Category Archives: Vineyard

Canberra wine district — pre-spring stirrings

There’s plenty happening on the Canberra district wine scene at present. It’s the depth of winter, but the first of the 2008 whites are being released, along with the last of the 2006 vintage reds and what little there is of the 2007s.

New-release samples to date look good. And a tasting of the latest offerings from Ravensworth, Clonakilla and Brindabella Hills (reviewed in coming Sunday columns) inspired us to begin the season’s cellar door visits. It’s a big district, of course, so the reports can only trickle in from week to week. But there’s a bit of excitement out there.

For pure quality, the most exciting wine remains Clonakilla Shiraz Viognier – a beautifully fragrant and plush, world-class example of a style that originated in Côte Rôtie at the northern end of France’s Rhône Valley. The about-to-be-released 2007 vintage is sensational. But, sadly, frost wiped out ninety per cent of the 2007 crop, leaving just 150 dozen bottles for the world. It’ll sell out rapidly at $75 – a modest price for a wine of this provenance.

It’s worth asking for a bottle or two at cellar door. But if you don’t get lucky, Clonakilla’s Hilltops Shiraz 2007 ($25) and O’Riada Canberra District Shiraz 2007 ($35) provide tremendously satisfying drinking. And the 2008 riesling ($25) offers taut, brisk lovely drinking and good cellaring prospects.

Writer of The Canberra Times ‘Male order’ column, Bryan Martin, can’t spruik for his own Ravensworth wines (he makes them at Clonakilla) but they sit with the best in the district. Ravensworth Riesling 2008 ($18) is pure and fresh and a little plumper than the Clonakilla. And his Shiraz Viognier 2007 ($30) is savoury, spicy – in the fine-boned Canberra mould – but a little chunkier and earthier than the silky, ethereal Clonakilla version. There’s no cellar door, however, but you can google ‘Ravensworth’ and order online.

We’ve not yet visited Roger and Faye Harris at Brindabella Hills, at Hall, on the rim of the Murrumbidgee Valley. But we’ve tasted Roger’s idiosyncratic and delicious ‘Aureus’ 2007, a blend of chardonnay and viognier. It’s unconventional but it works and is good value at $22.50, cellar door. The 2006 shiraz is in a different style again from any of the Clonakilla wines or Ravensworth’s. It’s round and plump and very soft in it’s own fragrant, elegant way.

Roger generally makes one of the better rieslings in the district and arguably the best sauvignon blanc – good reason in their own right to visit cellar door.

Out at Murrumbateman, Graeme Shaw’s Shaw Vineyard Estate adds another dimension to the cellar door offering with a range of ceramics imported from Italy and a restaurant overlooking the vines.

In a former career, Graeme built the Kamberra wine tourism complex for Hardys – a relationship that brought him to grape growing and ultimately to winemaking. At cellar door, the early, rustic wines from the 2003 and 2004 vintage are giving way to the far more polished products from 2006 and on (there were no 2005s as Graeme sold the crop).

The reds, in particular, offer huge value at $22 a bottle. Graeme currently offers, from the 2006 vintage, a shiraz, a shiraz-cabernet blend and a cabernet merlot, with a straight cabernet sauvignon due for release shortly.

I favour the shiraz cabernet blend, but these reds are all true to the elegant Canberra style. They punch above their weight and can only add to the district’s reputation. In fact, Graeme recently completed an export deal with a major French wine club. They purchased his remaining stock of 2004 cabernet merlot, half of the production of the 2006 cabernet merlot and signed a ten-year supply deal.

Graeme grows his own fruit on the 32-hectare Murrumbateman estate, but has the wine made by Brian Currie in Bill Calabria’s West End Estate, Griffith. During vintage Graeme and his daughter Tanya travel to Griffith to help.

And in the next few years we’ll see two new Shaw labels: a budget-priced ‘winemaker selection’ range targeted at pubs, clubs and function venues, mainly in country New South Wales; and two ‘reserve’ wines – a shiraz viognier blend and a cabernet blend that he expects will ‘knock the socks off the wine writers’.

And that’s exactly what the Canberra district needs. To date we have only one wine that blows the right socks away – Clonakilla Shiraz Viognier. But there’s room for more. And the more we have, the better the whole district’s reputation. Go for it Graeme.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Wynns Coonawarra — great winemaking but the marketing sucks

They say that if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. Wynns Coonawarra Estate was never broken. In fact, for all but a short period in the seventies, it produced reliable, long-cellaring reds.

But by the late nineties, with winemakers restless to do better, small-scale vineyard restoration began. “From 2000 on”, says winemaker Sue Hodder, “we knew that much work was required. And after the difficult 2002 vintage we realised that the pace was not fast enough”.

Under viticulturist Allen Jenkins, the large-scale work began. It was a massive and still not complete undertaking that included retrellising, chain-saw pruning, developing of a heritage nursery (based on cuttings from time-proven vines), grubbing out tired or diseased vines, replanting, converting from sprinkler to drip irrigation, changing canopy management and introducing new pruning techniques.

This vastly oversimplifies the task, of course. But by the time Allen and his team had passed the half way mark in Wynns massive estate, fruit quality had improved impressively. Tighter management of small vineyard plots gave Sue Hodder and the winemaking team a broader palette of fruit characters to work with. Most importantly it meant generally brighter, more evenly ripened fruit with the soft, velvety tannins that winemakers seek but don’t always find.

Modified winemaking, particularly a gentler hand on oak maturation, in combination with higher quality fruit produced notably better wines across the Wynns range in recent years. The changes were most notable in the re-introduced, revamped flagships, Michael Shiraz and John Riddoch Cabernet Sauvignon.

Despite the quality lift there remained a gap between what the vineyards could deliver and the ability of the winery to capitalise on it. That gap was closed this year with the commissioning of a new small-batch cellar at the western end of the winery.

It’s a self-contained unit with twenty-four ten-tonne, temperature controlled, open fermenters and separate crushing and pressing equipment – designed to process small batches of more-evenly ripened fruit.

The old winery had been geared to process fairly large batches of grapes. And its few smaller fermenters were “always in heavy rotation”, according to Sue’s fellow winemaker, Greg Tilbrook.

Tilbrook says that even though the winemakers and grape growers knew that different sections of a vineyard ripened at different times, there simply weren’t enough small fermenters to partition the crop to the level that they wanted.

The arrival of the new winery meant that in 2008 grapes from a larger block, producing, say, forty to sixty tonnes, might be processed in five or six batches instead of two or three.

The impact that this has on quality lies partly in the batch size and partly in better fruit quality. Sue Hodder says small, small, open fermenters, being more aerobic, give winemakers better control over ‘reduction’ (smelly hydrogen sulphide tends to develop in a closed, or reductive, environment). And harvesting small batches at perfect ripeness, rather than large batches with a range of ripeness, gives “brighter fruit with more evenly ripe, supple tannins’, says Sue.

Processing in multiple, small batches gives the winemakers more components and greater variation than they had in the past. And though it means more work, says Tilbrook, it brings home all the work done in the vineyards over the last decade and will affect the quality of all Wynns wines.

From the components the winemakers and viticulturists can learn which wine styles come from various blocks and clones. They can see where quality lies and also identify where things could be better. This quality and style assessment feeds back into vineyard management, which in turn feeds back into wine quality. Indeed, says Sue, Allen Jenkins knows intimately the wine styles from each of his vineyard plots.
And what are the quality factors in Coonawarra red? How important is the terra rossa soil, vine age and clonal selection?

It’s a complex picture. Sue says that while the best wines do tend to come from the terra rossa (well drained soils derived primarily from decomposition of the underlying limestone), vines from the transitional soils just off the terra rossa and some from the black soils further out have produced good quality during the run of dry seasons.

It seems the moisture holding capacity of these deeper soils, a curse in wet seasons, has been a virtue during prolonged hot, dry spells. Some of the traditionally great, unirrigated vines, on shallow terra rossa have suffered.
Even within one vineyard, says Greg Tilbrook, ripening can vary noticeably because of varying soil depth. During the dry spell, vines in shallow soil tend to ripen early, while those in deeper, moister soil ripen later – hence the need for separate harvesting and winemaking.

Having the right clones is important, too. Sue cites examples of poor genetic material overcoming the benefits of a great site and of clones that work in the Barossa not working in Coonawarra.

Like other winemakers around the world, Wynns used material from time-proven vineyards to propagate new plantings – principally from the ‘Johnsons’ block, planted in the 1920s, and the ‘Redman’ block.

While a lot is made these days of century-old vines, Sue says that the average age of vines used in making the famous Wynns Black Label Cabernet Sauvignon is about twenty-eight years. The flagship John Riddoch vines might be slightly older. The vines were planted mainly in the sixties, seventies and eighties. And there are no centenarians in the mix.

Unquestionably in my mind the wines are good and getting better. I’ve tried them all, back to the early fifties. They’re up there with the best in the world. And it gets back to location (including climate) and all the work of generations of grape growers and winemakers.

It’s a pity that the Foster’s marketers (Foster’s owns Wynns) seem so out of touch that they have to lie about these great wines. It’s silly enough that their current press ads call Wynns Coonawarra Estate ‘far more blessed’ than Vatican City. But it’s simply false when they say ‘It’s the combination of rich, red soil and hundred year old vines that makes Wynns Coonawarra Estate Cabernet Sauvignon and Shiraz arguably the best in the country’.

I wonder who signed-off on the ‘hundred year old vines’ lie? Wynns drinkers deserve better than this.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Bowen Estate — pull out half the vineyard, start again

This story came out of a bottle – Bowen Estate Coonawarra Shiraz 2006 – a fragrant, silky, delicious drop, sufficiently better than recent vintages to prompt a call to the Bowens. This was more than vintage variation, so what was going on?

It started in 2004”, says Emma Bowen. “We decided on big changes”. For a few years she’d been working alongside her dad, Doug, as assistant winemaker and 2004 was their thirtieth vintage. “We looked hard at what we were doing and asked what are we trying to do now and what do we want to do for the next thirty years”.

They had a general feeling that they could make even better wine than they had been from their 33-hectares of vineyards – running about five hundred metres from north to south, towards the southern end of Coonawarra’s terra rossa strip.

Doug had come to know the vineyard well over thirty years, says Emma. He had always picked the various blocks separately and kept the wines apart during maturation. On the tasting bench over all those years, the quality difference from block to block remained consistent. ‘Every year there was a clear difference from best to worst and it was always exactly the same’, say Emma, ‘and we picked the blocks in the same order each season’.

They wanted all of their wine to be like ‘The Ampelon’ 1998, a one-off release from their oldest shiraz block, a block that year-in, year-out was the first to ripen and always produced wines with the best flavour and texture.

They’d seen what others, including Kay Bros in McLaren Vale, had achieved in propagating new vines from those that had historically produced the best wines – and headed down the same path.

The Bowens ripped out two blocks of vines, one of diseased cabernet and another of shiraz that had been grafted onto merlot. At the same time they’d been marking the healthiest vines in the 2.5-hectare Ampelon vineyard.

Over the following two years they took cuttings from these to replant the two blocks that’d been ripped out. Doug doubled the vine density from four per panel to eight, with two canes per vine instead of four, but the same number of fruiting buds. Earlier trials had shown that this led to earlier ripening (important in the cool, southern end of Coonawarra) as well as being easier and cheaper to prune.

The denser planting gives similar grape yields per hectare but each vine produces only half the fruit of those replaced – twenty to thirty bunches each instead of forty to sixty, says Emma.

Emma and Doug expect to see the first fruit from these new plantings in 2009. Meanwhile a savage frost in spring 2006 wiped out what would’ve been the 2007 harvest on an adjoining 5.4-hectare block that the Bowens had bought in 1996.

The thirty-year-old vines were in poor health and the Bowens intended to pull them out eventually. But after the 2006 frost and ground-softening rain, Doug ripped the whole vineyard out. He replanted it with cuttings in November last year.

While the vineyard rejuvenation started with shiraz, the Bowens also identified their best cabernet sauvignon clone, based on wine quality, and have used this in the replanting program.

Emma says that their Ampelon shiraz clone and favoured cabernet clone, as well as producing high quality, give good yields and ripen early, important in beating the autumn cold.

As well as replanting parts of the vineyard, Doug converted the southernmost block of vines from spur-pruned to arched-cane pruning. As a result, Emma told me, the block weathered this year’s March heat wave and the vines looked in lovely balance – a good indicator of fruit quality, she reckons.

Emma says that all of this underlines what a very long-term venture grape growing is. “It takes a long time to get the understanding of your vineyard and, after thirty years, when you ask what you need to do, to decide to pull out half of it and start again”, she comments.

But all the vineyard changes that are about to yield better fruit, don’t explain why the 2006 shiraz, made in the middle of the rejuvenation, should be so much better than we’d seen for a while.

Emma attributes this to ‘being smarter in the winery, with more attention to detail’. With two palates at work on the tasting bench (Emma’s and Doug’s), there’s a more objective approach to each component and a more critical selection of what goes into each blend.

There’s a couple of winemaking tricks, too, admits Emma, including a bit of juice run off, to concentrate the wines. But, ultimately, she says, all of this richness and texture ought to come from the vineyard – and she expects it to.  ‘Texture and depth of flavour will go to another level in shiraz’, she believes, ‘and I hope for the same in cabernet sauvignon’.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Sipping from the top shelf — Aussie wines that came our way

We recently lined up a dozen top-shelf Aussie reds in a Chateau Shanahan masked tasting. There were just two of us at the bench – forming our judgments without discussion, then, at the end of each bracket comparing our impressions, and later unmasking the bottles.

In the few days following the sip-and-spit tasting, we consumed the bottles over various meals to see how they held up in real life. We include these impressions in the notes below.

We don’t pretend that the wines in the tasting are a true cross section of top-end Australia. They were just samples of new-release wines that’d come our way in the week or two before the tasting – and include old favourites as well as two new faces.

Eden Road Two Trees Grenache Shiraz 2006 $75 (screw cap)
A 50:50 blend of grenache and shiraz, 89 per cent from the Eden Valley with a small amount of grenache from the Clare Valley and shiraz from Colbinabbin, Heathcote. 300 dozen produced.

Along with the Eden Road V06 shiraz below, this is a first release from Canberra based Cooper Coffman Wine Company. It’s based on very low yielding, very old vines, lending some credibility to the hefty price tag. It’s a juicy, opulent wine showing distinctive jube-like grenache flavour mingling with liquorice-like character of Eden Valley shiraz. There’s a touch of porty ripeness and alcoholic warmth. But it’s balanced and easily passed the ‘bottle test’ – the leftovers from the masked tasting drank beautifully to the last drop a few days after the tasting.

Eden Road V06 Shiraz 2006 $220 (screw cap)
Sourced from a block of shiraz vines, planted in the 1890s, on Cooper Coffman’s Eden Valley vineyard. The vines yielded just 1.2 tonnes to the hectare in 2006 from which Martin Cooper made 300 dozen of.
Putting the price aside for a moment, this is a buoyant and fragrant, supple and generous, soft and elegant, pure shiraz of a very high calibre. Martin Cooper says most of the small production is to be hand sold in export markets, so discussion of the $220 price tag may prove academic.

Jacob’s Creek Centenary Hill Barossa Valley Shiraz 2003 $42 (cork)
Produced from the Willandra Vineyard and other old sites along Jacob’s Creek, Southern Barossa Valley.
There’s some terrific fruit at the heart of this wine from the difficult 2003 vintage. But there seemed to be a battle between the fruit and the oak – and the oak won. We tried to like it, but even at a post-tasting meal we couldn’t get past the intrusive oak.

Penfolds Magill Estate Shiraz 2005 $100 (cork)
Sourced from blocks 1, 2 and 3 of the Penfolds Magill Vineyard, Adelaide.
This is the wine that saved the historic Magill site from sale and subdivision. On 9 October 1982 retired Grange creator, Max Schubert, hand wrote for the Adsteam board (then owners of Penfolds) a six foolscap page proposal (never published) of what the wine should be like, how to make it and the economics of doing so. Max’s proposal began with this description of the wine that he envisage: ‘To make a French Chateau style red wine, distinctly different to the Grange Hermitage style, in that body weight and colour would be approximately half that of Grange, whilst aroma, flavour and character would be individual and pronounced’.

The board endorsed Max’s proposal and Penfolds made the first Magill Estate wine in 1983. Over the years Magill developed a bit more weight than Max had originally envisaged. This was essential fine-tuning of the style as the early vintages proved to be a little too lean. But it remains distinctive and has an elegance that I’m sure would’ve pleased Max.

In our tasting the 2005 showed ripe but spicy varietal character that we associate more with cool areas, not sunbaked suburban Adelaide. The ripe, spicy fruit interplayed beautifully with spicy oak, creating one of the most enjoyable wines of the tasting – one that slipped down pleasurably over the next few days.

Grant Burge Meshach 2003 $120 (cork)
Sourced principally from old vines on Grant Burge’s Filsell vineyard, located between Lyndoch and Williamstown, southern Barossa Valley, supplemented with fruit from other 100-plus-year-old vines.
Reflecting the warm year and the region, this is a big, ripe and porty wine. But like it’s southern Barossa neighbour, Centenary Hill Shiraz above, the oak outweighed the fruit. Remarkably, the wine looks better now, three days after opening – suggesting that it’ll age for many years. But it’s not, to my taste, one of the better vintages of Meshach.

Penfolds St Henri Shiraz 2004 $90 (cork)
Sourced from the Barossa Valley, Langhorne Creek and the Adelaide Hills. Unlike the other Penfolds reds, matured in large old oak vats – no new oak, no small barrels.

For a while St Henri hid behind the comparatively oaky wines in the tasting. But its appeal grew with each sip. It’s all about ripe, dense, round, soft pure shiraz. From experience St Henri’s at its best beyond ten years of age – and therein lies my caveat. Why, oh why, dear Penfolds winemakers when you bottled it, in the age of the screw cap, did you put such a crappy little cork in it? St Henri and your customers deserve better than this.

Penfolds RWT Barossa Valley Shiraz 2005 $160 (cork)
Made from Barossa shiraz selected for opulence and fleshiness.
The first vintage in 1997 was lovely, the second in 1998 remains the best Barossa shiraz I’ve tasted. And the 2005 isn’t far behind. It’s fragrant, generous and fleshy with bright, varietal fruit flavours that mesh perfectly with the high quality French oak. This is a superior wine.

Brown Brothers Patricia Shiraz 2004 $54 (cork)
Fruit sources: 33 per cent Brown Brothers’ Heathcote vineyard; 33 per cent Dinning’s Vineyard, King Valley; 34 per cent Glenkara vineyard, Western Victoria.

I suspect a poor cork might’ve let Patricia down, muting the fruit and allowing oak and tannin to take over and dry the wine out. We’ll try another bottle some time.

Penfolds Bin 707 Cabernet Sauvignon 2005 $175 (screw cap)
Fruit source: Barossa Valley (including Kalimna Vineyard Block 42), Coonawarra and Padthaway.
They call it ‘Grange cabernet’ and there’s a strong family resemblance in the dense colour and combined flavour of sweet American oak and powerful fruit. Of course, the flavour and structure is cabernet, not shiraz. It gets a bit of stick from other winemakers these days because of the American oak. But to me it works and gives the wine its distinctive thumbprint. Like Grange, it begins to hit its straps at about fifteen years of age. By then its showing cabernet’s elegance and fragrance with deep, sweet, underlying fruit. The elements are all there now in the outstanding 2005. But it really isn’t meant for current drinking. Its cellaring record makes it a great long-term ‘memento’ wine.

Jacob’s Creek St Hugo Coonawarra Cabernet Sauvignon 2004 $42 (cork)
Source: Coonawarra, principally the northern end.
This was our value-for-money pick of the tasting. It’s classic Coonawarra cabernet, featuring power with elegance and textbook cabernet flavour (ripe berries with a leafy edge) and structure (firm but not hard). Its perfume and flavour blossomed during the tasting and the bottle drank well three days later. Unlike the Bin 707, St Hugo provides outstanding drinking now. It will probably evolve well for another five or six years at least.

Grant Burge Shadrach Barossa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2005 $55 (cork)
Fruit source: Grant Burge’s Corryton Park Vineyard, on the slopes of Mount Crawford, Eden Valley, plus very rich fruit from several smaller Barossa Vineyards.

First impressions were of a simpler wine, with ripe, varietal aroma and a brisk but earthy, chocolate-rich palate. While it lacked the immediate appeal of the St Hugo, the flavours built over time. It’s a solid, complex cabernet with its best drinking four or five years away.

Cape Mentelle Margaret River Cabernet Sauvignon 2004 $85 (cork)
Fruit source: Cape Mentelle’s Wallcliffe Vineyard, Margaret River.
It’s a wine with a big reputation but I suspect a dodgy cork took the edge off our sample. It wasn’t corked, but there was a dusty smelling hint and then a very dry finish that didn’t fit with the otherwise beautiful fruit. We’ll hold judgement until we try another bottle.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Those Majella magicians — Coonawarra’s pure terroir

Majella, one of the great Coonawarra estates, built its reputation on rich, complex, elegant reds, built to satisfy and last. Then three years back Majella’s owners, Brian ‘Prof’ Lynn and his brother Anthony, released an early-drinking style, The Musician, a vibrant and aromatic cabernet shiraz blend from the 2004 vintage.

It was a jaw dropper at the time, offering pure, brisk Coonawarra flavours at a modest $17 a bottle. Subsequent vintages continued in the same mould. But they’ve been topped, in my view, by the just-released 2007. It’s the juiciest, loveliest red you can imagine – a wine that says heaps about modern Australian winemaking, regional specialisation (in this instance Coonawarra cabernet) and the French notion of ‘terroir’ – and what it might mean in an Australian context.

Regional specialisation (Coonawarra cabernet, Canberra shiraz, Clare Riesling, Mornington Peninsula pinot noir, and so on) touches on the ‘terroir’ concept. But for the French that’s only a starting point. True believers in terroir say not only that wine flavour comes from a complex interplay of geology, soil, climate and culture but that the discerning palate tastes all this in wine. Some even say, less plausibly, that it’s possible to taste the soil in the wine.

At the other extreme, some see terroir as bollocks. They might accept climate’s role in wine flavour, but argue that it’s largely human intervention in vineyard and winery that determine a wine’s flavour. But to them, I say show me the chardonnay that tastes like Chablis but wasn’t grown there; show me the luxury Champagne look-alike that tastes like the real thing; or show me a red that tastes like Majella’s Magician but isn’t from Coonawarra.

These distinctive, inimitable and easy-to-discern examples give terroir credibility. It’s also what fascinates many wine lovers; is the basis of France’s wine naming system; and has become the international language of fine-wine.

It’s also become Australia’s official export branding push as regional specialities, individual ‘icon’ wines and single vineyard wines attempt to build on ‘brand Australia’, established largely on cheaper, multi-regional varietals over the last twenty years.

And this is where a wine as strikingly regional and varietal as Majella’s Musician can have an impact beyond the small volume in the market. How could this be? And does it mean that Majella’s $17 drink-now blend is better than its long-cellaring $28 shiraz or cabernet, or the $66 flagship Malleea?

The answer is no. The more expensive wines are unquestionably better, especially in the long run. But most people buy wine for immediate enjoyment – something that the highly aromatic Musician provides in buckets.

What makes it different from the other wines then, if it’s from the same vineyards and made in the same winery by the same winemaker?

The answer probably lies more in the winery than in fruit sourcing, though that plays a role says winemaker Bruce Gregory.

All of the grapes come from the Majella vineyard, located at the southeastern end of old Coonawarra. The Lynn’s planted their first vines here in 1968 and extended the vineyard during the nineties boom.

Bruce says that cabernet for the Musician tends to come from the younger vines (a relative term here, as they’re more than ten years old) while older plantings provide the smaller shiraz component.

Bruce grades each batch of grapes as they come in during vintage. But all of the reds undergo a similar fermentation regime for the first five to seven days.

At this stage Bruce presses the reds earmarked for premium products into oak barrels to complete their ferments. Magician components, on the other hand, remain in stainless steel tanks.

Bruce says that this creates an important difference between Musician and the other wines. As ‘barrel fermentation builds palate structure at the expense of aroma’, he explains, the premium blends become denser and more complex while Musician retains its high-toned fragrance. The vibrant fruit character shows in the palate, too.

With fermentation complete, the Magician components go for maturation older oak barrels for about a year – an important step in stabilising the wine, softening the tannins and adding some complexity without inserting much oak flavour or aroma.

The final blend includes, as well, a small proportion of oak-fermented wines that’d earlier been earmarked for the more expensive labels. This builds palate richness without taking away the aromatic highnotes.

While Musician is a blend of cabernet sauvignon and shiraz, cabernet dominates the aromatics and flavour. Bruce says that shiraz makes a subtle difference to the aroma. If you smell the final wine, he says, you smell cabernet, but it’s not the same as the cabernet component on its own.

On the palate, though, shiraz adds structure and fleshes out the mid palate, which can be a little lean in straight cabernet. But, again, it’s a subtle, if crucial, influence.

The result is a wine that may seem simple and delicious but is really out of the ordinary. It’s finally about the fruit of an exceptional vineyard in one of the world’s great cabernet growing areas.

Over time the other Majella reds, especially the cabernet and Malleea, reveal unique Coonawarra aromas and flavours in full glory. But Magician, in stripping out some of the winemaking artefacts, delivers it all right now.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Karelas family buys Madew Lake George vineyards

Last month without any fanfare Canberra’s Theo Karelas and family, owners of Lake George Winery, acquired Madew Wines, on their northern boundary. The purchase brightens the outlook for this unique and historic stretch of vineyards.

Yet two years ago the future of Lake George as a Canberra sub-region appeared to be defaulting to Lerida Estate and its energetic owners, Jim Lumbers and Anne Caine. The neighbouring Lake George Winery was in decline and the for-sale Madew Wines had ceased production.

But in late 2006 Theo Karelas decided to revitalise his Lake George property, setting the scene for the Madew purchase just over a year later.

Karelas and his son Sam had bought Lake George from its founder, Dr Edgar Riek in 1998. But in an interview last year Sam said that while he’d made the Lake George wines after Riek’s, departure he had no background in winemaking. As well, working in the family’s Four Olives Deli Café at Manly, Sydney, left little time for the vineyard.

It needed full-time care, he said. And the family’s determination to give it that coincided with Hardy’s plan to exit Canberra. This, in turn, caused Hardy’s Kamberra winemaker, Alex McKay, to consider his options for the future.

With enormous respect for Alex’s talent and fearful that he might leave Canberra, Edgar Riek approached the Karelas family. They seized the opportunity. And after discussions with the family early in 2007 Alex agreed to make the Lake George wines and oversee a rejuvenation of the vineyard.

With the help of Riek and former Kamberra Winery colleague, Nick O’Leary, Alex achieved this substantially during winter 2007 and reaped a record, high-quality harvest in 2008.

Meanwhile the Karelas family had been negotiating with David Madew and settled on the property in time for vintage. Alex shifted the Lake George winemaking gear into Madew’s shed and made the Lake George wines there. There was no fruit from the Madew vineyards.

The Madew purchase included the land, vineyards, winery, house and the grapefoodwine restaurant/function/cellar door building. At about the same time, says Sam, his family purchased a vacant forty-hectare block on Madew’s northern boundary to allow for further vineyard expansion.

Sam expects to have a cellar door up and running in the stone cellars under grapefoodwine in the next few weeks. After that the number one priority will be to rejuvenate the vines, which appear to have been untended for several years.

For this, Sam says, ‘Dad and I have given total control to Alex and Nick. They are the best in the district’.
Alex McKay says he hasn’t completed a survey of what’s in the Madew vineyards yet. He believes that the mix is ‘not too redundant’ and probably about seventy per cent white, thirty per cent red.

There’s a fair bit of riesling, a variety which has, in the past, produced good wines. And tastings of the very small amount of Madew stock suggested that the vineyard produced generally high-quality fruit.

It’ll be all hands on deck there this winter to prune (probably with a chain saw), graft and re-trellis where necessary. Alex believes that the severe pruning will probably mean a 2009 crop of only about twenty to thirty per cent of normal.

But by pruning severely and limiting the yield next year, the vines will be healthier in the long run and yield normally in 2010. He says that because Sam and Theo will do what it takes to get the wines right they’re prepared to accept the small 2009 harvest.

Of the forty hectares on the new block adjoining the Madew property, Alex believes that perhaps twelve to six hectares could be planted to vines.

The Madew name won’t be retained and the combined properties will operate as Lake George Winery. Sam estimates current combined plantings at about seventeen hectares, with potential, across the three blocks to increase this to perhaps about thirty-seven hectares.

Lake George Winery, then, will embrace two of Canberra’s earliest vineyards – Lake George itself, founded as Cullarin Vineyard by Dr Riek in 1971; and the former Madew vineyard, founded as Westering vineyard by Captain Geoff Hood in 1973.

The substantial grapefoodwine building will serve several purposes. The cellar door is moving downstairs into the stone cellar, which will serve, too, as a barrel cellar; and the upstairs restaurant will continue as a function venue, with Lynwood’s Robert Broadbent running the kitchen. Sam says this may become a restaurant again in the future.

With the cellar door due to open and the first of the wines made by Alex McKay expected to come on sale in the next few months, we could be in for a treat.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Oz versus Kiwi wine style differences

Like the Australian wine industry, New Zealand’s has enjoyed a decade of unprecedented, export-driven growth. However, New Zealand’s southerly latitudes and cooler climate dictates a vastly different wine-industry structure than Australia’s.

With New Zealand’s warmest significant growing region, Gisborne, sitting at about the same latitude as Melbourne, it’s only natural that the Kiwi industry focuses on a different suite of grape varieties and evolved to accept lower yields per hectare but more dollars per litre than Australian producers.

In the twelve months to August 2004 New Zealand vignerons pocketed the equivalent of $9 Australian for every litre they exported. Australian winemakers earned just $4.30 a litre.

New Zealand’s transition from bulk, low-end producer to high quality exporter can be seen not just in the export figures (7.9 million litres in 1994; 31.1 million in 2004) but in the dramatically changing vineyard landscape of the last decade.

In 1994 Gisborne and Hawkes Bay on the North Island and Marlborough at the top of the South Island each produced similar tonnages of wine grapes: 17,555, 15, 116 and 15,851 respectively.

Just one year later Marlborough assumed the top spot with 24,509 tonnes to Gisborne’s 22,289 and Hawkes Bay’s 20,632. Come the bumper 2004 vintage and Marlborough stretched her lead, harvesting 92,581 tonnes to a combined 55,595 tonnes from Hawkes Bay and Gisborne.

But there’s considerably more colour and depth to New Zealand’s wine scene than mere tonnages suggest. The nineties saw an explosion in the number of winemakers from 190 to 463, greatly expanding the palette of wine available.

In Marlborough, for example the number of winemakers trebled between 1994 and 2004 from 28 to 84 as the tonnage grew almost sixfold from 15,851 to 92,581. In the same period – in a parallel of its nineteenth century gold rush — trendy Otago’s winemaking population swelled ninefold from 8 to 75 and the crush from 175 to1439 tonnes.

Otago, led by Central Otago, was the only region in New Zealand to post a significant decline in production from 2003 to 2004.  Despite an increase in area under vines from 703 to 822 hectares in that one year, devastating frosts struck in spring, killing buds, and in Autumn, wiping out leaves — underling the risks inherent in very cool-climate viticulture.

The very promising Canterbury/Waipara region, on the coastal plains north of Christchurch, attracted 26 new winemakers in the period, bringing the total to 46. However, this is a real hot spot, favoured by Montana, New Zealand’s largest producer. Though wine-grape production increased fourteen fold, from 197 to 2825 tonnes in that ten years, its 635 hectares of vines ought to produce five thousand tonnes or more as younger plantings mature.

Reflecting the growing significance of pinot noir and a conspicuous success with it, the Wairarapa region, embracing Martinborough and Wellington, at the southern tip of the North Island, expanded its winemaking numbers from 21 to 49, its plantings from 174 to 675 hectares and its harvest from 501 to 2820 tonnes between 1994 and 2004.

And lovely, remote Nelson, two hours drive west of Marlborough, boasted 24 wineries in 2004, up from 9 in 1994. In the same period, the area under vine grew from 97 to 571 hectares and the annual grape crush from 366 to 4563.

And along with all these exciting regions, we can throw into the blend several dozen more winemakers and pots more grapes from Northland, Auckland, Waikato/Bay of Plenty and the ubiquitous ‘other’ category.

From these diverse sites, stretching in latitude from the high thirties to 45 degrees south, came 166 thousand tonnes of grapes in 2004, up from 76,400 in 2003 and 54 thousand in 1994. (The huge gap between 2003 and 2004, incidentally, reflects weather conditions rather than vast new plantings coming on stream).

And where Australian export success rides on immense volumes of warm-grown shiraz, chardonnay, merlot and cabernet sauvignon, New Zealand’s push is led overwhelmingly by sauvignon blanc. This variety alone accounted for 42 per cent of the 2004 grape harvest.

Chardonnay ran second by volume to sauvignon blanc, making up 22 per cent of the crush. Pinot noir, New Zealand’s emerging red specialty, ran third behind the two whites a little over 20 thousand tonnes or 12 per cent of the total crush – the three top varieties then accounting for three quarters of the country’s production.

However, it’s not the whole story. Merlot production is comparatively high at around nine thousand tonnes; shiraz is making a mark in a tiny way in the Hawkes Bay area; riesling has a handy niche at just under six thousand tonnes; and pinot gris, though more talked about than grown (1888 tonnes), shows considerable potential, especially on the South Island.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

The power of a regional specialty

The emergence of shiraz as Canberra’s strongest wine variety is fortuitous for the region’s vignerons. Why? Because it plugs in neatly to a growing global view that Australia is the world’s shiraz specialist. And, arguably, the greater the diversity of styles we deliver the wider the interest that we’ll generate.

Phil Laffer, one of Australia’s most internationally renowned winemakers, puts it succinctly, ‘We’ve adopted shiraz as our own because we’re one of the few countries that makes it really well’.

Shiraz enjoys the added advantage of being mainstream. Australia crushes and drinks more shiraz than it does of any other wine variety, opening a tremendous opportunity for Canberra vignerons.

Clonakilla was the first Canberra winery to succeed with shiraz. But when John Kirk planted it in 1972 it wasn’t the darling grape that it is now. Back then shiraz didn’t rate alongside the so-called ‘noble’ varieties – riesling, chardonnay, cabernet sauvignon and pinot noir.

Like other district pioneers Kirk planted a range of varieties and through decades of trial and error learned how each performed. Ultimately, shiraz, blended with viognier, triumphed spectacularly.

But there’s a salient lesson in its slow climb to fame. Just look at this sequence in the Clonakilla shiraz viognier history:

  • 1972 – Dr John Kirk plants shiraz at Clonakilla, Murrumbateman.
  • Mid 1970s to 1989 – shiraz is blended with cabernet sauvignon.
  • 1986 John Kirk and son Jeremy plant the white variety, viognier.
  • 1990 – Clonakilla’s first straight shiraz wins silver and gold medals and trophies.
  • 1991 – John’s son, Tim, visits legendary Rhône Valley maker, Marcel Guigal, and is ‘transfixed and delighted’ by Guigal’s shiraz–viognier blends from the Côte-Rôtie’s impossibly steep slopes.
  • 1992 – Tim and John add viognier to shiraz for the first time.
  • 1997 – Tim Kirk moves from Melbourne to Canberra and becomes full time winemaker.
  • 1999 – The 1998 vintage receives a 92/100 rating from American critic Robert M. Parker and is nominated as NSW wine of the year.
  • 2001 – Influential UK wine critic, Jancis Robinson, rates Clonakilla as one of her two favourite Aussie shirazes.

The first thing we learn from this is that if a grape variety suits a site it’ll show in the quality of the wine – as it did in that first Clonakilla Shiraz in 1990, almost twenty years after the vines had been planted.

Secondly, we know that if a variety suits one site in a region, then there’s a good chance – climate being the biggest single determinant – that it’ll be generally well suited to the region. And so it’s proven to be.

Even before Hardy’s moved here in the late 1990s they’d been sourcing shiraz for top shelf blends, including the $100 Eileen Hardy. They’d been particularly impressed by fruit from Andrew McEwin’s Murrumbateman vineyard, planted by Ron McKenzie in 1982.

Former Hardy winemaker, Alex McKay, rated this fruit second only to Clonakilla in the district. He also identified several other promising shiraz vineyards.

Clonakilla’s success and the Hardy presence encouraged wider planting of shiraz in the district. And, over time, we’ve seen it dominate the local wine show, taking out top honours every year since 1998, and outnumbering all other varieties in the medal tallies.

The compelling argument for shiraz doesn’t rule out other varieties. Rather, it presents a powerful opportunity for Canberra to cut through in the crowded domestic and global wine markets.

A stunningly good wine like Clonakilla Shiraz Viognier has the potential to stamp a whole district with class. And as local peers emerge over time – and that’s already begun to happen – the reputation can gain depth.

A single, powerful regional specialty makes a dramatic impact on drinkers. Think of Marlborough and Sauvignon Blanc, Coonawarra and cabernet sauvignon or Burgundy and chardonnay and pinot noir.

An important difference between these French and Australasian examples is that in Burgundy, vignerons can’t diversify into other varieties. Their Aussie and Kiwi counterparts can plant what they like where they like.

For Canberra that means we can seize our overwhelmingly obvious shiraz advantage while continuing to work with other promising grapes.

Unquestionably our second major opportunity lies with riesling. It’s one of the great grape varieties. It drinks beautifully when young, but also ages beautifully. And it shows flashes of brilliance across the region. What Canberra hasn’t seen yet, though, is a riesling of a stature to match that of our best shiraz. But that will almost certainly come.

Riesling’s draw back is that despite being talked up for the last thirty years, volumes remain static. This limits opportunities for local makers. But, like shiraz, it has the potential to build our regional identity and reward those who excel at it. Full marks to Ken Helm for his huge efforts with riesling.

Viognier, the white variety now being blended in with shiraz around the district could be our third string, albeit occupying an even smaller niche than riesling. As with shiraz, Clonakilla led the way – and still does. But Hardys made a few crackers in their brief stint in Canberra. And we’ve seen several other lovely examples. It’s clearly suited to the district and has a long-term future here.

The pinot noir story has moved on since first being planted in a cooler Canberra in the seventies. The cutting edge stuff – and that’s what builds regional reputations – now comes from southerly locations including New Zealand, Tasmania, Mornington Peninsula and Gippsland. Show me the great Canberra examples and I’ll change my mind. But, by all means, if makers believe in it and customers like it, persevere.

Cabernet, too, to my palate, is an also ran for Canberra. It has a following and we make decent wine from it, but it’s not in the reputation-building league as far as I can see.

Ubiquitous chardonnay makes appealing wine across the district. As with pinot noir, however, the best now emerge from much cooler regions and I suspect that it will never be a Canberra hallmark. We could continue to see some exceptions, though, from Lark Hill high up on the Lake George escarpment.

Where I do see wonderful opportunities, though, and potential rewards for growers and drinkers is in largely untested Italian, Spanish and French varieties.

Tim and John Kirk, for example, are about to plant grenache on an elevated, warm site in Murrumbateman; Frank van de Loo makes exciting reds from tempranillo and graciano at Mount Majura (and a lovely white pinot gris); Bryan Martin’s Murrumbateman red sangiovese and white marsanne click the right hyperlinks; and out at Lake George Winery, Alex McKay has an impressive 2007 tempranillo in barrel.

Not everything that’s tried will work. But as the Kirk’s have shown, it’s what we trial today that makes tomorrow’s winners, provided we recognise quality and work hard to perfect and promote it.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Vineyards underpin McKay’s new Collector label

Despite Hardy’s sudden departure from Canberra, its ten-year presence leaves a valuable legacy that’s bound to express itself in unsuspected ways.

Short of a miracle, the legacy probably won’t be the Kamberra or Meeting Place brands – the small volume face of Hardy’s Canberra involvement.

It’s more likely to come from the know-how of the staff that stayed behind – Alex McKay and Nick O’Leary — and the ingenuity of a score or so independent, former Hardy grape growers.

We’ll almost certainly see an increase in the numbers of wine brands, including this month the release of Alex McKay’s Collector label.

In a big statement for Canberra’s acknowledged specialty, McKay offers two gold-medal-winning shirazes from the Murrumbateman area – Collector The Marked Tree Road Shiraz 2005 (about $27) and Collector Reserve Shiraz 2006 (about $45).

This extraordinary debut is to a large extent a Hardy legacy – revealing the depth of Alex’s experience in the district and the quality of the grapes available.

But there’s a fair bit more to the story, much of it predating Hardy and going back to a time when Alex McKay, an undergraduate art history student, was whetting his taste for winemaking at Lake George Vineyard, under Dr Edgar Riek.

As Riek entered his second decade as a grape grower in the early eighties, Ron McKenzie established a vineyard on his property Mamre at Murrumbateman. Over a couple of seasons McKenzie planted a little under four hectares of chardonnay, cabernet sauvignon, shiraz and what he thought was merlot (in fact it was cabernet franc).

In 1999 McKenzie sold the vineyard to Andrew McEwin, owner of the well-regarded Kyeema Estate label, and a buyer of part of McKenzie’s fruit crop since 1987.

McEwin recalls that when bought the vineyard, Hardy’s were already buying fruit from it. He recalls ‘Steve Pannell [chief winemaker] in raptures over the shiraz’ and believes that this may have been a key to their interest in the region.

As Andrew’s Kyeema shiraz from the vineyard was a regular gold-medal winner, Hardy’s excitement really just confirmed how good the fruit was – and put a price on it.

McEwin says that in every year but one Hardy’s paid a quality bonus when wine from the vineyard made the cut for the company’s top-shelf products. He believes that both chardonnay and shiraz reached the flagship ‘Eileen Hardy’ blends on at least one occasion.

Encouraged by the vineyard’s quality, Andrew recently expanded it by about 1.6 hectares – about half of that being struck from cuttings of the existing old shiraz vines and the other half planted to merlot and tempranillo.

At the same time he replaced the cabernet sauvignon with shiraz and retrellised the whole vineyard. What was ‘grow and sprawl’, said Andrew, is now the more controlled, and quality orientated, vertical shoot positioning system.

During the growing season shiraz receives particular attention, including shoot thinning and bunch thinning to control yields and maximise flavour.

Andrew says that as a contract maker for other grape growers he regularly sees what other vineyards produce. This, he says, confirms the quality of his own shiraz.

As winemaker at the large Hardy-owned Kamberra complex, McKay enjoyed even greater exposure to Canberra’s various shiraz vineyards than McEwin. As well, he participated in Hardy’s classification tastings across all varieties at company headquarters in Reynell, South Australia.

Coming from that broad – and very demanding perspective – McKay’s decision to make only shiraz for his new Collector label and to select McEwin’s vineyard as source of the ‘Reserve’ version – could, in a sense, be seen as Hardy’s collective learning on our region.

Talking to Alex McKay it’s clear that he views Clonakilla and McEwin as Canberra’s two best shiraz vineyards. Which just goes to show that even with the same inputs, all vineyards are not equal.

There is something special about the grapes – and hence the wine — from Andrew McEwin’s tiny, quarter-century old vineyard planted on a granitic saddle between two hills near Murrumbateman.

We’ve seen glimpses of it in Andrew’s Kyeema Wines over the years. But the winemaking experience that McKay brings reveals even more. I’ll review the two new Collector wines shortly.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Lake George renaissance part 2 — Lake George vineyard

Sometimes a vineyard’s fate depends on succession, or lack of it – a story well illustrated by Canberra’s first two vineyards.

In 1971 CSIRO scientists Dr Edgar Riek and Dr John Kirk, unknown to each other at the time, planted vineyards on the western foreshore of Lake George and at Murrumbateman respectively.

Kirk’s Clonakilla passed smoothly from John to his son Tim and today enjoys a global clientele.

Riek’s succession, though, didn’t run as smoothly as he’d hoped after selling Lake George Vineyard in 1998. But late last year the owners, Theo Karelas and his son Sam, decided to get the vineyard and winemaking back into shape.

Sam says that even though he made the Lake George wines in recent years, he had no background in winemaking. As well, working in the family’s Four Olives Deli Café at Manly, Sydney, left little time for the vineyard.

It needed full-time care. And their determination to give it that coincided with Hardy’s plan to exit Canberra. This, in turn, caused Hardy’s Canberra winemaker, Alex McKay, to consider his options for the future.

With enormous respect for Alex’s talent and fearful that he might leave Canberra, Edgar Riek approached the Karelas family. They seized the opportunity. And after discussions with the family early this year Alex agreed to make the Lake George wines and oversee a rejuvenation of the vineyard.

The arrangement with Theo and Sam Karelas allows McKay time to develop his own brand as well. (While that’s a story for another day, we can look forward to the release of Alex’s two gold-medal winning Canberra shirazes in August).

Out at the vineyard on a freezing Sunday, Alex is clearly impressed by the site that Riek chose back in 1971. He says the soil is great – ‘it’s friable, it’s well drained and it has the right pH balance’.

The site also has a unique aspect, exposing it to humid sea breezes. This, believes Alex, means less moisture stress for vines – and that’s particularly important in our otherwise dry climate.

He points to a building to the south, beyond the adjoining Madew vineyard. Throughout the drought, it seems, the water tanks there remained two-thirds full purely from condensation run off, courtesy of the sea breezes.

Despite the sea breezes, though, the six-hectare vineyard suffered in the long drought.  Alex appears confident, though, of restoring the vineyard – and shows a twenty-year-old photograph of Edgar Riek standing in front of neatly hedged vines with trimmed swards of green grass between the rows.

Alex intends to ‘nurse the vines along gently’ and not use too many sprays. He started the rejuvenation with soil tests across the property and from this developed a range of composts that have since been spread among the vines, along with supplements to address mineral deficiencies.

Like all accomplished winemakers, Alex knows that he can’t make a silk purse out of sow’s ear – or a top-notch shiraz from second grade fruit.  So the whole 6-hectare vineyard’s being reworked to produce the best possible quality.

The focus is going to be on the red varieties shiraz, pinot noir and tempranillo and on the white chardonnay and pinot gris. But a few patches of old cabernet sauvignon, malbec and viognier are to remain to make one-off small parcels or perhaps, in the case of viognier, to find its way into blends with shiraz.

The rejuvenation program includes grafting from one variety to another; grafting to better clones of the same variety; grubbing out old vines and replanting with better-suited varieties; and progressively re-trellising right across the vineyard.

Eighty-seven-year-old Edgar Riek began grafting shiraz onto pinot noir about a year ago; a block of merlot and cabernet is to be grafted over to tempranillo and shiraz this winter; and parts of the chardonnay and remaining pinot noir blocks are to be progressively grafted to better clones.

A block of shiraz at the lowest point of the vineyard is to be grubbed out and replanted to the white pinot gris – the lower, cooler location being better suited to whites.

The only new planting is to be seven rows of tempranillo on a plum site mid-vineyard that’s already been ripped in preparation.

Alex says that the gradual transformation from T-trellising to single-wire vertical shoot positioning will be accompanied by cane pruning. Together these will provide a more manageable canopy and help to optimise yields – key elements in producing high-quality fruit.

As Alex leads the charge in the vineyard – with help from Edgar Riek and Nick O’Leary, another of the young talents from Kamberra – Sam is planning the cellar door facility.

Like neighbouring Lerida Estate and Madew, he wants a substantial offering to attract both Canberra residents and travellers from the busy Federal Highway.

He envisages a large facility with both indoor and outdoor dining capacity – perhaps an outdoor pizza oven and, almost certainly, with a focus on cheese from boutique makers, both local and foreign – something that’s been a great success for him in the Manly deli.

Although Lake George has few wines to offer at present – the 2007 vintage being the hottest on record and one of the most difficult – it’s on track to deliver the vineyard’s full potential in coming years.

It seems that Edgar Riek’s vision might come true after all – thanks to the resources, will and entrepreneurial skill of the Karelas family and the outstanding talent they’ve recruited to deliver the goods.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007