Laurens met and fell in love with Ansela van de Caab, a slave at the
Castle in Cape Town where he worked for the Dutch East India Company. He had a
deep love for the soil and had always dreamt of becoming a farmer. So, when the
Governor of the Cape, Simon van der Stel, granted him tenure of De Driesprong
in 1685 (renamed Muratie in 1911), he moved to the farm at the foot of the
Simonsberg Mountains. He frequently walked the 64 kilometres to Cape Town and
back, a three day trip, to see his beloved Ansela. This courtship at the Castle
continued for 14 years during which time Ansela and Laurens had three children.
Eventually Ansela learnt to speak Dutch and was baptised at the Castle,
enabling her to be emancipated in 1699, whereupon she and Laurens married and,
with their three children, settled on the farm. The oak tree Ansela planted to
bless their marriage still stands on Muratie, as does a small white house,
their first home, built for them by Laurens. Fittingly the other Muratie
flagship wine, a Cabernet Sauvignon-dominated red blend, is named Ansela van de
Caab.
MURATIE LAURENS CAMPHER 2014
In the Vineyard:
This
wine is made from meticulously sourced grapes from different sites and slopes.
Vineyards vary in age from 10 – 15 years old. The Chenin Blanc is from an old
north-facing bush vine block with low yields and good fruit purity.
In
the Cellar:
It
is a blend of 46% Chenin Blanc, 27% Sauvignon Blanc, 19% Verdelho and 8%
Viognier. 40% of the wine was fermented in first-fill barrels and the rest was
second- and third-fill 500 litre French Oak barrels, for a period of 8 months
in total.
Tasting Notes:
Lively
fresh lemon and lime notes from the Chenin and Sauvignon Blanc are given added
interest with fragrant floral hints from the Verdelho and Viognier components.
On the palate, the wine is elegant and complex with flavours of honeysuckle,
lime marmalade and fresh almonds, all wrapped in creamy oak. Zippy acidity runs
through the wine until the eminently satisfying, lengthy finish.
Food
Suggestions:
This
off-dry wine is best savoured with creamy chicken dishes, as well as mild,
aromatic spicy dishes such as curries.
Ageing
Potential:
This
wine can be enjoyed now or up to five years from now.
Retail price:
The Muratie Laurens Campher 2014 retails nationally
at ±R120.
Accolades received for previous vintages of Muratie
Laurens Campher:
Muratie
Laurens Campher 2013:
- Rated the best value white blend at the 2014 RECM Best
Value White Niche and White Blends tasting convened by Neil Pendock;
- Received
4½ Stars in the Platter’s 2015 Wine Guide;
- Rated as one of the Top
100 SA Wines for 2015. The Challenge, now in its fifth year,
provides an objective independent and professional rating with judging
panels made up of the highest quality, independent experts, and drew 500
entries from a record 140 leading wineries;
- Awarded
Highly Recommended in Decanter magazine’s Cape Mediterranean Whites panel
tasting, published in the June 2015 issue. Muratie’s Laurens Campher 2013,
with a score of 91 points, came joint 4th in the tasting. Panelist
Tim Atkin, awarded wine writer and leading commentator on South Africa
wine, reported: “The tasting featured the cream of South Africa’s
Mediterranean producers – an important category… White blends are still what South Africa
does best”. Decanter is arguably the leading wine and spirits publication
in the world.
Muratie
Laurens Campher 2012:
Awarded
92 points in Tim Atkin’s 2014 South African Report. Tim Atkin is an
internationally renowned wine commentator and British Master of Wine. Highly regarded for his
tasting, wine writing and judging experience spanning 28 years, and having
tasted over 1000 South African wines for his current report, breaking the
venerable 90 point barrier in his 2014 South African Report is no mean feat;
- Rated
one of South Africa’s Top Six White Blends in Classic Wine magazine in
2014.
A VISIT TO MURATIE
A visit to Muratie today, still guarded
over by ancient oak trees, reveals a piece of history where time has largely
stood still. The passion for preserving the estate’s rich heritage
and intriguing human stories from its centuries old history, are captured in
every nook and cranny of this family farm. Even the wines and the food reflect
a tangible sense of time suspended, with the estate’s wines and the Farm Kitchen restaurant dishes named
after extraordinary characters from the farm’s colourful past.
The many and varied attractions at Muratie include:
·
Wine tasting daily between 10am and 5pm in
Muratie’s rickety
cob-webbed old-world tasting room
·
Wine and chocolate pairing
·
The Melck family’s home-made preserves and treats for sale at the
tasting room, which include nougat made from their own free range eggs, honey from the hives in the blue gum grove
on the hill above the tasting room, home baked rusks and green fig preserves and
apricot jam, made by Annatjie and Kim, from fruit grown on the farm.
·
The
Farm Kitchen restaurant;
·
Winery
and history tours by appointment;
·
GP Canitz Art Gallery in the refurbished historic concrete tanks
in the cellar;
·
Self-catering accommodation in the GP Canitz’s original art studio
which he built with bricks made on the farm;
·
Functions hosted in the cellar inside old tartaric
acid-encrusted concrete wine tanks which have been renovated and opened up for
guest entertainment;
·
Private tastings in the Kneipzimmer, GP Canitz’s drinking den;
·
Exciting
summer and winter events.
Tel: 021 865 2330 · Email: info@muratie.co.za
· Website: www.muratie.co.za