Category Archives: Wine review

Wine review — Pizzini, Yering Station, Brown Brothers, Philip Shaw, Dandelion and Evans & Tate

Pizzini Sangiovese 2009 $26.90–$30
King Valley, Victoria
Several Pizzini brothers emigrated from Italy’s Trento Alto Adige region in the 1950s, ultimately settling in Myrtleford and growing tobacco. With tobacco increasingly on the nose, in 1978 second-generation Fred Pizzini planted vines in the King Valley, originally as a supplier to Brown Brothers. In 1994 Fred and wife, Natalie, launched their own brand. By this time they’d been growing Italian varieties for a decade. Son Joel now makes the wines, including this impressive sangiovese. It’s medium bodied with vibrant cherry-like varietal flavour and a deep, tasty savoury vein. The savoury, assertive, soft tannins combine with the fruit to provide a unique and rewarding drinking experience.

Yering Station Village Chardonnay 2010 $25
Yarra Valley, Victoria
Yering Station, first planted to vines by the Ryrie family in 1838, is today part of the Rathbone Wine Group. The group also owns Xanadu Margaret River, Parker Coonawarra Estate and Mount Langi Ghiran Pyrenees. Yering’s new ‘Village’ label salutes the Burgundian concept of wines from a general vicinity sitting one rung lower on the quality ladder than those from individual sites. Flavour (melon and grapefruit-like), finesse and elegance are the keywords for this appealing example of modern, cool-climate chardonnay.

Brown Brothers Prosecco 2011 $22.90
Banksdale Vineyard, King Valley, Victoria
The King Valley, with its strong Italian heritage, has become a hot spot for this delicate sparkling wine, modelled on the originals from northeastern Italy. The style emphasises lightness, freshness and delicate fruit flavour – in this instance reminiscent of tart, just-picked, new season granny smith apples. This pleasant tartness is an endearing, unique feature of good prosecco, making it an excellent but unobtrusive aperitif and all-round food wine.

Philip Shaw No. 89 Shiraz 2009 $50
Koomooloo Vineyard, Orange, New South Wales

Philip Shaw’s glorious, demure, slow-evolving wine, appears upstaged at present by its fruit-riot, precocious, $17–$20 sibling, “The Idiot” Shiraz, winner of three trophies at the 2011 Sydney wine show. With a little aeration, though, Shaw’s flagship reveals the intensely spicy fruitiness and heady aromatics of cool-grown shiraz – with layers of supple, smooth, fine, ripe tannin. The inclusion of one per cent of the white viognier in the blend no doubt contributes to the aroma and supple texture.

Dandelion Vineyard Wonderland of the Eden Valley Riesling 2011 $30
Colin Kroehn vineyard, Eden Valley, South Australia
What a wonderful story and sense of place lie behind this wine. It’s summed up on the back label, “Colin Kroehn has tended his Eden Valley riesling for 66 of his 86 years. Our [wine] is made entirely from his vineyard which was planted in 1912 and thrives to this day”. The “we” being a small group of wine people intent on presenting wines from unique vineyard sites. The wine shows varietal floral and lemony aromas – characters reflected on an intensely flavoured, dry palate of rare delicacy.

Evans and Tate Classic Cabernet Merlot 2010 $13–$15
Margaret River, Western Australia
Evans and Tate, part of the McWilliams family since 2007, offers tremendous value across its range – starting with this budget-priced, genuine Margaret River blend. Sourced from the central and northern parts of the region, it’s a medium bodied blend, featuring sweet, verging on floral, varietal red-berry aromas. The particularly vibrant berry flavours provide juicy, easy drink-now pleasure at a modest price.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
First published 16 November 2011 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Chrismont, Kingston Estate and Pizzini

Chrismont King Valley La Zona Prosecco NV $22
In 2007 Arnie and Jo Pizzini planted the Italian white variety, prosecco, in their vineyard at Cheshunt, in Victoria’s King Valley. With it they emulate the light, delicate dry sparkling wines made with the variety in northeastern Italy. La Zona starts as a still table wine matured on yeast lees for a few months before being blended with components from earlier vintages then undergoing a secondary fermentation in steel tanks. It’s a unique style – pale, comparatively low in alcohol, at 12 per cent, and with a light, delicious, pleasant, intensely tart, dry palate.

Kingston Estate Adelaide Hills Mount Benson Pinot Gris 2011 $13–$15
Proprietor Bill Moularadellis offers tremendous value in this blend from two South Australian regions – the Adelaide Hills and Mount Benson (in the vicinity of Robe and Coonawarra on the Limestone Coast).  Winemaker Brett Duffin writes, “The 2011 vintage in Adelaide Hills saw lower yields than previous years, however, the fruit that was harvested experienced extended ripening which delivered vibrant acidity and flavour profiles”. This probably accounts for the wine’s two gold medals (Rutherglen and Riverina shows). The wine delivers pear-like varietal flavour on a particularly lively, fresh palate, with some of the beginnings of variety’s textural richness and viscosity.

Pizzini Victoria Arneis 2011 $22–$24
Once used to tame Barolo’s fierce tannins, this Piedmontese white variety now makes a unique dry white on its home turf. It also seems to have settled happily in Fred and Katrina Pizzini’s King Valley vineyard, offering an alternative to the familiar flavours of our usual white varieties. The 2011’s pale coloured, medium bodied and bone dry, featuring delicate, lemon and grapefruit-like flavours and a pleasantly sappy, savoury finish. For an illuminating account of the Pizzini family’s arrival in Australia in the 1950s and ultimate shift from tobacco growing to winemaking, see “history” at www.pizzini.com.au

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
First published 13 November 2011 in The Canberra Times

Wine review – Coriole, Howard Park, Tapanappa, Domaine A and Yalumba

Coriole Sangiovese 2010 $19–$25
McLaren Vale, South Australia
Mark Lloyd established sangiovese at Coriole in 1985. Over the years the style evolved as Lloyd learned how to manage this native Italian variety. It now appears very comfortable in its skin – a medium bodied red with a core of sweet fruit pulsing under the variety’s more savoury flavours and fine, persistent tannin structure. It’s a subtle, understated red that holds your interest glass after glass. The gentle flavours and medium body belie its 14 per cent alcohol.

Coriole Fiano 2011 $20–$22
McLaren Vale, South Australia
Mark Lloyd discovered fiano in 2000 at Vinitaly, Verona’s annual wine trade show. He writes that he’d been “looking for a white variety from southern Italy that would suit the climate of McLaren Vale”. Impressed by fiano’s aromatics, flavour and texture, Lloyd planted the variety in 2003 and bottled the wine from it separately from 2005. It offers a unique drinking experience, with a fresh melon-like aroma and flavour, a plump, smoothly textured mid palate and a bright, fresh, citrusy finish.

Howard Park Flint Rock Pinot Noir 2010 $23–$27
Great Southern, Western Australia
Western Australia’s vast Great Southern region, tempered by cool southerly breezes blasting in from the Antarctic, pushes out the odd decent pinot noir. The best I’ve seen come from a joint venture between Howard Park owner, Jeff Burch, and Burgundy winemaker, Pascal Marchand. Flint Rock no doubt benefits from this venture, delivering pure, varietal, red-berry characters, meshed with pinot’s spicy and savoury elements and rich, silky texture.

Tapanappa Whalebone Vineyard Merlot Cabernet Franc 2007 $80
Whalebone Vineyard, Wrattonbully, South Australia

Whalebone Vineyard, named for a fossilised whale skeleton in the limestone beneath it, was planted by John Greenshields in 1974 and purchased by Tapanappa, a joint venture led by Brian Croser, in 2002. This is the first release of a merlot-cabernet franc blend, inspired by the wines of Bordeaux’s St Emilion sub-region. Ripe, sweet, pure, plummy-earthy merlot dominates the aroma, with an attractive floral lift probably from the cabernet franc. The palate reflects the aroma, with juicy, plummy, earthy merlot at the centre and merlot’s assertive tannins ameliorated by the gentler cabernet franc.

Domaine A Lady A Sauvignon Blanc 2008 $60
Domaine A vineyard, Coal River Valley, Tasmania
Lady A floats aloof and elegant above the field of me-too sauvignon blancs. She combines great purity and intensity of varietal character with an unobtrusive complexity derived from fermentation and maturation in new French oak barrels. Domaine A proprietor, Peter Althaus writes, “I first made this wine in secret for my wife in 1996 as a birthday surprise – she’s a lover of the Pavilion Blanc from Chateau Margaux [Bordeaux]”. Althaus continues to make small quantities of the wine in good seasons. What a glorious, distinctive, unique white it is.

Yalumba Vermentino 2011 $12–$15
Reichstein Vineyard, Renmark, Murray River, South Australia

Italy’s white vermentino grows successfully in Australia’s hot, dry regions, giving growers there some chance of competing with varieties like sauvignon blanc that perform best in cool areas, including Marlborough, New Zealand, and Adelaide Hills, Australia. Yalumba takes the right approach with vermentino, bringing it to market young, fresh and devoid of winemaking frills. It’s a bright, fresh, zesty white with a modest alcohol of 11.5 per cent. However, the palate’s already thickening up, suggesting very early drinking.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
First published 9 November 2011 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Cofield, Brindabella and Capital Wines

Cofield Provincial Parcel Rutherglen Durif 2010 $39
Winemaker Damien Cofield writes, “I love the traditional style of durif being made throughout Rutherglen, but I wanted to make a lower alcohol version that still had full palate appeal”. That Cofield’s “lower alcohol version” weighs in at 13.7 per cent tells us much about this potent regional specialty. Cofield’s version remains a full-bodied red. But the slightly lower alcohol allows the vibrant, fresh fruit flavours to flourish. And the tannins, while abundant, don’t suck the water from your eyes as they do in some of the traditional styles. Cofield attributes the brighter fruit and finer tannin to early picking and prolonged maceration.

Brindabella Hills Canberra District Riesling 2011 $25
If we believe in wine shows, what should we believe about this wine? Is it an also-ran (Canberra Regional Wine Show 2011) or the best in the district (International Riesling Challenge 2011)? Well, we tested a bottle over seafood lunch at Delicio, Braddon, and sided with the Riesling Challenge judges. It’s very pale in colour, with pure mineral and lime-like aroma and a lean, delicate, bone-dry, intensely flavoured palate. The slight austerity of the high-acid 2011 vintage should subside with time as the beautiful fruit asserts itself.

Capital Wines “The Ambassador” Canberra District Tempranillo 2010 $27
We’ve tasted this on a number of occasions now, both in the clinical setting of the tasting bench and in real life with food. In a recent tasting of 17 Australian tempranillos, The Ambassador appeared a little shy at first, shaded by the bigger, more complex wines, but always pleasing in the line up for its purity of fruit, elegance and lack of winemaker artifice. Graduating from the tasting bench to the table, its medium body, harmony and fine, soft, persistent tannins sat comfortably with the meal – demonstrating that subtle, restrained wines can be the best of all.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
First published 6 November 2011 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Cofield, Tscharke, Rutherglen Estates, Alkoomi, Mitolo and Domain A

Cofield Provincial Parcel Beechworth Chardonnay 2009 $36
Beechworth, Victoria
There’s a stylistic salute to Rick Kinsbrunner’s legendary Giaconda chardonnay in Damien Cofield’s first vintage from the region. The salute includes the notable influence of barrel fermentation and maturation, minerality, finesse, flavour intensity and deep, smooth texture. This is a striking and lovable chardonnay, looking young and fresh two and half years after vintage. Cofield has a few runs on the board with his other wines, so this is a label to watch.

Tscharke Girl Talk Savagnin 2011 $18–20
Marananga, Barossa Valley, South Australia
As cooler areas inexorably dominate production of the crisp, zesty white styles demanded by consumers, warmer areas like the Barossa seek niches to keep their whites relevant. Damien Tscharke pioneered the Spanish variety, albarino, only to find it was savagnin. In the cool 2011 vintage the variety produced a fragrant, refined version of the style, with a modest alcohol level of 12.5 per cent and comparatively low acidity. The mid palate’s soft, juicy and smooth textured with a pleasant savouriness setting it apart from, say, sauvignon blanc or chardonnay.

Rutherglen Estates Viognier Roussanne Marsanne 2009 $29.95
Shelley’s Vineyard, Rutherglen, Victoria
In warm Rutherglen, Rutherglen Estate cultivates the Rhone Valley white varieties, viognier, roussanne and marsanne. Fermented as separate components in oak barrels and later blended, the trio make a full bodied but graceful, soft dry white of great appeal. Viognier gives weight, flavour and texture; roussanne boosts the aroma while mollifying viognier’s tendency to oiliness; and marsanne, say the makers, gives it longevity. It’s a delicious and unique blend, all the better for a couple of years’ bottle age.

Alkoomi Shiraz 2010 $15.89
Frankland River, Great Southern, Western Australia
Merv and Judy Lange established Alkoomi in 1971 and in 2010 handed the reins of the 80,000-case estate to their daughter Sandy and her husband Rod Hallett. Alkoomi’s entry-level shiraz, made from estate-grown fruit, offers vibrant, plummy varietal flavour in the sinewy, savoury, spicy regional style. The medium-bodied wine offers an enjoyable variation on the Australian shiraz theme – quite different in flavour and structure from its cool climate peers in Canberra or warm climate versions from, say, McLaren Vale or the Barossa.

Mitolo Jester Shiraz 2009 $28
McLaren Vale, South Australia
Frank Mitolo sources his Jester shiraz from McLaren Vale’s Willunga subdistrict. Mitolo writes the maritime climate contributes to, “ an even ripening period and the development of rich fruit flavours and ripe tannins”. Mitolo’s words dovetail with the tasting experience of a big, generous, harmonious shiraz full of fresh, ripe fruit flavour and soft tannins. Mitolo matured Jester in older French oak previously used for his flagship G.A.M. Shiraz.

Domain A Cabernet Sauvignon 2005 $70
Coal River Valley, Tasmania
From Tasmania’s pinot country comes this extraordinary cabernet sauvignon made uncompromisingly for long-term cellaring – and without a hint of the green, weedy character we might expect at this latitude. First impressions are of violet-like perfume and concentrated blackcurrant-like flavour, mingled with an assertive oak character (not surprising after 36 months in new French barrels). However, as the wine aerates, the varietal flavour asserts itself at centre stage of an amazing, if idiosyncratic, concentrated, sweet-fruited red of great elegance.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
First published 2 November 2011 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Grosset, Tscharke and Tulloch

Grosset Springvale Vineyard Watervale Riesling 2011 $36
Grosset Polish Hill Riesling 2011 $49

Despite widespread crop losses to mildew and botrytis, the wet, cold 2011 vintage delivered stunning quality in some white varieties where growers kept disease at bay and processed only clean fruit. The cool growing conditions produced higher than average acidity which, when combined with fully ripened fruit, meant the sort of intense, fine flavours seen in these two brilliant rieslings from Clare winemaker, Jeffrey Grosset. The Watervale wine shows delicate lime-like flavours and minerality; the Polish Hill is more austere in structure with amazingly powerful flavours underneath the acidity. These are exciting wines capable of long-term cellaring.

Tscharke Only Son Marananga Vineyard
Barossa Valley Tempranillo 2010 $25

We snuck this in towards the end of a tasting of tempranillos from across Australia. The variety seems adaptable to a wide range of climates, producing different styles in different areas. Damien Tscharke’s version, sourced from vineyards at Marananga, Western Barossa Valley, bear the regional thumbprint of full body and soft tannin, within the varietal spectrum.  The colour’s notably deeper than wines from cooler areas and the palate’s full, ripe, fleshy and round – but still vibrant and varietal. The tannins, though soft for tempranillo, permeate the fruit and complete the red wine story. This is a really high-class example of this fascinating variety.

Tulloch Hunter Valley Verdelho 2011 $12.35–$16
Tulloch Hunter Valley Vineyard Select Verdelho 2011 $20

Verdelho, from the Island of Madeira, has a long history in Australia, originally as a valued component in fortified wines. But like the red varieties shiraz and mourvedre, it moved easily into the world of table wine, principally in our warmer growing areas. Tulloch’s cheaper version captures the sappy, tropical and citrusy varietal characters pretty well in a grape-fresh, refreshing off-dry style. The vineyard selection version, from Denman (upper Hunter) and Pokolbin (lower Hunter) turns up the intensity of sweet, juicy fruit flavours and finishes a little drier. They make an interesting alternative to sauvignon blanc in the fruity, drink-now style.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
First published 30 October 2011 in The Canberra Times

Tempranillo — a growing taste

With production of a mere 3,000 tonnes annually, it’s tempting to dismiss tempranillo (a Spanish red variety) as a footnote to Australia’s 1.5 million tonne wine industry. But as the industry repeatedly demonstrates, big new things, and even niche new things, grow from modest beginnings, often driven by producer enthusiasm.

Great modern examples include the chardonnay boom of the eighties and nineties and the sauvignon blanc flood of the new century.

No one expects tempranillo to overtake shiraz or cabernet, our two most voluminous red varieties — nor, perhaps, even to be the next big thing. But despite its small total production, tempranillo has the attention of 286 wine companies, say the organisers of tempra neo, an annual workshop aimed at understanding and promoting the variety.

Local organiser, Mount Majura’s Frank van de Loo, says the organising group held this year’s workshops in Melbourne, Brisbane, Kingscliff and Canberra. In Canberra the events attracted full houses to both the consumer and trade events, says van de Loo.

Van de Loo, maker of Canberra’s leading tempranillo, initiated the workshop in 2010 with other tempranillo makers – La Linea (Adelaide Hills, South Australia), Tar and Roses (Alpine Valleys and Heathcote, Victoria), Running with Bulls (Barossa Valley and Wrattonbully, South Australia), Gemtree Vineyards (McLaren Vale, South Australia) and Mayford (Porepunkah, Victoria).

At the workshops, the group presented a mixed field of 18 Australian tempranillos, broken into three brackets of six wines. In an accompanying booklet, they wrote, “They have been chose from as wide a range of regions, climates and soils as we can find, to illustrate the regional expression of tempranillo around Australia.

Thanks to Frank van de Loo we reproduced the tasting, bar one wine, at Chateau Shanahan and later conferred with him on his impressions from the workshops. I’ve incorporated his comments into the tasting notes below.

The line up confirms to me the suitability of the variety in many parts of Australia, giving it a versatility, perhaps, comparable with shiraz. It also reveals the “mainstream” and distinctive flavour of the variety, suggesting to me that, over time, it may become a significant contributor here.

Tempranillos from the tempra neo workshops 2011

Running With Bulls Barossa 2010 $19.95
Running With Bulls Wrattonbully 2010 $19.95
These offer a terrific tempranillo starting point and demonstrate that sometimes less is more. The winemaker input, especially in relation to oak maturation, appear minimal, allowing the varietal expression of the two regions full reign. Both offer bright, pure fruit flavours, the Barossa with soft, juicy tannins to match. The Wrattonbully wine (from several hundred kilometres further south) introduces an earthy, savoury flavour element and firmer tannins. Surprisingly, says van de Loo, people tended to favour the Wrattonbully style – by a large margin in Canberra where five out of six buyers of a mixed tempranillo six pack opted for Wrattonbully over Barossa.

Topper’s Mountain New England 2009 $25
Frank van de Loo says many tasters at the workshops, drew comparison between this and his own Mount Majura, mainly through a shared hint of eucalypt and comparable tannin structures. It’s a delicious wine – the more it breathes, the greater the volume of vibrant red berry fruit flavours emerging (with the merest touch of eucalypt). The tannin structure is fine and soft.

Gemtree Vineyards Luna Roja McLaren Vale 2010 $25
Van de Loo says the wine received broad support at the workshops, where tasters described it as “interesting” and “reminiscent of French wine”. The winemakers, including its maker, Mike Brown, however, lamented its “brett” character – a spoilage caused by the unloved brettanomyces yeast. There’s lovely fruit under the brett, but once you’ve learned to identify brett you can’t forgive it.

Oliver’s Taranga Small Batch McLaren Vale 2009 $38
This is a big, round, soft red. But for me the vanilla-like influence of oak, while sweet and pleasant in its own way, overrides the varietal flavour. As the two Running with Bulls wines demonstrate, less intervention is better with new varieties.

Pfeiffer Winemakers Selection Rutherglen 2010 $30
Van de Loo heard many positive comments on the initially shy wine. However, after a few hours’ aeration, delicious red fruit flavours emerged, checked to some extent by fine, firm tannins.

Mayford Alpine Valleys Tempranillo 2010 $35
This was another of the top wines in the line up. It showed class from the moment it splashed into the glass, then held its power and depth for a couple of days afterwards on the tasting bench. It offers a wonderful tension between concentrated, sweet, restrained fruit and firm, fine, savoury tannins.

Sam Miranda King Valley 2009 $30
To my taste, this was a sound but unexciting wine, not pushing many tempranillo buttons.

Capital Wines the Ambassador Canberra District 2010 $27
This old and much loved friend, often enjoyed on its own, looked good among its peers. The keynotes are pure, red fruit aroma and flavour, elegant, cool-climate structure and very fine, pleasantly grippy tannins.

Mount Majura Vineyard Canberra District 2010 $40
One of my top wines of the tasting, Mount Majura showed some similarities to Topper’s Mountain in the workshops (see above). However, to me it’s a more concentrated expression of tempranillo. Its quite firm, tight tannins form a matrix with the deep, sweet underlying fruit.

Glandore Estate TPR Hunter Valley 2008 $35
First sniff – generic, earthy Hunter red aroma pinpoints its origins; then the plummy, juicy fruit flavour kicks in, not as fleshy as shiraz, with a spicy note, a little more oak than I like and a soft, fine finish.

Tahbilk Nagambie Lakes 2010 $15.45
The cheapest wine in the work shop was well received, says Frank van de Loo. It offers pleasant primary fruit and a solid tannin backbone for a medium-bodied, comparatively low-alcohol wine (12.5 per cent).

Sanguine Estate Heathcote 2009 $30
Sanguine, another star of the line up, flourished for several days on the tasting bench. It offers big volumes of alluring fruity, savoury, spicy aromas, backed by juicy fruit depth on the palate and solid, chewy but elegant tannins.

Tar and Roses Alpine Valleys and Heathcote 2010 $24
Like a nut, there’s sweetness inside this wine, but you have to work at it to find the kernel. A few hours after splashing and pouring, the fruit peeped through the tight mesh of tannin. Finally, one of the better wines in the tasting, just a little off the pace of the top few (Mayford, Sanguine and Mount Majura).

La Linea Adelaide Hills 2010 $27
La Linea split the room, says van de Loo, as people drifted towards or away from its pretty, fruity aroma and flavour. It certainly stands out from all the other wines because of that. Partners David LeMire and Peter Leske attribute the extraordinary (and lovely) fragrance to their coolest vineyard, Llangibby.

Stella Bella Margaret River 2009 $30
We tried to like this but found the fruit not quite up to the 14 per cent alcohol. The lack of fruit flavour, too, allowed the spicy oak flavour to come through. It’s a clean, well-made wine and pleasant enough but to our taste needs more fruit intensity.

Bunkers The Box Margaret River 2009 $20
Another pleasant, fault free wine but lacking fruit intensity and varietal definition.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
First published 26 October 2011 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Shaw Vineyard Estate, Pewsey Vale, Skillogalee, Peter Lehmann, Grosset and Mount Horrocks

Shaw Vineyard Estate Isabella Riesling 2009 $28
Shaw vineyard, Murrumbateman, Canberra District, New South Wales
Almost two years after its release, Graeme Shaw’s delicious Isabella Riesling 2009 remains available at cellar door and on the wine list at Flint in the Vines – the restaurant adjoining the cellar door. This is where we reacquainted ourselves with Isabella, following the recent Murrumbateman field day. Cellar door manager Tanya Shaw, Graeme’s daughter, says it’s now their biggest seller – and little wonder. A couple of years’ bottle age adds another dimension to the mouth-watering lime-like flavour of this delightful wine. Made by Ken Helm and Graeme Shaw.

Pewsey Vale Riesling 2011 $16.15–$23
Pewsey Vale Vineyard, Eden Valley, South Australia
This gold medal winner at the recent International Wine Challenge, comes from the Hill-Smith family’s 50-hectare Pewsey Vale vineyard, located on the edge of the Eden Valley. Louisa Rose makes the wine just a few kilometres down the hill at the Yalumba Winery, Angaston, centre of the Hill-Smith wine operations. It’s a little softer than I’d expected from the cool vintage, but shows the season’s intense, delicate, citrusy flavours and bright fresh acidity. It’s a dry style and ready to drink now, but has the potential to evolve well in bottle for a decade or so.

Skillogalee Riesling 2011 $21–$24
Skillogalee Vineyard, Clare Valley, South Australia
With a lower pH and higher acidity than the Pewsey Vale riesling, Skillogalee, from the estate’s highest slopes (around 500 metres), shows a certain austerity. But under the acidity lie rich, deep riesling flavours and structure. These will surely build with bottle age as the youthful acerbity falls away. That drying acidity makes Skillogalee a good aperitif or oyster wine in its youth. The food matching options will expand over time as the wine fills out and softens.

Peter Lehmann Dry Riesling 2011 $15.20–$18
Eden Valley, South Australia
Winemaker Andrew Wigan says he sourced material for this wine from six Eden Valley vineyards, the fruit all picked early, processed separately and blended later. This is the softest and least acidic of the rieslings reviewed here today, though not lacking the vibrant natural acidity that gives life to the very delicate fruit flavours. A touch of residual sugar (about seven grams per litre) nicely fills out the palate without adding overt sweetness. Soft, fruity freshness makes this a versatile drinking style. Enjoy now or over the next three or four years.

Grosset Off-Dry Riesling 2011 $32
Watervale, Clare Valley, South Australia
Largely as a response to high acidity, German winemakers learned to arrest fermentation, leaving unfermented grape sugar in their rieslings. The sugar offset the acidity, leaving delicate, low-alcohol, fruity wines of great freshness. The cold 2011 vintage in Australia created the conditions for comparable, though more alcoholic, styles here. Jeffrey Grosset demonstrates the style well. High, minerally acidity and tangy, lime-like varietal flavour sit well with a kiss of grape sugar and leave a really clean, refreshing, lingering finish. Will flourish with bottle age.

Mount Horrocks Cordon Cut Riesling 375ml $35
Clare Valley, South Australia
For the first time ever, Stephanie Toole’s benchmark sticky shows the extra luscious intensity and acidity caused by botrytis cinerea. Normally the wine’s a pure, sweet riesling, made from berries that shrivel on the vine as a result of the canes being cut. In 2011 botrytis leant a hand to this shrivelling process, noticeably influencing the flavour and structure. This extra dimension and intensity more than compensate for the slight step away from the wine’s usual pure, lime-like varietal character. Will probably cellar for decades.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
First published 26 October 2011 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Seville Estate, Mr Mick and Jacob’s Creek

Seville Estate Yarra Valley

  • Pinot Noir 2010 $30
  • Reserve Pinot Noir 2010 $60

Apart from the price, what’s the difference between Seville’s $30 pinot and $60 reserve pinot? In keeping with the laws of diminishing returns it’s more like a 20–30 per cent quality difference, not 100 per cent. And the differences are subtle – both wines offering a variation on a family style. They’re both pale to medium coloured and both reveal fruity, stalky and gamey varietal characters and quite a firm, fine backbone of drying tannin. The reserve version offers a little more volume in the aroma and concentration and silkiness on the palate – a character that will probably increase with bottle age.

Mr Mick Clare Valley Riesling 2011 $12–$16
Mr Mick is Tim Adams’ recreation of the old Leasingham Bin 5 riesling, created by his mentor Mick Knappstein back in the 1970s. Adams led a buyback of the historic Clare winery earlier this year but as the purchase didn’t include the Leasingham name, named the wines after his late boss. This is a fresh, light, lemony riesling with a soft mid-palate and fresh, almost-dry finish. It’s made for early drinking. Adams sourced the fruit from the Rogers vineyard (once part of Leasingham) that he now owns jointly with his wife, Pam Goldsack.

Jacob’s Creek Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 $13.30–$18
The Jacob’s Creek reserve range, once multi-regional blends, recently moved to single-region sourcing ­and labelling. The wines have always been outstanding at their price points and always contained material from our better regions. But the move to regional labelling gives better marketing support to the quality of the wine in the bottle. In this instance, for a modest price, we enjoy an outstanding expression of Coonawarra cabernet. It’s pure varietal in its berry, black olive and leaf aroma and flavour, its rich, firm palate and elegant structure.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
First published 23 October 2011 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Mr Mick, Howard Park, Paxton, Spinifex, Seville Estate and Knappstein

Mr Mick Shiraz 2009 $15
Sheoaks and St Clare Vineyards, Clare Valley, South Australia
One Friday last January winemaker Tim Adams and wife Pam Goldsack became the first private owners of Clare Valley’s Leasingham Winery since H. J. Heinz acquired it from the Knappstein family in 1971. Though this year’s American seller, Constellation Wines, retained the Leasingham name, Adams and Goldsack’s first wines retain an historic connection – saluting Mick Knappstein, legendary Leasingham winemaker (and a young Tim’s boss and mentor 36 years ago). The wine captures the essence of Clare shiraz in the 2009 vintage – fragrant, full, juicy and rich with just the right amount of spicy, soft tannins.

Howard Park Miamup Cabernet Sauvignon 2008 $23–$27
Northern Margaret River, Western Australia
Jeff and Amy Burch’s Howard Park produces a wide range of flawless-to-exciting wines from vineyards in Western Australia’s Margaret River and Great Southern regions. Their Miamup cabernet, targeted at restaurants and independent retailers, captures the riper end of Margaret River’s crystal-clear varietal flavour (violets and blackberries) with a touch of cedary oak and decent load of soft cabernet tannins. It’s a very sophisticated, drink-now cabernet built on superb fruit.

Paxton Tempranillo 2010 $18–23
McLaren Vale, South Australia
The Paxton family’s seven vineyards form an arc around the township of McLaren Vale. Visit www.paxtonvineyard.com and you can see the source of this tempranillo – the Thomas Block and Landcross Farm – clearly excellent vineyards judging by wine flavour. The alcohol content is low for warm McLaren, at 12.5 per cent, yet the flavours are full and ripe, with supple, sweet fruit. True to the variety and the Vale, the fruit’s cut with firm, persistent tannins and there’s a deep, earthy-savoury note to the flavour.

Spinifex Bete Noir Shiraz 2009 $36
Barossa and Eden Valleys, South Australia
This brilliant wine comes from husband and wife team Peter Schell and Magali Gely. It captures the unique richness and softness of Barossa shiraz in a restrained, medium-bodied way, completely masking the 14.5 per cent alcohol. The intense aroma leads for a moment with bright, black-cherry-like fruit but quickly incorporates savoury, spicy, complex, earthy characters. All of this comes through on a rich, supple, bright and also savoury palate of unusual dimension and complexity. Available at www.spinifexwines.com.au

Seville Estate The Barber Chardonnay 2010 $18–$20
Yarra Valley, Victoria
Seville’s Barber range complements its estate-grown wines while still offering an expression of Yarra Valley flavours. The 2010 chardonnay, made from both contract and estate-grown fruit, presents pure, tingly cool-climate varietal flavours (citrus and melon rind) in a bright, refreshing drink now style. It has good mid-palate richness and texture, but the focus never moves from the zesty fruit. Made by Dylan McMahon.

Knappstein Hand Picked Riesling 2011 $15–$20
Watervale, Southern Clare Valley, South Australia
I’ve seen quite a few different styles of rieslings from the 2011 vintage – generally sharing high acidity (a product of the cool season) but some looking atypically fruity as well, and others showing the flavours, and sometimes the sweetness, associated with botrytis (a product of the wet). Knappstein’s sits at the more delicate end of the spectrum, showing Watervale’s unique lime-like flavours and the racy acidity of the season. It’s bone dry with the understated power of really good riesling.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
First published 19 October 2011 in The Canberra Times