Yearly Archives: 2009

Beer writer Willy Simpson turns to brewing, mead making

Willie Simpson, beer columnist for our sister publication, The Sydney Morning Herald, and author of The Beer Bible, recently opened a brewery and meadery in Tasmania.

A few months before the opening I’d come across a gum-booted Willie lending a hand – and perhaps getting a few pointers from brewer Richard Watkins – in the cellar at Canberra’s Wig & Pen Pub Brewery.
At the time Willie said that he and his partner Catherine Stark intended to grow their own hops for their beer and to use local honey for their cider.

The dream crystallised with the opening of Seven Sheds Brewery, Meadery and Hop Garden in May 2008. It’s located at 22 Crockers Street, Railton, Tasmania, not far off the Bass Highway connecting Devonport to Launceston. You can get a birds-eye view using www.maps.google.com

If you’re heading that way it’s a short drive south of Devonport and could be a good starting point in discovering Tassie drinks and food. You can taste Willie and Catherine’s cider and mead at the cellar door and enjoy a tour of the cellars – and perhaps a look at the hops garden in season.
See www.sevensheds.com for more information.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Beer review — Timothy Taylor & Petrus

Timothy Taylor Landlord Strong Pale Ale 500ml $7.90
It’s not particularly pale – mid-amber’s more like it. Nor is it strong at a modest 4.1 per cent alcohol. But it’s beautifully fresh and wonderfully, lingeringly bitter – although not in the harsh, resiny way seen in some heavily hopped brews. Indeed the hops aroma and flavour work well with the underlying maltiness.

Petrus Oud Bruin 330ml $5.10
Oud Bruin (literally ‘old brown’) is a distinctive, dark, sour beer from Flemish Belgium. The Petrus version of the style is aged in oak barrels for 20 months, allowing plenty of time for a microbial tag team to produce those distinguishing sour notes. And that’s what it is  — dark, tart, sour and idiosyncratic.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Wine review — Zonte’s Footstep

Zonte’s Footstep Langhorne Creek Verdelho 2007, Pinot Grigio 2007 and Viognier 2007 $15–$18
A group of old schoolmates established a 210-hectare vineyard at Langhorne Creek in the late nineties and launched the Zonte’s Footstep brand about seven years later. The group sells a good deal of the grapes but winemaker Ben Riggs selects parcels for the Zonte wines. The verdelho’s my pick of the whites as it’s clean, fresh and bone dry. It’s lighter than chardonnay, heavier than riesling and not as in-your-face as sauvignon blanc. The pinot grigio is more powerful and savoury and beginning to fatten up with age – so drink up. And the viognier shows fresh, distinctive apricot-like varietal flavour

Zonte’s Footstep Langhorne Creek Dry Rosé 2007 and Cabernet Malbec 2006 $15–$18
If we’re going to drink rosé it should, at least, be dry and made from purpose-grown grapes – as Zonte’s is. In this version, Ben Riggs used cabernet and petit verdot in a blend that delivers rich fruit flavour with a pleasant dry, savoury edge. It’s pleasant as rosés go, but overshadowed by the cabernet malbec blend – a solid, deeply-coloured red combining two varieties that seem to do particularly well in Langhorne Creek. The region’s cabernet tends to have clear varietal flavour with an atypically fleshy mid palate. This seems to work well with the deeply coloured, opulent malbec – and a truly dry, tannic finish mark it as a real red.

Zonte’s Footstep Langhorne Creek Shiraz Viognier 2007 and Sangiovese Barbera 2007 $15–$18
What a big, soft, juicy, beautiful mouthful of fruit the shiraz viognier blend offers. It’s an enjoyable, drink-now expression of a combination that all too often doesn’t work, as even a few drops too much of the white viognier can spoil the blend. Even though it’s fleshy and soft, there’s plenty of tannin there to give grip and finish. Sangiovese and barbera are indigenous Italian varieties, the former tending to be light coloured (partly because it tends to overcrop) and tannic and the latter purple-hued and acidic. It’s no doubt taken a bit of work in the vineyard to achieve the colour and flavour depth of this blend. It’s very fruity, fresh and bright with a structure of fine tannin and brisk acidity.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Will Foster’s support revolutionary new seal for Penfolds Grange?

If winemaker Peter Gago’s vision is realised, future vintages of Penfolds Grange will be sealed with a unique glass-to-glass closure, developed in-house and now being trialled on the 2006 vintage. Adoption of the closure could create for Foster’s new chief executive, Ian Johnstone, an opportunity to shake the wine world with a powerful assertion of Aussie wine quality. Penfolds, the greatest blue chip of Foster’s wine brands, could rightly claim to have closed the final link in the quality-control chain. The long-term benefit for Grange, indeed for Penfolds reds in general, would be huge.

But despite the successful trial, adoption of the closure is not a fait accompli. Given the harsh economic environment, and with Foster’s reviewing its poorly-performing international wine business, the glass-seal project could easily be swept aside. But it would be short sighted to do so.

Grange is our greatest international wine icon. It’s been around since 1951 and, like the great wines of France, its custodians must view its future in centuries, not in the fleeting blip of even the nastiest recession.

What makes these wines hold their allure across the centuries? In a nutshell it’s the perception – by thousands of people over great spans of time – of unique style and superior quality sustained. This judgment is expressed in the premium that people are prepared to pay. Indeed this was the basis of Bordeaux’s classification of its great wines in 1855.

Peter Gago’s glass-seal project recognises that in this elite world, where a bottle might cost hundreds or even thousands of dollars, quality control isn’t limited to grape growing, winemaking, maturation and bottling – especially when there’s an assumption of longevity, where individual vintages may be enjoyed for many decades, sometimes a century or more. For wines of this calibre the winemaker must do everything possible to deliver every bottle in pristine condition.

And, so, we arrive at the pointy end of the Grange bottle and what to put in it – or over it. At present you’ll find an A-grade cork, says Gago, ‘but we are perpetually unimpressed by it’, largely because of cork taint – a musty taste caused by cork-borne trichcloroanisole (TCA). If there’s TCA in a cork, it’ll taint the wine immediately and forever. There’s no going back. And in the case of Grange, that could be goodbye $500.

Why not screw cap? Two thirds of Aussie wines now have one, Penfolds offers all of its wines, except Grange, under screw cap and it’s now known that cap-sealed whites and reds mature normally.

But Peter Gago says that while we know for sure that there are no problems with white wine stored under screw cap for forty years, we don’t have certainty beyond a decade or two for reds. He says that white and red wine chemistry is different and we simply don’t understand enough about how red might react in the very long term with the wads that form the seal inside screw caps.

He believes it’s an important area for the Australian Wine Research Institute to investigate. But meanwhile, given Grange’s multi-decade cellaring capacity, he initiated the glass-to-glass concept, reported here in May 2007.

Subsequently, Peter’s team developed two prototypes – a spring loaded device and a ‘pseudo screw cap’ – in time to test on the 2006 vintage. He says that they’re now ready to take it to the next level. But that requires money, and that’s very tight in the current environment.

Nevertheless it presents a golden opportunity for Foster’s to take a global lead – and seize a competitive advantage. And if they don’t, such a good idea’s sure to attract support from a savvy entrepreneur or, at worst, from a competitor ready to embrace the new technology.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Byron Bay’s Stone & Wood beer released

If you’re headed up the NSW north coast this summer, keep an eye out for the new Stone  & Wood Draught Ale in pubs around Byron Bay. This is the first batch of beer from the new brewery set up in Byron by industry veterans Brad Rogers, Ross Jurisich and Jamie Cook.

I’ve not tried the beer, but given Brand Rogers’ distinguished brewing background, it’s likely to be outstanding. Brad’s been in the game a long time, most recently at the Foster’s owned Matilda Bay.
Brad headed the brewing team. And as well as overseeing production of larger-scale products like Redback, he developed numerous, brilliant, small-production specialties – such as Alpha Pale Ale and Naked Ale (for Chloe’s bar at Young & Jackson’s hotel, Melbourne) at the company’s microbrewery in Dandenong.

Because they’re distributing only locally, the Stone  & Wood Ale goes straight from vat to keg without filtration or pasteurisation. And that means drinkers can experience the full, ultra-fresh flavour that only brewers usually experience – assuming fast stock turnover.

Wood & Stone Draught Ale is currently available at The Rails and Great Northern Hotels, Byron Bay, Bangalow Hotel and the Pacific Hotel, Yamba.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Beer review — Courage & Hook Norton

Courage Directors Amber Ale 500ml $7.10
This is a mild, dark-amber coloured ale built on a rich caramel-like malt aroma and flavour. It’s generous and soft on the palate with subtle hops providing a spicy and mildly bitter counterfoil to the maltiness. It’s an appealing cool-weather drink and best served cool rather than cold.

Hook Norton Brewery Old Hooky Ale 500ml $8.00
Old Hooky presents layers of aroma and flavour. It’s fruity, malty, hoppy, bittersweet, brisk and delicious. It’s built on malted barley, but it also contains wheat – presumably source of the pleasant tartness that adds life to the generous malt flavour. This is distinctive ale with lingering, refreshing bitterness.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Wine review — Deviation Road, Lillet, Tim Adams, Brands, d’Arenberg, Capel Vale & Cape Mentelle

Deviation Road Adelaide Hills Pinot Noir 2007 $28
Deviation Road Adelaide Hills Reserve Shiraz 2007 $34

Kate and Hamish Laurie’s Deviation Road, established in 1999, uses fruit from a 30-year-old Laurie family vineyard and other growers in the Lenswood subregion of the Adelaide Hills. These elevated (600 metres), cool sites produce Deviation Road’s fine boned wines including a lovely, zesty sauvignon blanc 2008 ($18) and these two very appealing reds.  In some senses they’re peas in a pod – limpid, finely structured, savoury, taut and bone dry. But the varietal differences show clearly in the deeper coloured, fuller bodied, peppery shiraz and the paler, more earthy, spicy pinot. See www.deviationroad.com for more info.

Lillet Blanc, Lillet Rouge $32
Deviation Road also imports Lillet, an oak matured aperitif, made in France’s Bordeaux region. Lillet combines wine and fruit liqueurs, made from fruit peel macerated in spirit, seasoned with a dash of quinine. It’s a beautifully refreshing, fruity, sweet, pleasantly tart drink, best served short, on the rocks with a twist of orange. You can try it at Parlour Bar, Acton, or order it through www.deviationroad.com. It’s no stranger to Canberra as Farmer Bros imported it during the eighties and early nineties. David Farmer still recalls a Lillet drenched lunch with countless members of the Lillet family.

Tim Adams Clare Valley The Fergus Grenache 2006 $25
Brands Laira Coonawarra Shiraz 2005 $18–23
d’Arenberg Footbolt McLaren Vale Shiraz 2006 $16–22

Conventional wisdom matches beer or white wine with curry. But recently a group of tennis-playing, curry-eating red wine tragics put a range of full-flavoured, fruity reds to the test. Aussie shiraz and grenache easily handled the spicy pace. Some favourites: Tim Adams ‘The Fergus’ 2003 appealed for its plush, soft and velvety grenache flavours – it’s sold out now, but the current release 2006 is as good. d’Arenberg Footbolt 2006 showed a little more oomph and earthiness, but it still had the necessary core of deep, sweet fruit. The more elegant Brand’s Coonawarra succeeded with its subtle berry flavours. And a couple of spicy WA reds, Capel Vale Mount Barker Shiraz 2005 ($50) and Cape Mentelle Margaret River Shiraz 2006 ($39) passed the curry test.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009