Yearly Archives: 2010

Wine review — Willow Creek, Clonakilla and Coriole

Willow Creek Vineyard Mornington Peninsula Chardonnay 2009 $40
Willow Creek is one of many beautiful Mornington Peninsula vineyards to make stunning chardonnay and pinot noir. Winemaker Geraldine McFaul writes that the wine is estate-grown, whole-bunch pressed, fermented in oak barrels (25 per cent new) and matured on yeast lees in the barrels, with regular lees stirring, for 10 months. It also undergoes full malolactic fermentation (converting hard malic acid to soft lactic acid). The result is a fine, delicate chardonnay that blossoms after opening for some time, revealing delicious, subtle nectarine-like varietal flavour. A silky, fine texture adds to the appeal. And bottle age should bring out more magic.

Clonakilla Canberra District Jack Reidy Shiraz 2009 $28–$35
This is one of several shirazes made under proprietors’ labels exclusively for the Coles liquor group and available in their 1st Choice and Vintage Cellars outlets. This one, named for Clonakilla founder John Kirk’s grandfather, expresses the bright, generous fruit flavour of the great 2009. It’s a little more upfront and simpler in its fruit expression than Clonakilla’s other two more-expensive Canberra shiraz viognier blends. Nevertheless it shows Tim Kirk’s deft touch with these varieties. It’s totally seductive; our sample disappeared in less than an hour. Although it’s easy to drink now, it should age well for three or four years.

Coriole McLaren Vale

  • Redstone Shiraz 2008 $18
  • Estate Shiraz 2008 $28

A severe March heat wave in 2008 brought vintage on in a rush and pushed grape ripeness to unprecedented levels. Coriole’s Mark Lloyd said he coped by declassifying over ripe, late picked batches. Certainly he produced a couple of very good wines in the difficult conditions. Redstone, sourced from Coriole and other vineyards, is a nice chunky wine at the price, packed with ripe flavours and cut with firm, satisfying, savoury tannins. The estate-grown version is more intensely flavoured and more fine boned but still has the firm, savoury tannins of the vintage.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Beer review — Strickland 1842 and Endeavour

Stricklands 1842 Lager 330ml glass $7
The Strickland brothers’ first brew sits square in the opulent, bitter Bohemian lager style. And what an impressive debut it is – served in its own custom glass and growing more luxurious with every sip as it warms a little in the glass. A very fresh, clean lingering bitterness balances the opulent malt flavour.

Endeavour Reserve Amber Ale 2010 330ml 4-pack $17.99
This is one of two bottle-conditioned ales released by the new Endeavour brewery. Rich chocolate malt is the keynote of the aroma and flavour – with the velvety texture to match. It’s easy drinking for such a malty beer and fairly delicately hopped for the style.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Strickland brothers launch beautiful new beer in Canberra

How did five stonemason brothers come to make Canberra’s new five-star beer? Mick Strickland says it started with a Pilzen beer recipe acquired by a great-something grandfather on the Ballarat goldfields in the 1850s.

About ten years ago the Stricklands found the recipe, written in German, in the spine of their grandmother’s bible. Later, they had it translated and asked brewing consultant Brian Watson if he could brew from it.

Watson modified the recipe with the Stricklands and Denis Coldabella, brewer at Southern Bay Brewing Company, Victoria. Coldabella then trialled and tested a few small batches with the Stricklands before producing the first 5,000 litre commercial brew.

Mick Strickland says they aimed to make a beer that started fruity, gathered richness and bitterness and finished dry – a style the brothers hoped might appeal to women as well as men. Their sisters and wives provided feedback on the trial brews.

The resulting complex, very drinkable beer is comparatively low in carbonation with a rich texture derived from a five-week lagering period (natural conditioning). It’s currently available on tap at All Bar Nun, O’Connor, and soon at the Hellenic Club, Civic.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Wine review — Jim Barry, Tim Adams, Willow Creek, Mitchell, Rutherglen Estate and Cloudy Bay

Jim Barry “The Florita” Riesling 2009 $40
Watervale, Clare Valley, South Australia
This is a stunning riesling, sourced from selected rows of the historic Florita Vineyard, established by Leo Buring in the 1940s. Replanted to riesling under Lindemans in the 1960s, the vineyard provided fruit for the great Leo Buring Watervale rieslings made for the next few decades by John Vickery. Jim Barry Wines acquired the vineyard in 1986 and the “Florita” trademark in 2004. Florita 2009 is a pristine, powerful riesling with a distinctive lime-like flavour and acidity.

Tim Adams Semillon 2009 $22
Clare Valley, South Australia

Clare semillon enjoys a long, albeit mostly anonymous, history as the backbone of popular, sometimes oak-matured, “white burgundies” in the days of generic labelling. Tim Adams is a particularly good,  modern expression of the style, partly fermented and matured in oak and partly in stainless steel tanks. The stainless steel component retains the tart, lemony freshness of the variety. And the oak fermented and matured component lends structure and complexity – without injecting overt woody flavours. At just on 12 per cent alcohol it’s light, zingy, tasty and refreshing.

Willow Creek Vineyard Pinot Noir 2009 $40
Mornington Peninsula, Victoria

First impressions are of a pure delicate, paler coloured pinot noir, with high-toned perfume and delicious, drink-now flavour. But over a number of days the wine reveals its wonderful flavour depth and a quite strong tannin backbone that should see it evolve beneficially with bottle age. It’s made entirely from estate-grown fruit by Geraldine McFaul, former winemaker for the neighbouring Stonier Winery.

Mitchell GSM (Grenache Sangiovese Mourvedre) 2006 $22
Clare Valley, South Australia

Winemaker Andrew Mitchell describes this as “the glorious essence of grenache enhanced with a touch of mourvedre and sangiovese”. He adds that the wine’s made from hand-pruned old vineyards from around Clare. It’s completely unoaked and a few years’ bottle age sets it apart from other reds at the price. A big, intriguing, earthy-savoury blend – with fruity, spicy grenache at the core – Mitchell GSM offers tonnes of flavour and character at a modest price.

Rutherglen Estate Shiraz Durif 2008 $13.95
Rutherglen, Victoria

Here winemaker Marc Scalzo presents a robust but happy, fruity face of Rutherglen’s two signature red varieties – shiraz and durif. The latter, also known as petite syrah, is an accidental shiraz-peloursin cross, first identified by Francois Durif at Montpellier, France, in 1880 and brought to Australia by Francois de Castella in 1908. This is a big, simple plummy style, packed with ripe fruit flavours and soft, easy-on-the-gums tannins. It’s a good general quaffer, but the sweet fruit and soft tannins allow it to match hot to spicy food.

Cloudy Bay Te Koko Sauvignon Blanc 2007 $50
Marlborough, New Zealand

Kevin Judd left a notable winemaking legacy at Cloudy Bay, including this left field, oak-fermented, aged sauvignon blanc style. While overproduction and declining prices take much of the cache from Marlborough sauvignon blanc – Te Koko flaunts the region’s extraordinary ability with the variety. As one taster aptly commented, Te Koko feels like chardonnay, tastes like sauvignon. The oak regime contributes a rich texture and complex flavours, but the pungent varietal flavour soars above it. It’ll be the centre of attention wherever it’s served.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Wine review — Pankhurst, Mitchell and Shelmerdine

Pankhurst Canberra District Dorothy May Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 $27–$30
Pankhurst Dorothy May 2009 was the sole star of the cabernet classes in the recent Canberra Regional Wine Show. It earned the only gold medal and trophy for the variety. And what a beautiful, seductive wine it is – another gem from the great 2009 vintage. Allan and Christine Pankhurst grow the fruit on their vineyard at Hall and Roger Harris makes the wine at his neighbouring Brindabella Hills Winery. The wine’s sweet, cedary aroma combines ripe, pure varietal fruit with beautifully judged oak; these are reflected, too, in the deep, juicy, elegantly structured palate. The wine is due for release early next year. Meanwhile the gold medal winning 2006 is still available.

Mitchell Clare Valley

  • Watervale Riesling 2009 $22
  • McNicol Clare Valley Riesling 2006 $35

What a delightful pair of rieslings from Jane and Andrew Mitchell’s Clare Valley vineyards. The younger wine presents riesling’s high-toned purity and lime-like varietal aromas and flavours, typical of Watervale, at the southern end of the valley. Its shimmering fruit and brisk, tangy acidity make it a good aperitif or company for delicate seafood; and it has potential to take on toasty complexity with age. McNicol, named for Andrew’s father, comes from a higher, cooler Clare vineyard that ripens two or three weeks later than Watervale. It’s ageing slowly and gracefully – combining fresh, tingly acidity with the deeper, maturing fruit flavours.

Shelmerdine Yarra Valley Chardonnay 2009 $29
Shelmerdine is a chardonnay that grows on you sip, by sip – subtle and restrained but revealing a little more with each glass. It’s probably best served at around 8–10 degrees, allowing the fine, delicate nectarine-like varietal flavour to emerge. It’s sourced from the Shelmerdine family’s Lusatia Park vineyard near Woori Yallock in the high, cool upper Yarra Valley. The winemaker captures the intense, delicate flavour through gentle hand harvesting, whole-bunch pressing and allowing spontaneous fermentation in older French oak barrels. The barrels add little oak flavour, but the oxidative environment and presence of spent yeast cells during maturation add to the texture and complexity of the wine.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Canberra regional wine show gets the big picture but falters on detail

What can we learn from the honours list from the local wine show? Perhaps that wine shows tend to capture the big picture well but falter, at times, on the detail; that shiraz, riesling and chardonnay perform best; that pinot noir, cabernet and sauvignon blanc, with occasional exceptions, fare less well, or even poorly; that we have distinct regional specialties; and that some niche varieties show great potential.

In an impressive blaze of glory, around two-thirds of the entries made from shiraz, riesling or chardonnay won gold, silver or bronze medals. And what a tight race those varieties fought for number one spot.

For all the talk we’ve heard about shiraz and riesling, chardonnay topped the rankings by a nose. Twenty one of the of the thirty one chardonnays entered won medals – five of them gold – for an aggregate strike-rate of 68 per cent and gold strike-rate of 16 per cent.

That’s a big enough sample to be significant. And when we look at the gold and silver medal winners, we see further confirmation of high, cool Tumbarumba’s class with this variety. It won three of the five gold medals and one of the two silvers. The three gold medallists all appeared under McWilliams Barwang label; the silver medallist was Cassegrain Fromenteau 2008.

However, Tumbarumba shared the glory with Centennial Vineyards Old Block Southern Highlands Chardonnay 2008 and Mount Majura Canberra District Chardonnay 2005. Centennial vineyards fared very well in the show overall; and the Mount Majura wine demonstrated that shy, restrained wines sometimes need time to reveal their best. The shy, restrained 2009 won silver – but we’ll back it for gold three of four years down the track, just like the 2005.

Shiraz, with an aggregate medal strike rate of 65 per cent from 49 wines, once again generated more excitement than any other variety, even if chardonnay snuck ahead marginally on medal strike rate.

We’ve adjusted the official shiraz figures slightly by shifting Centennial Vineyards Bong Bong Australian Red from the “other reds” class to the shiraz classes. It topped the “other reds” group, just nudging out Mount Majura’s magnificent Tempranillo Shiraz Graciano 2009. But the web site describes it as being “mostly shiraz with a splash of tempranillo”. That’s good enough for us, for the purposes of studying varietal form, to call it shiraz.

With Centennial’s wine thrown in, 49 shirazes won six gold, seven silver and 18 bronze medals.

Canberra District showed strongly, winning three and a half of the seven golds. Our winning wines were Lark Hill Shiraz Viognier 2009 (made at Lark Hill using fruit from Ravensworth Vineyard, Murrumbateman), Lerida Estate Lake George Shiraz Viognier 2008 and Ravensworth Murrumbateman Shiraz Viognier 2008. And we can claim half of the gold medal for Eden Road’s 2009 blend from Canberra and Hilltops.

That gives Hilltops half a gold medal plus one each for Moppity Vineyards 2009 and Clonakilla 2009. And the seventh shiraz gold, of course, belongs to Centennial’s shiraz-tempranillo blend, the wine we’ve pulled in from the “other reds” category.

Results in the shiraz class raise serious questions, though, about variations in awards from wine show to wine show – and how show awards stack up against critical acclaim from other sources.

In the Canberra show, it’s fair to say the judges showed a leaning to the bigger, fruiter, broader shiraz styles (in the cool climate context). More refined wines, like Nick O’Leary 2009 and Clonakilla O’Riada 2009, for example, scraped in with bronze medals. Yet O’Leary’s beautiful wine won a gold medal and trophy at the recent Winewise Small Vignerons Awards; and you can bet your last bottle of 1971 Grange, critics will fall over themselves praising the sensational 2009 O’Riada.

In fact, I’ll bet a bottle of Clonakilla Shiraz Viognier now that chair of judges, Ben Edwards, co-author with James Halliday of the Australian Wine Companion, ranks O’Riada ahead of this year’s trophy winner, Clonakilla Hilltops Shiraz 2009, in the next edition. That is, he’ll rate the bronze medallist higher than the gold medallist in other circumstances.

Why do I say that so confidently? And is this just some smart arse claiming a better palate than the show judges? The answer to both questions lies in the different ways critics appraise wine.

In a show we see no labels, just glasses on numbered squares, and we know nothing more than the variety, vintage and, in the case of the Canberra show, that the wines must come from one of the regions accepted by the show. Not surprisingly, with 24 strapping 2009 vintage shirazes lined up and only about two minutes average tasting time per wine, the more delicate styles like O’Leary and O’Riada may simply have been overshadowed by bolder or more fruitier wines. Indeed, judges call this well-known phenomenon “shadowing”.

The same judges sipping the same wines, or just a few of the same wines, at a more leisurely pace – perhaps over a few hours, or even revisited frequently over a few days, may easily rank the wines in different order. Certainly the fine-boned styles won’t remain in the shade. In fact, I’m backing them to prevail. We’ll see.

It’s also worth noting the absence, for various reasons, of several of the Canberra District’s best shirazes – firstly, our premiere wine, Clonakilla Shiraz Viognier, then another long-term performer, Capital Wines Kyeema Vineyard Shiraz and it’s vineyard mate, Collector Reserve Shiraz, and finally Mount Majura Shiraz. Moving the show back a few months may see some of these wines entered in the show. Mount Majura 2009, for example, hadn’t been bottled at the time of judging.

Murrumbateman made a clean sweep of the gold medals in the riesling classes. The winners were Helm Classic Dry 2010, Helm Premium 2009, Clonakilla 2010 and Gallagher 2010.

While cabernet performed poorly overall, winning just eight medals from 38 exhibits, Pankhust 2009 won the sole gold medal for the variety and drew this high praise from the judges, “the top wine showed the benefit of judicious oak use and was a truly medium-bodied cooler climate style done well.

Twenty-five pinot noirs scraped just three bronze medals; and nineteen sauvignon blancs and blends fared slightly better with one silver and three bronzes from 19 wines.

The judges found some excitement among the “other red” classes, awarding gold medals to Mount Majura’s previously mentioned Tempranillo Shiraz Graciano 2009, Centennial Vineyards Bong Bong Australian Red 2009 (a shiraz-tempranillo blend, mentioned above) and Southern Highlands Wines Merlot 2007. The also awarded silver medals to Mount Majura Tempranillo 2009 and Ravensworth Murrumbateman Sangiovese 2009.

Sparkling wines failed to impress the judges, scraping in only three bronze medals from 14 entries – white, pink and red. But 14 stickies yielded two gold medals – one each for Tertini Southern Highland Reserve Noble Riesling 2008 and Centennial Vineyards Southern Highlands Late Harvest Chardonnay 2009.

And, finishing on a high note, the “other white” classes glittered. Coolangatta Estate, Nowra, won gold medals for their 2006 semillon (confirming a long-established reputation for the variety) and 2010 savagnin – the savoury, dry variety previously misidentified in Australia as Spain’s albarino. And Canberra’s Eden Road Winery won gold for its The Long Road RHE 2009 – a single-vineyard, Canberra District viognier.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Beer review — Hopper Soft Brew and Henninger

Hopper Soft Brew Citrus, Apple and Blackcurrant 330ml $3
Looks and feels like beer texturally, but the red tinge in the blackcurrant gives it away. The citrus smells liked candied orange rind; the apple version is more clear-cut, like tangy granny smiths; and the blackcurrant’s like Ribena. To me they’re sweet and cloying, though carbohydrates represent just 7.9gms in every 100.

Henninger Original German Lager Bier 330ml 6-pack $11.99
Love ‘em or hate ‘em, the big retailers keep the pressure on premium beer prices by importing their own and selling it direct – cutting out the middleman. Coles imports Henninger for its Liquorland, 1st Choice and Vintage Cellars outlets. It’s a pleasant, light-golden lagers with appealing, delicate, herbal hops bitterness.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Hopper Soft Brew — zero alcohol fruit beer

Will anyone drink fruit juice with a beer flavour – or is that a beer-like drink with fruit flavour? Apparently it’s going gangbusters in the UK and it’s now being distributed in Canberra retail outlets.

The non-alcoholic drink, called Hopper Soft Brew and targeted at young adults, claims to be all-natural, with no additives or preservatives.

Billed as the soft drink born in a brewery, it’s the brainchild of a former Coca Cola Amatil executive, David Mead.

Mead says it’s made at the Southern Bay Brewing Company, near Geelong but took some years to perfect technically.

The brewer starts by making wort – derived by boiling water, malted barley and hops – then blending it with fruit juice and later pasteurising it and adding carbon dioxide. The boiling process, aided by natural enzymes, extracts soluble sugars from the malted barley. In brewing this is to prepare the sugars for alcoholic fermentation. But in this case, there’s no fermentation.

The result might best be described as a full-bodied soft drink with an energetic, persistent beer-like head, fruity flavour and colour derived from the fruit. The range currently includes citrus, apple and blackcurrant.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Wine review — Holm Oak, Seppelt Drumborg, Stefano Lubiana, Heartland, Coriole and Penfolds

Holm Oak Riesling 2009 $25
Rowella, Tasmania

Before unscrewing the cap, prepare for a giant step away from our traditional Clare Valley, Eden Valley or even Canberra riesling styles. Rowella’s very cool climate means more acidic grapes. The resulting wines tend therefore to be lean and minerally with high natural acidity. We see this in Home Oak, produced by husband and wife team  – Rebecca Wilson in the winery and Tim Duffy in the vineyard. The cool climate also tends to intensify varietal flavour. In tandem with the natural acidity this delivers a delicate, bracingly fresh, dry aperitif style with potential to build and fill out over time.

Seppelt Drumborg Vineyard Pinot Gris 2010 $27
Henty, Victoria

The wine’s been around since 1997 under Seppelt’s Coborra label. The name change simply emphasises its source – the Drumborg vineyard, just north of Portland on Victoria’s southwestern coast. The particularly cool site brings out the distinctive, if elusive, pear-like varietal flavour; and fermentation and maturation of part of the blend in older French oak vats builds texture and richness on the palate. It’s bone dry, zesty fresh and finishes with a pleasant savoury bite. Emma Wood makes the wine at Seppelt’s Great Western winery.

Stefano Lubiana Pinot Noir 2008 $45–$50
Derwent River, Tasmania

There’s something special about this part of the Derwent, just outside Hobart – home to Steve and Monique Lubiana’s vineyard and neighbouring Derwent Estate. Lubiana’s chardonnay and pinot rate among the best in Australia. And we know that Derwent Estate supplies chardonnay for Penfolds flagship Yattarna and Hardy’s just-released, new Eileen Hardy pinot noir. While Derwent Estate has yet to appear on the wine drinker’s radar, Lubiana demonstrates in this wine just how good the sub-region is. This is pinot of rare dimension – fragrant and intense, with deep, sweet fruit, restrained by fine, but firm tannins. This is pure power and elegance, built for the long haul.

Heartland Dolcetto and Lagrein 2008 $17
Langhorne Creek and Limestone Coast, South Australia

Dolcetto, originating in northwestern Italy and Lagrein, from the northeast, succeed dramatically well in this blend from winemaker Ben Glaetzer. The vivid purple colour, heady, ripe-cherry aroma and opulent, juicy-but-dry, savoury palate make a winning combination – especially at the price. Ben writes that dolcetto provides the “berry fruit flavours and lifted tones” while lagrein offers “astounding colour intensity and very good acid retention”. Something different and thoroughly enjoyable.

Coriole Reserve Sangiovese 2007 $45
McLaren Vale, South Australia

The Lloyd family was an early pioneer of Italy’s sangiovese, planting its first vines in 1985, about a decade behind Carlo Corino at Montrose, Mudgee, but a generation ahead of a wider trend to “alternative” varieties. This is Mark Lloyd’s first “reserve” since 1998 – “selected from our best vineyards and barrels from vintage 2007”, he writes. It’s pristine sangiovese, with an aroma and flavour reminiscent of dark, ripe, sour cherry, backed by firm, savoury tannins. Unlike most McLaren Vale reds, it’s medium rather than full-bodied. I suspect that over time it’ll become more ethereal, savoury and earthy while retaining its lovely core of unique, varietal fruit flavour.

Penfolds Grandfather Rare Tawny $99
South Eastern Australia

The distinctive pale, green-gold rim reveals Grandfather’s great age – an average of more than 20 years’ oak ageing for the various components in the blend. It’s one of Australia’s great wine treasures, based on a six-stage “solera” housed in a non-descript shed at Kalimna, northwestern Barossa Valley. Over great periods of time, the fortified blend of (predominantly) mourvedre, shiraz, cabernet and grenache takes on its unique, aged colour, aroma, flavour and texture through a process of slow oxidation in small, old oak barrels. The result is a luxurious tawny of great finesse and character.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Wine review — Robert Stein, Bay of Fires and Tin Soldier

Robert Stein Mudgee Reserve Riesling 2010 $45
What does Mudgee stand for as a winemaking region? I’ve visited there, judged there, and tasted wines from there since the late seventies, all without spotting a regional hero. Chardonnay stood out more than any other. Riesling, however, didn’t register until Robert Stein’s caught our attention a few years back. Winemaker Jacob Stein, says he sources fruit for the reserve wine from the family’s 32-year-old vines, at an altitude of 600 metres – considerably higher up than most Mudgee vineyards. Almost certainly the cooler site gives Stein riesling its racy edge and intense, fine, lime-like varietal flavour. It’ beautifully made a pleasure to drink, from first drop to last.

Bay of Fires Tasmania Pinot Noir $35
For a glimpse of Tasmania’s winemaking future, grab a bottle of this beautiful, silk-smooth, trophy-winning pinot before the price heads north. It’s part of Constellation Wine’s portfolio and made at their Bay of Fires Winery, Pipers River. Winemaker Fran Austin sourced fruit for the wine from a variety of clones grown on several vineyards on Tasmania’s east coast, Coal River Valley and Derwent Valley. Fran’s been tweaking the wine for about a decade, and in that time we’ve seen it evolve from a nice drop to jaw-dropping good. It joins a growing number of distinguished wines destined to make Tassie Australia’s pinot capital.

Tin Soldier Hunter Valley

  • Verdelho 2010 $18
  • Shiraz 2009 $20

Tin Soldier is the big-value member of a family produced by Swish Wines, comprising what were once the Gartelman and Warrarong vineyards in the Hunter Valley’s Lovedale sub-region. The verdelho is all about juicy freshness and fresh-from-the-vine fruit flavour – an appealing drop to quaff in its youth, then back up for the new vintage next year. The shiraz provides classy drinking at this price. Its pure, natural and fine-boned – in the Hunter’s medium-bodied, understated style. The winemaker hasn’t burdened it with too much oak, allowing the fruit to express itself. But it’s not too tutty-fruity either; it’s more trim and savoury.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010