The year of the big chef shake-out

Monday, 22 December, 2014
Graham Howe
The Stellenbosch winelands again dominated the Eat Out Restaurant Awards in 2014, taking seven of the top twenty nominations. Graham Howe tastes the trends.

The Mercedes-Benz Eat Out Awards 2014 got underway to the soundtrack of Oliver ringing through the aircraft hangar at Thunder City. The musical street urchin sang “Food, glorious food, hot sausage and mustard! While we’re in the mood, cold jelly and custard! Peas, pudding and saveloy. What next is the question? Rich gentlemen have it boys …In-di-gestion!” Unlike Oliver, we dined on trendy street food like bread, saucisson and mustard, and cold caciotta custard - paired with fine wine and beer.

The year 2014 will be remembered as a year of musical chairs in the winelands. Many of the country’s top chefs upped and moved - led by Chris Erasmus who left Pierneef at La Motte (rated #10 by Eat Out in 2013) to open Foliage in Franschhoek, PJ Vadas who left Camphors at Vergelegen (rated #8 last year) to open The Hog House, Nic van Wyk (ex Terroir/La Colombe) who left Diemersdal to open Bistro 13 at Welmoed Winery, Gerald van der Walt who left The Greenhouse (#4 last year) to join The Tasting Room and Jackie Cameron who left Hartford House (#5 last year) to open her culinary academy. The big chef shake-out is reflected in this year’s Eat Out Awards.

Wine tourism has made the Cape winelands a global gastronomic destination over the last decade. Stellenbosch consolidated its role as the culinary epicentre of the winelands in 2014, led by front-runners Jordan (rated #5), Overture (#6), Rust en Vrede (#7) and Terroir (#10) named in the Eat Out Top 10 Restaurant Awards 2014. And three more Stellenbosch restaurants were again among the top twenty nominees, on the inside looking in: Makaron, Tokara and The Restaurant at Waterkloof.

New cellar-door restaurants fared well in the Eat Out Awards in 2014 with first-time entry The Restaurant at Newton-Johnson Vineyards (#9) in Walker Bay making The Top 10 under new chef Eric Bulpitt (ex-Roundhouse). Equus Dine at Cavalli winery in Stellenbosch was another newcomer - winning the Boschendal Style Award while Margot Janse at The Tasting Room soared to #3, and took the Grolsch Service Award.

Even the Eat Out Awards moved closer to the winelands this year. The annual Oscars of the restaurant trade - billed as “the biggest chef’s table we’ve ever hosted” - took place at Thunder City at Cape Town airport. A cast of over 800 industry guests enjoyed a five-course glitz and glam dinner prepared by a few of the country’s top chefs - charcuterie, the best dish of the evening, by Neil Jewell of Bread & Wine (top 20 nominee), with courses by David Higgs of Five Hundred (#2), George Jardine of Jordan (#5) and PJ Vadas (ex-Vergelegen), and Bertus Basson of Overture (#6).

While the winelands dominated the pack, city restaurants took the top Eat Out awards. Luke Dale-Roberts of The Test Kitchen in Cape Town won the Eat Out restaurant of the year in 2014 and the #1 spot in the top 10 for the third year running - while Chantel Darnell of Restaurant Mosaic (#4) at Orient near Pretoria won Eat Out chef of the year for the second time in the Eat Out Top 10. David Higgs of Five Hundred at The Saxon (#2) and DW Eleven-13 (#8) were the other two Gauteng restaurants in an annual competition which has been dominated by Cape restaurants over the years.

Speaking at the awards ceremony, Abigail Donnelly, Eat Out editor and chief judge, identified 2014 as a year of change in the industry which has seen chefs moving around and the appearance of newcomers. She focused on what she calls “glocal” food (global + local) - and identified the edgy culinary trends on South African menus as foraging, the use of special cuts (especially the use of pork) and the rediscovery of the arts of smoking, pickling and fermenting ingredients in the kitchen. She especially praised chefs for “using their plates as a form of South African storytelling”. Abigail was assisted by judges Arnold Tanzer, Kate Wilson, Reuben Riffel and Andy Fenner.

The major trend over the last decade is how the Cape winelands have come to dominate the Eat Out Top 10. A super club of Cape chefs have consistently won top ten places since 2005 - led, ranked in order, by Margot Janse at The Tasting Room (eight times), George Jardine at Jordan (five) and Jardine/CT (twice), Bertus Basson at Overture (seven), Luke Dale-Roberts (four times at The Test Kitchen, twice at La Colombe, twice best chef of the year), Michael Broughton at Terroir (six), David Higgs at Rust en Vrede (four) and Five Hundred (twice), Peter Tempelhoff at The Greenhouse (thrice) and Grande Provence, and Neil Jewell of Bread & Wine (twice).

The rising young stars to watch over the next year include top twenty nominees such as Vanessa Marx of The White Room at Dear Me in Cape Town, Arno Janse van Rensburg of The Kitchen @ Maison Winery in the Franschhoek Wine Valley and Gregory Czarnecki at The Restaurant at Waterkloof (twice winner of best gourmet restaurant at Klink Wine Tourism 2013/2014 and best wine tourism restaurant at Great Wine Capitals Awards 2014) as well as Tanja Kruger at Makaron and master saucier Nic van Wyk who opened Bistro 13 at Welmoed Winery in late 2014.

If last year’s shock omission was Terroir at Kleine Zalze - a regular Eat Out Top 10 winner, returning at #10 in 2014 - this year’s talking point is the non-appearance of Peter Tempelhoff’s The Greenhouse in the Constantia Wine Valley (rated #4 last year - and past chef/restaurant of the year winner). Master chef judge Peter Goffe-Wood paid a moving tribute to kindred spirit Bruce Robertson, former chef of One at The Cape Grace and The Showroom (past winner of Eat Out Top 10), who passed away recently. Quoting gonzo writer Hunter S Thompson, he said, “The only people who know where the edge is have gone over it. Bruce was a maverick, an outlaw, free-thinker and a genius.” South Africa is a poorer place without a chef of his calibre.

At the end of the evening, Janis Joplin belted out on the speakers, “Oh lord won’t you buy me a Mercedes-Benz. My friends all drive Porsches, I must make amends” as the new sponsors gave winning chef Luke Dale-Roberts of The Test Kitchen with a new model-C. I drove home with Oliver ringing in my ears, “Food, glorious food. What is there more handsome? Gulped, swallowed or chewed, still worth a king’s ransom ...”

* The Eat Out 500 Guide 2014 is on sale at R49 - see www.eatout.co.za. Graham Howe has been a reviewer for Eat Out for the past decade - and judges for the Klink Awards for Wine Tourism South Africa 2014: see www.winetourismsouthafrica.co.za

Graham Howe

Graham Howe is a well-known gourmet travel writer based in Cape Town. One of South Africa's most experienced lifestyle journalists, he has contributed hundreds of food, wine and travel features to South African and British publications over the last 25 years.

He is a wine and food contributor for wine.co.za, which is likely the longest continuous wine column in the world, having published over 500 articles on this extensive South African wine portal. Graham also writes a popular monthly print column for WineLand called Howe-zat.

When not exploring the Cape Winelands, this adventurous globetrotter reports on exotic destinations around the world as a travel correspondent for a wide variety of print media, online, and radio.

Over the last decade, he has visited over seventy countries on travel assignments from the Aran Islands and the Arctic to Borneo and Tristan da Cunha - and entertained readers with his adventures through the winelands of the world from the Mosel to the Yarra.