Monthly Archives: April 2012

Craft beer festival, Canberra, 14 April

Although the Schwarz Family Company shelved plans for a brewery at its Canberra hotel (the Mercure, formerly Olims), the company continues to sell its own Sydney-brewed beer there and to run its annual craft beer festival.

This year’s event – to be held at the Mercure next Saturday from 11am to 6pm – features beers from 15 brewers: Schwartz, Coopers, Little Creatures, Malt Shovel, Lord Nelson, Paulaner, Stricklands, Harts Rocks Brewery, Matilda Bay, Stone and Wood, Mudgee Brewing Company, 4 Pines, Pinchgut, Hop Dog and Dalgety Brewing.

Canberra’s Zierholz and Wig and Pen are notable absentees. Nevertheless, with over 80 beers and ciders on tasting, it’s a significant event for local beer lovers.

A $25 pass ($35 for families) includes a cup and ten tasting tickets. Full details and tickets are available at www.canberrabeerfest.com

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 11 April 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Ravensworth, Juniper Crossing and Oxford Landing Estates

Ravensworth Murrumbateman Sangiovese 2010 $21
In the hot, then wet, then cool 2010 season, grape ripening “rushed ahead, then stopped”, says winemaker Bryan Martin. As a result, shiraz struggled to ripen. But Martin’s very small crop of sangiovese (10 barrels) ripened easily. “It was the best fruit in the winery in 2010”, he says. But it came in it a lower than normal pH – meaning a more purple colour and softer tannins than usual. Behind the deep but limpid purple colour lurks a delicious, fairly fleshy red – quite a contrast to the generally bonier wines of the vintage – with sangiovese’s distinctive, savoury and still reasonably firm tannins.

Juniper Crossing Margaret River Cabernet Sauvignon Merlot 2009 $17–$21
Juniper Estate, located at Wilyabrup in the historical heart of Margaret River, makes two ranges of wines – the Estate range, sourced only from the estate, and showcasing the best of the vineyard; and the Crossing range, purpose-built for early drinking. The Crossing wines all provide excellent drinking, though the semillon sauvignon blanc and cabernet sauvignon merlot hold the strongest appeal to my palate. Winemaker Mark Messenger sourced fruit for the 2009 cabernet merlot from estate vineyards and one long-term grower. It’s a delicious, ripe and full-flavoured expression of this regional specialty, with vibrant fruit flavours to the fore.

Oxford Landing Estate Chardonnay 2011 $6.65–$9.50
Yalumba’s Wyndham Hill-Smith established Oxford Landing vineyard on the Murray River, South Australia, in 1958. In the 1980s Hill-Smith’s son, Robert, launched the Oxford Landing Estate range as a fighting brand to take on the big companies. The meticulously managed estate still contributes chardonnay grapes to a brand that sits with the best in its price range. But the company also sources grapes from other grower sin the region – hence the subtle rebranding from ‘estate’ to ‘estates’. The full-bodied winner delivers pure, ripe, peachy varietal flavour with crisp acidity and a firm, tangy finish.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 8 April 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Ravensworth, Crittenden Estate, Innocent Bystander, Hungerford Hill and De Bortoli

Ravensworth Marsanne 2010 $21
Ravensworth Vineyard, Murrumbateman, Canberra District, New South Wales
Riesling’s our local white specialty. But vignerons seeking an alternative, might look beyond the usual suspects, like chardonnay or sauvignon blanc, to the Rhone Valley varieties, marsanne, roussanne and viognier – whether blended or solo. Bryan Martin grows all three and enjoys quite a following for marsanne in particular. In 2010 a light crop ripened to a higher sugar level than usual, says Martin, producing a full-bodied expression of the style. Wild-yeast fermented in older oak barrels, it delivers the rich, verging on viscous, texture of the variety, with underlying delicious, honey-like and stone-fruit flavours – and a savoury, bone-dry finish.

Crittenden Estate Pinocchio Sangiovese 2010 $20–25
Heathcote, Victoria

Garry Crittenden made his first wine from an Italian grape variety (dolcetto) in 1992 – and went on to become one of Australia’s leading producers of Italian varietals. He now works with his son Rollo, who writes that the Pinocchio story – “of a wayward son and his ever tolerant creator Geppetto” – symbolises their working relationship. The Crittenden’s wild-yeast fermented sangiovese captures the bitter-sweet character of sangiovese and its dominating, savoury, mouth-drying tannins.

Innocent Bystander Mule Sangiovese 2010 $30
Paxton’s Gateway vineyard, McLaren Vale, South Australia

Well-known McLaren Vale grape grower, David Paxton, established the Gateway vineyard (now certified biodynamic) early last decade. He sells fruit to Yarra-based Innocent Bystander for their new single-vineyard range comprising viognier, shiraz and this very good sangiovese blend. Presumably it’s the seven per cent cabernet franc in the blend giving the initial un-sangiovese-like perfume. But on the palate, sangiovese takes over, weaving its dry, savoury tannins through the bright fruit flavours.

Hungerford Hill Fishcage Chardonnay 2010 $18
Tumbarumba, New South Wales

Grow the right grapes in the right regions and you get beautiful results. In this instance, chardonnay from high, cool Tumbarumba reveals its tasty white peach and grapefruit varietal flavours and zingy, fresh acidity. The winemaker fermented a small portion of the blend in oak barrels. Together with maturation on yeast least lees, this added a rich texture and subtle “leesy” notes that season the pristine fruit character.

De Bortoli La Boheme Act Two Dry Pinot Noir Rose 2011 $20
Yarra Valley, Victoria

Leanne De Bortoli and winemaking husband Steve Webber share a love of southern France’s pale, soft, dry roses. The couple are also leaders of the rose revolution, a social-media-led annual campaign to promote this style of rose. De Bortoli offers two Yarra pinot-based versions of the style – a slightly more tart and tangy estate-grown version ($22) and La Boheme, named for Puccini’s opera. It’s pale coloured and offers light, strawberry-like pinot flavour on a richly textured and fresh but very soft palate.

Ravensworth Shiraz Viognier 2010 $30
Ravensworth Vineyard, Murrumbateman, Canberra District, New South Wales
After the succulent and fleshy 2009 vintage, Ravensworth 2010 presents a more sinewy side of cool-climate shiraz. Winemaker Bryan Martin says the shiraz grapes raced ahead early, then stopped, then struggled to ripeness, while retaining good acidity. This resulted in a fairly bony, just-ripe red, emphasising the peppery and spicy varietal flavours of the cool season. A high proportion of whole-bunches in the ferment injected a subtle stalky note that boosted those cool-climate flavours and added silkiness to the sinewy structure. It’s an edgy, irresistible wine and grows more interesting with every glass.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 4 April 2012 in The Canberra Times

 

Natural wine is the buzzword — but what does it really mean?

When is a wine natural? The concept of “natural” wine stuck its head into our letterbox twice last month. The first, a note from Clare Valley winemaker Jeffrey Grosset, accompanied a sample of the magnificent Grosset Gaia 2009 (five-star review 28 March).

Grosset’s note sparked our curiosity. It read, “The Gaia vineyard is named after James Lovelock’s original book Gaia: a new look at life on Earth. Lovelock proposed the Gaia hypothesis, now Gaia theory, that the Earth is a single organism, reliant on the complexity and diversity of its species to maintain ecological health.

While there is an international ‘natural’ wine movement, many great winemakers who believe they are already making natural wine have chosen not to jump on the ‘natural’ bandwagon. Jeffrey Grosset remains a firm believer in being guided by the producer’s name, rather than by a loosely defined term.

For decades now, every Grosset wine has been made with such precision and attention to detail, that the need for fining has been avoided and the wine’s integrity maintained. So in the absence of any chemical additives or finings, is it possible to refer to Grosset wines as anything but natural?”

The second arrival in our letterbox – Alice Feiring’s new book, Naked wine: letting grapes do what comes naturally – plunged directly into the natural wine movement, the object of Grosset’s comments.

Feiring traces the rise of today’s natural wine movement to Jules Chauvet, French scientist, his assistant, Jacques Neauport, and a winemaker in the Beaujolais village of Morgon, Marcel Lapierre.

In 1978”, writes Feiring, “Marcel Lapierre came to terms with the reality that he couldn’t stand to drink his own wine”. Independently of Lapierre, Chauvet had noted with despair the degradation of Beaujolais wines.

In a 1984 interview with American writer Kermit Lynch, reports Feiring, Chauvet recounted the unwelcome transformation of Beaujolais, between the late 1940s and mid 1970s, from fruity low-alcohol red, to hollow, alcoholic wine – often over-sulphured and smelling of banana, courtesy of “the industrial yeast 71B”.

Excessive yields made the wines ever more insipid and over use of chemicals in vineyards resulted in degraded soils, devoid of life and nutrients, Chauvet told Lynch. Ultimately, writes Feiring, “The region, capable of such greatness, became the vinous equivalent of candy corn, consumed only once a year [thanks to the rise of Beaujolais nouveau]”.

Lapierre, and a few other Morgon producers influenced by him, altered their grape growing and winemaking practices. Lynch imported the wines to the United States and began the difficult task of selling these wines, made without the addition of sugar (to boost alcohol content), sulphur or yeast.

Forty years on, the natural wine movement enjoys a global following – with dedicated wine bars in some countries. But as far as I can ascertain, there’s no formal definition of “natural wine”. At the core lies a notion we can all relate to – that wine should be a clean, wholesome product from sustainable vineyards. At a practical level, for the naturalists, this means adding and taking away as little possible from wine – no or low sulphur additions, no additions of cultured yeast, sugar, acid, tannin or yeast nutrients, no use of fining agents and no filtration.

But the proponents seem to share plenty of common ground with winemakers not sailing under the “natural” banner. And this brings us back to Jeffrey Grosset.

He says, “I was at a restaurant and their list had a whole section on natural wines. I was shocked and asked where are we? It’s a shame the naturals feel they have to put a wedge between themselves and other winemakers. It’s flawed logic to think that to show that I’m better I must show that others are wrong”.

He sees flawed logic, too, in insisting on wild yeast ferments and avoiding sulphur additions. The latter, he likens to throwing away personal hygiene – opening the door to oxidation in delicate juice like riesling and microbial spoilage in finished wine.

Grosset sees the term “natural yeast” as a misnomer, believing that yeast populations in wineries, and perhaps in the vineyard, as most likely including strains previously introduced. “Wild yeast” is therefore a better descriptor.

He says that if you’ve gone to the trouble to choose the right vineyard sites, use organic practices, balance every vine and get every bunch, every berry ripe and eliminate damaged fruit, “then using wild yeast doesn’t align with all this control. The results might be great or not so great”. He prefers to use a range of known yeasts in every ferment, emulating successful wild-yeast ferments.

Every bunch is precious and we make the best wine we can. We can’t leave it to fate”, he concludes.

Grosset speaks only for himself. But hundreds of Australian winemakers have been striving for decades to create healthy soils in their vineyards, gradually bringing their fruit to perfection and adding, or taking away, only what they need to make natural wines. They’ve simply not jumped on the “natural” bandwagon.

And as Feiring points out in her book, so-called “natural” winemakers embrace a spectrum of views. These range from strict no-sulphur regimes, to a minimum intervention approach strikingly similar to what Grosset and many other Australian makers employ.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 4 April 2012  in The Canberra Times

Beer review — Murray’s and Fullers

Murray’s Punch and Judy’s Ale 330ml $5.00
Punch and Judy’s ale, sub-titled “Ain’t no one pulling our strings”, puts heaps of flavour into mid-strength (3.9 per cent) beer. Lose the alcohol and lose the flavour, brewers say. But Murray’s uses dark malts and assertive bitter hops to close the gap – producing an intense, dry, lingeringly bitter brew of real interest.

Fullers Golden Pride Superior Strength Ale 500ml $8.40
Fuller’s luxurious ale carries its 8.5 per cent alcohol with grace and style. High alcohol tends to dominate beer flavour, but here it’s absorbed by the plush maltiness (pale-ale and crystal malts) and balanced by richly flavoured, bitter northdown, challenger and harvest hop varieties. It’s a sumptuous ale to savour with food.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 4 April 2012 in The Canberra Times

Hop into new brews

With the 2012 hop harvest in, watch for the seasonal, hop-focussed brews. Even before firing up its brew kettles, Tasmania’s Cascade Brewery (part of Foster’s), announced plans to hand harvest hops on 14 March.

Each year the company uses experimental hop varieties in its limited release Cascade First Harvest ale. Malted barley used in the brew is also from Tasmania’s 2012 harvest.

Head brewer Mike Unsworth says he’ll use three varieties this year, all grown at Bushy Park Estates in the Derwent Valley – but named after historic Tasmanian hop-growing regions.

The varieties are Campania, for bitterness, Triabunna, for flavour, and Ellendale, for aroma.

By 18 March, Unsworth had the brew under way. Cascade expects to release 3,600 cases (24 375ml bottles) of First Harvest in the first week of May through selected retail outlets nationally – principally Dan Murphy, 1st Choice and Vintage Cellars.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 4 April 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Kooyong Estate, Kingston Estate and Crittenden Estate

Massale by Kooyong Mornington Peninsula Pinot Noir 2010 $25.95–$30
Haven and Ballewindi Vineyards, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria

I tried and like this wine on its release in mid 2011. Months later it appealed to me more than two more expensive companions in a three-cornered taste off – Mac Forbes Woori Yallock Yarra Valley 2010 and Vosne-Romanee (Mugneret-Gibourg) 2009. The colour’s vibrant and crimson rimmed. The aroma suggests ripe, black cherry with savoury and earthy notes. The vibrant, juicy palate reflects a spectrum of pinot flavours, including savouriness. Fine fruit and oak tannins permeate the fruit, providing structure under the signature slippery pinot texture. Fruit was sourced from the Kooyong’s Haven and Ballewindi vineyards.

Kingston Estate Barossa and Clare Valleys Shiraz 2010 $10.45–$15
Bill Moularadellis’s Kingston Estate, though based on the Murray River, sources fruit from other top wine-growing regions – in this instance shiraz from the Clare and Barossa Valleys. These warm regions give the wine its pure, ripe, cherry-like varietal aroma and fleshy, juicy fruit flavours. Ten years ago we would’ve expected a blend at this price to be beefed up with vanilla-like oak flavours and huge tannins. But in the modern style, this one let’s the fruit do the talking, with sufficient tannin to give structure and a dry, satisfying finish. There’s lots of flavour for your money here.

Crittenden Estate Los Hermanos Saludo al Txakoli 2011 $25
This is brother and sister Rollo and Zoe Crittenden’s take on an idiosyncratic white from Spain’s Basque region. They write, “Traditionally, three varieties have been used for Txakoli – hondarrabi zubi, hondarrabi beltza and petit manseng, chosen for their natural acid retention and vibrant flavour at low alcohol. With the first two varieties unavailable in Australia, we have used petit manseng, grown in the King Valley”. It’s built to enjoy with savoury food – pale coloured and low in alcohol with tart, vibrant acidity and the further tingle and teasing bite of light, spritzy carbon dioxide.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 1 April 2012 in The Canberra Times