Monthly Archives: December 2014

A year in Canberra wine, 2014

As the Australian wine industry moved into another round of takeovers and rationalisation in 2014, Canberra’s vignerons remained many, small and independent. They released probably more outstanding wines in the year than they ever had before, attracting a remarkable flow of wine show gongs.

Treasury Wine Estates was the largest takeover target. After months of due diligence, the publicly listed offshoot of Fosters rejected takeover bids from two American private-equity suitors. However, Treasury remains vulnerable to takeover during its restructure under new chief executive, Michael Clarke.

On a smaller scale, Accolade wines confirmed in December it had finalised plans to buy independent Barossa operator, Grant Burge Wines and expected to settle in January 2015. Accolade, owned by private equity firm CHAMP and America’s Constellation Brands, own the former BRL Hardy empire.

The industry’s long history of capital destruction continued, albeit not on the multi-billion-dollar scale seen in the first decade of the century. In November, the Board of Barossa-based Peter Lehmann Wines said majority shareholder Hess Group (86 per cent) and substantial shareholder, Margaret Lehman, had agreed to sell interests to Casella Wine Brands at $1.50 a share, valuing the company at $57million. Hess had paid over $100 million for its stake in Lehmann about a decade earlier.

Canberra boasted no takeovers on this scale. But on 11 September, high-profile Murrumbateman winemaker Ken Helm emailed, “Today our daughter Stephanie and our son in law (vineyard manager) Ben Osborne have purchased Yass Valley Wines”.

But as 2014 dawned, Canberra vignerons focused not on the grinding wheels of the industry at large, but on the coming vintage. It seemed a song of ice and fire for much of the Canberra region: frost nipped vine buds in October and intense heat waves followed in January and February.

The frost affected many, though not all vineyards. While no one escaped the heat – growers with adequate water fared better than those without. Those with inadequate supplies struggled to keep vines, let alone crops, healthy; while others saw promising, if reduced, crops ripening under protective leaf canopies.

In the end, the area produced many good white wines led by our district specialty, riesling. These unoaked wines come to market just months after vintage. They can be a little austere at first release, thanks to their high natural acidity. But in 2014, full, ripe fruit flavours made the new releases more approachable than usual.

Perhaps because of this the accolades flowed quickly and in open competition against Australia’s best. At Canberra’s International Riesling Challenge, Mount Majura Riesling 2014 won trophies as best dry riesling of the show and best Canberra riesling. About the same time, Four Winds Vineyard Riesling 2014 won gold at the Royal Melbourne Wine Show. In our local show, judges awarded gold to Jeir Creek Riesling 2014.

The depth and breadth of Canberra rieslings mean we could easily have stuck to riesling alone for this year’s top-10 whites. The pickings are rich and prices comparatively modest for these potentially long-lived wines.

We also make decent chardonnay in the region ­– for example, those of Lerida Estate at Lake George Lark Hill, high on the escarpment. But, as results in our local show reveals, higher, cooler Tumbarumba generally upstages us. Little wonder then that several Canberra makers, including Eden Road, Ravensworth and Clonakilla, source chardonnay from Tumbarumba.

Other white varieties beginning to do well in Canberra include Austria’s gruner veltliner (at Lark Hill, our highest, coolest site) and the Rhone Valley varieties, marsanne, roussanne and viognier. This seems natural enough given the success of that other great Rhone variety, shiraz.

It’s impossible to say enough good things about Canberra shiraz – a distinctive, medium-bodied, fruity-spicy style of many shades ­– especially those from the great 2013 vintage.

These are now flowing into the market and present some of the best buying opportunities to date. A masked tasting of over 50 Canberra shirazes in September left no doubts about the superior quality of the 2013s and of the keeping ability of Canberra’s best vintages, notably the 2009s and 2005s.

Based on that tasting, and several others, Clonakilla Shiraz Viognier holds its place at the very top of the Canberra pile. This is superb, supple, complex to savour. However, a couple of others are moving towards it, while many more, just a rung or two down the ladder offer world-class drinking.

Nick O’Leary Bolaro Shiraz 2013 gets a special mention, for its exceptional quality and show success, including being named as NSW wine of the year and winning gold at the 2014 National Wine Show of Australia. Two other notable Canberra shirazes won gold in the same class: Collector Reserve 2013 and Lerida Estate Shiraz Viognier 2013 (top scoring gold and a trophy winner).

And the wines are far from uniform, ranging from bright, fresh, fruity and drinkable now, to more savoury, tannic wines needing time to evolve – all within the district medium bodied, spicy style.

If shiraz remains our highest achievement, other red varieties make good wines now and offer promise for the future. A November tasting of around 40 sangioveses revealed a range of styles and very good quality from a number of Canberra wineries, most notably from Ravensworth, Capital Wines and Four Winds.

The Spanish red variety, tempranillo, makes good wines, too. Mount Majura, Capital Wines and Quarry Hill all do it well. And Mount Majura throws touriga and graciano into the mix, blended and straight.

Canberra’s wine industry is, of course, best appreciated through its wines, with its shiraz and riesling, at least, acknowledged among the best in Australia.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2014
First published:

  • 2 December 2014 in goodfood.com.au
  • 3 December 2014 in the Canberra Times

Canberra’s year in beer, 2014

Canberra’s embrace of the global craft-beer phenomenon tightened during 2014. We began the year with two local breweries – Zierholz and the Wig and Pen – and on 6 June we welcomed BentSpoke, Braddon, as our third.

The two-story brewpub provides great views of the brewing equipment from the downstairs bar. It serves beer, cider, wine and food on both levels and at its outdoor courtyard.

On opening night, people queued in the cold to join an enthusiastic crow inside. And in the first three days, patrons consumed 3,500 litres of beer – all brewed on site in the lead up to opening by Richard Watkins.

Watkins, partner Tracy Margrain and his backers ­ – the family behind Melbourne brewing supplier, Bintani Australia – designed and built BentSpoke from scratch in a new building on the corner of Mort and Elouera Streets, Braddon.

As BentSpoke fired up, our oldest brewpub, the Wig and Pen prepared to move from its Alinga Street home of two decades to nearby Llewellyn Hall, at the Australian National University.

Owner Lachie McOmish hoped to achieve the move in just a few weeks from September. However, McOmish poured last drinks for his loyal patrons on 30 October. And after visiting the new site on 25 November, I’d be surprised to see it open before the new year, despite the building activity underway at the time.

McOmish says the bar will be about the same size as the original. The brewing area, on the same level, will be larger, and supported by a grain mill and storage space downstairs.

Before departing the Wig and Pen to establish BentSpoke, Richard Watkins trained Dr Tom Lillicrap as the Wig’s new brewer.

The new site should attract the old enthusiasts. And concertgoers at Llewellyn Hall will at last have tasty alternatives to the lacklustre offering of the Hall’s pop-up bar.

As BentSpoke revved up and the Wig and Pen wound back for its move, our third brewer, Christoph Zierholz, eyed a new site at Kingston.

Zierholz currently brews from a brewpub in Fyshwick, with another outlet at University of Canberra. He hopes to secure a site for a brewery and beer hall at the new arts precinct, adjacent to Kingston Markets.

Certainly our thirst for varied and interesting beers seems endless. It seems likely our small city can easily absorb the output of three exceptionally innovative local brewers.

All of these brewers arose from the amateur ranks. And the depth of local interest shows in two recent events.

Canberra brewer, Kevin Hingston, won the Champion Brewer Award at this year’s Australian Amateur Brewing Championship, hosted in Canberra. Canberra brewers overall amassed the second highest aggregate, just one point behind more populous Victoria, and two points ahead of NSW.

The other event, Canberra Beer Week, held in November, attracted a beyond-capacity crowd to its one-day beer hall at Kingston. Tap takeovers and beer and food events across the city also attracted enthusiastic drinkers.
It seems Canberra can’t quite get enough of the really good stuff.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2014
First published:

  • 25 November 2014 in goodfood.com.au
  • 3 December 2014 in the Canberra Times