Category Archives: Wine review

Wine review — Tertini, Centennial Vineyards and Lowe Tinja

Tertini Southern Highlands Riesling 2009 $30
Julian Tertini established the Yaraandoo vineyard, west of the old Hume Highway, just south of Mittagong, in 2001. Riesling and pinot noir quickly became the star varieties in this challenging grape-growing environment. Because of the austerity of the very young rieslings, Tertini releases them after a few years in bottle. Age softens the acidity and releases riesling’s appealing floral and lime characters. These flow from the aroma through to a delicate, fine, bone-dry palate – the lime-like varietal flavour lingering on and on. Ben Brazenor manages the vineyard; winemaker is Jonathon Holgate.

Centennial Vineyards Bong Bong Sparkling NV $18.69–$23.99
The Southern Highlands’ largest winemaker, located between Bowral and the old Hume Highway, makes a range of exciting sparkling wines, sourced from vineyards adjacent to the winery-cellar door function complex. The quality of the bubblies indicates the unexpectedly cool growing climate – producing fruit of a delicacy and intensity usually found much further south. A combination of altitude and cloud cover seem to account for this climatic quirk. A blend of estate-grown pinot noir and chardonnay, provides delicate and tasty off-dry drinking of a very high quality at the price.

Lowe Tinja Mudgee and Rylstone Preservative-Free Red and White 2012 $20
A sensitivity to sulphur dioxide prompted David Lowe to make Tinja sulphur-free wines – a red from 2009 and a verdelho-chardonnay blend from 2012. They’re difficult wines to make, requiring undamaged hand-harvested fruit picked early (as the low pH offers natural protection) and fanatically protective care in the winery. This includes selecting yeast strains that don’t produce sulphur dioxide during fermentation. The results are very good. Both wines offer fresh, bright, drink-now fruit flavours and the pleasantly tart edge that comes from early harvesting.  The shiraz merlot blend comes from Lowe’s organic vineyard, Mudgee; the white combines fruit from Mudgee and Rylstone.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 4 November 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Devil’s Lair, Vasse Felix, Hewitson, Stefano Lubiana, Mount Difficulty and Cradle of Hills

Devil’s Lair The Hidden Cave Chardonnay 2012 $19–$23
Margaret River, Western Australia

This is an excellent follow up to the 2011 vintage, winner of the Royal Sydney Wine Show’s “best commercial white” trophy. Delicious, vibrant nectarine-like varietal fruit flavours make the wine instantly appealing. But the winemaking techniques infuse it subtly with lees-derived flavours and add to the smooth texture of the full palate. This is really good, modern chardonnay. It walks a mouth-watering path between the fat and flubbery chardonnays of old and new lean, acerbic ones that’ve gone too far the other way. It has a lightness and freshness without losing chardonnay’s inherently generous nature.

Vasse Felix Chardonnay 2011 $21.85–$29
Margaret River, Western Australia

Under winemaker Virginia Willcock Vasse Felix chardonnays have pushed into the very top ranks from the region. Her Heytesbury ($60) easily sits alongside local icons including Leeuwin Estate Art Series and Cullen. The standard chardonnay, too, impresses. It’s a blend from numerous barrels of individual parcels, all wild-yeast fermented and managed individually until blended after nine months in oak. The rich and powerful wine seamlessly combines vibrant fruit with barrel-derived flavours and textures.

Hewitson Gun Metal Riesling 2012 $27
Eden Valley, South Australia

Winemaker Dean Hewitson offers another perspective on the outstanding 2012 rieslings, “the early sensationalism is born from a winemaking perspective, in that it was such a relief and so easy compared to the difficulties faced in 2008, 2009 and 2011. In that respect it was a dream vintage”. Hewitson’s riesling, though, can only fan the vintage reputation. It combines floral and lemony varietal character with the fine, slightly austere acidity of the Eden Valley – a delicate and intense dry white with considerable ageing potential.

Stefano Lubiana Selection 2/3 Pinot Noir 2008 $60 (as part of mixed 3-pack)
Lubiana Yellow block and Moorilla Estate, Granton, Tasmania

Steve Lubiana offers a mixed three-pack ($180) of 2008 vintage pinots, exploring respectively a winemaking option (blend 1/3, barrel fermentation) and two vineyard-soil options (blends 2/3 and 3/3). This one (2/3) includes material from Lubiana’s Yellow block and White block, which was planted to a mix of non-clonal material sourced from neighbouring Moorilla Estate in the mid 1990s. This is beautiful, subtle pinot, the bright juicy, underlying fruit flavours firmly held by fine tannins on a smooth, slippery palate. It’s available only at cellar door and slw.com.au

Mount Difficulty Target Gully Pinot Noir 2010 $99
Target Gully vineyard, Bannockburn, Central Otago, New Zealand

On a $100 budget, the pinot buyer’s options broaden to include very good Burgundy (the original pinot) as well as top shelf Australian and New Zealand versions. Mount Difficulty’s, from one of their six vineyards in Central Otago’s Bannockburn sub-region, sits squarely in the area’s robust style. It’s powerful, but silky, elegantly structured and offers layers of aromas and flavours – ripe, vibrant, cherry-like fruit, a stalky note, savouriness, spiciness, beetroot, earthiness and charry oak. The flavours all roll together, layered with fine, firm tannins. Probably a keeper.

Cradle of Hills Route du Bonheur GMS 2010 $25–$33
Sellicks foothills, McLaren Vale, South Australia

First the interpretation: route du Bonheur is the road to happiness; and GMS indicates a blend of grenache (63 per cent), mourvedre (25 per cent) and shiraz (12 per cent). Tracy Smith tends the vines and Paul Smith makes the wines – hand-sorted fruit; small open fermenters; hand plunging of the skin caps; post-ferment maceration (improves tannins structure and texture); lees stirring in older French barrel for 18 month (builds mid-palate); bottled without fining or filtration. Result: a happy, supple harmonious red – generous but not heavy, spicy, vibrant and with a fine, firm backbone of tannin.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 31 October 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Tulloch, Angoves and Domain Day

Tulloch Vineyard Selection Hunter Valley Semillon 2012 $20
Established in 1895, Tulloch wandered in the corporate wilderness from 1969 under varying corporate umbrellas until Jay Tulloch and family bought back the farm from Southcorp in 2001. Christine Tulloch now works as general manager under her dad, Jay. The new release comes from a single lower-Hunter vineyard. The wine weighs in at just 11 per cent alcohol and offers varietal citrus and lemongrass aromas and flavours – and a lean, tight, bone-dry finish. The low alcohol, light body and unique flavour make a good alternative to our generally more heady wines.

Angoves Long Row Riesling 2012 and Shiraz 2010 $6.90–$10
When crusty old Angoves rev up their labels, it’s like trading in the old Kingswood for an old Camry. Like the cars, Angoves Long Row wines offer reliability at a fair price – or even bargain prices when the big retailers have a go. In traditional Australian fashion, Angoves achieves the high quality to price ratio by blending material from top-notch growing regions into a base of Riverland wine. The riesling, at an unusually low 9.5 per cent alcohol, offers pleasant, fresh, floral and citrus flavours on a crisp, medium dry palate. The sturdy shiraz offers ripe plummy flavours with good tannin structure.

Domain Day Mount Crawford Garganega 2011 $18.05–$22
Garganega is the key grape in Verona’s famous dry white, Soave. It’s an Italian native – and perhaps one of its most promiscuous as recent DNA studies suggest it’s a parent of seven other varieties. Robin Day says his planting was Australia’s first. From it he makes a full-bodied, distinctively flavoured dry white which, in the cool 2011 vintage, seem particularly aromatic and intensely flavoured. A touch of passionfruit in the aftertaste adds zest to a vibrant, savoury dry white whose basic fruit flavour defies description. Day calls it preserved pear; I see more melon rind. Whatever you call it though, it works. And it’s a world away from chardonnay or sauvignon blanc.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 28 October 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Skillogalee, Hahndorf Hill, Mount Majura, Chrismont, Mount Langi Ghiran and Cracroft Chase

Skillogalee Riesling 2012 $21–$25
Skillogalee vineyard, Clare Valley, South Australia
Skillogalee, established in the early 1970s, first caught my attention when the 1978 vintage won a trophy at the national wine show. Its dazzling freshness and shimmering fruit character sent a ripple of excitement across the wine trade. The now mature vines, planted at around 500 metres in south-western Clare, make even better wines today – in this instance a blend of many individual parcels picked for optimum ripeness at different times during vintage. The wine pulses with life – the thrilling, juicy, intense lime-like varietal flavour cut with racy acidity on a nevertheless soft, deeply textured palate. This is another remarkable Clare riesling from the outstanding 2012 vintage. It drinks well now and should age deliciously for at least ten years if well cellared.

Hahndorf Hill Winery Gruner Veltliner 2012 $28
Hahndorf Hill vineyard, Adelaide Hills, South Australia

Hahndorf Hill owners Larry Jacobs and Marc Dobson pursued the great Austrian dream when they established vineyards in the Adelaide Hills. Research, they say, identified a fit between Austria’s late-ripening gruner veltliner and their elevated, continental-climate vineyard site. In Austria, they write, “vignerons all place huge emphasis on one crucial quality-defining factor – significant diurnal variation… the combination of good ripening days and cold nights that allows for an extended growing season… coaxing out its famously pure flavours and aromatics”. Well, the proof of the gruner is in the drinking of this dazzling, fresh 2012. It’s highly aromatic and flavoursome, with texture, savour and a pleasant bite to the finish.

Mount Majura Shiraz 2010 $28–30
Mount Majura Vineyard, Canberra District, ACT

Canberra’s 2010 vintage, the last of a run of warm seasons, included a couple of cool spells. Though the reds seem generally less opulent and more firmly tannic than the 2009s, winemaker Frank van der Loo notes in his 2010 “more spice than some years” – a flavour component normally associated with cool ripening. Indeed the spice cupboard dominates the aroma and flavour of this medium bodied red. But that’s an adornment to the underlying bright varietal fruit flavour. The texture’s particularly silky – partly a result, no doubt, of including a high proportion of whole bunches (including stalks) in the ferment. Firm but fine tannins rein the fruit in, giving a tight and savoury finish to a most appealing wine.

Chrismont La Zona Sangiovese 2011 $17–$22
Whitfield, King Valley, Victoria

Under the influence of Brown Brothers, Arnie Pizzini and his son Arnie jnr converted from tobacco to grape growing in the early 1980s. In 1984 they planted the Italian variety barbera and followed with sangiovese in 1999. The, operation now run by Arnie jnr and wife Jo, includes a range of Italian varieties and the Spanish tempranillo. Their 2011 sangiovese pleases for its medium body, subtle cherry-like fruit flavour and earthy, savoury tannins – an unobtrusive wine to accompany food, not be the centre of attention.

Mount Langi Ghiran Langi Shiraz 2010 $100
Mount Langi Ghiran vineyard, Grampians, Victoria

Australia’s great diversity of shiraz styles range from the inky black colour and full bodied power of those from warm climates to more subtle, medium bodied versions from cooler areas. And even within the subtle cool-climate versions, styles vary widely. Somewhere out on its own sits The Langi, a limpid, perfumed, peppery, comparatively delicate shiraz sourced from old vines at Mount Langhi Ghiran. The musk, pepper and spice of the aroma and flavour come with an intriguing stalky note, probably from whole-bunch maceration. The delicate, harmonious palate weaves all these flavours in with the finest, silkiest tannins imaginable – a brilliant, unique wine.

Cracroft Chase Blue Sun Pinot Gris 2009 $15
Cracroft Chase vineyard, Canterbury, New Zealand

Cracroft Chase’s Wilma Laryn visited Canberra recently, chasing business for her small Canterbury winery. The five-hectare vineyard produces only pinot gris, a variety that clearly suits the cool site. This is pinot gris as you seldom see it in Australia – in your face with its pear-like flavour, full body, syrupy-rich texture, grippy finish and pungent hit of lees-derived character that may overwhelm some palates. I can imagine this with soft cheese and dishes laced with rich, creamy sauces. It’s available at Braddon Cellars.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 24 October 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Mount Majura, d’Arenberg, Curly Flat, Printhie and Ross Hill

Mount Majura Vineyard Graciano 2010 $25
Mount Majura, Canberra District, ACT

Frank van de Loo’s lovely graciano won a gold medal and two trophies at this year’s regional wine show. Van de Loo says he bottled the late-ripening variety separately, rather than blending it with other varieties, for the first time in 2006 – but the 2010 is “probably the first that has been turning heads”. He adds that because it ripens so late “we only get it to this level of ripeness by severe crop thinning. Even in the warm 2010 vintage an exotic and intense peppery aroma says, phew, just made it. But sometimes wines that just struggle across the ripeness line bring more pleasure – it seems the just-ripe peppery notes emphasise the vibrant, fresh berry flavours underneath. In this instance it means a medium-bodied, savoury red that drinks deliciously now.

d’Arenberg The Footbolt Shiraz 2010 $16.15–$20
McLaren Vale, South Australia

The wine bears the name of Footbolt, a racehorse whose success helped Joseph Osborn fund the purchase of d’Arenberg’s first vineyard in 1912. Osborn’s descendents, d’Arry and son, Chester, continue to run the business. The Footbolt remains one of Australia’s big-value wines. It offers robust McLaren Vale shiraz flavour and savouriness, supported by mouth coating but soft, ripe tannins. It’s exceptionally rich and satisfying at this price and has the depth to age well for five to ten years if well cellared.

Curly Flat Pinot Noir $48–50
Curly Flat vineyard, Macedon, Victoria

Vigneron Phillip Moraghan says, “Vintage 2010 was a joy after the incredibly low yielding 2009”. We could add it’s a joy to drink too, and likely to remain so for a few decades. I place it in the very top ranks of Australian pinot noir – and all the more appealing because it moves well away from the strawberry-like fruit flavours we see in so many. Fruit sweetness remains crucial, but top pinot should also be earthy, savoury and richly, smoothly textured with a quite firm but fine tannin backbone. This pretty well describes the outstanding Curly Flat. Released in November and available cellar door and at George’s Liquor Stable, Phillip.

Curly Flat The Curly Pinot Noir 2010 $48–$50
Curly Flat vineyard, Macedon, Victoria

In 2010, under the influence of a visiting winemaker from Domaine Dujac, Burgundy, Curly Flat produced 244 dozen of The Curly – a variant on the other Curly Flat pinot reviewed today. The Curly enjoyed a slightly longer pre-fermentation maceration (five days versus 2–3 days); 100 per cent whole-bunch fermentation (versus 11 per cent); a 20-day fermentation (versus 12–17 days) and maturation in 100 per cent new French oak (versus 31 per cent new).  The wines share a common thread; but  surprisingly The Curly gobbles up all the new oak, which seems to add more to the tannin structure than flavour. The wine’s also a little earthier, more ethereal and a teasing bit of stalkiness that emphasises the underlying fruit flavour. Due for release in March-April 2013, it will be available by allocation only, so email expressions of interest to office@curlyflat.com

Printhie MCC Chardonnay 2010 $35
Orange, NSW

This and the Ross Hill chardonnay reviewed today are my picks of a range of wines tasted ahead of the Orange Wine Week, being held 19–28 October. The Swift family owns vineyards but also sources grapes from other growers. Drew Tuckwell makes the wines – in this instance a barrel fermented and matured selection of the best chardonnay grapes available from the vintage. It’s fuller bodied than the Ross Hill wine (from the cooler 2011 vintage), revealing grapefruit and white peach varietal flavours, deliciously meshed with all that comes from fermentation and ageing in barrel.

Ross Hill Pinnacle Series Chardonnay 2011 $35
Ross Hill Home Block vineyard, Orange, NSW

Terri and Peter Robson established Ross Hill in 1994 and planted chardonnay on their home block in 1996. In 2008 Greg and Kim Jones joined the business “to build the Ross Hill winery and plant further, higher elevation vines on the slopes of Mount Canobolas”.  Since 2009 wines have been made on site by Phil and Rochelle Kerney. The wines are among the best from the region. For this wine whole bunches were pressed and the juice run directly to oak barrels for spontaneous fermentation. It’s a classy chardonnay, showing the lean, acidic structure of the cool vintage, underpinned by intense grapefruit-like varietal flavour, infused with the funky notes and rich texture of barrel fermentation and maturation.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 17 October 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Lark Hill, Kingston Estate and Koonara

Lark Hill Canberra District Pinot Noir 2011 $30
Shock and horror stories of vintage 2011 didn’t paint the full picture. Yes, mildew and rot took their toll. And low temperatures slowed and even prevented ripening in some instances. But the best reds now coming onto the market are as clean as a scalpel, though somewhat lighter than in warmer years. The Carpenter family’s pinot noir demonstrates the positive side of the vintage. It’s intensely aromatic and a touch spicy, within normal pinot varietal bounds; and the medium bodied, lively palate again delivers intense varietal flavour and a fine, silky structure. It’s a delight to drink now and should evolve well in the medium term.

Kingston Estate Adelaide Hills-Mount Benson Pinot Gris 2012 $13–14
Bill Moularadellis’s Kingston Estate, though based on the Murray River, sources fruit from cooler growing regions. In this instance pinot gris from the cool Adelaide Hills and mild maritime Mount Benson region (near Coonawarra but closer to the sea) delivers a good value for money dry white. It’s a difficult variety and sometimes the descriptor “textural” seems a euphemism for bland. Kingston’s version captures some of elusive pear-like varietal flavour, but it’s really more savoury than it is fruity. And, yes, a rich, slightly grippy texture adds to its savoury appeal.

Koonara The Temptress Coonawarra Cabernet Sauvignon 2010 $24.95
Coonawarra’s 2010 cabernets look terrific – highly aromatic, intensely fruity and featuring the region’s unique power with elegance. Koonara’s Temptress captures this cabernet magic at a modest price. It’s deeply coloured, but limpid; the aroma shows ripe berry and floral notes, with just a hint of cabernet leafiness – characters that come through on a rich, well balanced, firm but supple palate. Proprietor Dru Reschke attributes 2010 vintage quality to smaller than average berries and the consequent high ratio of skin to juice. “As the flavour comes from the skins, the flavour structure was extremely dense”, he explained.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 14 October 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Lark Hill, Marquis de Riscal Rioja, Chapel Hill, Down to Earth and Peppertree

Lark Hill Chardonnay 2010 $35
Lark Hill vineyard, Lake George Escarpment, Canberra District, NSW

The 2010 vintage produced a particularly fine, appealing and potentially long-lived chardonnay from Lark Hill, Canberra’s highest and coolest vineyard. High natural acidity and intense nectarine-like varietal flavour underpin the wine, which also bears the funky thumbprint of a wild yeast fermentation in older oak – lending a pleasant lift and pungency to the aroma and flavour. Although it’s two years old, the pale colour and vibrant freshness of the wine indicate a slow and delicious evolution ahead in a good cellar.

Proximo Rioja by Marquis de Riscal 2009 $9.49–$9.99
Rioja, Spain

In a recent tasting we compared this budget Rioja to its $30 and $130 cellar mates. Reassuringly, higher prices reflected increasing quality, if not proportionally, peaking with the magnificent Baron de Chirel Reserva 2005 ($130). However, Proximo, looked good even in this company. It’s a tempranillo sourced from younger vines in Spain’s Rioja region. It’s medium bodied and offers clean, fresh blueberry-like varietal flavour, overlaid with a pleasant savouriness and finishing with fairly firm, fine tannins. The range is imported by Woolworths and sold through its Dan Murphy outlets.

Chapel Hill Il Vescovo Tempranillo 2011 $25
McLaren Vale, South Australia

The alcohol level’s a full-bore 14 per cent and the colour’s pretty dark, but Il Vescovo feels and tastes medium bodied, as tempranillo should.  The aroma resembles ripe, dark summer berries like mulberry and blueberry, but there’s an exotic spicy edge, too. The palate starts with fruit sweetness; but savoury, firm tannins sweep across the palate, creating a delicious contrast of sweet fruit and biting dryness. This is a success by viticulturist Rachel Steer and winemakers Bryn Richards and Michael Fragos in a most challenging vintage.

Lark Hill Gruner Veltliner 2012 $40
Lark Hill vineyard, Lake George Escarpment, Canberra District, NSW

David and Sue Carpenter and son Christopher say they planted the Austrian variety gruner veltliner so they’d have a high-quality white sitting in style somewhere between the delicacy of riesling and opulence of chardonnay. Their fourth vintage does precisely that. It’s notably fuller bodied than the 2011, with an exotic spicy aroma and flavour – very hard to describe, but unlike any other white and very pleasant. Fresh acid cuts through the full palate, although the overall impression of generosity and softness.

Down to Earth Sauvignon Blanc 2012 $26
Wrattonbully, South Australia

Lucy Croser and Xavier Bizot produce Terre a Terre, a quirky barrel fermented sauvignon blanc. But in 2012 they released Down to Earth, an unoaked wine from a vineyard planted in 2004. While all sauvignons tend to taste alike after a while, this one differentiates itself from the ubiquitous Marlborough versions. Principally it feels softer and less acidic, though stunningly fresh, and the flavour heads right out to the warmer, passionfruit-like end of the variety’s spectrum. Alcohol of 13.9 per cent, and smooth texture, add to this rich, ripe, juicy fullness. Drink now.

Random Acts of Winemaking 2010 $70
Hunter Valley, NSW and Grampian, Victoria

In a random act defying the current single-vineyard orthodoxy, winemaking mates Jim Chatto of Peppertree, Hunter Valley, and Dan Buckle, Mount Langi Ghiran, Grampians, swapped two barrels of their precious top-shelf shiraz – Chatto’s from the Roche family’s Tallawanta Vineyard and Buckle’s from Langi Ghiran estate. Chatto’s blend grew more interesting with every glass – a symbiotic combination of Hunter softness and earthiness with the spice, pepper and savour of the Grampians. It’s a wine of many dimensions and despite its slurpy appeal now will surely evolve for many years. It’s available at the cellar door (peppertreewines.com.au). Buckle moved from Langi Ghiran to Domain Chandon after the swap, but presumably we’ll see Langi’s Hunter-Grampians blend at some stage.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 10 October 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Best’s, Chapel Hill and Good Catholic Girl

Best’s Great Western Riesling 2012  $22.80–$27
The cool 2012 produced beautiful rieslngs in eastern Australia. Those from the Clare heartland are spectacular. Canberra’s best remain austere at present, but the fruit’s there waiting to push through. And this gorgeous wine from Great Western, Victoria, shows the best features of the vintage: beautiful, floral and musk aroma; intense, juicy, mouth-watering, citrus-like varietal flavour; and racy, exhilarating acidity. A small amount of residual sugar fills out the palate, subtly offsetting the high acidity but without apparent sweetness.  The wine comes from Best’s property, including the old Rhymney Vineyard.

Chapel Hill McLaren Vale Adelaide Hills Chardonnay 2011 $16–$18
Winemaker Michael Fragos succeeds with this attractive white in a very difficult vintage. The wet conditions promoted fungal disease and what fruit survived the onslaught tended to show the skinny fruit flavour and high acidity of the cold ripening conditions. But where the fruit ripened properly, the high acidity accentuated the fruit flavour, giving it a pleasantly brisk edge. In Chapel Hill’s blend, we taste ripe, stone-fruit-like varietal flavour on a medium-bodied, smooth textured palate, cut through with fresh acid. This is a long way from the fat, peachy, oaky chardonnays of old. And it weighs in at a modest 12.5 per cent alcohol.

Good Catholic Girl Hail Mary Full of Grace
Clare Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2010 $25
Jim and Nancy Barry’s three daughters own The Sisters vineyard in Armagh, a Clare Valley sub-region. One of the daughter’s, Julie,  “Head Girl” behind the Good Catholic Girl label, uses cabernet from the vineyard in this wine. It’s a no-holds-barred kind of cabernet, a devil really – deeply coloured, hugely flavoured and with a mouth-gripping dose of cabernet tannins. Despite its mass, it’s a well-balanced red with clear varietal flavour, including a seam of distinctive Clare mintiness. On the quirky back label, Barry dedicates the wine to her Grandmother Dorothy, like herself a good Catholic Girl.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 7 October 2012 in The Canberra Times

The vision behind Clonakilla shiraz viognier — part 2, a 20-year tasting

Part 1 of the Clonakilla shiraz viognier story last week recounted how great wine begins in the brain – with a vision or dream or hunch. We saw how Max Schubert created Grange after tasting half-century-old reds in Bordeaux in 1950; then how in 1991 Tim Kirk tasted Marcel Guigal’s Cote-Rotie shiraz-viognier blends and decided, “I’ve got to get this shiraz-viognier thing going back home”.

In both cases great French wines inspired the creation of a new and enduring style in Australia – the first from 1951, the second from 1992.

Schubert returned to Australia and in 1951 made Grange Hermitage – the first in a continuing line of deep, powerful, tannic reds made intentionally for the long-term. That he did so with warm-climate shiraz, rather than cool-climate cabernet sauvignon and related varieties used in Bordeaux, simply reflected the grapes available to him at the time.

Kirk, on the other hand, returned to Canberra with an altogether different shiraz style in mind. Schubert desired a big, powerful wine, capable of becoming fine and elegant over time; Kirk’s inspiration came from the perfume and sheer dimension of two- and three-year old reds, two of them still maturing in barrel.

Kirk had already recognised the medium bodied, aromatic character of the early Clonakilla shiraz vintages, made in 1990 and 1991. He was aware, too, that on a suggestion from brother Jeremy, father Dr John Kirk, had planted viognier in 1986. Kirk snr sourced cuttings from what is now Charles Sturt University, Wagga, where he was studying wine science. The ingredients for a Clonakilla shiraz-viognier blend therefore lay in the vineyard, awaiting Tim Kirk’s return from France.

At a Clonakilla tasting in Melbourne on 11 September, John Kirk recalled planting the viognier for its own sake – a white variety suited to the Murrumbateman climate and capable of giving tiny Clonakilla a point of difference over larger competitors.

In 1992, then, the viognier from these young vines found its way into the fermenter with shiraz and small amounts of pinot noir and mourvedre (aka mataro).

This inaugural Clonakilla Shiraz Viognier (still drinking well at the September 11 tasting) sits a long way stylistically from the later wines that built then cemented it as the gold standard for this style in Australia. The remarkable aromatics and silky tannins remained a few years in the future.

The 1992 is lower in alcohol at 12.5 per cent (compared with around 14 per cent through the noughties); it was matured in older American oak rather than the mix of new and old French oak that came later; and the grapes were all crushed and de-stemmed before fermentation (but from 1993 the inclusion of whole bunches, including stems, affected the flavour and structure of the wine).

The 1993 (12.7 per cent alcohol) again contained a small amount of pinot noir which, along with one third of the shiraz, was whole-bunch fermented and foot trodden. The rest of the shiraz was crushed and de-stemmed before fermentation with a small amount of viognier. The two batches of wine finished their fermentations in French and American oak barrels and were bottled without fining or filtration. In the tasting the 1993 showed a little of the stalky character of whole-bunch ferment, but overall held up less well than the 1992 or 1994 either side of it – a sound wine still.

1994 to my taste marks a maturing of the style: it’s a little more alcoholic at 13.7 per cent, the colour remains youthful and it delivers thrilling aromatics and silky tannins, though the oak tannins intrude ever so slightly. The wine – comprising 14 per cent pinot noir and four per cent viognier – was 100 per cent whole-bunch fermented and foot-trodden in open fermenters, followed by maturation in French oak (two thirds of it new), from cooper Seguin Moreau. 1994 was a frost-reduced vintage says Tim Kirk.

The style continues to mature in 1995 and 1996, separated in the tasting mainly by the vintage conditions. 1995 produced the first decent crop of viognier, Kirk says, and the proportion in the blend leapt from four per cent in 1994 to 10 per cent in 1995 and 1996.  The lovely, elegant 1996 appealed more on the night. Both wines showed their age.

1997 presented the first real excitement of the tasting – a wine blossoming with bottle age yet still limpid and youthfully coloured, with sweet berry and spice flavours, alluring perfume and silky texture. In this vintage Kirk wound the viognier back to five per cent and used 30 per cent new Sirugue (France) oak.

The notably more robust 1998 vintage, still at five per cent viognier content, seemed like a bigger, riper, sweeter version of the 1997 – all the alluring features pumped up proportionally and therefore well balanced.

In October 1998 a jet stream of frigid air destroyed vine buds across south-eastern Australia, including Canberra. Clonakilla’s 1999 was therefore a tiny crop from a second budding – five per cent viognier, co-fermented with shiraz, matured in Sirugue and Francois Frere barrels, 36 per cent new. The wine’s holding in there in a distinctive spicy, peppery, stalky way.

The 2000 vintage, from a cool, wet season, is lighter coloured, lean on the palate and drying out now. The alcohol is 12.8 per cent, compared to the 14.1 per cent in the beautiful 2001. Kirk calls this vintage a turning point as he’s now soaking the juice on skins for 16–18 days before fermentation, creating even finer and silkier tannins. At 11 years, this is Clonakilla in full flight – maturing but youthful and fresh at the same time. Beautiful floral and spicy aroma and lively, fresh, silky, medium-bodied palate are in a class of their own.

By now the pinot noir component in the wines is absent or tiny. Tim Kirk emailed, “Once we started making the Hilltops [shiraz] in 2000, the pinot would end up there if I felt it wasn’t going to contribute anything positive to the SV [shiraz-viognier]. Sometimes there, sometimes the SV and, from 2007, possibly the O’Riada [shiraz].”

From 2001 on we’re seeing a mature Clonakilla style, but still being tweaked, Tim Kirk said, particularly in the maceration phase and the type of oak used. He acknowledged recent work on this with winemaker Bryan Martin.

From 2001 the wines all receive gold-medal scores in my notes, with exception of 2003, 2006 and 2011 on silver. All this says is that some wines are more exceptional than others, silver medallists included.

I rated the 2009 as wine of the line up – a slurpy, juicy, utterly seductive red of exceptional dimension. The just-released 2011, too, is gorgeous. It shows the style of the very cool vintage – a slightly lighter colour and lower alcohol content than the warmer 2009 and 2010 vintages – but a triumph nevertheless.

Tim Kirk says he bottled just 1,000 dozen, less than half the usual volume, because disease destroyed much of the crop. He calls the wine “pretty”, which is not a bad description, albeit an understatement. I enjoyed the delicate musk-like aroma, seasoned with white pepper (a sure sign of cool ripening conditions) and vibrant, fresh fruit flavours – a spicier, more peppery, lighter bodied version of the style.

But that’s not all. We started this story with a quote from Yalumba’s Brian Walsh. “Great wine starts in the brain”. Walsh declared at an industry symposium last year.

There’s another story to come – from the same brain behind Clonakilla shiraz viognier. Tim Kirk’s encounter with La Chapelle 1990, a straight shiraz from Hermitage, just down the Rhone fro Cote-Rotie, inspired Clonakilla’s Syrah, a wine to equal the old flagship.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 3 October 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Hugh Hamilton, Good Catholic Girl, Topper’s Mountain, John Duval, Best’s and Kingston Estate

Hugh Hamilton The Rascal Shiraz 2010 $25.50–$30
Bethany and Blewitt Springs, McLaren Vale, South Australia
Hugh Hamilton’s latest Rascal shiraz demonstrates the outstanding quality of the 2010 vintage in South Australia’s warm regions. The wine appeals for its full, ripe, generous flavours, bright fruit and earthy, savoury undertones (typical of top-notch McLaren Vale shiraz). The combination of rich, sweet fruit and soft tannins means easy drinking now, though the wine could be cellared for a few years. Hamilton says it’s a blend of 12 batches harvested from 10 blocks on this three vineyards – two in the Bethany sub-region and one in Blewitt Springs.

Good Catholic Girl Teresa Riesling 2012 $25
Barry Marsson Vineyard, Watervale, Clare Valley, South Australia

Julie Barry, winemaker and self-titled Head Girl, writes, “I am especially relieved to show you my 2012 Teresa Clare riesling as I did not have one to show in 2011 after the devil did his work in the vineyard”. Barry’s 2012 delivers Clare’s mouth-wateringly delicious fruit flavour and crisp, refreshing acidity – towards the fuller bodied end of the regional style spectrum. The back label describes Teresa of Avila as patron saint of headache sufferers. Go easy then. Available at www.goodcatholicgirl.com.au

Topper’s Mountain Barrel Fermented Petit Manseng 2011$34
Tingha, New England, NSW

The 10-hectare Topper’s Mountain vineyard lies at an altitude of 900 metres on the western slopes of the Great Dividing Range, between Armidale and Inverell. The vineyard, planted in 2000 and 2002 by Mark and Stephanie Kirby, contains a number of alternative varieties, including the obscure south-western French petit manseng – the latter grafted onto petit verdot vines in 2009. The high acid of the cold year lends a racy, sappy excitement to the delicate, bone-dry palate, subtly and gently fleshed out by the barrel fermentation. Available at www.toppers.com.au

John Duval Eligo Shiraz 2010 $105
Barossa and Eden Valleys, South Australia

Through either modesty or commercial embargo, John Duval declares on the back label, “Over the last three decades in the Barossa I was given the opportunity to make Australia’s most famous wine”. Duval made Penfolds Grange and remained close to its creator, Max Schubert, until Schubert’s death in 1994. But ever confident as a winemaker, Duval offers in Eligo his own interpretation of shiraz – a powerful but elegant French-oak matured blend from the Barossa and Eden Valleys.

Best’s Bin No. 1 Shiraz 2011 $25–$28
Best’s Great Western Vineyard, Grampians, Victoria

It’s the hour of reckoning: what kind of reds has the cold, wet, diseased-ravaged 2011 vintage delivered? Quantities are certainly reduced; and the grapes that made it to the winery produced wines showing the cold-vintage character. In Best’s that means a lighter bodied shiraz than usual (in the medium-bodied regional context) and considerably more pepper-like aroma and flavour (the cold end of the varietal spectrum). But the fruit’s bright and sweet, albeit less weighty than usual, and the wine well balanced and lovely to drink.

Kingston Estate Cabernet Sauvignon 2011 $10.45–$15
Mount Lofty Ranges and Mount Benson, South Australia

Even at this modest price Kingston Estate’s winemakers appear to have snatched victory from the jaws of the troubled 2011 vintage.  First and foremost, Kingston Estate smells and tastes like cabernet sauvignon and has its firm tannin structure. But the cool season translates into less flesh on the bone – meaning a lean, taut, sinewy style, but thankfully not the green unripe flavours that could herald. This style of wine suits roasted red meats and savoury food in general.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 3 October 2012 in The Canberra Times