Category Archives: Wine review

Wine review – Hardys, Tim Smith and Mount Horrocks

Hardys Chronicles Twice Lost Langhorne Creek Pinot Grigio 2014 $16
During the nineties our major companies, and some private investors, planted broad acres of vines at Langhorne Creek to feed the wine-export boom then underway. With ample water, a warm climate, tempered by nearby Lake Alexandrina, the area produced healthy yields of high quality fruit – which, of course, is exactly what attracted investors there in the first place. Generous, soft, varietally pure red wine remains the area’s real specialty. But white wines perform well, too, albeit without the distinction, in my view, of the reds. Hardys pinot grigio delivers fresh, clean, pear like varietal flavours on a soft and refreshing palate.

Tim Smith Barossa Mataro Grenache Shiraz 2013 $24.50–$28
Former Yalumba winemaker Tim Smith struck out on his own in 2002, following a trip to France’s Rhone Valley in 2001. In his 2013 vintage three-variety Rhone-inspired blend, Smith used a smaller proportion of firm, spicy mataro (also called mourvedre) than he did in the 2012, though it remains the dominant variety at 45 per cent of the total. Floral, soft grenaches contributes 33 per cent and rich, earthy shiraz 22 per cent. It’s perhaps a tad fuller bodied than the 2012, but continues in the highly aromatic style, with rich, juicy, spicy, mid-palate fruit and assertive but smooth tannins.

Mount Horrocks Clare Valley Semillon 2013 $30
Stephanie Toole’s semillon provides the full body and texture of an oak-fermented white but unique flavours, far removed from our usual oak-fermented tipple, chardonnay. Semillon’s unique lemon- and lemongrass-like characters come through in both the aroma and flavour and give delicious vigour and life to the deep, satisfying palate. Though fermented and matured entirely in oak barrels, it’s the fruit flavour, finesse and texture that appeal most of all, meaning the oak barrels did their job without intruding. O’Toole makes her wines from 10-hectares of vines in the Clare Valley. Her semillon comes from the Watervale sub-region at the southern end of the valley.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2014
First published 11 October 2014 in goodfood.com.au and 12 October 2014 in the Canberra Times

Wine review – Lark Hill, Serafino, Madfish, Freeman, Mount Majura and Hardys

Lark Hill Gruner Veltliner 2014 $45
Lark Hill Vineyard, Lake George Escarpment, Canberra District, NSW

Even in the difficult 2014 season, Austrian variety gruner veltliner made an outstanding wine at Canberra’s highest vineyard. The Carpenter family call 2014 “one of the most challenging vintages to date”. Frost and unsettled spring weather disrupted flowering, reducing the crop. But what remained of the gruner veltliner, say the Carpenters, successfully weathered the hottest, driest summer and wettest autumn on record. Spontaneously fermented in older oak barrels, the wine offers aromas of spice and melon and a richly textured palate with unique flavours reminiscent of spice, herbs and melon rind. Steely acidity accentuates the flavours, gives a long finish and suggests a medium to long cellaring life.

Serafino Sorrento Shiraz 2013$18–$20
McLaren Vale, South Australia

Steve Maglieri’s mid-priced shiraz looked good at a recent tasting alongside several more expensive wines, including the remarkable d’Arenberg Dead Arm McLaren Vale Shiraz 2010 ($65). Not surprisingly, tasters preferred the powerful d’Arenberg wine. But for less than a third of the price, Serafino gives the more-ish, ripe and earthy flavours and soft, savoury tannins of McLaren Vale shiraz.

Madfish Premium White 2013$13.30–$18
Great Southern and Margaret River, Western Australia

Behind the vague “premium white” name lurks a decent dry white, made mainly from chardonnay grown in very good Western Australia’s vineyard regions. The wine shows the bright, fresh, citrus-like flavours of chardonnay fermented in stainless steel, rather than oak barrels. Although semillon comprises just four per cent of the blend, its presence shows in the aroma and, to a lesser extent, in the zesty, smooth-textured palate. Madfish is the budget brand of the Burch family’s Howard Park Wines.

Freeman Nebbiolo 2012 $35
Freeman Altura vineyard, Hilltops, NSW

In 2012, Brian Freeman coaxed something wonderful out of Piedmont’s noble and notoriously difficult red variety, nebbiolo. He writes, “Five years ago we decided to graft nebbiolo onto dry-grown 40-year-old pinot noir vines, effectively tapping into amazing vine maturity. Subsequently, the ideal 2012 season produced low yields of fully ripe nebbiolo grapes with exceptional flavour and balance”. The wine shows nebbiolo’s typically pale colour, floral- and -savoury aroma and taut, firmly tannic, medium bodied palate. Delicious, ripe fruit flavours push teasingly through those tannins ahead of the firm, savoury, lingering finish. This is an elegant, distinctive red well removed in style from Australia’s generally fleshy styles.

Mount Majura Vineyard Shiraz 2013 $32
Mount Majura vineyard, Canberra District, ACT

In a recent masked tasting of 2013-vintage Canberra shirazes, Mount Majura was one of the deepest coloured, fullest bodied and, at 15 per cent, probably one of the most alcoholic of 21 wines. In that fairly rushed tasting I ranked it about bronze medal standard, with the caveat that wines of this dimension require bottle age. A week later judges at the local show perhaps felt the same when they awarded it a bronze medal. However, a more leisurely tasting, with the bottle open for a few days, revealed a big but harmonious wine with great depth of bright, spicy fruit flavour and silky tannins. Based on that tasting, I’m shifting up to a silver medal score and suspect the wine will distinguish itself after more bottle age.

Hardys The Chronicles Butcher’s Gold Shiraz 2012 $15.99
McLaren Vale, South Australia

Hardys is now part of Accolade Wines, controlled by Champ Private Equity, and headquartered at Reynella, South Australia, home of the former Hardy Wine Company. Reynella is next door to McLaren, where Thomas Hardy founded Hardys in 1853. That the winemakers know a little about McLaren Vale shiraz shows in this delicious new Butcher’s Gold release. It’s a rich, full red wine, built on ripe, earthy shiraz flavours with the savouriness and soft but pervasive tannins we expect of the region.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2014
First published 7 October 2014 in goodfood.com.au and 8 October 2014 in the Canberra Times

Wine review – Hardys and Soumah

Hardys Chronicles “The Gamble” Limestone Coast Chardonnay 2014 $15.99
The press release sketches a tenuous connection between Hardys “The Chronicles” range and the company’s nineteenth-century founder Thomas Hardy. In fact, this is a thoroughly modern, realistically priced wine, made by people who also make one of Australia’s finest chardonnays, Eileen Hardy. Grapes are sourced from South Australia’s vast Limestone Coast (all of the state south of the Murray and immediately west of the Victorian border). The result is a bright and fresh wine of rich but fine texture, built on the region’s melon-like varietal flavours. Presumably Padthaway fruit contributes much to the flavour. This area was also source of fruit for the early Eileen Hardy chardonnays.

Hardys Chronicles “Seventh Green” Langhorne Creek–Coonawarra
Cabernet Sauvignon 2012 2014 $15.99
Hardys new Seventh Green neatly combines the characteristics of cabernet sauvignon from Langhorne Creek (near Lake Alexandrina) and Coonawarra, a couple of hours’ drive to the south on the Limestone Coast. Both regions produce cabernet of outstanding varietal definition: Langhorne Creek in a slightly fuller, fleshier style; Coonawarra in a more concentrated, firm and elegant style. The combination produces a modestly priced cabernet of striking varietal definition, both in its blackcurrant and slightly leafy character and fine, firm backbone of tannin. With wider distribution the price may be subject to discounting.

Soumah Single Vineyard Yarra Valley Pinot Noir 2013 $29–$31
Soumah, from Gruyere, Yarra Valley, makes its pinot noir from three different clones of the variety. Soumah’s Brett Butcher writes, “the traditional MV6 clone gives minerality and a broad fruit profile while the Pommard adds good structure and elegance. The 777 then brings a dollop of well-rounded, juicy raspberry and cherry flavours with a bright dose of fine acid”. What the drinker beholds is an elegant pinot, built on vibrant red-berry varietal flavours, fresh acidity, smooth texture and fine tannins, derived both from the fruit and oak casks.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2014
First published 4 October 2014 in canberratimes.com.au
and 5 October 2014 in the Sunday Canberra Times

Wine review – John Duval, Red Knot, Andrew Thomas, Ulithorne, Mount Majura and Lark Hill

John Duval Wines Entity Shiraz 2012 $40.85–$50
Krondorf, Greenock and Eden Valley, Barossa, South Australia

Former Grange makers John Duval sources fruit for Entity from the Krondorf and Greenock sub-regions of the Barossa Valley and a portion from the elevated, cooler Eden Valley to the east. The combination yields a vibrant shiraz in the generous, sweet-fruited Barossa style, but with an elegant structure and drink-now appeal. The supple, juicy fruit flavours incorporate the spice, savouriness and fine structural tannins of high quality fine-grained French oak. Entity provides extraordinarily satisfying drinking now. But the sheer freshness of the fruit and solid underlying tannin structure suggest a long and lovely evolution with bottle age.

Red Knot by Shingleback Cabernet Sauvignon 2013 $11.39–$15
McLaren Vale, South Australia
Red Knot Cabernet Sauvignon, from the Davey family’s Shingleback vineyard, McLaren Vale, evokes words like ripe, juicy, fruity, varietal and soft – a bright, fresh, flavoursome, lovable, red made to enjoy now. But it’s a bit more than that, too – a great example of the sophistication of modern Australian winemaking. Why? Despite the low price it’s not propped up by over-extraction, over oaking or over-ripeness as we used to see. It’s a graceful, lovely, modestly priced wine, based on fruit quality not winemaking tricks.

Andrew Thomas Six Degrees Semillon 2014 $23
Hunter Valley, New South Wales
Hunter Valley semillon’s a logical candidate for low-alcohol winemaking. The dry versions deliver ripe flavours but often register at around 10–11 per cent alcohol, considerably below the 12–14 per cent we normally see in Australian whites. Arresting the fermentation before the yeasts gobble up all the grape sugar produces wines of even lower alcohol content. In Six Degrees, Andrew Thomas achieves just 8.7 per cent alcohol while leaving a fairly high level of unfermented grape sugar. However, the high acidity of the early-picked grapes offsets the sweetness by injecting young semillon’s typical lemony tartness. It’s a delicious combination.

Ulithorne Corsus Vermentinu 2013 $34
Corsica, France

McLaren Vale based Ulithorne makes and imports this wine from the French Island of Corsica. Vermentinu, known in Australia as vermentino, has grown in the vicinity, notably in Sardinia and Liguria, for many centuries. Winemaker Rose Kentish’s version presents a more herbal, spicy and savoury version of the variety than Australian efforts to date. It offers a fine but chewy texture, exotic herbal flavours and bone-dry, refreshing finish.

Mount Majura Riesling 2014 $27
Mount Majura vineyard, Canberra District, ACT

Mount Majura 2014 riesling follows broadly in the style of other Canberra 2014s tasted to date. The first impression of aromatic and delicious, full-throttle varietal flavour changes a little as the wine’s high acidity becomes apparent. The acidity makes the palate refreshing and works very well with food. But unaccompanied by food, the wine’s acidity tends to be a little austere, even though winemaker Frank van de Loo left a little residual grape sugar behind to temper the acidity. A few more months in bottle should amplify the fruit flavour, further offsetting the acidity.

Lark Hill Biodynamic Shiraz Viognier 2013 $30
Lark Hill Dark Horse vineyard, Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW

In mid September, the Canberra District Vignerons Association held a tasting of Canberra shirazes, split into four groupings: 2013 vintage, 2009 vintage, 2005 vintage, and a mixed class from 2000, 1998, 1996, 1994 1992 and 1990. With only a few exceptions, 21 wines from 2013 confirmed the exceptional quality of this vintage. Many wines, including Lark Hill, showed the superior fruit quality and ripe, velvety tannins of the benign season. Lark Hill combines bright red-berry fruit with typical Canberra spice and a touch of pepper. A small portion of viognier in the blend adds to the richness and texture of the palate. The wine is young and unevolved at present but we can expect it to blossom with a little bottle age.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2014
First published:
30 September 2014 at goodfood.com.au
1 October 2014 in the Canberra Times

Wine review – Yellow Tail, Nick O’Leary and Wilson

Yellow Tail Chardonnay 2014 $8.55–$10
The Casella family doesn’t reveal the source of grapes for its popular chardonnay, but we can safely guess it comes from many vineyards across south-eastern Australia, with a large component from the warm, high-yielding irrigation areas. It’s a smart wine, produced to the best quality possible for the volume produced and sub-$10 pricing. Made in the fresh, modern style, it offers tropical-, citrus- and stone-fruit-like varietal flavour on a full but lively and fresh palate. The winemaking techniques also give the wine a richer texture, say, than riesling or sauvignon blanc, as you’d expect in chardonnay.

Nick O’Leary Bolaro Canberra District Shiraz 2013 $55
Nick O’Leary’s makes Bolaro from Great Western clone shiraz, grown on Wayne and Jennie Fischer’s Nanima vineyard, to the east of Murrumbateman. His 2013 vintage, due for release in October, reveals the great flavour intensity and solid tannin structure produced by these outstanding vines. A quick encounter with the wine hints at the delicious, spicy fruit held by those firm tannins. Tasted over a couple of days, however, the fruit’s alluring sweetness reveals itself fully, albeit integrated with the wine’s spicy, savoury character and beautiful tight but silky tannins.

Wilson Watervale Riesling 2014 $19
John Wilson originally established vines in the Clare Valley’s Polish Hill sub-region. Today, his son Daniel makes several Clare Valley riesling, including this one from the valley’s southernmost sub-region, Watervale. Daniel Wilson writes, “To the east of Watervale lies a narrow band of vineyards rooted in a base of pure white limestone. After tasting the wines of Watervale for more than a decade, we formed the opinion that the most powerful, aromatic wines from this Clare sub-region originate from this band of limestone”. Wilson 2014 delivers Watervale’s floral and lime-like aromas and flavours on a full but finely structured, delicate, dry palate.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2014
First published:
27 September 2014, canberratimes.com.au
28 September 2014, Canberra Times Relax

Wine review – Mount Majura, Tahbilk, Four Winds, Ravensworth and Domenica

Mount Majura Graciano 2013 $27
Mt Majura vineyard, Canberra District, ACT

“Graciano has a huge number of synonyms in Spain and all around the Mediterranean, suggesting it is an old and widespread variety”, write Jancis Robinson and Jose Vouillamoz. They also note it, “is valued for its acidity and perfume”. Mount Majura’s Frank van de Loo refers to it as “a minor variety in Rioja [Spain], considered to be very high quality and used in blends for its good acidity”. Thankfully, van de Loo spares a small amount from the blending vat as it unquestionably makes a fine, distinctive wine in its own right: crimson coloured, impressively perfumed and with a rich, supple, slightly peppery palate. The excellent 2013 vintage won a gold medal at this year’s Winewise Small Vignerons Awards.

Tahbilk Roussanne Marsanne Viognier 2013 $25
Tahbilk vineyard, Nagambie Lakes, Victoria

In recent years Tahbilk planted the Rhone Valley white varieties, roussanne and viognier, alongside their extensive marsanne holdings. The latter had been cultivated on the property continuously since 1927 to become a notable Tahbilk specialty. A recently released blend of the three varieties could appeal widely. It’s based on the comparatively understated roussanne (40 per cent of the blend) with the more assertive marsanne (34 per cent) and powerful viognier (26 per cent) contributing to, but not overwhelming the blend. The result is a richly textured, fairly full-bodied dry white with distinct notes of citrus and honey.

Four Winds Shiraz 2013 $25
Four Winds vineyard, Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW

Graeme and Suzanne Lunney planted their 13-hectare vineyard during the Hardy period in the late nineties. Today it’s a broader family business involving two daughters and their husbands: Sarah and John Collingwood and Jaime and Bill Crowe. Four Winds fruit is highly valued by other growers in the district. And in the Four Winds winery, Bill and Jaime Crowe make very good wine, including this very tasting shiraz from the excellent 2013 vintage. It’s a highly aromatic red, built on cherry-like varietal flavours, seasoned with spice and a touch of pepper. The palate is medium bodied and soft, for current drinking.

Ravensworth Pinot Gris 2014 $25
Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW

Many a person’s been changed by a trip to Byron Bay. For Canberra vigneron Bryan Martin it meant a newfound running career and a 700-litre, egg-shaped ceramic fermentation vessel. Ever the experimenter, Martin sourced pinot gris grapes from neighbouring Long Rail Gully vineyard and let the ferment rip in the new calcium-rich egg. The result: a rich, smooth-textured white with the pear-like flavour of the variety and a fresh, citrusy tang to the finish.

Ravensworth Riesling 2014$ 25
Canberra District, NSW

Ravensworth tastes so very young now, its youth underscored by a high acidity that accentuates the lemon-and-lime varietal flavour. A very small amount of residual grape sugar adds a little flesh to what might otherwise have been an austere palate. Winemaker Bryan Martin attributes the wine’s texture partially to barrel fermentation of a small component. Even at this early stage of the wine’s development, I’m scoring it at silver-medal level, but suspect we’ll see it winning gold medals at wine shows in the months ahead as the fruit flavours build.

Domenica Shiraz 2012 $40–$44
Domenica vineyards, Beechworth, Victoria

Peter Graham’s Domenica provides yet another expression of Australia’s great red specialty. Medium body and fine tannins can be assumed in well-made shiraz from Beechworth’s comparatively cool climate. But Domenica separates itself from other cool-grown shiraz by its secondary flavours – reminiscent of leather, earth and bacon rind. These flavours season the underlying fruity and spicy varietal flavours, adding real interest to an harmonious, soft and thoroughly enjoyable wine.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2014
First published 23 September 2014 in goodfood.com.au and 24 September 2014 in the Canberra Times

Wine review – Soumah, Grant Burge and De Bortoli

Soumah Yarra Valley Chardonnay 2013 $33–$35
The Butcher family owns vineyards in the Gruyere-Coldstream sub-region of the Yarra Valley and created the acronym Soumah (south of the Maroondah Highway) as its brand name. Wines released under this label include Savarro (savagnin blanc), pinot noir, pinot grigio and shiraz. Even in the warmer 2013 season Soumah sits at the delicate end of the chardonnay spectrum, weighing in at just 12.7 per cent alcohol. Although delicate and zinging with fresh acidity, the wine offers deep, rich, fine flavours, combining grapefruit- and melon-like varietal flavour with the more exotic characters derived from fermentation with wild yeasts in oak barrels.

Grant Burge Barossa Valley Miamba Shiraz 2012 $19–$28
Revamped packaging gives Grant Burge’s Miamba shiraz a reassuringly smart appearance. And the good looks go all the way through. Burge sources grapes from his Miamba vineyard at the southern, cooler end of the Barossa, near the town of Lyndoch. And while it’s hard to say whether nature or humans shape the wine most, this is clearly an elegant, refined expression of ripe and generous Barossa shiraz. We’d probably rate it 50:50 nature and nurture. Whatever the defining forces, however, this is absolutely delicious drinking and especially good value when on special.

De Bortoli Bella Riva King Valley Sangiovese $16–$19
De Bortoli’s sangiovese comes from their Bella Riva vineyard, planted in Victoria’s King Valley in 1994. It was an exciting time down there as new money flowed to the valley, funding vineyards alongside those of other long-established Italian families – some making the transition from tobacco to grape growing. Twenty years on De Bortoli’s sangiovese vines produce an excellent red, very much in the bright, fresh and fruity modern Australian style. However, the Italian accent comes, not so much from the makers, as from the deep, varietal savouriness washing under the fruit – and, of course, the variety’s signature persistent, tannic grip.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2014
First published 20 September 2014 in goodfood.com.au  and 21 September 2014 in the Canberra Times.

Wine review – Brokenwood, Jamiesons Run, Tahbilk, Four Winds Vineyard, Kangarilla Road and Montevecchio

Brokenwood Quail Shiraz 2012 $100
McLaren Vale and Hunter Valley, South Australia and NSW
On the back label, winemaker Iain Riggs notes the inspiration of Quail shiraz being the Thomas Hardy “Burgundies” of the 1940s and 1950s. Riggs wasn’t of drinking age back then, but you can be sure he savoured their magnificence decades after vintage. Like those elegant, long-lived old Thomas Hardy wines, Quail combines shiraz from McLaren Vale and the Hunter Valley. Indeed it brings together the best barrels from Brokenwood’s star vineyards: Graveyard in the Hunter and Wade Block 2 in McLaren Vale. The style is elegant, restrained and savoury, with a fine, firm backbone of tannin – a sophisticated, understated wine of great dimension.

Jamiesons Run Cabernet Sauvignon 2012 $9.40–$15
Limestone Coast, South Australia

Jamiesons Run began as a Coonawarra brand in the 1980s, but now offers wine from Treasury Wine Estates’ vast vineyard holdings on South Australia’s Limestone Coast. The exact sourcing isn’t revealed for this wine, but prime suspects would include Padthaway, Wrattonbully and Coonawarra. It’s a drink-now style, with the emphasis on blackcurrant and leafy varietal flavour. It’s widely distributed and as a brand the big retailers latch onto, the price varied from $9.40 to $15 at the time of this review. It offers good value at $9.40, but you’ll find better wines at $15.

Tahbilk Grenache Shiraz Mourvedre 2013 $25–$28
Tahbilk vineyards, Nagambie Lakes, Victoria

In recent years, Alister Purbrick established grenache and mourvedre vines on his family’s magnificent property, Tahbilk. These two varieties now join Tahbilk’s long-established shiraz in the classic three-variety Rhone Valley blend – grenache-shiraz-mourvedre. Grenache leads with its musky, fruity fragrance. But shiraz and mourvedre temper the grenache fruitiness with spice and refined, savoury tannins on a medium bodied, smooth, understated palate. This is very much in the traditional Tahbilk mould, albeit with the new (for them) flavours of grenache and shiraz.

Four Winds Vineyard Riesling 2014 $22
Four Winds vineyard, Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW

Whether or not Canberra’s 2014 rieslings live up to the 2012s and 2013s remains to be seen. But they are very good indeed. Several, including Four Winds, would be extremely unlucky not to win gold medals at coming wine shows. The wine is impressively aromatic and purely varietal. The intensity of its flavour belies the mere 11.2 per cent alcohol. However, there’s a sting in the tail: while high acidity accentuates the flavour it also lends some austerity to the palate. This is quite in character for Canberra riesling and is easily resolved by giving the wine another 6–12 months in bottle.

Kangarilla Road Montepulciano 2012 $25
McLaren Vale, South Australia

Italy’s montepulciano grape makes strong, savoury, satisfying reds, notably in Abruzzi – a beautiful region between the Apennine Mountains and the Adriatic sea. The variety delivers its savoury character in McLaren Vale, too, prompting winemaker Kevin O’Brien to write of Italian red varieties in general, “the unique structural fruit tannins and sweet fruit compounds react perfectly with the palate to produce new flavour complexes to savour”. O’Brien’s purple-rimmed montepulciano captures exactly that aspect of montepulciano – the sweet fruit flavour, cut through with savoury flavours and rustic tannins.

Montevecchio Bianco 2012 $20–$23
Chalmers vineyard, Heathcote, Victoria

Fruit for Montevecchio Bianco comes from the Chalmers family’s 20-hectare vineyard on the eastern slopes of the Mount Camel Range, Heathcote, Victoria. The vineyard hosts more than 10 Italian grape varieties. For the family’s white blend, winemaker Sandro Mosele (of Kooyong Estate) co-fermented vermentino, fiano and a small amount of moscato giallo. The result is a bright, fresh wine with aromas and flavours reminiscent of citrus and melon rind. The palate is thoroughly Italian in style with its lean, acidic thrust and savouriness.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2014
First published 17 September 2014 in the Canberra Times and goodfood.com.au

Wine review — Sutton Forest Estate, Jamiesons Run and Chalmers Montevecchio

Sutton Forest Three Daughters Reserve Southern Highlands Pinot Noir 2010 $35
Next to MacDonald’s, Sutton Forest, Nick and Santina Lo Rosso offer a warm smile, good coffee and Italian cakes. They also offer their own wine. But many Hume Highway motorists want nothing more than the Lo Rosso’s hospitality and coffee, served by the open fire or in the peaceful gardens. A recent coffee stop put us in such a good mood, we bought a bottle of their reserve pinot noir, which we polished off with great delight a week later. This is medium bodied pinot, leaning to the earthy, savoury, firm-but-fine style. It’s available at cellar door or suttonforestwines.com.au

Jamiesons Run Limestone Coast Chardonnay 2013 $9.40–$15
Jamiesons Run began as a Coonawarra brand in the 1980s, but now offers wine from Treasury Wine Estates’ vast vineyard holdings on the Limestone Coast. Grapes for this appealing wine came from Padthaway (about an hours’ drive north of Coonawarra) and Robe (about an hour west of Coonawarra). Robe’s also an important cray-fishing port – and there could be nothing more pleasant than sitting on the beach washing down fresh cray with this delicious local wine. It’s medium bodied and richly textured with mouthwatering nectarine-like varietal flavour and zesty, fresh acidity. The very wide disparity in retail pricing suggests a brand still struggling for identity after almost thirty years.

Montevecchio Rosso Heathcote 2012 $20–$23
Fruit for this blend comes from the Chalmers family’s 20-hectare vineyard on the eastern slopes of the Mount Camel Range, Heathcote, Victoria. The vineyard hosts 10 Italian grape varieties. Four of those – negramaro, nero d’Avola, lagrein and sagrantino – go into this blend, made for the Chalmers by Sandro Mosele at Kooyong Estate, Mornington Peninsula. What an exotic and loveable wine it is: highly aromatic, combining ripe, sweet, plummy fruit with gamey, earthy notes. The palate zigs away from the sweetness and opulence suggested by the aroma. Instead the wine’s intensely savoury, tannic and pleasantly tart.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2014
First published 14 September 2014 in the Canberra Times and goodfood.com.au

Wine review – Gallagher, Sandalford, Printhie, Ten Minutes by Tractor and Nick O’Leary

Gallagher Shiraz 2012 $30
Murrumbateman, Canberra District, NSW

“After doing climatic data searches for about two years, looking for the best area to grow shiraz”, says Greg Gallagher, he and wife Libby Gallagher planted the variety at Murrumbateman in 1995. While neighbouring Clonakilla enjoyed success with shiraz from 1990, and shiraz-viognier from 1992, the variety remained far from the local hero it is today. But the Gallaghers backed the right variety, and their percipience delivers yet another outstanding Canberra shiraz. Their highly aromatic 2012 vintage combines bright red-fruit characters deliciously with intense spice and pepper of the cool season. The palate is supple and sweet, with very fine tannins providing structure and a long finish. The wine won a gold medal in the 2013 Canberra Regional Wine Show.

Sandalford Chardonnay 2014 $16–$20
Margaret River, Western Australia

Make no bones about it, chardonnay fermented and matured in oak barrels runs rings around unoaked versions. However, unoaked chardonnays cost less to produce and perhaps take the style closer to sauvignon blanc, Australia’s favourite white tipple. Sandalford’s unoaked wine edges in that direction, with its focus on fruit flavour and comparatively high acidity. Even the undoubted peach-like varietal flavour doesn’t distract from the sauv blanc similarities – raising the question of where this style fits. There is no doubting the wine’s high technical quality.

Printhie Mountain Range Merlot 2013 $18.05–$20
Orange, NSW
Is any other grape variety as revered or reviled as merlot? Its generally unquestioned merit in blends with cabernet sauvignon and cabernet franc fails to carry through to the variety on its own. Wines labelled merlot can be light and soft, dark and firm, or somewhere in between – or even sweet. Different clones vary and, of course, the vine responds to climatic variation, viticultural practice, ripeness at harvest and winemaking approaches. In the cool heights of Orange, Printhie prefers early ripening clones, tightly managed yields, ripe fruit and a combination of new and older French oak for maturation. The bright and plummy aroma leads to a medium-bodied palate with plummy fruit and a quite firm, fine backbone of tannin.

Ten Minutes by Tractor 10X Chardonnay 2013 $30
Osborn, Judd and McCutcheon vineyards, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria

Ten Minutes by Tractor offers several more expensive, single-vineyard chardonnays, but the entry level 10X offers most of the features found in the premium wines. This is opulent, finely balanced chardonnay of a very high order. It was barrel fermented, using ambient yeast, it underwent partial malolactic fermentation as was then aged in barrel for eight months, with regular lees stirring. These techniques added greatly to the wine’s texture and highlight the great beauty of chardonnay’s flavour – in this instance in the cool climate spectrum, reminiscent of melon and white peach with a squeeze of grapefruit.

Nick O’Leary White Rocks Riesling 2013 $37
Westering vineyard, Lake George, Canberra District, NSW

Canberra winemaker Nick O’Leary sources grapes for White Rocks from one of Canberra’s oldest vineyards. In 1973, two years after Dr Edgar Riek planted the first vines at Lake George, Captain Geoff Hood established Westering Vineyard next door. Hood’s dry-grown old riesling vines continue to thrive under Karelas family ownership, producing tiny crops of powerfully flavoured grapes. O’Leary says, “It’s a great vineyard”, and adds “the vines have huge trunks on them”. From these venerable old vines O’Leary made an extraordinarily concentrated riesling – a wine of great power but also of finesse and delicacy.

Nick O’Leary Shiraz 2012 $32
Malakoff vineyard, Pyrenees, Victoria

After hail ravaged the local 2012 grape crop, Nick O’Leary wondered how to fill the expensive oak barrels lying in wait for vintage. He looked to Victoria’s Pyrenees region, an area he says, “Is under-rated and makes meatier wines with darker fruit” than Canberra shiraz. O’Leary sourced fruit from Malakoff Estate and made a superb complement to his Canberra wine. The medium bodied, plummy palate shows the intense spice of the cool season and a notable stalky character, derived from O’Leary’s inclusion of whole bunches in the ferment (60 per cent of the total). The combination of fruit, spice, stalk, supple texture and fine tannins provides irresistible drinking. O’Leary made follow-up vintages in 2013 and 2014.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2014
First published 10 September 2014 in the Canberra Times and goodfood.com.au