Everyone needs a bit of yesteryear now and again. And whenever this feeling raises its head, Vriesenhof is my place.
Look, I’m all for progress. And having resided and worked in Stellenbosch for almost four decades I am stunned by the continuous evolution the wine industry has shown. Not only in its incomparable wine quality, but the imagination and initiative wine-farm owners have shown in turning the region into a haven for tourists and other visitors. Gourmet restaurants. Cavernous, shiny venues with gorgeous views offering detailed wine-tastings to rows of eager tour groups. Art collections and play-spaces for kids.
This is all good and has over the past 15 years helped make Stellenbosch not only South Africa’s leader in overall wine quality, but a premier and world-leader tourist destination as well.
There is, however, always a time and place for wanting to seek the quieter side to this place to remind one of Stellenbosch’s roots as an agricultural community. A place where nature and farmland and the activities of man are in harmony to remind you of the utter magic of this region.
This is Vriesenhof, set surprisingly close to Stellenbosch town centre opposite the golf course, up against the Stellenbosch Mountain which separates the two great wine wards of Simonsberg and Helderberg.
A steepish drive through the quiet Paradyskloof residential area – yes, the road with the lonely oak tree still standing forlornly in its middle – leads to a stretch of open land, and down a slight dip lies Vriesenhof.
The feeling is that of a real old farm “werf”: white plastered building. A walled vegetable garden that looks like it was sketched straight out of the VOC gardening books. The ubiquitous oak trees are spread across the lawns and between the buildings. And I would not say it if security wasn’t good, but the magnificent fig trees of Vriesenhof stand large, in summer bearing the biggest, sweetest purple figs. Towering over Vriesenhof are the Stellenbosch and Helderberg Mountains which, despite the obvious contribution to ensuring the farm gives good views, lie at the heart of what this place is all about: wine.
Because at Vriesenhof it is absolutely, first and foremost, about the wine. Wine that aims to express the aspect and soil and climate unique to Vriesenhof. Pinot Noir and Chardonnay. Pinotage. Cabernet Sauvignon and those classical components that make up the farm’s Bordeaux-style red blend, namely Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Malbec. The soul purpose here is simply to honour this farm’s unique geography by making wines that do justice to this special place of earth.
Okay. Then there is Jan Boland Coetzee. The Don Corleone of Vriesenhof. The Master. The one and only.
For those who know this soft-spoken and modest man, it does not need explaining that Jan never aimed to become the legend in the South African wine industry that he is. Or, as wine aficionado Michael Fridjhon calls him, “a national treasure”.
This kind of recognition does tend to happen when, firstly, you celebrate – as Jan did this year – your 50th harvest as a winemaker. There is the pioneering role Jan played and continues to play in accentuating the importance of regional and site-specific authenticity to ensure South African wines bear the unique fingerprint of nature.
“I am just a farmer,” Jan says. “It is the relationship between the vine and the land that really does all the work in providing a wine with its qualities – good or bad or in between. That is my job, to see that the relationship between the soil, climate, slope and aspect and the vine keeps working. So that, at the end, it all comes together in the glass.”
Kevin Arnold, who makes wine just up the road at Waterford once said something I’ll always remember. “You know what makes Jan different from the rest of us?” Kevin asked. “After the harvest, April time, all of us other winemakers are heading off to the coast for a break. And where is Jan? In the bloody vineyard, digging between the vines to check what the soils and the plants look like, already thinking of next year’s harvest.”
Each grape variety harvested on Vriesenhof is planted on a patch of land selected by Jan. “Slopes vary, because some are cooler than others. The effect of soil on the grape character and resulting wine is diverse, strong and striking. It is where it all begins. Each bottle has to show a sense of place, of belonging.”
Depending on the preference of the wine-lover, views on what belongs on Vriesenhof may differ. There is the classic Kallista red Bordeaux blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Malbec . Sometimes only released six years after vintage, this wine has a cult following among unashamedly old-school Bordeaux purists. Pinotage from the bush-vines growing in shales soils on the round koppie provides a beautiful expression, complex and feral and enigmatic.
Chardonnay is bright and lean, an ode to the grape’s origins in Burgundy and especially the Beaune region where Jan spent a year working with the most noble of all white varieties.
For me, the Vriesenhof Pinot Noir is the wine that always commands my fullest attention when doing a tasting in the cool room situated on the south-side of the Vriesenhof homestead.
Like all the grapes he grows, Jan knows the chemistry, composition and personality of Pinot Noir like few others. It is a notoriously fickle grape to cultivate as well as to vinify. Why do winemakers refer to this as the heart-break grape, I ask him.
A wry smile appears.
“You know why Pinot breaks my heart?” he retorts. “Because I’ve been working with the damn thing for forty years, and I still can’t figure it out.”
Myself and others will tend to differ. But what the hell do we know?
I will never forget the first time I experienced Vriesenhof Pinot Noir 2003. The garnet colour was intriguing, giving way to an aroma of sweet flowers, pine fresh moss and a hint of the box a very good Havana cigar was stored. The wine presented itself in a manner only a great Pinot Noir does, slowly and gracefully commanding the attention of every sense in your body, gently unleashing an array of flavours that made me honestly believe Paul Gauguin was painting in my mouth: exotic, earthy, visceral and fleshy.
Mention this vintage and Jan will tell you the day the vines’ buds broke, when the south-easterly started blowing off the sea and what the size of the bunches were.
Just the other day I asked him of the greatness predicted for the 2015 vintage. On the napkin before him Jan began to write 1974, 1979, 1987, 1995, 2003, 2005, 2013….under each year he listed the average minimum night and maximum day temperatures for Stellenbosch, before telling stipulating the variation between the temperatures experienced by Simonsberg and Helderberg.
And I am sure he could have gone on and told me how each vintage’s wines from a number of wine farms tasted like, and does now.
I’m willing to hedge my bets, but on Vriesenhof it is – for me – always a good year.
- Emile Joubert for Stellenbosch Visio, December 2016
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Baie mooi geskryf Emile.
Dankie Wynand. Hoop jy het die Sevens geniet. Julle was self ‘n gedugte span, lyk dit my. Groete
Hope you can assist. I am trying to locate a old friend that had a property just outside Stellenboch in the ’90s. It then used to be a wine farm, but during those years they concentrated on a place where families could come and picnick over weekends. They kept some Cheetha on the farm. The owner was named Ziggy Kullenkamph, and if I am not mistaken it was the called Vriesenhof
Thanks Cor – I will make a few calls and let you know. Thanks for writing. Emile