Monthly Archives: September 2012

Wine review — Charles Cimicky, Lock & Key, Moppity Vineyards and Shaw & Smith

Charles Cimicky Barossa Valley Trumps Shiraz 2010 $14.25–$20
Charles and Jennie Cimicky’s winery and vineyards are at Lyndoch, in the slightly cooler south of the Barossa Valley. Their reds, starting with the inexpensive Trumps shiraz, deliver typical Barossa generosity and softness without going over the top on oak, tannin or alcohol. Delicious, ripe, cherry-like shiraz flavours underpin a deep but limpid and lively wine. Round, soft tannins cut through the fruit giving structure and satisfying, dry, slightly savoury finish. Trumps is a very good, sophisticated regional wine – sensitive winemaking lets the fruit talk. Charles Cimicky says, “It is the variety, region and vineyard that are most important to us”.

Lock & Key Riesling 2012 $14.99
Moppity Vineyards Hilltops Riesling 2012 $24.99

Both wines come from Jason and Alecia Brown’s Moppity Vineyards, one of the oldest in the Hilltops (Young) region. Jason Brown says their planting include “Some of the oldest riesling vines in southern NSW”. For much of its history, Moppity sold fruit to other producers, but Brown launched the current label in 2007. Lock & Key, at just 11 per cent alcohol, makes a tasty, refreshing aperitif. It shows the high acid, intense fruit and delicate structure of the cool vintage. The notably fuller bodied (12.5 per cent alcohol) Moppity vineyard presents a riper, more powerful, though still delicate and fresh face, of riesling.

Shaw and Smith Adelaide Hills Shiraz 2010 $37–$45
The latest Shaw and Smith shiraz sits at the more powerful end of the house style. That is, it’s medium bodied and elegantly structured, as you’d expect in the cool growing climate; but the deep, intense-crimson colour, opulent, seductive aroma and palate-saturating fruit flavours, cut with very good oak, probably outweigh any they’ve made in the past. Winemakers Martin Shaw and Darryl Catlin say the fruit comes from “low yielding vines at Balhannah, the central Adelaide Hills, and Macclesfield, the warmer and drier sub-region to the south”.  The wine should drink and evolve well for a decade or more if well cellared.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 30 September 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Mount Horrocks, Pizzini, Shingleback, Clonakilla and Zema Estate

Mount Horrocks Riesling 2012 $27–$30
Mount Horrocks Watervale vineyard, Clare Valley, South Australia

Stephanie Toole’s 2012 joins a growing list of fabulous Clare rieslings. As they come onto the market over the next few months, they present a rare opportunity to buy superb whites with proven long-term cellaring ability. The usually unexcitable Toole, writes of this wine and her cordon-cut sweet riesling, “these two wines may well prove to be the most impressive in my 20 years at Mount Horrocks”. I’ll review the sweetie another day. But the dry wine reveals the pure, intense lime-like varietal character and delicacy of Watervale, a Clare sub-region. This is an exceptional riesling.

Pizzini Pinot Grigio 2012 $18.50–$21
King Valley, Victoria

There’s a bit of Italian in this delicious pinot grigio from Fred Pizzini and family. They use the Italian name, rather than French “pinot gris” and the wine certainly sits more in the crisp, dry north-eastern Italian style than in the opulent versions from France’s Alsace region. The cool season brought out the variety’s pear-like flavour and the Pizzinis haven’t been afraid to extract a little tannin from the skins – giving the wine structure and a pleasantly tart, very Italian finish.

Shingleback Haycutters Shiraz 2010 $16.20–$17
Haycutters block, Davey Estate vineyard, McLaren Vale, South Australia

The Davey family produces a number of outstanding reds from its extensive vineyard holdings in McLaren Vale. This one leapt off the tasting bench, contrasting strongly in style to the Clonakilla wines reviewed today. We expect bigger reds from McLaren Vale than Canberra and, as well, the 2010 vintage produced more opulent wines than 2011. Haycutters delivers on the expectation. It’s a generous McLaren Vale style – big on fruit and savouriness and showing the strong tannin structure of the vintage. It really is a far better wine than you’d expect at the price.

Clonakilla O’Riada Shiraz 2011 $35
Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW

No vintage is either all good or all bad. Though disease destroyed much of Murrumbateman’s shiraz in the cold, wet 2011 season, small quantities survived. And in this co-fermented shiraz and viognier blend, Tim Kirk captures the bright, fresh, spicy character of the cold year. The underlying fruit flavour resembles red berry fruit compote, seasoned with a handful of mixed spice and a light dusting of pepper. The small amount of white viognier in the blend boosts the pleasing, floral aroma and contributes to the silky smooth texture. Fine tannins and lively acidity provide a clean, fresh finish. This is a lighter style to enjoy over the next three or four years.

Clonakilla Shiraz 2011 $25
Hilltops, NSW

Clonakilla Hilltops shiraz, generally a little fuller-bodied and rounder than its Canberra shirazes, also shows the cool-vintage thumbprint. It remains richer than the O’Riada or flagship shiraz viognier, but with less weight than in warmer years. The cherry-like fruit flavour comes dusted with spice and pepper on a medium-bodied, smooth, soft palate. It lacks the length or depth of warmer years, but drinks deliciously now.

Zema Estate Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 $25.65–$29
Coonawarra, South Australia

Zema Winery sits in the heart of Coonawarra’s terra rossa soil, on the western edge of the Riddoch Highway. Nick and Matt Zema manage the 61-hectare estate, founded in 1982 by their parents Demetrio and Francesca, with former Lindemans winemaker Greg Clayfield calling the shots in the winery. The 2009 shows a very light touch from the winemaker, allowing us to savour Coonawarra’s juicy, rich berry flavours and naturally elegant structure.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 26 September 2012 in The Canberra Times

Great wine starts in the brain — the vision behind Clonakilla’s shiraz viognier

This is part one of the story of Clonakilla shiraz viognier, Canberra’s now world famous red, created by Tim Kirk and other Kirk family members over the last 40 years. But first let’s step back to a time long before Tim’s birth – detouring via a Brian Walsh (Yalumba) speech at University House Wine Symposium 2011.

Great wine does not start in the vineyard”, declared Walsh, contradicting an industry axiom. “I assert that great wine starts in the brain”, he continued. “The creation of fine wine is, at its source, an intellectual exercise. Someone has a dream, a vision, a hunch – then the desire, commitment, capability and energy to craft something special, typically with a desire for unique attributes that differentiate it from others”.

This vision, or dream or hunch comes in ways unique to each vigneron. Take, for example, Max Schubert and Penfolds Grange.

By 1950 Schubert was chief winemaker at Penfolds, concerned mainly with the production of fortified wines. But a trip to France that year, and an encounter with aged Bordeaux reds in the home of wine merchant, Christian Cruse, changed the course of Australian winemaking history.

In an interview with David Farmer and me in 1992, Schubert recalled,

These were 40 and 50 years old. The magnificence of these wines sort of remained with me and I still think that they are the best wines I’ve ever tasted. I mean you’ve got magnificence in front of you. You’ve got perfection and you should savour it. And I did savour it right to the bloody hilt.

You know, the thought went through my mind: Why, if they can do this, why can’t we at home. But then I thought, too, that I won’t live long enough to do it. How can you and yet here I am. I have a forty-year-old wine that I made forty years ago experimentally and the bloody thing is still alive. And that is a tremendous thrill to me.

… It [Grange] has a similar elegance [to those French reds], even after starting from a great big rough Australian red”.

Schubert wasted no time. He made the first experimental Grange in 1951, applying winemaking techniques he’d observed in France to mainly shiraz grapes sourced from favoured vineyard sites. The rest is history.

The Kirk family’s Clonakilla Shiraz Viognier builds on several visions, dreams and hunches – the smaller, earlier, more-modest dreams enabling fruition of Tim Kirk’s big dream following a tour of France’s Rhone Valley in1991.

The first, a seed of a dream really, dropped into John Kirk’s brain during World War II. Of Irish birth but living in England, he was shipped for a time to his grandfather’s farm, Clonakilla, in County Clare, for respite from wartime England and its poor diet.

The working farm appealed to Kirk, he said last week in Melbourne. Then after the war he returned once more to Ireland from England to help out in a family hotel. At 14 years the family gave him control of the wine cellar. “I knew nothing about it”, he said, “but I read up and bought the best”. He subsequently maintained an interest in wine, exclusively French, through his university years in the UK and Wales and brought the fascination with him to Australia in 1968.

Arriving in Canberra, he felt surprised to find no vineyards in this part of NSW. People believed it was too cold. But his own research suggested a climate similar to Bordeaux’s.

The working-farm concept planted in Kirk’s brain during the war years, and the later fascination with wine, coalesced into Clonakilla Murrumbateman vineyard in 1971. And the perceived similarity with Bordeaux’s climate, convinced him to plant cabernet sauvignon first – although shiraz (1972) and other varieties followed soon enough.

Although the shiraz-viognier phenomenon lay 20 years in the future, the first shiraz vines were now in the ground. Then in 1984 on son Jeremy’s suggestion, the Kirk’s sought another variety that might suit the district and offer a point of difference.

They identified the rare Rhone Valley white variety, viognier. John Kirk sourced cuttings from Charles Sturt University, Wagga, where he was studying wine science, and planted vines at Clonakilla in 1986.

So by the late eighties, the dreams, hunches and visions of the Kirk family coincided with nature – setting the scene for the fulfilment of the biggest dream of all.

In 1990 no one would have predicted shiraz as Canberra’s regional specialty. Even at Clonakilla, shiraz joined cabernet sauvignon in the blending vat until 1989 – eighteen years after the vineyard’s establishment.

Then, in 1990, “we made our first straight shiraz, on a whim”, says John Kirk. The wine enjoyed remarkable success, winning a silver medal at the Cowra Wine Show, a gold medal at Stanthorpe and a gold medal and two trophies at Griffith.

Then, in 1991 while the second Clonakilla shiraz lay in barrel, Melbourne-based Tim Kirk, having completed his Diploma of Education, headed off to France where I’d organised an appointment for him with Marcel Guigal, one of the Rhone’s great winemakers.

There he tasted Guigal’s stunning single vineyard wines (blends of shiraz and viognier) from the impossibly steep slopes of Cote-Rotie: the 1988 vintages of La Mouline and La Landonne from barrel, and the 1987 La Turque from bottle.

This meeting and tasting, Tim Kirk recalled, had been a “transforming moment” and that he was “transfixed and delighted” by the perfume and sheer dimension of Guigal’s wines. “I’ve got to get this shiraz-viognier thing going back home”, he thought.

This powerful vision soon crystallised into the Clonakilla shiraz-viognier the world loves today. Tim and John Kirk included viognier in the blend from 1992 and the accolades followed remarkably soon after, as another great wine shifted from the brain to reality.

Next week we’ll look at the wine’s evolution from the first vintage in 1992 to the current release twentieth vintage, 2011 – based on a tasting at Melbourne’s Circa Restaurant on 11 September.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 26 September 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Bremerton, Beurrot by Kooyong and Voyager Estate

Bremerton Langhorne Creek Coulthard Cabernet Sauvignon 2010 $22–$27
In a line up of cabernets, including the $60 Voyager Estate below, Bremerton appealed for the volume of flavour it delivered at a realistic price. Langhorne Creek seems to do this with cabernet sauvignon effortlessly and reliably. Bremerton Coulthard shows the regional thumbprint – full body, fleshy mid palate and unmistakeable varietal character. The varietal character has several aspects to it: riper blackcurrant-like flavours, eucalypt and leafy notes typical of Langhorne Creek and firm tannins supporting the fleshy mid palate. Bremerton belongs to the Willson family and eldest daughter, Rebecca, makes the wines.

Beurrot by Kooyong Pinot Gris 2011 $31
Exciting’s not a word usually associated with pinot gris. But this Kooyong 2011 is exciting and certainly one of the best Australian expressions of the variety I’ve tasted. The cool ripening conditions probably contributed the tight acid backbone and intensity of pure, pear-like varietal aroma and flavour. Winemaker Sandro Mosel said he fermented the wine entirely in older barrels without yeast inoculation – meaning ambient yeasts did the hard work. This, and 10 months maturation on the spent yeast cells, contributed to the wine’s rich texture. Grapes came from the Beurrot vineyard and Meres block at Kooyong Estate.

Voyager Estate Margaret River Cabernet Merlot $51.29–$68
In the same tasting as the Bremerton wine reviewed above, Voyager Estate, showed real class – a wine to savour, and with the potential to evolve for many years given good cellaring potential. The wine comes predominantly from two blocks of vines (Old Block and Shining Star) on a gravelly slope of the Stevens Valley.  Cassis-like varietal character underpins the wine, but a cedary element from the French oak and plummy merlot add to its dimension – with a little dusting of cabernet leafiness. The wine continued drinking well for days after our tasting says one of the participants, with the sweet berry flavours pushing through deliciously.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 23 September 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Grosset, Clonakilla and Pike

Grosset Springvale Riesling 2012 $37
Grosset Springvale vineyard, Watervale, Clare Valley, South Australia

The Clare Valley riesling excitement continues with the release of Jeffrey Grosset’s amazing 2012s. A normally reserved Grosset, can’t bottle his enthusiasm, writing, “The 2012 vintage has turned out to be one of the best experienced at Grosset. Weather conditions were ideal”. Springvale, from Clare’s Watervale sub-region, presents a delicate, pristine, utterly irresistible face of riesling. Spritely, lime-like acidity carries the fruit flavour across a nevertheless delicate, soft palate – the upfront fruit flavour and softness making delicious current drinking (though the wine should evolve for many years).

Grosset Polish Hill Riesling 2012 $50
Grosset Polish Hill vineyard, Clare Valley, South Australia
The excellent 2012 vintage emphasises the differences between rieslings from Clare’s Watervale and Polish Hill sub-regions. The sheer power of Grosset’s Polish Hill contrasts starkly with the delicacy of his Watervale (wine of the week based on its drinkability now). Though more austere and steely, Polish Hill shows the upfront fruit sweetness of the vintage. Over time, the power, structure and fruit of this exceptional wine will all become more pronounced.

Clonakilla Riesling 2012 $25–$30
Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW
Shortly after vintage, winemaker Tim Kirk said he’d picked riesling early, ahead of the rain, describing it as “a very fine, bony style along the lines of 2011 – acid driven, fresh and appley, but delicious”. He retained unfermented juice for adding back after ferment should the wine need rounding out – which it did. Months later the wine shows a delicate floral aroma with a citrusy note, showing particularly on the palate. High natural acidity intensifies the floral and citrus fruit flavours, carrying the wine to a long, tart, dry finish, with a fresh, feijoa-like aftertaste. It’s delicious now in Canberra’s tart and tight style, but should be even better as time ameliorates the acidity and allows the fruit to emerge.

Grosset Alea Off-Dry Riesling 2012 $33
Grosset Alea vineyard, Watervale, Clare Valley, South Australia
Australia’s increasingly popular off-dry rieslings, taste best from cooler vintages where high natural acidity balances the sweetness of residual grape sugars in the wine. Grosset’s comes from a 300-metre by 22-metre section of vineyard at Watervale’s highest point. The 2012 combines Watervale fruit delicacy, with pristine, mineral acidity and a delicate sweetness that gently fills the palate. The balanced interplay of fruit, acid and sugar means a clean, fresh finish – avoiding both the cloying effect of too much sugar or the austerity of too much acid.

Pikes Riesling “Traditionale” 2012 $20.89–$23
Polish Hill, Watervale and Sevenhill, Clare Valley, South Australia
Like other producers, Neil Pike rates the 2012 Clare rieslings “of a very high quality – up there with the excellent 2009, 2005 and 2002 vintages”. Pike’s holding his two reserve rieslings, Merle and J.T., for release in November, but the two reviewed today are available now. The widely distributed “Traditionale” shows the vintage thumbprint – oodles of delicious fruit flavour and balancing acidity, in a full-flavoured style for early drinking. Pike says it’s a blend of estate-grown fruit (70 per cent) and material from neighbouring growers.

Pikes Olga Emmie Off-Dry Riesling 2012 $20 cellar door
Pike Thicket vineyard, Polish Hill, Clare Valley, South Australia
Pike’s off-dry riesling comes from a family vineyard in Polish Hill. It’s rich in citrusy fruit flavour and more overtly sweet than the Grosset off-dry style reviewed today. Acidity keeps the fruit flavour fresh and zesty. But the sweetness outweighs the acid at this stage – though that’s a minor blemish in a thoroughly enjoyable wine. In fact, on a hot day on its own, the wine’s sweetness might add to the appeal. This is an excellent style with hot and spicy food as the fruitiness and sweetness rise above the chilli heat while the crisp acidity refreshes. (Available at www.pikeswines.com.au).

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 19 September 2012 in The Canberra Times

Jayco founder buys Mitchelton winery

Mitchelton tower, cellar, cellar door and restaurant

On August 17 Kirin Brewing Company’s Australian arm, Lion, completed the sale of Mitchelton Winery to Gerry and Andrew Ryan. The sale brings the winery back under private control after 18 years of corporate ownership – Petaluma Group from 1994, then Lion Nathan (now Lion) from 2001.

Mitchelton’s the winery that never quite fitted in – proving problematic to successive owners from its establishment in 1969. A common factor in the periodic ownership changes was the extravagant scale of its elaborate brick and concrete underground cellars and the cellar door, restaurant and 55-metre observation tower.

These landmark facilities present capital and business demands over and above those of maintaining a 115-hectare vineyard and its annual crush and wine production.

Managing director of Fine Wine Partners, Lion’s wine division, Chris Baddock, says Lion was interested in the brand, but not the site. Even owning vineyards, he added, fits poorly from a brewer’s accounting perspective.

But the brand and site being inseparable, Lion disposed of the Mitchelton brand, cellars, cellar door, restaurant observation tower and vineyards – but retained Mitchelton’s popular Preece brand.

Baddock says Fine Wine Partners (a blend of the former Petaluma Wine Group and distribution business, Tucker and Company) will continue Australia-wide distribution of Mitchelton.

When Melbourne’s Ross Shelmerdine planted the first vines at Mitchelton in 1969, riesling joined cuttings of marsanne, from neighbouring Tahbilk, as a key white variety.

Colin Preece, a distinguished table and sparkling wine maker of the fifties and sixties at Seppelt’s Great Western, selected the Mitchelton vineyard site in the late sixties after an extensive search through southeastern Australia on behalf of the Shelmerdine family.

Ross Shelmerdine’s son, Stephen Shelmerdine wrote to me: “Such was Colin’s vision and enthusiasm for riesling that extensive plantings were made in 1970 and 1971, well before the white wine boom. Colin believed that the specific micro climate of the vineyards – surrounded on three sides by the deep, very cold, constant-height Goulburn River, a site very conducive to autumn fogs, providing suitable conditions for botrytis cinerea – would put Mitchelton in a very strong position to demonstrate the quality of riesling in Victoria.”. Preece’s judgement proved spot on, although he did not live to see it vindicated.

Instead, Don Lewis, a young man selected and trained by Preece, made Mitchelton’s first riesling during the massive floods of 1974. In an interview some years back, Lewis couldn’t recall the quality of the wine. But he well remembered the multiple gold-medal-winning1975 Mitchelton riesling.

But in tough times for the wine industry producers battled for margin in a glutted market. The going proved particularly tough at Mitchelton as the owners struggled to fund an extravagant and still mind-boggling underground concrete and brick cellar and landmark observation tower.

During a period in receivership, Mitchelton sold most of its riesling as grapes or bulk wine. Most of the 1976, for example, went as grapes to Brown Brothers. However, Brian Croser, then lecturing in wine making at Riverina College of Advanced Education, Wagga, purchased a small portion of the crop.

Using a discarded Maralinga rocket fuel tank as a fermenter, he turned Mitchelton’s 1976 grapes into the first Petaluma riesling. By this time Croser was an accomplished riesling maker, having put Hardys Siegersdorf on wine shelves and restaurant lists all over Australia. Stephen Shelmerdine once told me Malcolm Fraser loved the inaugural Petaluma riesling and secured a quantity for the Lodge.

In1978 Mitchelton’s financial trauma ended, for the time being, when, for an undisclosed sum, believed to be just a fraction of the building cost, Melbourne’s Valmorbida family acquired the winery, tower and Mitchelton brand. The Shelmerdinesf retained the vineyards.

In the same year, the 1978 riesling won a trophy at the Adelaide wine show, contributing greatly to its commercial success and making Mitchelton’s flagship wine. And it went on to win gold medals for successive vintages for over twenty years. It now sells as Mitchelton Blackwood Park Riesling.

Mitchelton subsequently built a following for its other wines, notably shiraz and marsanne-roussanne-viognier white blend and its blended Preece range.

But even under Valmorbida family ownership, then Petaluma from 1994 and Lion from 2001, the cellar door, restaurant, observation tower complex were never fully exploited, and appear to have been a drag on the wine business.

The latest ownership change, however, promises to address this. The Ryan family (founders of Jayco caravans and GreenEDGE cycling team) are building a 60-room hotel on the site, renovating the cellar door and restaurant and adding conference and function facilities.

With its proximity to Melbourne and the Hume Highway, you’d have to give this side of the business – the part that’s troubled Mitchelton’s previous owners – every chance of success. But the hospitality business is largely separate from grape growing and winemaking. Ironically, therefore, the real challenge for the Ryans may prove to be the capital-hungry wine business – a peculiar beast that in Australia has been fed generously by external investors over the decades, only to turn and bite the hand of its feeder.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 19 September 2012 in The Canberra Times

Cider review — James Squire

James Squire Orchard Crush Apple Cider 500ml $6.99
James Squire (part of Kirin-owned Lion group), the latest brewer to hop on the cider wagon, offers a pleasingly dry style with the refreshing flavour and tart bite of a fresh, slightly green granny smith. In a claim reminiscent of “cotton rich” material, we’re told it’s made from a “high proportion of seasonal, locally-grown apples”.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 19 September 2012 in The Canberra Times

A glass half full

From Bristol, that great city of brewing excellence, we learn that we quite likely drink beer faster from curve-sided glasses than straight-sided ones.

In a University of Bristol study, 159 male and female social drinkers consumed either lager or soft drink from a curved or straight glass. The researchers also asked participants to pick the half-full point of the glasses.

The experimenters concluded, “Participants were 60% slower to consume an alcoholic beverage from a straight glass compared to a curved glass. This effect was only observed for a full glass and not a half-full glass, and was not observed for a non-alcoholic beverage. Participants also misjudged the half-way point of a curved glass to a greater degree than that of a straight glass”.

I’m not sure what we’re to do with this insight. But I notice 99 per cent of Schloss Shanahan’s beer glasses are curved. Oh dear.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 19 September 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Penfolds, Illuminati and Bremerton

Penfolds Koonunga Hill Chardonnay 2011 $12.35–$16
What do you drink on a camping trip around the Northern Territory? We recently stocked up on this in Darwin and again in Katherine as the seeming best value white at Woolies Liquor. Even up there we paid just $12.35 and it easily passed the campfire taste test, night after night. It’s a modern style chardonnay, based on bright, fresh fruit, with texture and structure (but not overt woody flavours) derived from oak fermentation and maturation. A multi-region blend, the high quality to price relationship owes much to the parent company’s work on its top-end chardonnays.

Illuminati Riparosso Montepulciano d’Abruzzo 2010 $9.49–$11.40*
Our red choice for the NT camping trip comes from the Contraguerra region in the hinterland of Italy’s Abruzzi coast. Like the Koonunga Hill above, we bought it from Woolies Liquor (at around $11 a bottle) and we’d have paid dollars more for an Australian red of comparable quality. Like Australian reds, Riparosso starts with clean, fresh fruit flavour. But a delicious, teasing, Italian savouriness sets in, making it a lovely cook’s tipple and refreshing company for food in general. Woolies imports Riparosso direct from Dino Illuminati, a distinguished Abruzzi vigneron.

Bremerton Langhorne Creek Selkirk Shiraz 2010 $20.89–22
Craig and Mignonne Willson set up in Langhorne Creek, on the Bremer River floodplain, in 1985. Their daughters, Rebecca and Lucy (winemaking and marketing, respectively), direct the business. The wines, all estate grown and made, are consistently outstanding, as well as being reasonably priced. They generally present the clear varietal flavours and fleshy, juicy mid palate that makes Langhorne Creek a popular grape source for big company multi-region blends. Bremerton’s pure regional shiraz delivers ripe, plummy, slightly spicy varietal flavour and a succulent, lovable palate, with soft, easy finish.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 16 September 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Shelmerdine, John Duval, Helm, Thorn Clarke, Ross Hill and Smith and Hooper

Shelmerdine Heathcote Shiraz 2009 $23.75–$33
Shelmerdine Vineyard, Heathcote, Victoria
The Shelmerdine family established Mitchelton, just across the Goulburn River from historic Tahbilk. They moved on from there decades back and later established vineyards in the Yarra Valley and Heathcote, one of Australia’s new hot spots for shiraz. This wine comes from the family’s Merindoc and Willoughby Bridge vineyards, at opposite ends of Heathcote. It’s a medium bodied, shiraz featuring the region’s unique combination of bright fruit and savoury flavours. The elegant palate finishes with Heathcote’s signature fine but firm tannins – a farewell tweak that goes so well with food.

John Duval Plexus Marsanne Roussanne Viognier 2011 $26–$30
Barossa and Eden Valleys, South Australia

With Plexus, a blend of three Rhone Valley grape varieties, former Penfolds chief winemaker John Duval says he wants “to build structure and texture, rather than just acid crispness”.  Duval recognises that since the warm Barossa can never compete in crispness with wines from cooler areas, then he should take another path. The result in this partially barrel fermented and matured white is pretty much as Duval says – richly textured and soft, but fresh, with subtle and savoury fruit flavours seasoned with leesy notes from the time in barrel. It’s a little lighter bodied than 2010, the firs vintage. But that’s what you’d expect from the cool 2011 season.

Helm Premium Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 $52
Lustenberger Vineyard, Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW
Canberra can and does make decent cabernet. But critics, myself included, don’t always assert, as Helm says we do, that it can’t ripen here. Clearly it can in the right conditions. Very pleasant wines from Long Rail Gully, Pankhurst, McKellar Ridge and Helm show that it does. Our criticism is more that to date Canberra hasn’t produced a single great cabernet, and that the quality of the average cabernet is pretty average. However, Helm and daughter Stephanie plan to change that – evidenced by steady improvements in their Premium wine, sourced from neighbour Al Lustenberger’s vineyard. The 2009, to be released in December, shows intense, ripe cabernet varietal flavours and elegant structure. The oak flavours and tannins, however, intrude a little on the fruit. But this is a minor blemish in a very good wine.

Thorn Clarke Shotfire Shiraz 2010 $16–$20
Barossa, South Australia

Thorn Clarke, one of the biggest private winemakers in the Barossa, owns a little under 300 hectares of vineyards in the Eden and Barossa Valleys. They produce a range of wines, but enjoy a particularly strong following for the two reds released under the Shotfire range – this straight shiraz and a cabernet blend. For a reasonable amount of money, the shiraz gives us a lot to like: rich, ripe, earthy, savoury varietal flavours, mixed in with mouth-drying, soft tannins – and a sympathetic, vanilla-like character derived from oak maturation.

Ross Hill Pinnacle Series Chardonnay 2011 $30–$35
Ross Hill Griffin Road home block vineyard, Orange, NSW
Ross Hill is collaboration between Terri and Peter Robson and Greg and Kim Jones. The Robsons planted vines at Orange in the mid nineties and in 2008 joined forces with the Joneses to establish a winery and plant more vineyards. This chardonnay comes from the original Robson vineyard. It shows the lean, tight structure of the cold season. But under the lean, acidic structure lie delicious grapefruit and white peach-like varietal flavours. The rich texture and “struck match” character derived from maturation on yeast lees add to the wine’s appeal. The wine should evolve well for another five years or so in a good cellar.

Smith and Hooper Sauvignon Blanc Semillon 2011 $16–$22
Wrattonbully, South Australia
If we have to drink sauvignon blanc, let’s bolster it with semillon, in the dry Bordeaux style. In this example from Robert Hill-Smith’s Yalumba group, the winemakers fermented one fifth of the blend in old oak, leaving this component on the spent yeast cells (lees), and stirring the lees every two weeks. The process builds a rich texture and subtle flavours that, together with the semillon, contribute so much to the drinking pleasure. But sauvignon blanc still exerts its pungent, herbal flavour and zesty acidity.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 12 September 2012 in The Canberra Times