Yearly Archives: 2013

Wine review — Seppeltsfield, Wicks Estate and Tscharke

Seppeltsfield Eden Valley Riesling 2012 $19.80–$22
After a couple of changes of ownership in recent years, Barossa’s historic Seppeltsfield belongs to four investors, led by winemaker and managing director, Warren Randall. Under an arrangement with former owner, Foster’s (now Treasury Wine Estates), Randall’s group can sell Seppeltsfield table wines only through the cellar door and mail order. However, it distributes the unique and superb Seppeltsfield fortified wines throughout and Australia. And Treasury continues to use the Seppelt brand for table and sparkling wines. Seppeltsfield riesling, under its beautiful retro label, provides the full flavoured delicacy of a great Eden Valley vintage. (Available at seppeltsfield.com.au).

Wicks Estate Adelaide Hills Shiraz 2012 $16.15–$20
In 1999, property developers Tim and Simon Wicks bought a 54-hectare property at Woodside, Adelaide Hills. They planted a 40-hectare vineyard and, in 2004, built a winery large enough to process the vineyard’s considerable grape output. The wines, made by Tim Knappstein, Leigh Ratzmer and Chris Parsons, have been outstanding at the price. On a recent visit to the winery, the 2012 shiraz appealed strongly. It’s of a similar quality and style to the gold-medal-winning 2010 vintage (there was no 2011), offering lovely fragrance, vibrant, ripe-berry and spicy flavours and silky soft tannins.

Tscharke Girl Talk Barossa Valley Savagnin 2012
As cooler areas inexorably dominate production of the crisp, zesty white styles demanded by consumers, some winemakers in warmer areas like the Barossa seek white varieties that make appealing wine in these warm, dry conditions. Damien Tscharke pioneered the Spanish variety, albarino, only to find it was savagnin. Whatever it’s called, though, the variety produces a soft, juicy and smooth textured dry white with a pleasant savouriness setting it apart from, say, sauvignon blanc or chardonnay. For the first time in the very good 2012 vintage, Tscharke fermented a small proportion of the wine in older oak – boosting the wine’s texture.

Copyright Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 11 August 2013 in the Canberra Times

Lobethal beer

A couple of Alistair Turnbull’s bottled beers enjoyed here in Canberra, prompted a visit to his Lobethal Bierhaus. We’d been in the Barossa, so motored up through Angaston and south along the Mounty Lofty ranges.

Henschke, at Keyneton, doesn’t open Sundays, so we continued south through Springton, Eden Valley and across the invisible border to the Adelaide Hills and its string of lovely villages, including Lobethal.

It’s winter but a balmy 19 degrees, tempting the Bierhaus crowd, largely families with kids, into the beer garden, though the hall inside fills up with lunch time revelers, too.

It’s hard to imagine a friendlier, more relaxed place, offering good local food and soft drinks as well as the exceptionally good beers Turnbull brews on site. It’s a must visit, and an easy drive from Adelaide, or via the scenic route, going to or from the Barossa.

Lobethal Hefeweizen 330ml $4.99
Lobethal Bierhaus makes its wheat beer in the southern Bavarian style, characterised by a highly aromatic fruity character. A yeast haze hangs in the lovely golden liquid, topped by a dense white foam. The generous, creamy textured palate refreshes with its fruity flavour and tangy dry finish.

Lobethal Bierhaus Red Truck Porter 330ml $4.99
Porter sits at the dark end of the ale spectrum, generally a tad lighter coloured than stout, though that distinction doesn’t always hold. The aroma suggests roasted grain, coffee and chocolate – flavours delivered generously on the palate. A subtle hops flavour adds freshness and a mild bitterness that offsets the generous malt flavours.

Copyright  Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 7 August 2013 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Main Ridge, Prancing Horse Estate, Oliver’s Taranga, Paxton, Seppeltsfield and Langmeil

Main Ridge Estate Chardonnay 2011 $55
Main Ridge vineyard, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria
In a tasting of top-shelf chardonnays from the cold 2011 vintage, Main Ridge stood out from its bonier peers. The shift to leaner, tighter chardonnays in Australia has been overall a good thing, though some wines do seem a little too skinny, especially in very cool seasons. But even in one of the wettest, coolest vintages Nat and Rosalie white manage to keep some flesh on the bone. Theirs is an elegant chardonnay, in the best sense of the word – finely structured and delicate, but with beautiful fruit flavours, a subtle, sweet, caramel-like undercurrent (probably a result of malolactic fermentation) and smooth, silky mid palate and brisk, clean finish.

Prancing Horse Estate Pinot Noir 2010 $65
Prancing Horse vineyard, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria
Prancing Horse vineyard dates from 1990. But after a change in ownership in 2002, writes Tony Hancy, it was “rejuvenated with an extreme pruning regime. Additional clones were grafted into the sit alongside the existing MV6 and great effort went into changing the trellis system from Scott Henry to VSP [vertical shoot positioning]”. Hancy engaged Burgundian biodynamic wine consultant, Pascal Marchand, a soil expert, Professor Yves Herody, and winemaker Sergio Carlei. The team is clearly getting it all right as this is an outstanding pinot, showing intense, savoury fruit flavours and a strong, fine backbone of tannin.

Oliver’s Taranga Fiano 2013 $24
Oliver’s Taranga Vineyard, McLaren Vale, South Australia
Put this spritely white in you notebook for spring. Winemaker Corrina Wright, a sixth generation Oliver of Taranga, McLaren Vale, mixes several Italian and Spanish varieties in the family’s extensive plantings of more traditional cultivars. Wright’s fiano, an Italian white variety, is bracingly acidic but also richly textured, with a sweet kiss of residual grape sugar offsetting the high acid. Wright says the very low pH of two needed a little sugar coating. It’s something different and exhilarating for the coming summer.

Paxton AAA Shiraz Grenache 2011 $20
Paxton vineyards, McLaren Vale, South Australia
David Paxton and family operate several vineyards in McLaren. Paxton originally grew and sold grapes, and was involved in establishing several significant vineyards – including Hardys highly regarded Hoddles Creek vineyard in the Yarra Valley. However, the Paxtons moved to wine making a few years back and intend ultimately to process all of their own grapes for the Paxton label. AAA, a delicious, savoury, medium-bodied blend, is their biggest seller, offering the regional style at a fair price.

Seppeltsfield Solero DP117 Pale Dry Flor 500ml $29–$32
Seppeltsfield vineyard, Barossa Valley, South Australia
That unique Barossa wine estate, Seppeltsfield, sits on a treasure trove of fortified wine, stretching back in an unbroken sequence to the 1878 vintage. The company’s stocks include a solera of this thrilling, salty, briny, tangy fino “sherry” style made from palomino grapes grown on the estate. With an average age of eight years in barrel, it offers a fine and thrilling expression of this Spanish inspired style, so suited to savoury food like olives and anchovies.

Langmeil Eden Valley Riesling 2012 $25
Eden Valley, South Australia
On a cold Barossa day we arrived at Tanunda’s 1918 restaurant ready for a hot meal and cold drink. We asked the waitress for something refreshing, and she delivered Langmeil’s delicious Eden Valley riesling. The shimmering green-gold colour appealed enormously and the thrill carried through to the generous, vigorous, lime-like flavours. It’s a fuller-bodied version of the Eden Valley style, giving great drink-now appeal but without sacrificing vibrancy and freshness.

Copyright Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 7 August 2013 in the Canberra Times and goodfood.com.au

Wine review — Clonakilla, Turkey Flat and Red Knot

Clonakilla Hilltops Shiraz 2012 $28–$32
Heavy rain towards the end of February 2012 destroyed large volumes of ripe, or near ripe grapes in Canberra and surrounding districts. Clonakilla lost much of its Canberra fruit in the event. But, says Tim Kirk, they harvested most of their fruit from the Hilltops region (around Young, NSW), the day before the 200mm deluge arrived. The result is a delightfully rich red combining ripe, dark-cherry flavours with the spice and touch of black pepper we see from cooler areas. The wine’s medium bodied and shows the Clonakilla signature of great harmony and silky, juicy mid palate.

Turkey Flat Butcher’s Block Barossa Valley
Marsanne Roussanne Viognier 2012 $19.95

This is exactly the sort of white Barossa makers ought to specialise in. Made from three varieties well suited to warm, dry regions, Butcher’s Block offers texture and savouriness rather than the aromatics and fruitiness cooler regions do better. Christie Schulz polished the style over the years, treating each of the components separately, including skin contact for the viognier, early picking for the marsanne and later picking and whole bunch pressing for the roussanne – with 50 per cent of the blend matured in oak. It’s a full-bodied, richly textured dry white with subtle, underlying nectarine and apricot-like flavours.

Red Knot by Shingleback McLaren Vale
Grenache Shiraz Mourvedre 2012 $10.90–$1
5
The Davey family’s Red Knot range delivers some of the best value for money drinking in the market. Red drinkers twigged to this a few years back, and retailers responded by including the wines among their regular discounts. The wines easily deserve $15 a bottle. But they’re bargains when the price drops closer to $10 – as they were when I wrote this review. The 2012 blend leads with the lovely musk-like fragrance of grenache, supported on the soft and juicy palate by the richness of shiraz and spiciness of mourvedre.

Copyright Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 4 August 2013 in the Canberra Times

 

Wine review — Jim Barry, Port Phillip Estate, Peter Lehmann, By Farr, Cullen and Lowe

Jim Barry Lodge Hill Riesling 2013 $21–$23
Jim Barry Lodge Hill vineyard, Clare Valley, South Australia
A gold medal and trophy at the royal Queensland wine show underlines the drink-now, fruity, dry appeal of Jim Barry Lodge Hill Riesling. It’s probably a tad less in-your-face fruity than the trophy-winning 2012 vintage and therefore potentially of even wider appeal. At a recent office tasting, even the red wine diehards slurped it down and enquired where they might buy it. It should be available in any decent liquor store. 2013 looks to be another excellent Clare Valley riesling vintage.

Port Phillip Estate Quartier Pinot Noir 2012 $28
Mornington Peninsular, Victoria
Port Phillip Estate (including Kooyong Estate) recently released three pinot noirs, two from the cold, wet 2011 vintage and this crowd pleaser from the more benign 2012 season. Port Phillip Estate 2011 ($38) and Kooyong Estate 2011 ($53) offer lean and taut, silky expressions of the cool season. But Quartier 2012 takes us into plump, juicy fruity territory – ripe, round delicious pinot flavours with sufficient tannin structure and savouriness to count as a real red wine – an irresistible one at that.

Peter Lehmann Drawcard Shiraz 2010 $21–$23
North-western ridge, Barossa Valley, South Australia
Peter Lehmann died in June, so Drawcard shiraz reminds us of the Barossa wines he loved and championed. And of course they’re still being made under his name by long-serving winemaker Ian Hongell. Sourced from old vines in the north-western Barossa, Drawcard shows a particularly robust face of Barossa shiraz – deeply coloured, with powerful, ripe fruit and particularly firm tannins; quite a contrast to the often soft, tender styles of the region.

Shiraz by Farr 2010 $55
Geelong, Victoria
This is the sort of shiraz you’d expect from one of Australia’s most accomplished pinot makers. Grown in the cool, maritime climate of Geelong and co-fermented with a splash of the white viognier, it’s fragrant and lively, medium bodied, peppery and spicy and smoothly, gently textured. We tasted then drank Shiraz by Farr at a leisurely pace following a couple of top-end pinots. This proved a delicious segue into a fine, firm old Bordeaux, Chateau Pichon-Lalande 1986.

Cullen Mangan Vineyard Merlot Malbec Petit Verdot 2012 $29
Cullen Mangan vineyard, Margaret River, Western Australia
Vanya Cullen’s new red, from the family’s Mangan vineyard, captures the rich, ripe flavours and abundant tannins of these three Bordeaux varieties. As only about four fifths of wine is matured in oak (seasoned) and for only eight months, vibrant fruit dominates the aroma and flavour of very deeply coloured, crimson-rimmed wine. The vibrant berry flavours come with a touch of leafiness. And the full-flavoured, fruity palate carries quite a load of assertive but soft tannins. The wine will probably age well for many years.

Lowe Louee Nullo Mountain Pinto Grigio 2012 $25
Louee vineyard, Nullo Mountain, Rylestone, NSW
David Lowe’s unusually aromatic pinot grigio comes from a site he claims “as the coldest vineyard in Australia in the 2012 vintage”. Assuming there’s sufficient heat to ripen the berries, cool or cold is good for pinot grigio. Cool ripening intensifies fruit flavour, retains acidity and generally means greater fragrance and a more elegant, delicate wine style – characteristics seldom associated with pinot gris/grigio. Lowe’s is a delicious expression of the variety – aromatic, lively on the palate with vibrant pear-like flavour and crisp, dry finish without the hardness sometimes seen in the variety.

Copyright Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 31 July 2013 in the Canberra Times and goodfood.com.au

Truffle and wine moments — Canberra Times truffle dinner 13 August 2013

I love wine. But I’ve never felt a wine moment as profound as that first encounter with truffle. In winter 2009, local truffle grower, Wayne Haslam, arrived at Chateau Shanahan, beaming with a secret knowledge. He knew the coming effect on me – and a day later, on the Food and Wine team – of the knobbly black nugget inside the clip-lock bag he held.

I can’t describe that first sniff better than Elizabeth Luard did in Truffles (London, 2006), “I breathe deeply. The fragrance almost overpowers me, filling my nostrils with a scent so exciting, so overwhelming, so astonishingly familiar that my head swims and I have to sit down on a tree-stump… What exactly is it that makes the scent of a truffle so thrilling? Well. The chemists tell us it’s the pheromones, the stuff that tells Noireau [her companion’s truffle-sniffing dog] that the neighbour’s bitch is on heat. There’s no other way to explain the effect. It reminds some of us – not all, no doubt – of those nights when we held our first lover in our arms and learned, once and for all, what this thing they talked about in books was all about. Sex, actually – but all new-minted and carrying with it none of the baggage of later years. I breathe deeply again. These words spring to mind: sweet almonds, ripe grapes, thyme, rosemary, juniper, the scent of heather-roots, bonfire embers after rain”.

That sweet, pungent, earthy, sometimes cloying, sexy, power of the raw, fresh black truffle subsides to greater or lesser degree in food. But wherever the black truffle appears, it’s too exotic and expensive to be anything but centre stage.

Therefore the wine selection for our coming truffle dinner, doesn’t compete with the food. Pairs of wines with each course offer comparisons of Australian and imported styles that should sit comfortably with the food.

We selected local wines from the list at pop-up restaurant, 10 Yards, added Bryan Martin’s Ravensworth sangiovese, at Food and Wine editor Kirsten Lawson’s request, and then brought in an imported equivalent to accompany each.

The wine pairings place a local wine against wines from the homes of those varieties – sangiovese from the Chianti Classico zone Tuscany, Italy; a viognier-roussanne-marsanne blend from the southern Rhone Valley, France; and a sweet riesling from the impossibly steep slopes of the Goldtropfchen vineyard, opposite the town of Piesport on Germany’s Mosel river.

SPARKLING WINE

Centenary of Canberra Chardonnay Pinot Noir Cuvee Centenary
In 2008 a group of local winemakers produced a shiraz and a riesling for release in Canberra’s centenary year, 2013. Then in 2011, the group decided to add a sparkler to the list. Our local bubbly specialist, Greg Gallagher, made and blended the wine with Jeir Creek’s Rob Howell. It’s an excellent wine, getting better with age and makes a good starter for the truffle dinner.

WHITES – a Canberra Rhone-inspired blend and an original

Collector Lamp Lit Canberra District Marsanne 2011
Alex McKay’s marsanne a pleasing and sophisticated wine – savoury, richly textured (but not fat) and underpinned by a gently, citrusy varietal flavour, subtly meshed with a pleasing character derived from barrel ageing on yeast lees. The slightly fuller and rounder (but now sold out 2010) indicates benefits from bottle ageing – and that this could be a slow and graceful evolution. McKay says both wines underwent full malo-lactic fermentation, adding texture, and the 2011 contains a splash each of viognier and roussanne.

Cotes du Rhone Blanc (Guigal) 2009
Leading wine producer, Guigal, makes a fresh and fruity style by fermenting this blend at low temperature in stainless steel tanks. While Guigal, like McKay, also uses viognier, roussanne and marsanne, viognier, rather than marsanne, leads the blend. And, of course, there’s no oak influence.


REDS – sangiovese from Canberra and Tuscany

Ravensworth Le Querce Canberra Sangiovese 2012
Le Querce is packed with the black-cherry wholesomeness of Italy’s ubiquitous red grape variety, sangiovese. The vibrant cherry-like varietal flavour comes with attractive herbal, spicy, savoury notes. A combination of acid and fine, persistent tannins provide vibrance and structure to the medium body.

Chianti Classico Peppoli (Antinori) 2009
Here the 600-year-old producer Antinori presents a modern face of Chianti Classico. The fruit’s bright and fresh and the inclusion of merlot and shiraz with the local sangiovese adds flesh and ameliorates Chianti’s savoury-to-firm tannins. A couple of years bottle age adds to the contrast between Peppoli and the fresh, young, screw-cap sealed Ravensworth.
A STICKY END

Barton Estate “Elva” Late Picked Riesling 2008
In the cool, moist mornings of a Canberra autumn Barton Estate’s riesling developed noble rot. Ultimately the uber-ripe, shrivelled berries made the estate’s first luscious dessert wine.

Piesporter Goldtropfchen Riesling Auslese 2005 (Reichsgraff von Kesselstatt)
Compare a Canberra “auslese” style with the original from Germany’s Mosel river. This is probably as close as we’ll get to truffle-like experience with wine. The south and south-east facing Goldtropfchen vineyard slopes steeply away from the Mosel on one of its extreme bends, near the ancient town of Piesport. President John F Kennedy reportedly enjoyed the 1959 vintage kabinett at a 1963 breakfast in Berlin. And in June this year Berliners presented President Barack Obama with a bottle of Reichsgraff von Kesselstatt estate’s 2011 spaetlese riesling from the same vineyard.

See good food for details of the dinner and how to book.

Copyright Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 31 July 2013 in the Canberra Times and goodfood.com.au

Wine review — Peter Lehmann, Port Phillip Estate and Cappa Stone

Peter Lehmann Drawcard Barossa Shiraz Mataro 2010 $20–$25
It’s hard to believe now that so much of the Barossa’s wine once disappeared anonymously into multi-regional blends. But the area’s recognition as one of the world’s great makers of shiraz, grenache and mourvedre (aka mataro) opens up the palette of wine styles available. Increasing numbers of winemakers now present the product of single vineyards or sub-regional blends. In this instance Peter Lehmann’s Ian Hongell delivers the earthy power of shiraz and mataro from the Barossa’s north-western ridge – a generous, sweet-fruited wine, principally shiraz, with the fragrance, spice and grippy tannins of mataro.

Port Phillip Estate Quartier Mornington Peninsular Arneis 2012 $28
A number of Australian winemakers, principally in Victoria’s King Valley, now cultivate arneis, a white variety first documented in Piemonte, Italy, in the fifteenth century. Port Phillip Estate’s version, from a vineyard at Red Hill on the Mornington Peninsula, presents a lively, full-flavoured expression of the variety, with unique, sappy, slightly pear-like flavours and savoury, vigorous dry finish. Winemaker Sandro Mosele writes, “[the wine] comes from a 0.61-hectare parcel planted in Red Hill. Handpicked fruit is whole-bunch pressed, tank fermented without inoculation and matured in stainless steel for seven months”.

Cappa Stone Clare Valley Shiraz 2010 $18
Mildura-based Cappa Stone Wine brings in fruit from a number of other wine growing regions, including the Clare Valley, source of this shiraz. Winemaker Donna Stephens, formerly of Clare Valley’s Kirrihill Wines, recently took over at Cappa Stone, though I suspect this wine predates her arrival. For a fair price, it offers a big mouthful of flavour – combining ripe, sweet shiraz, with aggressive, palate-gripping tannins, a little burst of oak and a warm-to-hot alcoholic aftertaste. I’d call it a modern rough red, where bright fruit intersects with angular tannins.

Copyright Chris Shanahan 2013
First Published 28 July 2013 in the Canberra Times

 

Wine review — Helm, Heartland, Scorpo Estate, d’Arenberg and Dowie Doole

Helm Premium Riesling 2013 $48
Lustenburger family vineyard, Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW
Mid way through the 2011–12 growing season, Ken Helm’s friend, neighbour and grape supplier, Al Lustenberger, died in a tragic accident on his property. Lustenberger’s family, however, assumed management of the vineyard, sole source of Helm Premium Riesling, and supplied fruit to Helm for the 2012 vintage. Again in 2013 the family produced the goods, although Helm now has a lease over the vineyard, his most treasured grape source. I tasted the wine shortly after bottling – perhaps the worst time for a delicate, aromatic riesling. But it looks good already – pale but brilliant, highly aromatic and intensely dry and acidic on the palate. Behind the acid, though, lies the tightly wound-up lemony varietal flavour, ready to unfurl in the years ahead – just as previous vintages have done consistently.

Helm Half Dry Riesling 2013 $25
Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW
Whether you call it it half sweet or half dry, or even halb trocken, as the German’s do, a little sugar helps the riesling go down. In Helm’s version, 15 grams of natural grape sugar per litre fattens out the middle palate, accentuates the citrus-like varietal flavour and offsets the acidity that would dominate a dry riesling of this age. The overall impression is of an ultra-fresh, fruity, soft wine – a light (11.2 per cent alcohol), pleasing drink on its own or good company for hot or spicy food.

Heartland Cabernet Sauvignon 2010 $19–$20
Langhorne Creek and Limestone Coast, South Australia
Langhorne Creek, near Lake Alexandrina, and the Limestone Coast, stretching for hundreds of kilometres south of the lake, produce large quantities of high-quality cabernet sauvignon. While many Langhorne Creek wines disappear anonymously into multi-region blends, Ben Glaetzer’s bear the region’s name. Glaetzer’s 2010 shows clear varietal character, reminiscent of cassis and black olive, with a touch of mint, often associated with Langhorne Creek. The fleshy palate, too, is typical of Langhorne Creek cabernet, though the variety often lacks this generosity elsewhere. The wine finishes with firm, slightly tough, dry tannins – but nothing a good steak won’t resolve.

Scorpo Estate Grown Single Vineyard Pinot Noir 2011 $45–$47
Scorpo Vineyard, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria
Even in the cool 2011 season, Scorpo produced a most seductive pinot noir. It’s underpinned by vibrant berry flavours. But the wine goes many steps beyond that into true pinot territory as the fruit comes deeply interwoven with firm but fine, savoury tannins. It appealed as much for its savour, texture and grippy, fine tannins as it did for its fruit.

d’Arenberg the Dead Arm Shiraz 2009 $61.75–$70
McLaren Vale, South Australia
No other beverage enjoys the mystique of wine. In this d’Arenberg the mystique stems from red a disease – eutypa lata – that kills off one side, or arm, of a vine. Hence the name, dead arm. But the disease doesn’t affect the fruit from those stately old vines, described by winemaker Chester Osborne as “truncated and gap-toothed”. Rather, they produce a sturdy, friendly, bear hug of a wine, with a deep, tannic, savoury undercurrent. The flavour intensity is truly remarkable. But it’s not overwhelming. It’s a sturdy, friendly bear hug of a shiraz, with a deep, tannic savoury undercurrent.

Dowie Doole Vermentino 2013 $25
Wetlands Vineyard, McLaren Vale, South Australia
Vermentino (also known as favorita and pigato) is the most important white variety of Sardinia, Italy, and is also grown in Liguria, Piemonte and in southern France. A number of Australian makers now cultivate vermentino, which seems suited to warm, dry climates. Dowie Doole’s version, from a small, trial planting (less than half a hectare), attempts to rev up the variety with wild-yeast fermentation in barrels – followed by lees stirring and further maturation in barrel. The resulting vibrant, savoury dry white drinks pleasantly enough, though I suspect it’s a quaffing variety requiring few such winemaking tricks.

Copyright Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 24 July 2013 in the Canberra Times and goodfood.com.au

Mudgee wine versus hot and spicy Thai food

In a brave and confident display early July, winemaker David Lowe pitted his solid, tannic Mudgee red wines, and a couple of whites, against the spice and fire of Thirst’s exciting Thai food.

The combinations got us talking about wine and food matching in general, about what goes, or not, with spicy food and, in particular, with chilli – the most widely used spice in the world.

The chilli pepper family derives its palate scorching powers from the alkaloid, capsaicin. Ironically, what attracts us to it – its burning power – was probably nature’s way of protecting plants from hungry predators – like us.

Yet we dose up on it, dowse the fire momentarily, or aggravate it, with cool liquid, then, like palate pyromaniacs, come back for more – as we did at Thirst a few weeks back.

Before the fireworks began, we tasted Louee Nullo Mountain Riesling 2012 – a searing, delicate beauty of a dry white, needing time to tame, and due for release in a few years, says Lowe. It’s from the Louee vineyard, 1100 metres above sea level on Nullo Mountain, near Rylestone – a colder site than Lowe’s Mudgee vineyards, 50 kilometres away and almost 700 metres lower down.

The riesling follows us to dinner, where it joins Louee Nullo Mountain Pinot Grigio 2012 and Thirst’s chilli-laden fish cakes. It’s a strikingly aromatic pinot grigio, suggesting drinking pleasure ahead. My neighbour, Nick Bulleid, gets to the wine before the food and says the flavour matches the aroma – delicious. But I hit the chilli first and the wine seems flavourless, albeit cold and fresh. The high-acid riesling, on the other hand, maintains some flavour through the chilli peak. Neither puts out the fire.

So here we have wine and food shouting for attention. It’s a flavour adventure, not flavour matching. The food creates its own urgency, pain and thrill, while the wine flavours pop up momentarily between waves of spice and chilli heat. The pinot grigio, for example, comes back to life between courses.

This is a familiar flavour battle and one I’ve cherished for decades, putting many beers and wines to the test. The question becomes do we want to soothe the pain, fan the flame or go for the big flavour shoot out?

How about a bit of each? Drive the devil out with Beelzebub, so to speak, by turning on the flavour kaleidoscope. An old beer-judging mate, Bill Taylor, chief brewer at Lion, once told me the capsaicin family meets its match in really hoppy, bitter beers.

For example, the original Czech pilsners, and some Australian versions of the style, have the stuffing to put the chill on chilli anytime. They won’t dowse the fire, but they’ll make it sputter and fizz as capsaicin and hops joust for palate space. It’s a particularly interesting battle, too, because capsaicin and hops both have exceptionally lingering flavours.

Less bitter beers, on the other hand, tend to temper the heat. But, like the pinot grigio, they sit in the background, subdued by chilli heat and flavour.

But these beers are cheap, and being cold and wet is all we ask of them. However, if I’m drinking wine costing $20 or more a bottle, I want to taste it, even when the chilli’s burning.

Some wines step up to the mark. Lowe’s young riesling did. And it’ll no doubt look even better over time as the fruit flavour blossoms, ultimately outweighing the acidity.

In general, fruity, soft wines, whether red or white maintain flavour through the spice and chilli attack.

Aromatic and floral white wines offer a purity of fruit flavour, refreshing acidity and, quite often, a gentle sweetness. In combination, these elements not only refresh but also broaden the flavour impressions of a wide range of spicy and even mildly hot dishes. Riesling is a favourite, especially those with modest amounts of residual sugar.

In the discussion at Thirst, partner in Winewise magazine, Lester Jesberg, mentioned Beaujolais – a soft, juicy, light-bodied, fruity red made from the gamay grape at the southern tip of France’s Burgundy region.

I’ve enjoyed the style with hot and spicy foods and agree with Jesberg. The lovely fruitiness runs side by side with chilli, without taking the edge off the heat. But no wine I know of achieves the latter.

In the last few years, I’ve tried a wide range of red wines with Indian food, covering a spectrum of spicy flavours and, at times, intense chilli heat. We’ve yet to find one that mollifies the heat. But fruity wines with soft tannins consistently hold their flavours with the food. In particular, we’ve enjoyed Australian warm climate shiraz and grenache and blends where those two varieties dominate.

At the Thirst-Lowe dinner and tasting, a long run of shirazes, from 2002 vintage to 2011 (with some gaps) as well as zinfandel and nebbiolo and found much to love. However, Mudgee reds in general carry a formidable tannin load, giving a firm, sometimes-tough finish. I don’t think these work with hot and spicy food.

To me, the most appealing with the food were the fruitier zinfandels (though the tannins took the edge off) and Lowe’s Block 8 Shiraz 2011 – a fragrant and silky, soft wine from an unusually cold vintage. Lowe called it his “stalky Murrumbateman style”.

Overall, though, the people attending the dinner didn’t seem too fussed about whether the wine and food matched or clashed. They enjoyed both, they said, and weren’t silly enough to be deflected from a good night out and exploring a great diversity of flavours.

Copyright Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 24 July in the Canberra Times and goodfood.com.au

Wine review — Mad Fish, Yalumba and Heartland

Mad Fish Gold Turtle Margaret River Chardonnay 2012 $14.25–$15
A mad fish and a gold turtle seem unlikely companions in a wine name. But the wine, from Jeff and Amy Burch’s Howard Park Winery, Margaret River, offers extraordinarily good drinking at a bargain price. Sourced from the Wilyabrup and Karridale sub-regions, Gold Turtle Chardonnay offers bright, fresh nectarine-like varietal flavour with lively acidity and a rich texture derived from a natural fermentation in barrel followed by extended maturation on yeast lees. The screw cap on wines of this calibre enables reliable cellaring for perhaps five years from vintage.

Yalumba The Strapper Barossa Grenache Shiraz Mataro 2011 $17–$20
Winemakers generally put the best spin on their vintage stories, even in miserable, wet, cold years like 2011. The Barossa was particularly hard hit in this season. But the better wines, through careful fruit selection, show fresh, clean regional flavours, albeit in a leaner, lighter style reflecting the cold growing season. Louisa Rose’s red is an excellent example of this. We bought ours at Civic Pub where it washed down a thick and chunky meat pie quite nicely. Grenache fragrance set the tone of this medium-bodied, earthy and savoury dry red.

Heartland Langhorne Creek Shiraz 2010 $19–$20
From Langhorne Creek, near Lake Alexandrina, South Australia, winemaker Ben Glaetzer reports an “amazing” 2012 vintage, a small but excellent 2010 vintage and a disastrous 2011 season, noting, “no 2011 reds will be released from Heartland Wines as we were not able to create anything we found worthy of our label”. Glaetzer’s 2010 shiraz offers generous, mulberry-like fruit flavours – lively, sweet and juicy on the palate, and cut with soft, savoury tannins. Glaetzer says the blend contains a small amount of fruit from the Limestone Coast, a little to the south of Langhorne Creek.

Copyright Chris Shanahan 2013
First published 21 July 2013 in the Canberra Times