Category Archives: Beer review

Beer review — Badger & Chambly

Badger Golden Champion Ale 500ml $7.49
Had it been a tad fresher, this delicious ale from the Hall and Woodhouse Brewery, Dorsett, would’ve rated five stars. It’s seductively floral and fruity with malt opulence (but not heaviness) and a beautifully balanced, mildly bitter, fruity finish. The hops/fruit aroma is unique, described by the brewer as being like ‘elderflower’.

Blanche de Chambly 341ml $5.99
It’s a long way from Quebec, and perhaps that accounts for Chambly’s lack of freshness. Nevertheless, it’s a distinctive and appealing bottle conditioned wheat beer. The head fades all too quickly, but the aroma and palate deliver exotic clove-like notes and the brisk acidity that differentiates wheat beers from barley beers.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Cellist Nathan Waks leads Seppeltsfield buyout investors

About a year after putting historic Seppeltsfield on the market, Foster’s last week announced its sale to a group of investors led by little-known Clare Valley based Kilikanoon Wines.

Kilikanoon Managing Director, Nathan Waks, says that the purchase is being executed through The Seppeltsfield Estate Trust. The trust’s owners include Kilikanoon Wines, Janet Holmes a’Court, Greg Paramor and Kilikanoon’s major shareholders, Nathan Waks and Bruce Baudinet.

In a complex deal the Trust will buy the entire property and fortified wine stocks but will lease 108-hectares of vines back to Foster’s and enter into a long-term agreement with Foster’s to manage the fortified stocks.

The 185-hectare property is a treasury of Barossa winemaking history dating to the early 1850s. Visitors to the site drive through an avenue of date palms – established to keep workers employed during the depression – to the complex of cellars, dwellings and National Trust listed Seppelt family homestead.

Five generations of the Seppelt family established this sprawling village before the company floated in 1970 and subsequently passed, intact, through successive ownerships by South Australian Brewing Holdings, Adsteam, Southcorp and Fosters.

Perhaps the most direct links to the past, with continuing relevance to wine today, are the 108-hectares of vines and around nine million litres of fortified wine stored in an estimated thirty thousand barrels – each in need of TLC.

With the market for fortified wine all but dead, the question, until now, was who will take on such a colossal volume of high maintenance wine, even if it is some of the best material in the world?

To Foster’s credit, it steadfastly avoided a carve up of the property or a fire sale of the unique fortified stocks. Those thirty thousand barrels carry wines dating back to 1878 and underpin the magnificent Seppeltsfield fortified range.

But who would be interested in continuing to make these wines, finding a market for them and for looking after a heritage property with a reported $1-million a year maintenance bill?

It was never likely to be a large public company – Foster’s had already admitted that this type of niche operation didn’t fit its global plans.  As well, Seppeltsfield held strategic assets that Foster’s needed to access in the future. So the buyer had to have capital, a vision for the property and its fortified wine and a willingness to meet Foster’s needs.

Foster’s wanted continued access to grapes from the Seppeltsfield vineyard – particularly to ‘icon’ quality shiraz – company jargon for material good enough for flagship Penfolds reds, Grange and RWT Shiraz.
Seppeltsfield also holds within its complex soleras (a fractional blending system for ageing fortified wines) material used in Penfolds products, including Grandfather and Great Grandfather ports.

The deal cobbled together by the Kilikanoon team sees the 108-hectare vineyard leased back to Foster’s. Foster’s will maintain the vineyard, keep the grapes that it needs for the Penfolds brand and sell some of the material, including the fortified varieties, touriga and palomino, to the new Seppeltsfield owners.

Foster’s fortified winemaker, James Godfrey, will continue to maintain the soleras and to make fortified wines on site for both Foster’s and Seppeltsfield. And the Kilikanoon press release says that ‘The Seppeltsfield Trust will employ apprentice and junior winemakers to learn the specialist art of fortified winemaking from one of the world’s finest exponents’.

And who are the new owners? Kevin Mitchell founded Kilikanoon Wines in the Clare Valley about ten years ago. In 2000, at Kevin’s request, a group of investors, including Nathan Waks and Bruce Baudinet, became involved and expanded the company’s interest beyond the Clare Valley.

Nathan Waks now heads an export-focused business (‘our exports are bigger than our domestic sales’, says Nathan) with vineyards in Clare, Barossa, McLaren Vale and the Southern Flinders Ranges. It’s a business that’s ‘grown organically and quickly’ says Waks.

With solid financial support Waks plans to ‘bring the village back to life around the Seppeltsfield fortified brand’. He views the fortifieds as a niche product and a good fit with Kilikanoon’s boutique, hand-sell operation.

He believes that Australia can learn to love top-end fortifieds consumed in small quantities with sympathetic food. And he sees tremendous potential in export markets where the wines, with the exception of muscats and tokays from Rutherglen, are virtually unknown.

Although Seppeltsfield remains one of the most visited sites in the Barossa, Waks observes that ‘there’s not much for them to do’ – hence a plan to ‘revive the village in all its facets’.

Under the Seppelt family the property produced not just wine but vinegar, wine barrels, smoked meats and raspberry cordial. Under the new owners these activities will recommence – and olive oil production could be part of it.

Already under Foster’s the Seppeltsfield fortifieds have a regional focus and the European wine names ‘sherry’ and ‘port’ have been dropped. The fino, amontillado, oloroso and tawny styles all focus on Barossa Valley origins and the tokays and muscats on Rutherglen.

The new owners intend to maintain this regional focus. And, for the most part, wines offered at Seppeltsfield will be estate grown and made. The wine plan includes a recommissioning by next vintage of the historic 1880s gravity-fed winery – sitting unused but in good nick since the 1980s.

And there’ll be music and dancing, too. The press release says, ‘The well-known musical careers of Kilikanoon partners, violinist John Harding and cellist Nathan Waks will ensure that the arts take centre stage in the future with a Seppeltsfield Festival high on the agenda’.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Grape and grain together — Saltram Pepperjack Ale

A few years back Saltram Barossa Valley winemaker Nigel Dolan rang his brewing mate Brad Rogers. Could they get together on a brewing project, Nigel wondered?

By mid 2006 they’d commenced trial brews at Matilda Bay’s Dandenong brewery. But there were some tricks to incorporating shiraz into beer making. And, admits Brad, ‘we buggered a few up of them up’ before hitting on the right formula.

In February this year the pair completed the first commercial batch of Saltram Pepperjack Ale – a fruity, pungently hoppy beer containing a good dollop of 2007 vintage Barossa shiraz juice, added as concentrate towards the end of the boil.

The concentrate accounted for about one third of the brew’s fermentable sugars and contributed subtly to its colour and crisp acidity.

Nigel believes that the natural grape acids account, in part, for the beer’s crispness and lifts the fruity notes contributed by Amarillo hops – an assertive component of the ale.

Saltram Pepperjack Handcrafted Ale 330ml 6-pack $17.99
There’s Barossa shiraz in the brew, but does it look or taste like wine? Apart from a faint redness to the hue and a slight acid tang on the palate, the answer’s no. But it’s a wonderfully fruity ale with a keynote of resinous, bitter, Amarillo hops and a truly dry, refreshing finish.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Beer review — Hunter Old & Schneider Weiss Hefe-Weizen

Hunter Old 375ml $2.50
I suspect this dark, almost black ale is modelled on Tooheys Old, a popular brew in the coal mining communities of both the Hunter and Illawarra regions. Though the aroma and flavour are rich in molasses and roast-malt character, it’s a zesty, low-bitterness, easy-drinking, medium-bodied style.

Schneider Weisse Hefe-Weizen 500ml $5.99
This is a distinctive, dark-amber-coloured, bottle-conditioned wheat beer from Bavaria. It’s a delight to drink with its subtle, fruity/spicy notes and wheat beer’s defining light, tangy, grippiness. Had the bottle been a little fresher – a real problem with delicate imported styles – there’s have been another star in the rating.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Beer review — Matilda Bay & Little Creatures

Matilda Bay Grayston Reserve 07 750ml $17
Brad Rogers’s second vintage ale is bottle-conditioned and built to last. It’s a wheat ale combining five different barley and wheat malts. The combination gives Grayston a rich, chocolate-like flavour. But the wheat components add a spiciness and lift to the estery, fruity aroma and a vibrance and crisp acidity to the palate.

Little Creatures Bright Ale 330ml 6 pack $18.99
This is a small brewer’s response to demand for an easy drinking beer. Made in the image of the full-bore, cloudy Pale Ale, Bright Ale leads with the lovely citrus/resiny character of new season New Zealand hops in a moderately bitter brew built on delicious, subtle pale ale, carapils crystal, Vienna and wheat malts.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Another vintage beer story

Where vintage wines reflect seasonal variations on grape flavour, a vintage date on a beer signals the brewer’s intent to give us a robust, age-worthy brew rather than seasonal flavour impact.

And the difference in flavours between vintage beers reflects the brewer’s imagination and ingredient selection rather than, say, the regional differences that we might see in wine.

The Cooper’s and Matilda Bay 2007 vintage ales reviewed this week and last illustrate the impact that brewing decisions makes on the beers we drink.

Cooper’s opts for a high-alcohol (7.5 per cent) all-barley beer. The result is an opulent, rounded beer with heady fruit-like esters. To keep these in check the brewers create countering herbal aromas, flavours and bitterness with a liberal addition of hops.

The less alcoholic Matilda Bay, by using wheat malt as well as barley, has a drier, less rounded palate, more apparent fruitiness and the distinctive acidity of wheat ales.

Matilda Bay Grayston Reserve 07 750ml $17
Brad Rogers’s second vintage ale is bottle-conditioned and built to last. It’s a wheat ale combining five different barley and wheat malts. The combination gives Grayston a rich, chocolate-like flavour. But the wheat components add a spiciness and lift to the estery, fruity aroma and a vibrance and crisp acidity to the palate.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Beer review — Cooper’s & Ruddles County

Cooper’s Extra Strong Vintage Ale 2007 $375ml $3.75
The family resemblance between Cooper’s 2006 and 2007 ales is a high 7.5 per cent alcohol and robust malt and hops flavours. But a year’s bottle age sees the 2006’s flavour balance shifting towards sweet, toffee-like malt and away from hops. The ultra-fresh 2007 still delivers both in abundance – and harmony.

Ruddles County World Famous English Ale 500ml $7.49
In a recent tasting of richer, maltier English ales Ruddles stood apart for its lighter colour and emphasis on a lingering, delicious bitter finish. Malt and fruitiness, the other key ale-flavour elements were there, too, but the hops aroma and flavour and bitterness set the theme for a very more-ish drop.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Cooper’s 2007 — a vintage drop

Cooper’s Vintage Ale 2007 hit retail shelves recently, prompting a call to brewer, John Hood to find out what makes ‘vintage’ beer age-worthy.

The biggest element, said John, is the bottle conditioning process – where a secondary fermentation produces carbon dioxide and absorbs oxygen. This in turn reduces oxidation of the beer.

Subsequently the high alcohol, opulent malt flavours and assertive hopping tend to mask oxidative character that might show more in a lighter beer.

John says that successive vintage have taught the brewers that some things seem to work better than others.

For example, all that alcohol and body requires a counterfoil.  Robust hops treatment provides bitterness to balance the malt sweetness and a pungent aroma to match the fruity esters.

Vintage 2007 has a little more crystal malt for its red hue and caramel/toffee flavour as well as increased hopping to increase the bitterness – as this tends to decline with age.

Cooper’s Extra Strong Vintage Ale 2007 $375ml $3.75
The family resemblance between Cooper’s 2006 and 2007 ales is a high 7.5 per cent alcohol and robust malt and hops flavours. But a year’s bottle age sees the 2006’s flavour balance shifting towards sweet, toffee-like malt and away from hops. The ultra-fresh 2007 still delivers both in abundance – and harmony.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Beer review — Redoak & Fuller’s

Redoak Rauch 330ml $7.50 at Café della Piazza
Redback Rauch had the Schloss Shanahan tasting memories drifting back to Bamberg, Germany, and drafts of meaty, smoky Rauchbier served with liver dumpling soup. We’ve not seen an Aussie attempt at this beechwood-smoked style before, but see great promise in Redoak’s less in-your-face version. This is adventurous brewing by David Hollyoak.

Fuller’s Extra Special Champion Ale 500ml $7.49
Few back labels hit the mark like Fuller’s. But ‘smooth, full bodied and bursting with flavour, with marmalade fruitiness throughout’ hit the mark as we sipped at this opulent 5.9 per cent alcohol English ale. The fruity notes really did move into the bitter/sweet marmalade spectrum. These fitted well with the complex, bitter hops.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Beer review — Weihenstephaner & Shepherd Neame

Weihenstephaner Original Bayrisch Mild 500ml $5.99
How can a millennium-old brewery making some of the world’s best beers have such a bland website? Don’t bother visiting. But do pour another glass of this sublime, pale-lemon coloured lager – and savour the rich, fine flavours and delicious, lingering hops bitterness. This is as good as pale, light lager gets.

Shepherd Neame Bishops Finger Kentish Strong Ale 500ml $7.49
It’s been a lucky week on the beer-tasting bench – two 5-star beers in a row. First the delicate Bavarian lager, then the slap-on-the-back Kentish Ale: deep amber coloured, terrifically fruity aroma and warm palate, cut by assertive, bitter (bordering on astringent) hops that work magic for those wha’ likes ‘em.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007