Monthly Archives: February 2009

Wine review — Langmeil

Langmeil Jackaman’s Barossa Valley Fifth Wave Grenache 2006 $30 Langmeil Jackaman’s Barossa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2006 $50 Langmeil’s ‘Old Vine Garden’ wines reviewed here today present the gentle, distinctive flavours derived from old-to-very-old central and southern Barossa vines. Jackaman’s Vineyard, from Lyndoch (southern Barossa), produces the full, fleshy, lively and pure Fifth Wave Grenache from vines planted in 1953 – and the intense, elegant, soft cabernet from vines planted in 1964. In both wines (indeed in all of the Langmeil wines) fruit comes before winemaking artifice. They’re gloriously complex and satisfying with deep, sweet, juicy fruit flavours. See www.langmeilwinery.com.au for the full story.

Langmeil Orphan Bank Barossa Valley Shiraz 2006 $50 This wine was sourced from three old vineyards – two near Tanunda (central Barossa) and one near Williamstown, towards the region’s southernmost boundary. The Tanunda vines, planted in the 1860s, were uprooted after this vintage but not before Langmeil successfully transplanted 300 of them to their own vineyard on the banks of the North Para River, on the western edge of Tanunda, in 2006 and 2007. These distinguished old vines, located on what is now called the Orphan Bank vineyard, will produce future vintages of this wine. It’s a rich, fine, expression of the district style.

Langmeil The Freedom 1843 Barossa Valley Shiraz 2006 $100 Langmeil’s showpiece comes from vines believed to have been planted by Christian Auricht in 1843. The vines survived, somewhat battered, until 1996 when they were revived by new owners, Barossa veterans Richard Lindner, Carl Lindner and Chris Bitter. They’ve been producing a single-vineyard shiraz since 1997. If you’re in the Barossa, Langmeil is a ‘must visit’ – both for the quality of the wines and for a look at these marvellous old vines. The Langmeil crew are delivering what will be the lifeblood of Australia’s wine industry once the world recovers from its current malaise – beautiful, natural, wines that express the local flavours. This is as fine, supple and lovely as Barossa shiraz gets.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Posted in Wine review | Comments Off

Sauvignon blanc overtakes chardonnay

Sauvignon Blanc. Kath and Kym call it sauvignon plonk. Others call it cat’s pee. Over a glass or two, someone commented that it tasted like it’d been drunk before. The late Len Evans listed it with goat’s cheese among his pet hates. And England’s wine luminary, Jancis Robinson, once wrote that its ranking amongst the world’s nine ‘classic’ varieties came only because of its ‘divine combination with semillon in parts of Bordeaux’.

But whether you call it cat’s pee or dog’s nectar it’s now our biggest selling white wine style. Sauvignon blanc pipped chardonnay by 23.5 million litres to 22.5 million litres in the year to September 2008, according to AC Nielsen figures cited by Jeni Port in the Sydney Morning Herald on 25 January.

While wine show judges almost invariably find sauvignon classes disappointing, populated by weedy, tart wines, sprinkled with one or two juicy highlights. Despite all the sauvignon put downs, Aussie drinkers love the variety – notably as a straight varietal from Marlborough, New Zealand or, from Margaret River, Western Australia, blended with semillon.

Almost twenty years ago, Jancis Robinson wrote “Sauvignon blanc produces wines for our times: white, dry, refreshingly zesty, aggressively recognisable and ready to drink almost before the presses have been hosed down after the vintage”. Her words seem even more on the money now than they did in 1986.

And the word from retailers and producers throughout this decade was that sauvignon blanc and blends were the fastest growing segment in the domestic wine market. As far back as April 2004, national retailer, Vintage Cellars (part of the then Coles Myer Group) reported that sauvignon blanc constituted just one twenty fifth of Australia’s grape crush but represented one sixth of its white wine sales.

This suggested a dash into sauvignon blanc by Australia’s keenest wine drinkers. Even if New Zealand led the way the sustained growth in sauvignon blanc demand showed up, too, at Australia’s grape crushers. In 2002 we harvested 28, 567 tonnes of it. But that had increased to 43,107 tonnes in 2004 and to 66,267 tonnes in 2008 – suggesting many hectares of plantings coming on stream to meet rising demand.

So why the rise in popularity of sauvignon blanc? I suspect it’s the exciting quality of straight varietals from Marlborough and blends from Western Australia delivering what Jancis described 20 years ago, “dry, refreshingly zesty, aggressively recognisable and ready to drink almost before the presses have been hosed down”.

It seems that sauvignon blanc has found its niche as a fruity, zesty undemanding white well suited to our warm climate and casual dining habits – capturing what might have been riesling’s role. Alas, poor riesling.

Twenty years ago with a stronger Aussie dollar and a dearth of local material, the most loved sauvignons were those imported from Pouilly and Sancerre at the eastern end of France’s Loire Valley. Magically fruity with a minerally, bone dry finish, they reigned until international demand and a weakening dollar pushed them out of reach.

Domestic sauvignons, at the time, came from mainly warm areas and were often made in the ‘fume blanc’ style pioneered by Robert Mondavi in California. These attracted momentary attention but were by and large over oaked and lacking varietal flavour.

By the mid eighties Australians had begun to enjoy the first in-your-face Marlborough sauvignon blancs. These offered pungent, capsicum-like aromas and flavours in tandem with high natural acidity – the product of Marlborough’s very cool climate, a pre condition for good sauvignon.

A quarter of a century on and Marlborough’s the world capital of sauvignon, having spread from a few vineyards at the southern cooler side of the Wairau valley to the warmer northern side and to the even cooler Awatere Valley, over the Wither Hills to the south.

The resulting diversity of sites, viticultural practice and winemaking preferences means a great diversity of Marlborough styles today. In general that means zesty, fresh, well-defined varietal flavours. But the varietal spectrum varies from the riper citrus and tropical fruit character of warmer sites to the old in-your-face capsicum-like ones.

Australian sauvignon blanc hasn’t found its Marlborough yet. But it has found a comfortable home in the Adelaide Hills. Like Marlborough the Adelaide Hills region is far from homogenous climatically. But selected sites do bring home the bacon.

And at Margaret River in the west, where sauvignon blanc seldom makes it on its own, semillon steps in to fatten out the mid palate and add a lovely citrus note without detracting from the racy freshness of sauvignon blanc. These range from ever popular ‘classic dry white’ styles like those from Evans & Tate and others at modest prices to the seamless glory of Cullens or Cape Mentelle Sauvignon Blanc Semillon (among others) – in the Bordeaux style praised by Jancis Robinson.

With a few exceptions like the Cullens wine, though, these are wines to chill, quaff and enjoy by the bucketful. Then back up for the new vintage as soon it hits the shelves.

This very big swing in popular taste, however, spells trouble for local chardonnay growers, especially in the face of collapsing export demand.

But the Kiwi sauvignon blanc growers won’t have it all their way either.  The amazing twenty-year boom appears to be at an end.  The variety now accounts for two thirds of all whites produced in New Zealand.

But economic weakness in its biggest export markets, Britain, Australia and America (in that order), combined with rising production, suggests that prices will fall this year. Retailers expect the price of branded Marlborough sauvignon blanc to decline and that we’ll see a rising number of bargain-basement clean skins from the region.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Posted in Wine | Comments Off

Beer review — Belhaven and Emerson’s

Belhaven Twisted Thistle IPA 500ml $7.99 The Brits loaded India Pale Ale (IPA) with alcohol and hops to survive the long trip in cask to India. But by the time refrigeration arrived it was too late to stop — and now even the Scots brew it, perhaps better than the English. This is a beautifully fragrant, hoppy, opulent version.

Emerson’s Belgian Style Beer 500ml $8.90 This Belgian-style lambic beer comes from Dunedin, New Zealand. The traditional style is fermented in barrels using wild yeast, with fruit (in this case cherries) added during the ferment. The result is an idiosyncratic sweet and sour ale with a strong and distinctive sour cherry flavour.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Posted in Beer review | Comments Off

Wig & Pen — beer worth bottling

After years of maybe-we-will, maybe-we-won’t, Canberra’s Wig & Pen Pub Brewery plans to offer bottled beer this year. Brewer Richard Watkins says they’ll kick off with a ‘regional ale’ made in Cologne’s Kölsch style – traditionally a pale coloured, cold-conditioned brew.

But it’ll probably be April or May before it’s released. They’re developing the packaging now. When it’s ready Richard will make and bottle the beer at Mildura Brewery. It’ll be the same as Kamberra Kölsch, one of the Wig’s most popular tap beers, aptly described as a ‘very drinkable lager like ale’ on their website.

The beer will initially be offered at the Wig & Pen – regulars, including Bruce, have been asking for it for years – but owner Lachlan McOmish expects to have it in one or two specialty retail outlets before too long.

Meanwhile the Wig has a couple of week’s supply left of its two summer ales, both Belgian inspired – Framboise, a lambic style, pitting raspberry sweetness against lactic acid sourness; and Saisson (season), a full, rich ale fermented by a specialty Belgian yeast.

And with the Tasmania hop harvest approaching, Richard has three special hop-focussed beers planned. For one of them he’s building a new ‘hopinator’ – a device for passing beer across fresh hops flowers en route to the glass.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Posted in Beer | Comments Off

Wine review — Capital Wines, Z4 & Ten Minutes by Tractor

Capital Wines Canberra District The Backbencher Merlot 2006 $25, The Frontbencher Shiraz 2007 $25, Kyeema Vineyard Reserve Shiraz 2007 $52 This is an incredibly high quality trio from Capital Wines, formed last year by the Mooney and McEwin families to market Canberra wines made by Andrew McEwin and sourced principally from his Kyeema Vineyard, Murrumbateman. In style ‘Backbencher’ merlot sits somewhere between shiraz and cabernet, with a sweet perfume, delicious mid-palate fruit (a bit like shiraz) and fine but slightly austere tannins (a bit like cabernet) – lovely drop. ‘Frontbencher’ shiraz is all perfume and sweet fruit. It’s fine-boned, soft, delicious and approachable now but could cellar for a few years. The Reserve wine, a selection of the best barrels, has similar fruit flavour to the ‘Frontbencher’ but it’s tightly wrapped in tannins and needs a few years in bottle. It has great potential.

Z4 Zoe Canberra District Riesling 2008 $13.95 This appealing silver medallist from the regional wine show was produced for Bill and Maria Mason, owners of Canberra-based wine wholesaler, Z4.  Bill writes that ‘The wines produced in the Z4 range recognise the Christian names of each of the four family members of the next generation’. We’ve not met Zoe, but her mum and dad can be pretty happy with the zesty riesling named after her. It’s a good example of the regional style, with attractive, drink-now, lime-like varietal flavour. Great value.

Ten Minutes by Tractor Mornington Peninsula X Pinot Noir 2007 $23, 10X Pinot Noir 2007 $36, Reserve Pinot Noir 2006 $60, McCutcheon Vineyard Pinot Noir 2006 $70 Ten Minutes by Tractor, one of Mornington’s leading chardonnay and pinot noir producers, offers a range of small-production, estate based wines as well the slightly cheaper ‘X’, sourced from a leased neighbouring vineyard. The wines give a spectrum of pinot aromas and flavours from the simpler, fragrant (but still proper pinot) style of ‘X’ through to the more robust and savoury McCutcheon Vineyard wine. You can buy any of these wines with confidence. See www.tenminutesbytractor.com.au for more detail.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Posted in Wine review | Comments Off