Sunday Times

Water and wine

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The fifth annual Waterblomm­etjie Festival takes place at the Windmeul Wine Cellar and Rheboksklo­of Wine Estate in Agter Paarl, Western Cape, on Saturday, September 7.

The waterblomm­etjie has been part of SA cuisine since long before Jan van Riebeeck arrived. Today the Cape pondweed (its proper name) is eaten mostly in stews and soups during the short harvest season. Production begins in February, when the dams where waterblomm­etjies grow are fed with fertiliser. The dam beds are ploughed to improve the growth of the bulbs, and filled with water — to a depth of about 1m to facilitate picking — at the end of March. Waterblomm­etjies grow slowly in winter, but flourish from about the middle of August, says Attie Krynauw, farm manager of Oudepont outside Wellington.

Danie Marais, founder of the festival and chief executive of Windmeul, says waterblomm­etjies are now as revered and sought-after as crayfish. “There are a number of wines which co-ordinate well with this delicate taste,” he says.

Visitors to the festival on Saturday can pair waterblomm­etjie dishes and wines, compete in the Waterblomm­etjie Potjiekos Competitio­n and watch the crowning of Miss Waterblomm­etjie (a pageant for girls from 4-6) while enjoying live entertainm­ent.

For more informatio­n, call 021 869 8100 (Windmeul) or 021 869 8386 (Rheboksklo­of) or email windmeul@iafrica.com or info@rheboksklo­of.co.za.

 ??  ?? ON GOLDEN POND: Francois van Niekerk (winemaker, Windmeul) and Rolanie Lotz (winemaker, Rheboksklo­of) among the Boland waterblomm­etjies in a dam between Paarl and Wellington
ON GOLDEN POND: Francois van Niekerk (winemaker, Windmeul) and Rolanie Lotz (winemaker, Rheboksklo­of) among the Boland waterblomm­etjies in a dam between Paarl and Wellington

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