Yearly Archives: 2013

Beer review — Townshend Brewery and Duke

Townshend Brewery Dinner Ale 500ml $6.58
Townshend comes from Upper Moutere, Nelson – the beautiful heart of New Zealand’s hop industry. The ale’s wussy four per cent alcohol is well and truly made up for by its attractive fruitiness and spicy, lightly pungent hops character. Natural carbonation adds to the overall gentleness and freshness of a distinctive brew.

Duke Premium Lager 330ml $4.98
Duke’s, from Burleigh Heads, Queensland, joins the increasingly crowded premium lager market with a decent but hardly distinctive brew. The lively, abundant white head, bright medium-golden colour; pleasant herbal, hoppy aroma and mildly bitter palate offer good refreshment, if not a new interpretation of the much-abused term, “premium lager”.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 6 February 2013 in The Canberra Times

Cooper laughs all the way to the bank

As the traditional beer market struggles and the premium end expands, privately owned Adelaide Brewer, Coopers, sits in the sweet spot.

In January, Managing Director Dr Tim Cooper said the company’s after tax profit rose to a record $27.2 million in 2012, “up 18% on the $23 million in 2010–11”.

Cooper also announced a $20 million expansion program for this year, to meet growing demand for its own products and to brew under contract for Sapporo and Carlsberg.

Cooper said beer sales to December 2013 were up 13.6 per cent on 2011 – attributing half of the increase from sales of Sapporo, Carlsberg and Kronenbourg.

Coopers claims to be the biggest Australian owned brewery with a market share of four per cent. But that status seems likely to be challenged when Coca Cola Amatil returns to Australia’s beer market in 2014.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 6 February 2013 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Windy Peak, Capital Wines, Tower Estate, Robert Stein and Clover Hill

Windy Peak Shiraz 2012 – $11.40–$14
Heathcote, Victoria
Sometimes less is more. And that’s what makes modestly priced Windy Peak wine of the week. It isn’t over-oaked. It isn’t over extracted. It isn’t tricked up in any way as some cheaper wines can be. It simply delivers what it says on the label – shiraz from Heathcote, Victoria. We expect and get something from that regional-varietal combination: a riche but medium-bodied dry red with bright, spicy, shiraz flavour and a soft but savoury bite of tannin – a satisfying wine to enjoy now. Clever winemaking gives it an appealing combination of bright fruitiness and mellow red wineyness: the winemakers mature part of the blend in older oak casks (giving mellow, red wine character) and the balance in tank to retain fruitiness.

Capital Wines Ministry Series The Whip Riesling 2012 $19
Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW
The attractive Whip riesling comes from four different Murrumbateman vineyards, writes Capital’s Jennie Mooney. Approaching its first birthday, the wine’s delicate lime-like flavours are beginning to rise above the racy acidity – suggesting even better drinking ahead as it evolves over the next two or three years.

Capital Wines Ministry Series The Ambassador Tempranillo 2011 $27
Kyeema Vineyard, Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW
The Ambassador won gold at last year’s regional wine show, demonstrating how even the rottenest vintages, like 2011, can produce decent wines – largely through amazing amounts of work in the vineyard. It’s a medium bodied red, far removed in style from Spanish tempranillo. The sweet core of ripe berry flavours comes with a dash of spice and the savoury bite of the variety’s distinctive tannins. This vintage will probable be at its best over the next two or three years.

Tower Estate Pinot Noir 2011 $30
Cradoc and Coal River Valley, Tasmania
In Not my memoirs (Union Publishing, Sydney, 2012) the late Len Evans recounts the story of the Hunter Valley’s Tower Estate, his final creation and scene of one of the greatest wakes in history. Evans mentions the quest for Tasmanian pinot noir, and here we see a blend from the Panorama vineyard, near Cradoc, and the Meadowbank vineyard in the Coal River valley. It’s a pleasing, moreish wine, ticking most of the pinot boxes. I think Len would’ve seen it as a promising start.

Robert Stein Riesling 2012 $40
Stein Vineyard, Mudgee, NSW
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, sources riesling from the family’s mature 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’s beautifully made and a pleasure to drink, from first drop to last. Should age well for many years.

Clover Hill Brut Rose Cuvee Exceptionnnelle 2008 $55
Pipers River, Tasmania
Over Christmas we drank quite of lot of French non-vintage Champagne in this price range and generally rated them well below comparably priced Tasmanian bubblies from the House of Arras, Pirie and Clover Hill. The French, however, pulled away once we move into the more expensive vintage Champagnes. Clover Hill Rose, a blend of pinot noir and pinot meunier, appealed for its delicate, supple fruitiness and gentle texture, derived from prolonged ageing on yeast lees.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 6 February 2013 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Hartz Barn, Sibling Rivalry and Capital Wines

Hartz Barn Eden Valley Reserve General Store Riesling 2012 $25
Sydney-based Estate Wines distributes Penny Hart’s and David Barnett’s wines in NSW, including Canberra’s south-coast holiday patch. We discovered the excellent 2011 vintage riesling at Quarterdeck Restaurant, Narooma, which prompted a request to taste the even better 2012. Typical of the vintage it reveals loads of floral, round and juicy fruit flavours. But behind the fruit lies the crisp, taut acidity of the Eden Valley region – suggesting drink pleasure in the future as well as right now. It’s available online for $25 (hartzbarnwines.com.au_ and in selected restaurants along the coast for a little over $30.

Sibling Rivalry Geelong Pinot Noir 2010 $26
Sibling Rivalry, an addition to the Four Sisters brand, created by the late Trevor Mast, debuted on Chateau Shanahan’s tasting bench over the Christmas break. It’s a lovely, medium bodied pinot made to drink now and rated highly by English visitors more attuned to these lighter styles than traditional big Aussie reds. It comes from high-quality, maritime pinot country at Geelong. The winemakers applied traditional hands-on pinot techniques (like small-batch ferments and gentle hand plunging) to produce a fragrant, juicy, silky red for current drinking. It has flavour and character without heaviness.

Capital Wine Ministry Series The Swinger Sauvignon Blanc 2012 $19
Reflecting the sauvignon-blanc fatigue of so many in the wine industry (not seen in the market), Capital’s Jennie Mooney writes, “Yes, I know its just sauvignon blanc, but I want you to give this wine a little more attention please”. Well, we do. And what we find is sauvignon blanc – yelling at us with ripe, passionfruit-like aromas and flavours, plush and pleasantly tart at the same time. We think: cold salad, icy, briny oysters, as cold as the wine itself, and shade out of the 36 degree heat. Even partial barrel fermentation can’t blunt the overt sauvignon blanciness of this back slapper.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 3 February 2013 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Dandelion, Maipenrai, Moss Wood, Punt Road, Penny’s Hill and Hartz Barn

Dandelion Wonderland of the Eden Valley Riesling 2012 $22–$27.50
Colin Kroehn Vineyard, Eden Valley, South Australia
God knows where Colin Kroehn’s riesling grapes went before Dandelion’s bright young people came along. But since their arrival we’ve tasted some of the finest, most delicate Eden Valley riesling on offer – a particularly juicy, taut and delicate wine in the 2012 vintage. The Dandelion team includes Carl Lindner, Brad Rey, Zar Brooks and Elena Brooks, winemaker. Octogenarian Colin Kroehn tends his venerable old vines, planted in 1912.

Maipenrai Pinot Noir 2010 $34
Maipenrai vineyard, Sutton, Canberra District, New South Wales

Heavy rain before vintage split 80 per cent of the pinot grapes on Brian Schmidt’s Maipenrai vineyard. “We were spared botrytis”, writes Schmidt, “and the remaining fruit ripened under near perfect conditions. To ensure high quality, our fruit was picked by 100 people who went through the vineyard, grape by grape, and cut out all the split fruit. We were only able to produce two barrels”. It’s a successful wine and a pleasure to drink. We enjoyed it beside the Moss Wood Mornington wine, also reviewed today. They’re contrasting styles – Maipenrai offering bright, deep fruit flavours cocooned by the assertive tannins that seem to characterise the vineyard’s wines. There’s also a juicy texture, a touch of oak pushing through and a teasing, biting savoury element adding to the excitement. Available at $100 for 3 bottles at maipenrai.com.au

Moss Wood Pinot Noir 2010 $45
Dromana, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria

Moss Wood makes two pinots – one from estate vineyards in Margaret River, the other from Mornington Peninsula. I served the estate wine masked to a couple of experienced wine people and neither identified the variety – though we all enjoyed it as a lovely, medium-bodied dry red. The Mornington wine, on the other hand, could’ve been nothing but pinot, and a very good example of it. It’s fragrant, silky, smooth and seamless, with “pinosity”, an elusive element setting pinot apart from other red varieties.

Punt Road Chemin Chardonnay 2011 $40
Napoleone vineyard, Yarra Valley, Victoria
Punt Road’s new wine, made by Kate Goodman, comes from the oldest vines on the Napoleone family’s vineyard. The cool season naturally pushes the wine towards the lighter, finer end of the chardonnay spectrum – characteristics enhanced by hand harvesting and gentle handling. Two thirds of the wine was fermented in barrel; the remaining third on skins in tanks. As a result the wine shows the finesse and rich but soft texture resulting from barrel fermentation, with a little tweak of soft tannins from the skin contact – all held together by bright, zingy acidity.

Penny’s Hill Skeleton Key Shiraz 2010 $35
Penny’s Hill Vineyard, McLaren Vale, South Australia
Could McLaren Vale be getting the drop on its South Australian, warm-climate shiraz rival, the Barossa Valley? I’ve seen no research to support this, but over the past few years I’ve heard many casual wine drinkers talking up the Vale’s shiraz – far more than’ve spontaneously spruiked for the Barossa. The latest praise flowed over this beautiful Penny’s Hill wine, made by Ben Riggs. It shows the Vale’s generous, bright, sweet fruit flavours, backed by velvety tannins and complex earthy and savoury notes – a full-bodied, satisfying wine without the hotness or heaviness sometimes seen from warmer regions.

Hartz Barn Reserve General Store Riesling 2011 $25–$31
Eden Valley, South Australia
Chris and Robyn Scroggy’s Quarterdeck restaurant, in a converted boatshed on Wagonga Inlet, Narooma, offers fresh seafood in a beautiful, casual, quirky setting. The wine list reflects the tastes of Quarterdeck patrons, meaning we skip over a long list of sauvignon blancs (“they love Marlborough”, says Chris Scroggy) to the solitary riesling – a wine seemingly made for fish and chips. From the cold 2011 vintage, its brisk acidity cuts through the fat and salt like lemon juice, while the more delicate floral notes and fruity flavours simply add to the drinking pleasure. It’s available online and in selected restaurants on the south coast.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 30 January 2013 in The Canberra Times

 

Wine-rating systems

I favour a simple like-dislike button, comparable to Facebook’s thumbs-up icon, as a credible wine-rating system. Failing that, a five-star rating, in half-star increments, or the Australian wine-show system’s bronze, silver and gold medal ratings, based on a 20-point scale, both give a broad quality ranking without splitting hairs.

However, the 100-point scale, popularised by America’s Robert M Parker, increasingly dominates the global scene and will inevitably become the standard for Australian wine shows (and already adopted by many critics). Brisbane Show and the Canberra International Riesling Challenge adopted it last year. Sydney trialled it in 2012 and intends going the whole hog this year.

Fortunately, Brisbane and Sydney at least settled on the same rating scale: 84–89 points for bronze medals; 90–95 for silvers and 96–100 for golds. And since both shows intend sticking with medals, consumers may not, at first, notice the difference between the 100-point system and 20-point scale it replaces.

That is, until successful producers begin adding scores to the gold, silver and bronze medals adorning their wines. The temptation may prove irresistible, especially for those with scores in the nineties – and a wine consumer now well and truly exposed to the 100-point system.

As well, wine show catalogues, now little read outside the industry, may attract wider consumer readership, if only because of greater familiarity with 100-point ratings. The old 20-point system probably meant nothing to the average wine lover.

Indeed, this is one of the points argued by supporters of 100-point rating – that the scores will help make wine shows more relevant to the consumer.

Part and parcel of 100-point ratings, is the dubious perception that only wines scoring 90 or above deserve attention.

While producers, traders and critics often slam this attitude, it’s completely understandable given the confusing number of wines available. And it’s little different, in principle, than a phenomenon observed for decades by producers and retailers – that gold medals and trophies sell wine; silver and bronze medals do not.

This says only that an insecure consumer, faced with a bewildering choice, takes the impartial advice of wine shows or critics and plumps for the best.  Since they can always find a 95-point wine at any price point, why buy the 89-point one?

This desire to help readers buy well also explains why publishers, including The Canberra Time and the larger Fairfax group, demand ratings from their wine reviewers.

While Fairfax overall embraces the 100-point system, this magazine chooses five-star ratings – my preferred system.

This seems more in tune with the percipient English writer, Hugh Johnson. He once commented after judging at the Sydney wine show, “I judge wine by loving it or hating it … and there’s not much in between. I love vitality in a wine, the sort of wine where one bottle is not enough… giving wines points creates a spurious sense of accuracy and if you can believe it means something when someone gives a wine 87 points out of 100 then you would believe anything.”

Like Johnson, judges, critics and consumers all seek exciting wines. And I believe he’s dead right about the spurious sense of accuracy in 100-point ratings – hence, my preference for a broader scale.

I don’t see how wine shows, or anyone who’s judged in wine shows, can adopt the scale with a straight face. Scoring always involves compromises by individual judges and either aggregate or average scores across a panel of three. That’s how committees work and how a truly democratic system should – allowing full expression of individual views, but finally reaching a decision.

Under the 20-point scoring system, wine shows award medals on the aggregate scores of three judges: 46.5–50.5 for bronze medals, 51.0–55.0 for silver and 55.5–60 for gold.

Under the 100-point system, however, shows will award medals based on the average score of three judges – for example, if one judge rated a wine at 83 points (one point below bronze), another gives it 86 and the third awards 89 (the highest bronze score), the aggregate is 258 points for an average of 86.

In the argy-bargy following each judging session, I can already see judges madly adjusting scores to achieve just the right average. Now that will be an exercise in futility.

There’s little difference in principle between the two systems. However, in the past if consumers saw the results at all, they probably saw the medals, not the aggregate score that led to it.

Under the new system, if shows and exhibitors publicise the points, then we’re likely to see scores, as in the example above, that no judge actually awarded. And could anyone interpret the relative merits of wines rated, say, 86 and 88 – by a committee of three? Sounds spurious to me.

And while some argue for the merits of a standard 100-point system, ratings among critics may vary considerably, not necessarily reflecting the wine-show bronze, silver and gold categories. Already, ratings by individual critics vary, as you’d expect of individual opinion, underlining the fact that that’s all it is.

Most consumers will continues to feel insecure about wine and, quite sensibly, take advice from wine shows and critics with due scepticism. I, for one, see the supposed precision of the 100-point system as a distraction from wine’s infinitely variable hues and tones.

Surely it’s better for readers if critics attempt to give some sense of a wine’s style, then a broad view of its quality – whether gold, silver or bronze; somewhere on the five-star scale; or even categorised, as Canberra’s Winewise magazine does, as highly recommended, recommended, agreeable, acceptable or unacceptable.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 30 January 2013 in The Canberra Times

Beer and cider review — Batlow and Holgate

Batlow Premium Cider 330ml 4-pack $16
What a contrast between the sweet, bland, mass-produced ciders and the crisp, crunchy apple-in-a-bottle taste of Batlow Premium – an off-dry, tart, cider made from apples grown within a 30 kilometre radius of Batlow. The company says it uses only freshly crushed apples, not concentrate, and adds no sugar. And it tastes like it.

Holgate Brewhouse Temptress Chocolate Porter 330ml $6.50
It’s not a heatwave brew, but at a tad over six per cent alcohol, Chocolate Porter suits those cool Canberra nights. It’s a porter, made from seven different malts, boosted by the addition of cocoa and vanilla beans. The vanilla sits well in the background. But the cocoa adds luxurious chocolate flavours and texture.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2013
First publisehd 30 January 2013 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Centenary of Canberra

Centenary of Canberra Chardonnay Pinot Noir Cuvee Centenary $30
In 2008 a group of local winemakers produced a shiraz and a riesling for release in Canberra’s centenary year, 2013. But, writes vigneron Allan Pankhurst, “Only about 300 cases of each were produced of which half is already earmarked for use by the ACT government and key organisations for the centenary celebrations. So I thought there was both more wine needed and a more celebratory style would be complementary to the other wines. Hence the sparkling came after – from the 2011 vintage”. Canberra’s sparkling specialist, Greg Gallagher, made and blended the wine with Jeir Creek’s Rob Howell. It’s available at canberrawines.com.au/centenary.

Centenary of Canberra Riesling 2008 $30
Several of Canberra’s top riesling makers collaborated on this blend back in 2008. A panel tasted samples from the vintage, selected suitable parcels and recommended the final blending ratios. Roger Harris (Brindabella Hills Winery) finished and bottled the wine with assistance from Mr Riesling, Ken Helm. The result is very pleasing indeed. The delicate wine combines lime-like varietal character with the mellow, honeyed notes of five years’ bottle age. Age also takes the edge off the acidity that makes Canberra riesling a little too austere in youth. It’s at its drinking peak right now – a delicious example of Canberra’s white specialty. (Available at canberrawines.com.au/centenary).

Centenary of Canberra Shiraz 2008 $35Canberra’s centennial red blend comprises parcels of shiraz selected by a panel of winemakers, then blended and bottled by local red royalty: Eden Road’s Nick Spencer, Collector’s Alex McKay and Clonakilla’s Tim Kirk. It’s moving into its peak drinking period – with the strength and freshness to hang in for a few more years. The colour’s remains red and youthful. And the aroma and flavour retain underlying bright berry fruit character, now meshed with delicious spicy and savoury notes. It’s medium bodied and tightly structured with an assertive grip of fine tannins in harmony with the savoury flavours. (Available at canberrawines.com.au/centenary).

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 27 January 2013 in The Canberra Times

Beer review — Grand Ridge and Matilda Bay

Grand Ridge Brewery Brewer’s Pilsner 330m 6-pack $18
Grand Ridge’s original beer, first tasted years ago at the brewery in Mirboo North, Gippsland Victoria, retains its original style. It’s an assertive Czech-inspired brew, big on malt, with a caramel-like richness, and cut through with the bracing, pungent aroma, flavour and lingering bitterness of Saaz hops – a robust and distinctive style.

Matilda Bay Minimum Chips Golden Lager 330ml 6-pack $19.99
Foster’s-owned Matilda Bay launched Minimum Chips in November through the various Woolworths-owned Dan Murphy, BWS and Woolworths Liquor; and on tap at its Port Melbourne Brewery and Bar. It’s a pleasing, full-bodied lager, mid-golden in colour with rich malt and a firm, assertive hops bitterness.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 23 January 2013 in The Canberra Times

Beer and cider in Coca-Cola Amatil’s sights

You can almost feel Coca-Cola Amatil straining at the leash to get back into the blossoming premium beer and cider markets. On December 16, the company’s restraint agreement with SABMiller (owner of Fosters) expires.

When CCA sold its stake in Pacific Beverages to SAB Miller, it agreed to remain out of the Australia beer and cider markets. But CCA made no secret of its intention to return to the market and announced several major liquor acquisitions following its agreement with SABMiller.

CCA acquired Foster’s Group Pacific Limited (renamed Paradise Beverages (Fiji) Limited, owner of a Fiji brewery; entered into a joint venture with the Casella family to brew beer in Griffith, NSW; and recently won the rights to distribute Rekorderlig cider in Australia from 1 January 2014 (number one brand by value in the off-license market, says CCA).

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 23 January 2013 in The Canberra Times