rive and walk to quite a few that were in the vicinity of our Vintners’ Retreat Resort, our vineyard accommodation. Although our favourite, Oyster Bay did not have a cellar door. After a day of tasting, and sniffing, Sally couldn’t find a sauvignon blanc she didn’t like. But, having become accustomed to Californian, Australian, and BC
cabernets, she couldn’t adjust to the pinot noir, which is the most prized red in this region.
Many of the wineries have very good and (by our standards) reasonably priced restaurants. We ate at Vintners the first night, and could have stopped after the two bowls of bouillabaisse, with large banana prawns that are regularly flown in on ice from les; and venison with sautéed grapes, red wine honey and espresso sauce. Speaking of espresso, the coffee here is excellent, although early in our travels, our beautiful waitress had absolutely no idea what Sally was talking about when at breakfast she ordered a ‘regular decaf’ coffee after enjoying a couple of flat whites. There’s no such thing as a brewed cup of ‘regular’ coffee. Each cup is individually prepar
ed, either with an espresso machine, or coffee plunger. Most of our accommodation has a coffee plunger in the room, (or what the French call, café filtre).
We left the wine region and headed south. I was in search of crayfish, and they were easy to spot along the road. "How much are they?" I asked once inside. "Just look at their tails," I was told. After I gave the salesgirl a puzzled look, she opened a cooler and I knew what she meant.
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