In a region celebrated for lamb and wide open skies, a wood-fired pizza topped with kudu salami is quietly becoming one of the most talked-about dishes in the Karoo. At Cafe O on Swartrivier Farm in Prince Albert, it brings together game meat from the veld and artisan food made by hand — a single plate that captures the flavour of the landscape it comes from.
The dish is not complicated. Hand-stretched dough, a wood-fired oven, tomato sauce, mozzarella and slices of cured kudu salami finished with a drizzle of cold-pressed extra virgin olive oil from the farm next door. Yet it is this simplicity that keeps drawing visitors back, and it has become a quietly persuasive reason to add Prince Albert to a Karoo itinerary.
https://www.oforolive.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/oforolive_black.png00Kirsty van der Walthttps://www.oforolive.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/oforolive_black.pngKirsty van der Walt2026-03-31 19:01:342026-04-01 11:23:15Kudu Salami Pizza: The Wood-Fired Karoo Classic Drawing Visitors to Prince Albert
The Swartberg Pass, a UNESCO World Heritage Site carved through ancient quartzite mountains, has become one of the most celebrated road trip routes in the Western Cape — and the small Karoo town of Prince Albert, waiting on the other side, is the reason more travellers are making the journey every year.
The 27-kilometre gravel pass, built by master road engineer Thomas Bain between 1881 and 1888, connects the lush Klein Karoo to the arid Great Karoo through a landscape so geologically significant that it earned its place on the UNESCO list in 2011. For visitors driving from Cape Town, it is the dramatic final act of a road trip that combines coastal scenery, wine country charm and high-mountain spectacle in a single day.
https://www.oforolive.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/oforolive_black.png00Kirsty van der Walthttps://www.oforolive.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/oforolive_black.pngKirsty van der Walt2026-03-31 19:01:322026-05-31 18:04:06The Swartberg Pass Road Trip: A Complete Guide from Cape Town to Prince Albert
South African extra virgin olive oil has moved from regional curiosity to international contender in less than two decades. Local producers are now winning gold medals at the world’s most prestigious olive oil competitions, earning quality scores that place them alongside the best estates in Italy, Spain and Greece. For consumers who have long defaulted to imported Mediterranean oil, the evidence is becoming difficult to ignore: some of the finest olive oil in the world is now being pressed in South Africa.
Gold Medals and 97-Point Ratings: South Africa on the World Stage
The shift in perception has been driven by results. South African olive oil producers have collected gold and silver medals at competitions including EVOOEUM in Spain, the Mario Solinas Quality Award (run by the International Olive Council), the Los Angeles International Extra Virgin Olive Oil Competition and the London IOOC.
https://www.oforolive.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/oforolive_black.png00Kirsty van der Walthttps://www.oforolive.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/oforolive_black.pngKirsty van der Walt2026-03-30 10:10:512026-03-30 10:45:31Why South African Extra Virgin Olive Oil Is Rivalling the Best in the Mediterranean
Prince Albert has long been called the Jewel of the Karoo, and the title is not an exaggeration. This small town at the foot of the Swartberg Mountains has reinvented itself as one of South Africa’s most compelling food, art and nature destinations, a place where farm-to-table dining, world-class mountain passes and night skies free of light pollution converge in a single, unhurried weekend. Here is what to do when you get there, organised by visitor type and by the time of day each activity makes most sense.
WHICH PRINCE ALBERT DAY FOR YOU
The food and farm day: Saturday market, olive farm tour and tasting at Swartrivier, long lunch at Cafe O, dinner at Karoo Kombuis
The mountain and views day: Swartberg Pass crossing, lunch at Cafe O on the descent, late afternoon walk in the village
The slow weekend: Friday arrive and dine, Saturday market and olive farm, Sunday Swartberg Pass and lunch out
The art and heritage day: Fransie Pienaar Museum, Church Street galleries, Karoo Kombuis dinner
The stargazing trip: Day at the olive farm or fig farm, dinner at Lazy Lizard, late-night sky tour from a local guesthouse
https://www.oforolive.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/oforolive_black.png00Kirsty van der Walthttps://www.oforolive.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/oforolive_black.pngKirsty van der Walt2026-03-30 10:10:492026-05-12 15:20:57What to Do in Prince Albert: The Karoo Town That Serves Up Food, Art and Mountain Views
Tucked beneath the Swartberg Mountains, just four kilometres from the centre of Prince Albert, lies Swartrivier Farm — a working olive estate that has quietly earned its place as one of the Great Karoo’s most compelling visitor experiences. Long before olive tourism became a talking point in the Western Cape, this farm was pressing fruit and welcoming guests. It remains, by all accounts, the original Karoo olive farm.
Where It All Began: Swartrivier and the Karoo Olive Story
The story of olives in Prince Albert is older than most visitors expect. While the Western Cape’s winelands dominate the agricultural tourism map, the semi-arid Karoo has been producing olives for generations. Swartrivier Farm, home to O for Olive, sits at the heart of this tradition.
https://www.oforolive.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/oforolive_black.png00Kirsty van der Walthttps://www.oforolive.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/oforolive_black.pngKirsty van der Walt2026-03-30 10:10:482026-03-30 10:45:28Prince Albert’s Best-Kept Secret: A Day at South Africa’s Original Karoo Olive Farm
If you’re looking for an easy supper option, try this delicious olive risotto fish medallions recipe. It’s super-healthy and flavourful!
Spice it up with hot chilli – if you prefer something milder, use hot Hungarian or Spanish paprika. O for Olive’s pitted black olives, extra virgin olive oil and green olive tapenade make the perfect ingredients…
Olive risotto fish medallions
The Homegrown Chef
Olive risotto and olive oil fish medallions coated in green olive tapenade
This olive stuffed lamb loin dish is tender and juicy, and filled with Mediterranean flavours. Perfect for a family lunch or warming winter meal. Blending spices, fresh herbs and delicious black olives, try the recipe…
We grow our own herbs and bought meat from Oaklands Butchery in Joburg’s Northern Suburbs. Olives come from Swartrivier Farm in Prince Albert, in the Western Cape. Aim for fresh, local ingredients… and your meal will pop with flavour!
Olive stuffed lamb loin
The Homegrown Chef
Flavourful, juicy and tender 'low-and slow' lamb dish, ideal for a family meal
Blend together into a smooth paste the green olive tapenade, lemon zest and juice of one lemon, anchovy fillet, peppadew, half a bunch of thyme, rosemary, hot English mustard, olive oil, garlic cloves, and ½ tsp paprika.
Trim the lamb loin of excess fat, if any, and cut in the middle but not completely through – enough to allow the meat to fold easily.
Place skin-side down on a board, and smear the inside heavily with the blended paste.
Add olives in groups of 5 or 6, to form a filling.
Fold lamb loin up, and tie off with cotton string (about five ties, depending on size).
Place in an ovenproof dish, and add the remaining thyme, rosemary and coat outside with ½ tsp paprika plus a few grinds of salt and pepper, as desired.
Preheat oven to 200 ℃, and cook at this heat for 10 minutes. Then drop the temperature to 170 ℃, add a cup of red wine, and cook for a further 1 hour and 45 minutes.
The lamb should be a nice golden brown. If it browns too quickly, cover with tin foil.
Leave to rest for about 15 minutes, remove string and carve into thick slices.
Serve with:
Baby roast potatoes and veg like cauliflower, broccoli or beans.
Keyword family meal, pitted black olives, winter food, winter recipe
This hearty peppadew and olive pork fillet dish makes the perfect winter meal! Full of flavour and packed with the goodness of herbs, spices, extra virgin olive oil and Karoo olives, here’s the recipe…
A memorable, easy-to-make meal for family and friends. Why not try it for your next Sunday lunch or a cosy evening meal?
Peppadew and olive pork fillet
The Homegrown Chef
Hearty winter dish with delicious Mediterranean flavours
Prepare your marinating mix in a small sauce bowl.
Trim excess sinew from pork fillets, and select a suitable oven-proof dish.
Scatter a bunch of fresh thyme and 4-5 bay leaves on the bottom of the dish.
Add salt, black pepper and a drizzle of O for Olive Extra Virgin Olive Oil.
Place pork fillets in the dish, and sprinkle with 1 tbsp of coarse salt.
Coat fillets with marinade, and leave to stand for 4 hours, or overnight (in fridge).
Preheat oven to 200 ℃, and cook for about 10 minutes, then turn down to 175 ℃ for 25-30 minutes.
When you notice liquid in the dish, the pork should be nice and tender.
Let the dish rest for 15 minutes before carving into around 1.5cm thick medallions.
Side dish 1: Serve with baby roast potatoes, boiled then crushed and seasoned with salt, pepper, paprika and thyme. Add olive oil before placing in the oven for approximately 40 minutes until golden brown.
Side dish 2: Chop about a saucepan full of green cabbage. Add 3 garlic cloves, roughly chopped, salt, black pepper, paprika and a dash of olive oil. You may need to add a ¼ cup of water. Cook on medium heat on the stove for about 18 minutes.
Notes
Don't overcook the fillet as this will make it tougher. If needed, a 1/8th of a cup of water can be added.A good size pork fillet is around 600 g. This recipe calls for two fillets.
Kudu Salami Pizza: The Wood-Fired Karoo Classic Drawing Visitors to Prince Albert
In a region celebrated for lamb and wide open skies, a wood-fired pizza topped with kudu salami is quietly becoming one of the most talked-about dishes in the Karoo. At Cafe O on Swartrivier Farm in Prince Albert, it brings together game meat from the veld and artisan food made by hand — a single plate that captures the flavour of the landscape it comes from.
The dish is not complicated. Hand-stretched dough, a wood-fired oven, tomato sauce, mozzarella and slices of cured kudu salami finished with a drizzle of cold-pressed extra virgin olive oil from the farm next door. Yet it is this simplicity that keeps drawing visitors back, and it has become a quietly persuasive reason to add Prince Albert to a Karoo itinerary.
Read more
The Swartberg Pass Road Trip: A Complete Guide from Cape Town to Prince Albert
The Swartberg Pass, a UNESCO World Heritage Site carved through ancient quartzite mountains, has become one of the most celebrated road trip routes in the Western Cape — and the small Karoo town of Prince Albert, waiting on the other side, is the reason more travellers are making the journey every year.
The 27-kilometre gravel pass, built by master road engineer Thomas Bain between 1881 and 1888, connects the lush Klein Karoo to the arid Great Karoo through a landscape so geologically significant that it earned its place on the UNESCO list in 2011. For visitors driving from Cape Town, it is the dramatic final act of a road trip that combines coastal scenery, wine country charm and high-mountain spectacle in a single day.
Read more
Why South African Extra Virgin Olive Oil Is Rivalling the Best in the Mediterranean
South African extra virgin olive oil has moved from regional curiosity to international contender in less than two decades. Local producers are now winning gold medals at the world’s most prestigious olive oil competitions, earning quality scores that place them alongside the best estates in Italy, Spain and Greece. For consumers who have long defaulted to imported Mediterranean oil, the evidence is becoming difficult to ignore: some of the finest olive oil in the world is now being pressed in South Africa.
Gold Medals and 97-Point Ratings: South Africa on the World Stage
The shift in perception has been driven by results. South African olive oil producers have collected gold and silver medals at competitions including EVOOEUM in Spain, the Mario Solinas Quality Award (run by the International Olive Council), the Los Angeles International Extra Virgin Olive Oil Competition and the London IOOC.
Read more
What to Do in Prince Albert: The Karoo Town That Serves Up Food, Art and Mountain Views
Prince Albert has long been called the Jewel of the Karoo, and the title is not an exaggeration. This small town at the foot of the Swartberg Mountains has reinvented itself as one of South Africa’s most compelling food, art and nature destinations, a place where farm-to-table dining, world-class mountain passes and night skies free of light pollution converge in a single, unhurried weekend. Here is what to do when you get there, organised by visitor type and by the time of day each activity makes most sense.
WHICH PRINCE ALBERT DAY FOR YOU
The food and farm day: Saturday market, olive farm tour and tasting at Swartrivier, long lunch at Cafe O, dinner at Karoo Kombuis
The mountain and views day: Swartberg Pass crossing, lunch at Cafe O on the descent, late afternoon walk in the village
The slow weekend: Friday arrive and dine, Saturday market and olive farm, Sunday Swartberg Pass and lunch out
The art and heritage day: Fransie Pienaar Museum, Church Street galleries, Karoo Kombuis dinner
The stargazing trip: Day at the olive farm or fig farm, dinner at Lazy Lizard, late-night sky tour from a local guesthouse
Read more
Prince Albert’s Best-Kept Secret: A Day at South Africa’s Original Karoo Olive Farm
Tucked beneath the Swartberg Mountains, just four kilometres from the centre of Prince Albert, lies Swartrivier Farm — a working olive estate that has quietly earned its place as one of the Great Karoo’s most compelling visitor experiences. Long before olive tourism became a talking point in the Western Cape, this farm was pressing fruit and welcoming guests. It remains, by all accounts, the original Karoo olive farm.
Where It All Began: Swartrivier and the Karoo Olive Story
The story of olives in Prince Albert is older than most visitors expect. While the Western Cape’s winelands dominate the agricultural tourism map, the semi-arid Karoo has been producing olives for generations. Swartrivier Farm, home to O for Olive, sits at the heart of this tradition.
Read more
Olive risotto fish medallions
If you’re looking for an easy supper option, try this delicious olive risotto fish medallions recipe. It’s super-healthy and flavourful!
Spice it up with hot chilli – if you prefer something milder, use hot Hungarian or Spanish paprika. O for Olive’s pitted black olives, extra virgin olive oil and green olive tapenade make the perfect ingredients…
Olive risotto fish medallions
The Homegrown ChefIngredients
Olive oil fish medallions
Instructions
Fish dish
Notes
Olive stuffed lamb loin
This olive stuffed lamb loin dish is tender and juicy, and filled with Mediterranean flavours. Perfect for a family lunch or warming winter meal. Blending spices, fresh herbs and delicious black olives, try the recipe…
We grow our own herbs and bought meat from Oaklands Butchery in Joburg’s Northern Suburbs. Olives come from Swartrivier Farm in Prince Albert, in the Western Cape. Aim for fresh, local ingredients… and your meal will pop with flavour!
Olive stuffed lamb loin
The Homegrown ChefIngredients
Instructions
Serve with:
Peppadew olive pork fillet
This hearty peppadew and olive pork fillet dish makes the perfect winter meal! Full of flavour and packed with the goodness of herbs, spices, extra virgin olive oil and Karoo olives, here’s the recipe…
A memorable, easy-to-make meal for family and friends. Why not try it for your next Sunday lunch or a cosy evening meal?
Peppadew and olive pork fillet
The Homegrown ChefIngredients
Marinating Mix
Instructions
Notes
Rustic chicken casserole
Made with O for Olive extra virgin olive oil. Browse all our olive products or visit the farm.
Tomato cucumber salad
Made with O for Olive extra virgin olive oil. Browse all our olive products or visit the farm.