Mail & Guardian

Local is luscious for SA foodies

Using traditiona­l ingredient­s such as amasi is one of the ways our top chefs are making tastebuds sing

- Abigail Donnelly

As the editor of Eat Out and chief judge for the Eat Out Mercedes-Benz Restaurant awards, I get to eat out a lot — and to tell you what I think is really great (or not). With the awards coming up next month, we can begin to sum up where we’re at this year. What have top South African restaurant­s been serving? What impressed the judges? What can diners expect in the coming months?

Trends

Chefs are making diners smile with their imaginativ­e creations, telling stories, pushing boundaries and celebratin­g local ingredient­s and people.

Bread has been elevated with the use of amasi and ash butter as accompanim­ents, and buttermilk is in everything from dressings to desserts. Pork is still big — cheeks, jowls and belly, slow-cooked and pulled — but beef has also been celebrated at restaurant­s like Camphors at Vergelegen in Somerset West (tender tongue, cheek, sirloin, brisket and rump) and Jordan Restaurant in Stellenbos­ch (aged Chalmar rump with herb crust and veal sweetbread­s).

Vegetarian dishes are also very exciting and imaginativ­e, and chefs are showing more considerat­ion of sustainabi­lity, especially for seafood.

Floral notes of rose and jasmine are at the forefront of desserts — I’ve seen hibiscus glass broken into splinters and made into powder — and meringue shards are another new texture, even a p p e a r i n g i n s mo k e d form in a duck dish at the Test Kitchen in Cape Town.

While the food is always the priority — it makes up 70% of the judges’ scorecard — service is improving too. It’s been amazing to see the standard of wine service soar. Young sommeliers’ personalit­ies are coming through, and their approachab­le and unassuming manner is a breath of fresh air.

Star dishes

I have had plenty of outstandin­g dishes during the past judging season, but one of the truly memorable was chef Michael Broughton’s vegetarian ravioli at Terroir in Stellenbos­ch. Soft and silky pillows of courgette-filled pasta were accompanie­d by parmesan cream and porcini purée, and then smothered in a beautifull­y light and acidic tomatobutt­er sauce. A plate of heaven.

Then, at La Colombe’s new spot up on Silvermist Wine Estate in Constantia, I loved chef Scot Kirton’s “tin of tuna”, which, incidental­ly, will be served at the Eat Out Mercedes-Benz Restaurant Awards.

The tongue-in-cheek concept is a tin can that you peel open to reveal the most delicate Asian tuna amuse-bouche.

The Belnori Forest Phantom cheese by chef Gregory Czarnecki at Waterkloof wine estate was also on another level: a round of goat cheese rolled in ash and served with slices of truffled pear and pistachio brittle. The dish really celebrated the cheese and was a great example of how simplicity on the plate doesn’t mean it’s easy to execute.

The standout dish at Restaurant Mosaic just outside Pretoria, in the trademark playful style of 2014 Chef of the Year Chantel Dartnall, was the Alchemist’s Infusion. For this minimalist dish, a selection of flowers, from gladiolus and rose to hibiscus and fennel, was infused into an aromatic broth in a glass globe right at the table, and then poured over three medallions of West Coast rock lobster. Phenomenal.

Food of the future

Where South Africa’s top chefs go from here depends on their philosophy. Some want to cook more simply, focusing on quality ingredient­s that become the hero on the plate.

Then there are chefs who are constantly working to offer the customer a culinary journey of mind-blowing imaginatio­n.

Restaurant­s of this standard have just one chance at wooing and wowing the customer on that special occasion.

Sustainabi­lity will also be a focus in future. Not one restaurant can say it’s fully sustainabl­e, but a lot of the chefs have this thinking entrenched in their philosophy, and Eat Out will be acknowledg­ing their passion and commitment at the awards this year.

 ?? Photo: Trish Erasmus ?? Flower power: Chef Chantel Dartnall’s Alchemist Infusion at Restaurant Mosaic in Pretoria.
Photo: Trish Erasmus Flower power: Chef Chantel Dartnall’s Alchemist Infusion at Restaurant Mosaic in Pretoria.

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