Food and family

Libby, Arabella and Simon survey the tent before the party

Libby, Arabella and Simon survey the tent before the party

Last weekend was a big one for the Waghorn family. Simon turned 50 and we threw him a big party at Astrolabe Farm. Sadly, none of us took many pictures but hopefully some that my aunt Nicki took will surface soon. A great time was had by all – particular highlight for me was watching Dad pogo-ing around the dancefloor to the B52′s later on in the evening…

Having the whole family together (along with lots of extended family and old friends) got us thinking about the next big occasion in the family calendar – Christmas. Every family has their traditional Christmas (or other seasonal holiday) foods and recipes. We’d like to share one of ours, the Christmas Cake. It’s not that original but , as for many other families, the making of the Christmas cake carries with it a lot of meaning and memories.

Ruthie using the Christmas Cake recipe for Jane & Simon's wedding cake

Ruthie using the Christmas Cake recipe for Jane & Simon's wedding cake

Our recipe comes from our maternal grandmother (Jane’s mother) Ruth Forrest. Our lovely Nana is sadly in a home suffering from severe dementia but we think of her often, particularly in the kitchen as she was a phenomenal cook. This is Nana’s recipe and the copy we have is precious to us, as it is hand written by her. The hard copies of recipes are so evocative, this one has the smears and smudges of a well used recipe as well as the conversions and additions written by my mother, Jane (and a few extras from Dad/Simon). It’s a very visual reminder of my family tree.

This cake has been a Christmas Cake, a wedding cake and a Christening cake in our family. The lucky way to make it is to let everyone stick their hands into it and mix it up a little.

Here’s the recipe:

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Ruth’s Christmas Cake

625gms Butter

250gms Brown sugar

250 gms White sugar

750 gms Flour

12 eggs

Tbsp almond

1 kg Currants

1 kg Sultanas

375 gms Sunmaid raisins

125 gms cherries

60 gms almonds

250gms peel

2 tsp cinnamon

pinch nutmeg

1/2 cup brandy

Pour brandy over fruit – I leave overnight. Better to line tin the day before also (easier next day). Cream butter & sugar, add essence. Add egg yolks & mix well (little flour with eggs [I can't quite read this bit - Meg.] won’t curdle.

Next add flour & fruit [and SPICE! - Simon's note]. Lastly beaten egg whites.

Cook six hours in lined tin, light cardboard base – newspaper folded about 3 thick then grease proof. Paper above tin about 2 inches – I put piece of cardboard over cake [can't read here! - Meg] about an hour, won’t burn but smells like it will. [Some hard to read instructions about lining tin]. Bake 300 for 1 hour then 250 – cook 6 hours – place middle – tray underneath.

Use 1/2 recipe will be big enough. 1/2 cooking time – don’t panic if getting too brown – turn to 200. Don’t open oven too much.

Leave in tin until cold, then remove.

Good luck.

- Ruth (& Meg)

Meg, Libby and Bella making the Christmas Cake

Meg, Libby and Bella making the Christmas Cake

South of the border…

Sunday 11th October

I am writing this blog beside the pool over looking Acapulco Bay. It is a long way physically and philosophically from Astrolabe Farm. However it is very impressive and I feel a little like Alice in Wonderland.

Simon, Murray & Yolanda eating Tacos

 We have flown to Mexico to meet our importers Murray Bindon and his beautiful wife Yolanda Estrada.

 So we are here on big sister (Astrolabe) business and on Tuesday we begin the meet and greet before a function on Wednesday. However Murray is showing some interest in Durvillea as well. Mexico is a relatively new market for us and this is our first trip. It is a wonderful chance to promote the wine, gain some understanding of the market here and strengthen relationships . However right now we are staying at Yolanda and Murray’s apartment here on the beach. Perfecto.

This is another aspect of the wine business. We get to travel. I never take this for granted and I am always grateful for the opportunity to see countries and places. When we travel we have the advantage of being with locals and learning a little about the culture and life. So this morning we mounted an expedition to Walmart!

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Friday 16th October

It has been a busy week. After our relaxing start at the beach we drove back to Mexico City fully recovered from jetlag and and opportunity to see a little of the countryside. We met with Yves and Pierre from Cavas de Francia who distribute the wine. Astrolabe samples had been released but the first shipment was held up in customs. Fingers crossed it will be released soon. IMG_0646That evening Simon presented the wines to an impressive group of about 80.  Yves translated as our Spanish is non existent.

The next day we lead a tutored tasting at Citimarket  which is an upmarket supermarket. Simon had had an interview with the Food and Wine editor of La Reforma the local paper earlier in the day. Today he had another interview with a columnist from the same paper.

Tomorrow we head home. Mexico has been a fantastic place to visit and I hope the wines do well here. Looking forward to getting home and seeing how the chooks, cat, garden and everyone are. Big week next week as Libby turns 22 and Simon 50!!!!!!!!

- Jane

Sophie’s Wrap Up

Not the weekend just been but the weekend before I was up in Auckland, I was up there to support some of the retailers that have been selling our wine, by going to visit them and doing tastings in their stores.

Bella at Farro's

Bella, my cousin now lives up there so she came along to help me out- along with the help of my trusty GPS to get us around Auckland!

While I was up there for a few Astrolabe tastings, we managed to fit a Durvillea one in concurrently at Farro’s (80 Lunn Ave, Mt Wellington, Auckland), where we had a fantastic response, with the savvy walking out the door! Farro’s is a fabulous “fresh food concept store” which is a great store to have our wine in, and the sort of store that I wouldn’t mind Blenheim getting!

After Auckland I was back down to Blenheim to look after the office.  Jane and Simon have been away on Astrolabe work in Mexico for the last ten days, only arriving back yesterday. They were over there learning about the market, meeting our distributors and doing tastings and events. There is even a possibility that we may try send Durvillea there at some point!

Tim tasting off

Tim tasting off

While they were over there we have been organising exports and bottlings for our wines, both Astrolabe and Durvillea.  Meg and I have also been organising a couple of interviews on Durvillea and the girls that will be coming out in the next few weeks.

As the 2009 Durvillea Sauvignon Blanc, was bottled on Friday afternoon, I went out to Wineworks with Tim to see how it all worked. Before the bottling took place we were given samples of the bottled wine to “taste off” which is essentially just trying the wine from the bottle to check it tastes ok. After that we went down to the bottling line where they had it already to go.

Once we okay’ed it to the guys there, and decided on the height of the label it was all ready to go.  We watched a pallet (56 cases) go through to see if there were any issues then we left them to it.

The bottling ran smoothly, and ended up being done ahead of schedule, a very good thing, especially on a Friday. Durvillea front labels on the bottling lineThis week has been quite busy, with two long weekends in a row coming up (Marlborough Anniversary is the weekend after Labour weekend). There is a lot to make sure you have done by the required dates, in particular, making sure samples will be where they need to be at the right time, and ensuring that all the export documents are completeted.

On a more exciting note, Meg and the girls are coming home for the weekend as it is Simon’s 50th, so I am looking forward to catching up with them.DSCF0335

Who’s that girl? Introducing Arabella!

bellaball2cropThe fifth ‘Who’s that girl?’ interview in an occasional series – questions and write up from Meg.

Born in sunny Gisborne in 1990, Bella is the baby of the Forrest-Waghorn family. She’s in her first year of a fine arts degree & BA at university and contributes an eye for design and a palate beyond her years to the Durvillea team. Arabella is a pretty busy girl but always finds time to help out with tastings in the Auckland area – in fact she and Sophie will be at Farro’s from 2:30 -5:30 tomorrow! (Saturday 10th October).

What is your role at Durvillea?: 

So far I have been helping with tastings in stores, I also help out at home with tastings and functions.  I suppose because I am home more than the others I am often involved in discuss visual look of the brand with Jane (ma).

Where do you live?:

Half of the time at home at in Grovetown on Astrolabe Farm  and half in Auckland in a hostel during the university term. I am in my first year of study at the university of Auckland  studying arts and fine arts

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Arabella at Sponge Bay, Gisborne.

 How has your family being in the wine industry impacted on you?:

I spent a lot of time hanging out and playing at wineries, drawing on white boards and those gigantic office pads, climbing on the tanks, riding on pallet jacks  and  investigating the lab. I remember when I started high school and all my friends were really excited and fascinated by the science labs but to me they were pretty normal.

 Any childhood memories of being a winemaker’s daughter?: 

Definitely having a winery as your playground, which had perfect concrete for riding your scooter! The mysterious witches garden behind the winery and eating too many sour grapes from the vines.

What’s your favourite thing about coming home to Marlborough?: 

Being at the farm, relaxing and catching up on sleep, and the endless supply of my favourite tasty home grown foods, garlic, basil,  raspberries, redcurrants and  lemons.

Arabella enjoying some of her favourite Astrolabe Farm produce

Arabella enjoying some of her favourite Astrolabe Farm produce

Any Blenheim local knowledge or tips you’d like to share?: 

Well my favourite place is definitely Cruzies cafe, we have been going there for as long as I remember, I love the decor with its old plates and kitchenware. If you go be sure to have a mince savoury –  my personal favourite is the potato top which sadly no longer fits in my gluten-less diet.

Cruizies Cafe in Blenheim

Cruizies Cafe in Blenheim

What do you like about Auckland?:

After being at boarding school in the very chilly Christchurch it is nice to be in a sub-tropical climate. I also enjoy living in the busy centre of the city with walking distance to all the nice shops, cafes and galleries.

What’s your favourite wine?: 

Savingon blanc, I was practically reared on it (just kidding) but it ismy favourite variety, perhaps because I have grown up in a region that excels at it so I have never had a bad glass. My favourite red wine possibly ever and I’m not just saying that is the Durvillea Pinot Noir, I love the lightness of it and the bright raspberry and fruit flavours.

Arabella in Italy, the home of some of her favourite things - pizza, pasta & red wine!

Arabella in Italy, the home of some of her favourite things - pizza, pasta & red wine!

 

 And a meal to go with it?:

With the Durvillea Pinot Noir I would have one of my specialty pizzas which I have been able to successfully develop into a gluten free version, it has to have plenty of parmesan, fresh basil, pesto, feta, cherry tomatoes, kalamata olives and blackball salami.

Who would you recommend Durvillea wines to?:

Probably someone a bit older than me, I fear  my peers would just funnel it!

Can you sum up the Durvillea range for us?: 

 Seaweed, my mother and my sisters – oh and the wine (thanks Pa).

Libby, Meg and Arabella.

Libby, Meg and Arabella.

aaaaaaaaargh…..A green tale

 There are several strands to the Durvillea story. So far you have met some of the people involved, the women of our family. From me you have heard a little about our life at Astrolabe and it is from here that the green strand evolves. Another aspect is that we are real people with a real story to tell. Durvillea is not brand that will disappear as the sauvalanche of 08 ebbs away.

It isn’t easy being  green of any shade. So what shade is Durvillea? Well I’m not sure. I suppose it depends how you measure it. Claiming to be environmentally friendly is a dangerous game. How do you measure it? Do you need to pay up to be certified as carbon neutral , how do measure that carbon footprint? So what words do you use to describe a way of living.

For me this is part of my everyday life. So this is what do we do.

Jane's bike at Astrolabe Farm beside her Olive Oil

Jane's bike at Astrolabe Farm beside her Olive Oil and recycling baskets. How green is that?!

I recycle.I take my own bags shoping. I grow vegetables and keep chickens, produce our own wine and olive oil. I buy freerange pork and chicken. I ride my bike to work when I can. I always hang my washing outside or on the verandah. I don’t spray the roses or the olives. We mulch all the pruning’s from the property. We drive small cars. We have extensive gardens and trees. We are planting an area of the vineyard as a firewood coppice. The idea is that the carbon absorbed from the atmosphere as the tree grows balances the carbon released during combustion.

Alder trees for coppicing firewood

Alder trees for coppicing firewood

Sounds good, maybe apple green.

But…..

I use roundup to control weeds, I buy coffee from overseas, I fly overseas to sell wine and sometimes just for pleasure, the mulcher  runs off a diesel tractor, I still buy commercial cleaning products.  Okay pale apple green.

So that is how we live but what about the wine. Well, we have a vineyard and we are part of the sustainable vineyard programme as are all the vineyards we source fruit from. They are all certified or working towards it. There is one who isn’t, they are heading the biodynamic way. That makes them bright green and rapidly getting darker.

So when we began Durvillea I wanted to think about how we could make the product itself more environmentally sensitive, aware, lessen the footprint,be more sustainable. The easiest way I thought was to use a lighter weight bottle. Now traditionally the weight of the bottle is equated with quality of the wine. I don’t get it. I don’t really care how big the punt is. However the problem with using a light weight bottle means they are not as strong and when stacked in pallets this can be a problem. In our first run we had a few problems. However aside from the energy used to produce glass it means we  can put more bottles in a container  which means less carbon footprint. Hooray- a measurable thing.

Durvillea Cartons

Durvillea Cartons

Then we decided to use cardboard cartons without overgloss and a limited amount of inks. However when they get wet they get soggy. Then we used a label made from recycled materials but when the wine was put in an icebucket the labels scuffed. We have had to revert to a normal label until we can source a more suitable recycled paper. We have continued with the carton and a light weight bottle. We are trying. It’s not easy being green.

So what colour green am I? I haven’t done the sums, I am sensitive, aware, and my footprint is pretty average. I think sustainable is the word I would use. I think that makes me seaweed green.

PS. Meg is going to teach me to make cleaning products  when she comes home next.

Jane's hedge

Jane's hedge

 

 

 

 

 

PPS. I’ve been trimming the hedges at Astrolabe Farm, and this is what I’m aiming for…..

Hedge friends (Edendale, Southland)

Hedge friends (Edendale, Southland)

Sophie’s Wrap Up:October Promo and The Winery

It has been another busy week, Jane and Simon left Blenheim on Monday bound for Invercargill. A roadshow that they do every year with our South Island rep Preston Clark. This year they even managed to pick up Pops (Jane’s father, our grandad) and take him down for the ride!
Kaikoura Coast on Simon and Jane's trip down. If you look closely you can see the Durvillea in the middle of the picture
Kaikoura Coast on Simon and Jane’s trip down. If you look closely you can see the Durvillea in the middle of the picture
It  is normally just an Astrolabe thing, but they managed to tie in Durvillea as well this year, doing a few tastings along the way.
low res tim in winery

Tim in the winery, checking on the wines

While they have been down south it has been all go here. Tim has been doing trials and final adjustments for the 2009 Durvillea Sauvignon Blanc, particulary looking looking at the balance and structure of the wine, to get it just right! We have just booked in a bottling date for the 16th October.

The 2009 Durvillea Pinot Noir is a work in progress, it is still in barrel and we are waiting for the malolactic fermentation (MLF) to finish (rounds and and softens the palate) before we finish this wine ready for bottling.

Photo may have been digitally enhanced!

Photo may have been digitally enhanced!

While Tim has been looking after the winery and production side I have been organising a new promotion for Durvillea. This is for the month of October and is to encourage people to load up fan photos of themselves drinking Durvillea. While the one I have put up is of a a friend and I in Greece earlier this year, you get the point of what I’m hoping we’ll get some people doing( though not necessarily photoshopped). Especially with an incentive of a 6pack of wine to win! (Visit www.facebook.com/durvilleawines for more information)

I am off to Seafest this weekend in Kaikoura, but I look forward to looking at photos of you all drinking Durvillea in different places on Monday morning. Have a great weekend, and I’ll leave you with a couple more photos of Jane and Simon’s trip down south. -Sophie

Simon and Sam (my brother) on Sam's 21st (29th Sept) , Nova Cafe Dunedin
Simon and Sam (my brother) on Sam’s 21st (29th Sept) , Nova Cafe Dunedin
The Railway Hotel, Simon, Jane, and Pops' accommodation, Invercargill
The Railway Hotel, Simon, Jane, and Pops’ accommodation, Invercargill
Jane and Pops in Bluff
Jane and Pops in Bluff