Category Archives: Wine review

Wine review – Tim Adams, Schild Estate, West Cape Howe

Tim Adams Clare Valley Semillon 2012 $18.05–$22
Wines labelled “semillon”, unaccompanied by the magic words “sauvignon blanc”, appeal to a narrow audience. But there’s no reason why this should be so as the variety offers terrific drinking with distinctive flavour. The light bodied, low-alcohol versions from the Hunter Valley drink beautifully for decades. Tim Adams, on the other hand, provides an altogether different take on the variety. He harvest grapes riper than Hunter styles ferments and matures eighty per cent of the blend in French oak barrels. The wine retains semillon’s distinctive, vibrant, lemon- and lemongrass-like flavour on a lively, full, smooth palate with a pleasant vanilla-lie input from the oak.

Schild Estate Barossa Valley Shiraz 2013 $17.09–$22
Winemaker inputs at times overwhelm or mute climate-driven regional or sub-regional characteristics in a wine. Indeed, even the best palates would struggle to affix sub-regions to a masked range of Barossa shirazes from a number of makers. However, tasted on its own and in full view of the label, Schild 2013 shows the bright, red-fruits varietal character of shiraz grown in the cooler southern end of the valley. Family vineyards around Lyndoch and Rowland flat give the wine its appealing fresh fruit flavours. And though it weighs in at a solid 14.7 per cent alcohol, the wine sits light and soft on the palate.

West Cape Howe Frankland River Malbec 2014 $22
While malbec adds perfume, intense colour and strong tannins to red blends, it can also make excellent stand-alone wines. It’s the signature red of Argentina, for example. And in Australia, notably at Langhorne Creek, it makes sturdy, satisfying reds that differ in taste and structure from old favourites like shiraz or cabernet. Over in the west, West Cape Howe makes an outstanding version from the remote Frankland River region. The deep, crimson-rimmed colour, cherry-like aroma and plush, juicy palate appeal tremendously. After the first hit of fruit, the variety’s firm tannins take hold, though in harmony with the sweet fruit.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2016
First published 2 and 3 April 2016 in goodfood.com.au and the Canberra Times

Wine review – Robert Stein, Cockburn, Domain Day, Irvine, Majella, Van Volxem

Robert Stein Riesling 2015
Stein and Mirramar vineyards, Mudgee, NSW
$25

With his 2015 vintage, winemaker Jacob Stein takes us away from traditional floral, delicate Australian rieslings. Thirteen per cent alcohol puts it at the bigger end of the variety’s style spectrum. Then spontaneous fermentation on skins of a component, and barrel-fermentation in old oak barrels of the pressings, bring extra weight and grip to the palate. The result is a ripe, full, dry (if not bone dry) white that retains citrus-like riesling flavours and racy acidity. This is an impressive and interesting riesling, heading off in its own direction.

Rockburn Pinot Noir 2013
Gibston and Parkburne, Central Otago, New Zealand

$38–$43

At two degrees south of Australia’s southernmost vineyards, Central Otago produces wines of greater body and ripeness than we might expect at the latitude. But the area’s dry, sunny, continental climate produces distinctively powerful pinots that fetch high prices in world markets. Rockburn provides a taste of the style in a warm year. Vibrant, dark-cherry-like varietal flavours back an assertive palate, comprising fruit, warming alcohol (14 per cent) and strong, fine, drying tannins. Winemaker Malcolm Rees-Francis writes, “This pinot is generously proportioned but remains taut for the moment”. I agree. A year or two in bottle should bring all the flavour elements together.

Domain Day “S” Saperavi 2004
Mount Crawford, Barossa Valley, South Australia

$24–$35
Impressed by its longevity, winemaker Robin Day planted the Georgian red variety saperavi at Mount Crawford. Day writes “I have my vineyard and cellar door on the market as I aim to retire and write (an anecdotal travelogue is half written)”. While we wait for Day’s hilarious stories, his wines seep into the market, sometimes at very low prices. His 2004 saperavi, for example, can be found on winerobot.com.au for $24 by the dozen, while Dan Murphy offers the 2005 vintage at $28–$29. The 2004 appeals for its warm, earthy, mellow aroma and rich, firm, medium-bodied palate. It’s fully mature now and a delight to drink.

Irvine “The Estate” Shiraz 2014
Barossa Valley, South Australia
$25–$28
The Wade and Miles family recently purchased Jim Irvine’s brand and Eden Valley property. The revamped label now draws fruit from wider sources, including the Wade and Miles family’s Barossa Valley vineyards. Sam Wade writes, “The wine styles are also moving towards a fresher, brighter style in response to the changing palate of the consumer”. However, the Barossa’s warm-to-hot climate hasn’t changed. So the new, lighter style shiraz belies the reality of its warm origins. It’s a very pleasant, clean, fruity red of medium body, soft tannin and drink-now appeal.
Majella Shiraz 2013
Majella vineyard, Coonawarra, South Australia

$30–$35
Majella shiraz caught our attention from the very first vintage, 1991 – the year the grape-growing Lynn family began its gradual, and now complete, transition to winemaker. Their shiraz, though elegant and fine boned in the Coonawarra style, nevertheless requires cellaring to bring out its best, perhaps even more so in the powerful 2013 vintage. Behind the light, vivid, limpid colour lie deep, sweet berry fruit flavours, tightly bound up in fine but assertive fruit and oak tannins. The wine has its charms now, but from past experience we can expect the delicate and lovely fruit to flourish with a decade or so of cellaring. First reviewed in July 2015, the 2013 vintage looks even better half a year later, especially given its outstanding cellaring record.

Van Volxem Saar Riesling 2013
Saar River, Mosel wine region, Germany
$35
Roman Niewodniczanski’s historic wine estate, at Wiltingen, Germany, makes a range of single-vineyard rieslings as well as this dazzling blend from steep sites on the Saar River. At Manta Restaurant, Woolloomooloo, bone-dry Van Volxem 2013 served both as an aperitif and company for a variety of juicy, NSW oysters. Delicate yet intensely flavoured, with a laser edge of acidity, the wine suited the food, the moment and the setting. The unique combination of power and delicacy of Saar and Mosel rieslings comes from the very cool growing conditions at around 49 degrees north. The Saar flows north into the Mosel near Trier. Wines from both rivers belong to the official Mosel wine region. Imported by Fox Beverages and available by order through fine wine retailers.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2016
First published 30 March 2016 in the Canberra Times

Wine review – Bleasdale, Kirrihill, Howard Park

Bleasdale Langhorne Creek Second Innings Malbec 2014 $15.15–$22
Bleasdale, Langhorne Creek’s original winery, used malbec for table wines from 1961 (111 years after Frank Potts established the business). Although long a blending wine, malbec now stands on its own under a number of Bleasdale labels. Indeed, winemaker Paul Hotker writes, “We have recently planted three more malbec clones, bringing our total up to nine”. The company’s entry-level Second Innings provides a deliciously fragrant, mouth-filling, juicy, soft expression of the variety at a fair price. The flagship Generations Malbec 2014 ($33.25–$35) provides a more concentrated, tannic experience. It needs a good splash in the decanter or a few more years’ bottle age.

Kirrihill Vineyard Selection Series Watervale Riesling 2015 $18–$20
The 2014 vintage of Kirrihill Watervale riesling weighed in at 11 per cent alcohol, substantially lower than the 12.6 per cent of the 2015 vintage. As both were dry wines, with very low levels of residual grape sugar, we know the 2015 was harvested significantly riper, with a consequent increase in the alcohol content. The alcohol boosted the body of the wine compared to 2014’s, resulting in a less delicate palate. However, Watervale’s distinctive lime-like flavours remain in a rich but very fresh and appealing riesling.

Howard Park Miamup Margaret River Sauvignon Blanc Semillon 2015 $14–$28
A recent tasting of the 2013 Miamup against the current-release 2015 revealed how with bottle age the wine loses much of its more aggressive, herbaceous character. The older, mellower, rounder wine retains enough of the punchy varietal flavour of the two grapes. But it also shows more texture and flavour depth. The 2015, on the other hand, is all about fresh, grapey flavours and the pungent, herbaceous character the two varieties develop in Margaret River. Barrel fermentation of a portion of the blend gives that little extra depth that becomes amplified with bottle age.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2016
First published 27 March 2016 in the Canberra Times

Wine review – Tellurian, Josef Chromy, Stockman’s Ridge, Redbank, Saltram, Tim Adams

Tellurian Viognier 2014
Eastern Mount Camel Ranges, Heathcote, Victoria
$27

Tellurian Viognier 2014 topped the “other whites varietals and blends” section in February’s Winewise Championship. The Canberra-based championship rates gold-medallists from other Australian wine shows – a sort of best-of-best taste-off, judged in small groups of no more than seven wines. Tullurian topped the viognier class before advancing to the finals against four other varietals and a blend, each a winner of its own class. Viognier can be big, brash and overbearing. But barrel-fermented Tellurian captures pure apricot- and ginger-like varietal flavour on a silky, richly textured. harmonious palate. It’s a juicy and loveable example of the variety, best drunk within three or four years of vintage. I rated it top in both the heat and the final. It’s available at tellurianwines.com.au.

Josef Chromy Fumé Blanc 2015
Relbia, Northern Tasmania

$28

Another white that impressed while judging at the Winewise Championship, was Joseph Chromy’s oak-fermented sauvignon blanc, labelled as “fume blanc”. The wine retains fresh sauvignon blanc flavours, but against the rich texture and flavours derived from fermentation and maturation in oak barrels. We rated it the best of the sauvignon blancs or sauvignon blanc dominant blends in the competition. Californian vigneron Robert Mondavi coined the name “fume blanc” in the 1960s to differentiate dry sauvignon blanc from sweeter versions. Australian winemakers flirted with it in the 1980s. It still pops up occasionally in Australia and generally indicates, as this one does, an oak-fermented sauvignon blanc.

Stockman’s Ridge Rider Shiraz 2014
Stockman’s Ridge vineyard, Orange, NSW

$23
I’m not as excited by Stockman’s Ridge 2014 as the judges at the 2015 Australian Highlands Wine Show, where it won a gold medal and three trophies. But it’s a pretty shiraz, displaying pure, sweet, berry fruit flavours on a medium-bodied, lively, soft palate. It offers pleasant, fruity current drinking. The wine comes from Jonathon Hambrook’s 20-year-old shiraz vines located at 800 metres above sea level on the north-west slopes of Mount Canobolas.

Redbank Fiano 2014
Myrrhee, King Valley, Victoria
$21.95
With more romance than reality the back label depicts fiano as a variety “dating back to the days of Roman viticulture”. More prosaically, Jancis Robinson and Jose Vouillamoz in Wine grapes – a complete guide to 1368 varieties, including their origins and flavours, dismiss as futile attempts to link ancient names to modern varieties. They do, however, point to its origins in Campania and mentions of it as early as 1240. At Myrrhee, 700-metres up in Victoria’s King Valley, it produces a full-flavoured, melon-scented dry white with a rich texture and tangy, lemony dryness. At the recent Winewise Championship, Redbank ranked second in my score sheet to the delicious, but sold-out, Briar Ridge Limited Release Fiano 2015.

Saltram “The Journal” Old Vine Shiraz 2010
Schultz vineyard, Mount McKenzie, Eden Valley, South Australia

$133–$175
Buried among Treasury Wine Estate’s vast portfolio are beautiful regional gems, including Saltram The Journal, made from Eden Valley vines planted in Australia’s federation year, 1901. This high (472-metre), cooler section of the Barossa produces perfumed, comparatively elegant shiraz with very long-term cellaring potential. In the solid 2010 vintage, Shavaughn Wells made a powerful, brooding wine from these old vines. Despite its power, The Journal is an harmonious red with deep, bright fruit flavours meshed with strong but soft, persistent tannins. It’s a wine to marvel at and savour as it evolves over the next half century.

Tim Adams Riesling 2015
Clare Valley, South Australia
$18.90–$22
Tim Adams riesling offers absolutely delicious current drinking and outstanding cellaring potential. A year on from vintage, it shows appealing floral and lime varietal aromas and a shimmering, fresh palate. A combination of intense lime-like varietal flavour, light body (11.5 per cent alcohol), pure, refreshing acidity and bone-dry finish add up to pure drinking pleasure. The light colour, delicacy, freshness and high acidity all point to interesting flavour development in the years ahead. Buy a dozen, throw it somewhere cool and dark, and enjoy a bottle every now and then over the next ten years.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2016
First published 9 and 16 March 2016 in goodfood.com.au  and the Canberra Times

Wine review – Logan, Shaw Vineyard Estate, Ad Hoc

Logan Weemala Orange Riesling 2015 $16–$20
Mudgee-based Logan wines sources grapes from a range of altitudes across a swathe of the NSW central ranges, including Orange. Winemaker Peter Logan writes, “Logan’s vineyards sit particularly high above Orange. At altitudes ranging from 850 to 1,050 metres above sea level these are some of the highest vineyards in Australia”. The high altitude means comparatively low temperatures during the ripening period. In the great 2015 vintage, these conditions produced a highly aromatic, intensely flavoured riesling of great delicacy. The wine’s high natural acidity gives it a racy, fresh, dry finish.

Shaw Vineyard Estate Canberra Riesling 2015 $22.50–$25
Graeme Shaw writes, “I craft my wines with my customers in mind and I’ve rarely seen a wine judge in my cellar door buying wine. However, I can’t help but be a smidgen proud that this wine won three trophies at the 2015 Australian Cool Climate Wine Show, including best wine in show”. This is a fuller bodied riesling than the delicate Logan wine reviewed above. It offers strong, lemon-like varietal flavour on an assertive, dry palate. Refreshing acidity combines with warm alcohol and a light astringency to the finish.

Ad Hoc Middle of Everywhere Frankland River Shiraz 2014 $19–$21
The quirky name reflects winemaker Larry Cherubino’s belief in shiraz from Western Australia’s Frankland River region. He writes, “Some people might think Frankland River’s a little isolated – but if you want to make great shiraz in WA, it’s right where you want to be”. The region feels the continent’s hot breath which, on its own, might be too much heat for shiraz. But the southern ocean counters with lovely cold air – and the result is savoury, spicy, medium-bodied cool-climate shiraz. Ad Hoc is a drink-now version of the style. Cherubino captures vibrant fresh berry flavours, laced with pepper and spice, on a smooth, savoury palate.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2016
First published 12 and 13 March 2016 in goodfood.com.au  and the Canberra Times

Wine review – McKellar Ridge, Four Winds, Swinging Bridge, Hay Shed Hill, Pike and Joyce, Toppers Mountain

McKellar Ridge Shiraz Viognier 2015
Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW
$33–$35
Due for release at the April Harvest Festival, Brian and Jane Johnston’s shiraz-viognier shows the exceptional fruity depth of Canberra’s 2015 vintage. ­­Round, plush and seductive, the palate ripples with vibrant, ripe-berry flavours. Brian Johnston says he accentuated the fruit flavour by using more new French oak than usual, but reducing the time in oak by about five months. It’s a noticeable change and one that worked deliciously in the outstanding 2015 season. The wine remains medium bodied and spicy in the Canberra mould, with a special buoyancy and depth.

Four Winds Vineyard Shiraz 2014
Four Winds Vineyard, Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW
$30

Graeme and Suzanne Lunney planted the 13.4-hectare Four Winds vineyard in 1998 and 1999, during BRL Hardy’s tenure in Canberra. Hardys are long gone, but the family now makes and markets wine under the Four Winds label. Daughter Sarah Collingwood looks after marketing and husband John Collingwood manages the vineyard. Another Lunney daughter, Jaime Crowe, and husband Bill Crowe, make the wine. The family’s 2014 reveals a fragrant and gentle side of Canberra shiraz. Vibrant, berry fruit flavours, a touch of spice and savoury oak, and a round, soft, palate complete an appealing, medium-bodied style.

Swinging Bridge Mrs Payten Chardonnay 2014
Orange, NSW

$32

Tom Ward’s Swinging Bridge chardonnays demonstrate the varietal intensity achieved in Orange’s high-altitude vineyards. His current releases include this lovely Mrs Paytens 2014 and a reserve bottling (4.5 stars–96 points, $38), also from the 2014 vintage. Mrs Payten – a richer, rounder style for Orange – seduces with ripe, nectarine-like varietal flavour and refreshing, brisk acidity. The reserve version echoes those nectarine-like flavours in a leaner, tighter style of great intensity. These are classy drops from a region that makes excellent wines, yet struggles to create a clear style identity as Canberra has with its shiraz and riesling.

Hay Shed Hill Shiraz Tempranillo 2013
Margaret River, Western Australia

$19–$22
Michael Kerrigan fermented and matured shiraz and tempranillo separately before combining the two in this solid, loveable blend. At 86 per cent, shiraz dominates the blend, giving a sweet, mid-palate ripeness and flesh. But the tempranillo brings earthy, savoury characters and assertive tannins that cut through the bright, berry flavours, giving a long, grippy finish. Kerrigan writes, “Margaret River has experienced an unprecedented sequence of outstanding vintage – all with their own twists and turns but all of the highest quality. 2014 will prove to be another highlight in this run”.

Pike and Joyce “Separe” Gruner Veltliner 2015
Lenswood, Adelaide Hills, South Australia
$28
Austria’s national white variety, gruner veltliner, now grows in several cool Australian regions, including Canberra and the Adelaide Hills. The Clare based Pike family source theirs from Lenswood, a particularly cool part of the Adelaide Hills which, like Clare, lies on the Mount Lofty Ranges. The 2015 gruner tingles and pleases with its richly textured palate and tart melon-rind and pear-like flavours. It finishes dry and refreshing with a distinctive spicy aftertaste.

Toppers Mountain Gewurztraminer 2015
Toppers Mountain vineyard, Inverell, New England, NSW
$35
Gewurztraminer’s remarkable aroma – reminiscent of musk and lychee – tends to attract at first, then repel with its unrelenting attack on the senses. I’ve toyed with the variety for about 40 years, since falling in and out of love, in one evening, with a particularly heady version from Alsace. The fascination returned recently with tastings of the 2014 and 2015 vintages from Mark Kirkby’s Toppers Mountain vineyard. The 2014 tasted so pure and delicate at the Winewise Championship; and a few days later the new-release 2015 showed similar class. This is dry, intense gewürztraminer of the highest order. It’s a wine to admire, but probably not drink much of.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2016
First published 8 and 9 March 2016 in goodfood.com.au  and the Canberra Times

Wine reviews – Tim Adams, Tyrrell’s, Torbreck, Moss Wood, Sassafras

Tim Adams Reserve Riesling 2010
Clare Valley, South Australia

$29
Tim Adams’ brisk, sometimes searingly acidic rieslings benefit from bottle age. His currently available reserve bottling, now six years old, retains a razor-sharp edge of acidity that accentuates its intense, yet delicate, lemon- and lime-like varietal flavours. Bottle age has also added smooth texture and subtle honeyed notes to a delicious wine with years, perhaps decades, of flavour development ahead of it.

Tyrrell’s Lost Block Merlot 2014
Limestone Coast, South Australia
$16–$18

Tyrrell’s Lost Block range offers enjoyable drinking – and quite often retailer discounts – across the range. Each comes from a region well suited to a variety, in this instance merlot from the Limestone Coast – that vast area of cool, coastal south Australia stretching from the Coorong in the north to Mount Gambier in the south. The medium bodied wine combines bright fruit flavours with earthy–savoury notes and a satisfying bite of fine, drying tannins.

Torbreck Woodcutter’s Shiraz 2014
Northwestern Barossa Valley, South Australia

$22.80–$25

Woodcutter’s shows the richness and smoothness that comes from attention to detail in the vineyard and winery. Ripe, but not over-ripe, shiraz gives the wine its mouth-filling richness. And the natural quality of the fruit – combined with varied fermentation and oak-maturation techniques – provide mellow, smooth, soft tannins that perfect the generous, warm, satisfying drinking sensation. More please.

Moss Wood Amy’s Cabernet Merlot Petit Verdot Malbec 2014
Margaret River, Western Australia

$32.30–$38
Could there be a juicier, more seductive cabernet blend? I doubt it. Moss Wood puts a friendly, smiling face on what can be an austere blend. Led by cabernet sauvignon, Amy’s beguiles with its joyous, sweet, berry-laden aroma. The fleshy, deep palate reflects this vibrant fruitiness. However, serious, grippy tannins wash through the fleshy fruit, giving structure, length and a satisfying finish – completely in harmony with the overwhelmingly fruity character of the wine.

Sassafras Fiano 2015
Ricca Terra Farms, Barmera, Riverland, South Australia

$24
Fiano 2015 accompanied two other new releases from Paul Starr and Tammy Brook’s tiny, Canberra-based Sassafras label: the lightly sparkling Canberra District Savagnin Ancestral 2015 (reviewed last week) and Sassafras Canberra District Sagrantino 2013, a rustic red with the eye-popping tannins associated with this Italian variety. The lovely white comprises Southern Italy’s fiano and a splash of Canberra-grown savagnin. It’s a highly distinctive, full-bodied dry style that’s at once savoury, leesy, and slippery smooth textured.

Taittinger Comtes de Champagne Blanc de Blancs 2006
Avize, Le Mesnil-sur-Oger, Oger, Cramant and Chouilly, Champagne, France
$284–$350
Being in the right place at the right time – and a handful of hastily collected cash – put three vintages of Comtes de Champagne on our palate in quick succession. The sublime and powerful 2005, enjoyed at Penfolds Magill Estate, rates as our most memorable wine of 2015. The equally sublime, if more subtle and elegant, 2002 graced a Chateau Shanahan tasting in November: 10 of us shared the $280 buying price from Jim Murphy Airport Cellars. Then in early January, the importer, McWilliams Wines, provided a taste of the 2006 – a beautiful wine, sitting in body between the 2002 and 2005, with a unique combination of delicacy, richness and backbone, derived from prolonged ageing on yeast lees. The all-chardonnay blend comes from some of the best vineyards on the Cotes des Blancs, south of the Marne River.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2016
First published 2 March 2016 in the Canberra Times

Wine review – Curly Flat, Freeman, Kirrihill

Curly Flat Williams Crossing Macedon Pinot Noir 2014 $27.90–$30
You can buy good shiraz from around $10 a bottle. And there’s lots of it. But the real pinot noir experience comes at a higher price. The best Australian versions come from cool growing regions: on the south-eastern tip of the mainland, from high-altitudes, and Tasmania. A favourite, Curly Flat, comes from the high, cool Macedon ranges near Melbourne. You can pay around $50 for the company’s flagship pinot. But Williams Crossing, a blend from barrels not suited to the flagship style, provides a satisfying pinot experience. The 2014 offers ripe, juicy varietal flavour with underlying savouriness and a silky satisfying texture.

Freeman “Secco” Rondinella Corvina 2011 $35
For the adventurous or well-travelled palate, Brian Freeman’s Secco offers an Australian take on the idiosyncratic “Amarone” wines of Italy’s Valpolicella region. He says the late-ripening rondinella and corvina grapes “were still green during the nerve-wracking downpours” of the disastrously wet, cold 2011 vintage. They ripened in more benign conditions “three months after the other varieties…from almost leafless vines, clean and ready for the neighbour’s prune dehydrating shed”. Use of partially raisened grapes give the wine exotic prune- and fruit-cake-like flavours on an intensely savoury palate with firm, mouth-puckering tannins.

Kirrihill Regional Range Adelaide Hills Chardonnay 2015 $10.90–$13
Chardonnay remains Australia’s biggest volume white wine. Our vignerons crushed 376 thousand tonnes of it in 2015 – more than four times the 89 thousand tonnes of sauvignon blanc they processed. However, Australians consume far more sauvignon blanc than they do chardonnay, largely through the runaway success of imports from Marlborough, New Zealand. While Australia can never hope to out-sauvignon Marlborough, we now make an extraordinary range of chardonnays to equal the world’s best. At a very modest price, Kirrihill shows a rich, juicy, fruity side of the variety. Smooth textured and full of vitality it brims with unoaked nectarine-like varietal flavours.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2016
First published 28 February 2016 in the Canberra Times

Wine reviews – Tapanappa, Sassafras, Ravensworth, Cupitt, Pikes and Bremerton

Tapanappa Foggy Hill Pinot Noir 2014
Foggy Hill vineyard, Fleurie Peninsula, South Australia
$55

After losing control of Petaluma Wines to Lion Nathan (now Lion Co) early this century, founder Brian Croser established Tapanappa Wines, based on existing vineyards in the Piccadilly Valley (Adelaide Hills) and Wrattonbully, near Coonawarra. In 2003, Croser planted a pinot vineyard at Parawa, “the highest point of the Fleurieu Peninsula half way between Victoria Harbour and Cape Jervis”, he writes. Eleven years and several vintages later, the vineyard at last produced a pinot of stunning quality, revealing the unique power, elegance, firm-but-fine structure, and earthy richness of this great variety.

Sassafras Savagnin Ancestral 2015
Quarry Hill vineyard, Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW

$24

Be prepared to wrinkle your nose and pucker your lips. Paul Starr’s cloudy bubbly challenges the senses with it lemony tartness and green-apple sharpness. Made from barely ripe savagnin grapes, the wine was lightly filtered towards the end of its fermentation and transferred to bottle. There the remaining yeast cells converted residual grape sugar to alcohol and carbon dioxide. (The spent yeast cells give the wine its cloudiness). The wine shows fresh fermentation aromas, while the palate combines lemon and sour apple flavours, with a tart, grippy, bone-dry finish. Noma restaurant selected Sassafras Savagnin for its Sydney wine list – perhaps to pair its idiosyncratic tartness with particular foods.

Ravensworth Garnacha Tinta y Cinq-sao 2015
Quarry Hill and Euroka Park vineyards, Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW

$32
Press the “Weird stuff” tab on ravensworth.com.au to buy Bryan Martin’s delicious young red. He writes, “I was eating a pretty neat paella when I was writing the label” – hence the Spanish names of two red varieties we know as grenache and cinsaut. These southern French vines thrive in hot, dry climates and clearly ripened beautifully in cooler Canberra in 2015. Martin used whole-berry ferment, in the Beaujolais style, to create a unique, mouth-watering style: fragrant and juicy, with a range of sweet-berry flavours, a touch of spice and savour, round, plush palate and dry, fresh finish.

Cupitt Semillon 2014
Cupitt vineyard, Ulladulla, Shoalhaven Coast, NSW

$26
Cupitt winery and restaurant complex perches on a gentle slope, to the west of Ulladulla, with views to Burrill Lake and the Budawangs. Fresh local food, smart service, and delicious wine and beer made on site match the beautiful setting. Griff Cupitt raises Black Angus cattle, Rosie Cupitt makes cheese, and their sons Wally and Tom produce wine and beer. At a recent lunch, we enjoyed 2012 and 2014 vintage semillons from the Cupitt vineyard and a 2014 shiraz from Hilltops. They’re all enjoyable wines, but our pick on a hot day, the 2014 semillon, provided ultra-fresh, light-bodied drinking (10 per cent alcohol), with zesty lemon-like flavours and bone-dry finish.

Pikes Traditionale Riesling 2015
Clare Valley, South Australia

$17.90–$25
The Pike family’s blend from various Clare Valley sub-regions provides a rich, soft, drink-now expression of Clare’s great white specialty. Lemon- and lime-like aromas and flavours, combined with brisk acidity, give the wine tremendous vitality. The combination of delicate, citrus characters with that acidity make it a great pre-dinner refresher or good company with seafood, especially oysters. We enjoyed our bottle with fresh Clyde River oysters at Lake Conjola.

Bremerton Special Release Tempranillo Graciano 2014
Langhorne Creek, South Australia
$24
Down in Australia’s “middle palate”, Langhorne Creek, sisters Lucy and Rebecca Willson have a bit of fun with the Spanish red varieties tempranillo and graciano, solo and blended together. Their 2014 combination of the two varieties produced a medium-to-deep coloured wine with satisfying, Langhorne Creek fleshiness. However, the savoury character of the varieties and rustic tannins flow across the palate, too, giving a firm but gentle, dry finish.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2016
First published 24 February in the Canberra Times

Wine review – Ten Minutes by Tractor, De Bortoli, Angullong

Ten Minutes by Tractor 10X Mornington Peninsula Chardonnay 2013 $30
Down the coast during January we feasted regularly on the local seafood. We found sweet, fresh-caught Coila Lake school prawns, at outlets between Moruya and Ulladulla, for as little as $14 a kilo. They became a staple, served with homemade coriander pesto and various breads from Braidwood’s Dojo bakery. The prawns don’t know it, but they’re even more delicious with chardonnay of this calibre. The wine’s nectarine-like varietal flavour, silky texture, subtle caramel notes and vivid, fresh acidity blended seamlessly with the sweet, prawny little schoolies.

De Bortoli Bella Riva King Valley Sangiovese 2013 $16–$18
In 1994 the De Bortoli family planted sangiovese and other Italian varieties in their Bella Riva vineyard, located in Victoria’s King Valley. Twenty years on, a combination of controlled cropping and Steve Webber’s sensitive winemaking captures the rustic, savoury side of sangiovese. Bright, fresh, sour-cherry-like varietal character lies at the heart of the wine. But a deep savouriness, reminiscent of, say, fresh-crushed herbs, black olives and seared red meat, give a delicious rustic edge, which is completed by grippy tannins and pleasant tartness in the aftertaste. This is a drink-now wine.

Angullong Orange Sauvignon Blanc 2015 $19
The 220-hectare Angullong vineyard, 35-kilometres south of Orange, rolls in and out of the Orange wine-district boundary, which is defined partly on altitude. The vineyard’s altitude varies by only 40 metres, from 580-metres to 620-metres. But only the vines located above 600-metres lie within Orange. Those below it qualify for the Central Ranges appellation. Imagine the headaches keeping all the batches separate. The cooler sites suit sauvignon blanc, spectacularly so in the 2015 vintage. This is lovely spicy, herbal, textured sauvignon of a very high order – and quite a subtle alternative to the more in-your-face styles from Marlborough, New Zealand.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan
First published 21 February 2016 in the Canberra Times