into the marketplace (I reviewed the debut releases, which didn’t make it here). It’s a part of the business side of things that Badenhorst expected, though still overwhelms him a bit.
“You can’t get out and do anything else,” said the fishing fan, half-exasperated, of the demands of running a small family estate (he runs it along with his wife, Cornelia). “You can’t get away. It’s not just making wines. There’s all the admin stuff, and paperwork and shipping and this and that. You have to do it to understand how much there is of it. Thank god Cornelia is there to yell at me once a day and get me going,” he added in his usual self-deprecating style.
As consuming as it might be, he’s hardly worn down by it. With a suntanned face, Badenhorst veers from wine to soccer back to wine to politics to rugby and back to wine again in his totally uninhibited, freewheeling style. His wines are an extension of himself in every way—the top red a blend of Shiraz, Mourvèdre, Cinsault and Grenache (the ’07 vintage will be available in the U.S. market, slated for a September release), the ’08 white an even more eclectic mix of Chenin Blanc, Roussanne, Grenache Blanc, Viognier, Verdelho and Chardonnay. Both are set to retail in the $35 to $40 range, a daunting task to Badenhorst, who admittedly doesn’t carry a lot of name recognition here, despite his popular status back home.
“Man, how are you going to get someone to pay $40 for a South African white that’s a blend of all that?” he asked incredulously. “Your three-tier system really gets in the way. I’m going to really need a guy in the shop who’s switched on to South Africa, and is passionate about the stuff to really push it for me.”
Badenhorst also has a second label, Secateurs, which will retail for $15. The red is a blend of Shiraz, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cinsault, Mourvèdre, Grenache and Carignane, the white made from only Chenin Blanc. The wines are traditionally made: Reds are not destemmed (the red varieties for the Secateurs are even cofermented) and fermented in either old oak casks or cement vats. Badenhorst aims for lower alcohols as well, rather than a fuller-blown profile. (As usual, formal reviews of the newest releases, based on official, blind tastings, will appear in the near future.)
“You give up a little bit of that sweet fruit profile, which I do like in some wines,” said Badenhorst. “But I prefer a little rough edge around my wines. I’ll never be accused of making the most perfect wines,” he said with a laugh.
The Swartland has become South Africa’s wine frontier, drawing a small, but growing cadre of young winemakers looking to make wine outside of the standard Cabernet Sauvignon or straight Syrah bottlings from the more prominent and established Stellenbosch and Paarl regions. Along with Sadie, Chris and Andrea Mullineux are also forging a path there, with their Mullineux label. Badenhorst, who spent time abroad at St.-Emilion’s Château Angélus, the Rhône’s Alain Graillot and elsewhere, fits right in with the rogue mix of personalities in the area. 
Here’s hoping that 1,000-watt personality helps open doors for him here, because the wines are worth it.
welcome home!

Farm fresh…

The Badenhorst Family will be at the Farmer’s Market at Windmeul Winery this Saturday, August the 7th.


Come meet Adi, have a chat, taste the wines. Cornelia is organising a puppet show in aid of young Samuel’s school. The ‘production’ is on show at 10am and again at 11.30 and stars local drama students.

This is the real deal farmers’ market with the freshest produce on offer (remember your coolbox!). Not your average flea market set-up, the focus is mainly on organic produce straight from the farms. 


The produce on offer on the day includes organic vegetables, vegetables, fruit, beef, lamb & mutton, chicken, pork, freshly baked bread, droëwors & biltong, cheese, biscuits and cakes, free-range eggs, jams and preserves, olives and olive oil, grapeseed oil, braai-wood. 


Bring the kids for a real farm style treat. 


The market is open from 8am to 1pm.


For more details and directions go to the website.

Wines on auction

The line up for the 2010 Cape Winemakers Guild Auction taking place at Spier, Stellenbosch in October has been released.


Adi, who made his debut at the 2008 auction, has had two wines selected this year, the only Botrytis dessert wine on auction, AA Badenhorst Family Wines Kalmoesfontein Semillon Noble Late Harvest Volume 2 2008 and his Auction Red 2005.


For more info see Diana Proctor’s blog and keep an eye on the CWG website.


It’s a revolution…


The cat it out of the bag, the red wine is spilled on the white table cloth, the revolution has started…

A Badenhorst Family Wines, Mullineux Family Wines, Porcelain Mountain Wines, Sequillo Cellars and The Sadie Family Wines
brings you the first annual Swartland Revolution Weekend.

When: 12 – 13 November 2010
Where: Riebeek Kasteel

Over the past 15 years the Swartland region has grown in stature and complexity and today there are enough contrasting wines to showcase this diversity over a weekend.

The aim of the revolutionary weekend is to raise general awareness of the area, and although there might be stylistic and philosophical differences in the wines to be showcased, they all share a common sense of place – as with all great wine regions of the world.

For the first forum we have invited Stefan Ogier from Domaine Michel & Stéphane Ogier from Ampuis, France. He is a world-renowned producer of fine Rhône wine.

There will also be tastings conducted by some of the local producers in formal and informal formats as well as great meals prepared by Reuben(of Reuben’s Restaurant fame) and local culinary hero Mynhardt Jouberof Bar Bar Black Sheep.

For more details including a teaser programme and booking informationvisit our website.


The Swartland is producing some of South Africa’s most exciting wines, with its old bush vines expressing a lot of intensity of fruit. Winemakers such as Eben Sadie and Adi Badenhorst have made their names in this incredible region with unique terroir and wine making styles. – Under the influence, June 2010

So, tired of fashonista cuvees, head out to Malmesbury to embrace the zeitgeist of zef wine – Neil Pendock, May 2010

There is unqualified respect for the area’s terroir and the wines it produces. In its favour are ancient soils, old bush vines and interesting grapes – from Chenin Blanc, red and white Grenache to Clairette Blanche and Shiraz. – WOSA