Category Archives: Wine review

Penfolds releases Grange, St Henri, Magill, RWT and Bin 707

There’s always a buzz of excitement at the release of a new Grange vintage. It’s a global event now and a confident Penfolds includes in the release its other flagship wines – Yattarna Chardonnay, Reserve Bin Adelaide Hills Chardonnay, St Henri Shiraz, Magill Estate Shiraz, RWT Barossa Valley Shiraz and Bin 707 Cabernet Sauvignon.

This is an extraordinary line up of wines by any measure – and priced accordingly. But when we look at top Bordeaux reds, still in barrel in the cellar, fetching up to $2,000 a bottle, and being produced in much larger volumes, Penfolds’ prices appear modest indeed.

The reds, in particular, enjoy a long pedigree for quality and cellaring ability. They also trade in large volumes at auction – meaning they can always be liquidated, and creating profitable opportunities for astute collectors. But, as the accompanying table shows, timing is everything and it’s probably easier to lose money than make it on Penfolds reds.

Indeed, the table demonstrates that it may be better to buy Grange at auction than in a retail store. The 2005 vintage, for example, fetches less at auction now than it did in retail stores on release last year. Indeed most vintages, including many classic years of the past, cost less at auction than the current release 2006 at retail.

On the other hand, Grange, especially the good vintages, can appreciate over time. But increases are unevenly spread. If, for example, you bought a bottle of 1971 at $9.99 on discount at Farmer Bros in the late seventies, you’re sitting on a handsome gain. You could pocket around $945 at auction ­ – a handsome return.

Or if you bought a bottle of 1983 for around $50 in 1988, you could turn it into about $405 – a good nominal return, but perhaps not sensational in real terms. Note, however, that the beautiful old 1983 fetches almost $200 a bottle less than the brash, new-release 2006.

We held this year’s new-release Penfolds red tasting at Chateau Shanahan with guest panellists, Wine and Food editor, Kirsten Lawson, winemaker and food writer, Bryan Martin, and Jill Shanahan.

To add interest, we poured a 1983 Grange from our cellar alongside the new-release 20006 vintage.

The comments below are all mine. But we agreed on the night that these were distinctive wines of rare dimension – each with its own personality.

Penfolds St Henri Shiraz 2007 $89.99

Regions: Robe, McLaren Vale, Langhorne Creek, Padthaway, Barossa Valley, Coonawarra, Adelaide Hills.

Variety: 100 per cent shiraz.

Maturation: 12 months in 1,460-litre oak vats, more than 50-years’ old.

The diverse fruit sourcing suggests the winemakers pulled out all tricks to make an outstanding St Henri in an ordinary vintage. Because of its focus on fragrance, fruit and soft tannins, we taste this one first and it appeals all around. We love its pure varietal aromas, flavours, softness and suppleness. It’s a very even, balanced, subtle wine with proven long-term cellaring potential.

Penfolds Magill Estate Shiraz 2008 $114.99 (available at cellar door only)

Region: Magill vineyard, Adelaide.

Variety: 100 per cent shiraz.

Maturation: 12 months in 72 per cent new French and 23 per cent new American oak hogsheads. The balance in one-year-old French oak

This is the wine that saved the Magill vineyard from urbanisation. It’s the site of Dr Christopher Penfolds’ Grange cottage and the cellars where Max Schubert developed Grange. Today it’s the home of the Penfolds brand, if not’s its main winery. This wine, however, is made on site in the original open, concrete Grange fermenters.

Although a wine of many parts, it was the least favoured at our tasting – simply upstaged by magnificence. It’s a generous wine, marked by comparatively high acid, savouriness and spice and bright berry flavours pushing through quite obvious (very high quality) oak flavours. Like a kaleidoscope, it offered different patterns and shades during the night.

Penfolds Barossa Valley RWT Shiraz 2008 $174.99

Region: Barossa Valley

Variety: 100 per cent shiraz

Maturation: 14 months in French oak hogsheads, 83 per cent new, 17 per cent one-year-old.

John Duval developed RWT in the 1990s as a fragrant, opulent, supple expression of Barossa shiraz, matured in French oak – a counterbalance to the sheer power of American-oak-matured Grange, also based on Barossa shiraz.

This dense, red-black, crimson-rimmed wonder simply blew us away, from its high-toned aroma to its luxuriously fruity, deep, silky texture to the perfectly matched cedary oak. This is a great wine, as good as Barossa shiraz gets.

Penfolds Grange 2006 $599

Region: Barossa Valley, Coonawarra and Magill.

Varieties: 98 per cent shiraz, two per cent cabernet sauvignon.

Maturation: 18 months in new American oak hogsheads.

Where RWT reveals the fragrant, opulent side of Barossa shiraz, Grange is a more thunder-in-the brain wine – opaque, red-black colour with immense fruit, American oak and tannin influences. The flavour elements are merging by the time it’s released at five years. But that’s just the beginning of a journey that might last for decades. Certainly our 1983, tasted alongside the 2006, has decades of life ahead.

Because it evolves for so long, Grange offers a unique, endless view of its vintage conditions. The1983, for example, has always expressed the exceptional flavour concentration and formidable tannins of a particularly hot, dry season. Over the years the character remains, despite time’s mellowing influence.

The new-release 2006 will never be like the 1983. It comes from a more benign vintage. So, even as a young wine, its sweeter, juicier fruit flavours harmonise with the silky, if huge, tannins. Grange’s signature opaque, colour, American oak, abundant tannins and great flavour concentration are all there. But there’s a lovely harmony and lovability about it even now, despite its rare dimension.

I rate this as one of the great Granges.

Penfolds Grange 1983 $518 (mean auction buyer’s price)

Regions: Barossa Valley (Kalimna and other vineyards), Magill Estate, Modbury Vineyard

Varieties: 94 per cent shiraz, six per cent cabernet sauvignon

Maturation: 100 per cent new American oak hogsheads.

After seeing the beginning of the Grange journey in the raw young 2006 vintage, we moved closer to the destination in the 1983. The product of a hot, dry season this has always been a big, dense, tannic Grange, described succinctly in the 1990 edition of The Rewards of Patience as, “Blockbuster Grange with massively powerful fruit and oak. Enormous strength. Will live for decades”.

Four years on, tasters for the 1994 edition, predicting a drinking window of 2000–2015, commented, “Dense, powerful chocolate/spice/plum/briar aromas with some American oak-derived coconut. A highly concentrated wine showing pronounced extract and tannins balanced with sweetness of fruit and obvious American oak. The wine is beginning to show some complexing ‘cigar box’ characters but is still very youthful. This will be a great Grange”.

By the fourth edition in 2000, tasters pushed the drinking window out to 2020 and with fruit descriptors in overdrive wrote, “Red/purple, intense, rich, brambly/blackberry fruit with touches of cedar and liquorice. Beautifully concentrated, with abundant blackberry/apricot fruit and plenty of meaty/cedary characters, plush, pronounced tannins and underlying sweet oak. Super wine”.

In the 2004 edition, the tasters pushed the drinking window out another decade to 2030 for this “superbly concentrated wine”. A mood swing four years later in the sixth edition saw the drink-by date pulled back to 2025. The tasters described the 1983 as, “A profoundly concentrated vintage with years of cellaring potential”, noting its “muscular tannins”.

On 23 June at Chateau Shanahan Grange 1983 again revealed its muscular tannins, concentration and great staying power. Coming off the youthful fruitiness of the younger wines, though, the old-wine aroma shocked Kirsten Lawson with its “oceany”,  “meaty” and “decaying” aromas – just three descriptors of a wine now deeply endowed with secondary and tertiary bottle-age aromas and flavours. We could throw in old leather, grandma’s furniture, cedar, chocolate and soy, too – and we did. These all adorned the deep, sweet, still-vibrant fruit and strong tannins that came from those tiny, thick-skinned shiraz berries in the hot, drought-affected 1983 vintage. The wine will drink well for decades.

Penfolds Bin 707 Cabernet Sauvignon 2008 $189.99

Regions: Coonawarra, Barossa Valley and Wrattonbully.

Varieties: 100 per cent cabernet sauvignon.

Maturation: 14 months in 100 per cent new American oak hogsheads.

Bin 707 is simply Grange made of cabernet sauvignon instead of shiraz. It’s about power, flavour concentration, American oak and longevity. Originally sourced from Block 42 of the Kalimna Vineyard, northern Barossa, it now owes more to Coonawarra, hundreds of kilometres to the south – although the Barossa contributes in this vintage.  The 2008 is another beautifully balanced blockbuster – impressively aromatic, revealing floral character as well as deep, underlying cassis-like varietal notes, with a mere hint of leaf. The palate’s impressively concentrated, the flavours reflecting the aroma – though over time the lovely cassis-like character dominates. The fruit is layered with powerful but fine, silky tannins, with the oak almost impossible to separate from the fruit flavours.

What your bottle of Grange is worth

Mean auction hammer priceSeller’s approx nett priceBuyer’s approx nett price
Penfolds Grange – vintage
2006 – current release, good vintageNo saleNo SaleNo Sale
2005 – last year’s release, average vintage$440$396$506
2004 – good vintage$440$396$506
2003 – average vintage$410$369$451
2002 – good vintage$430$387$495
2001 – average vintage$400$360$460
1996 – good vintage$495$446$569
1995 – average vintage$365$329$420
1990 – good vintage$630$693$725
1989 – average vintage$360$324$414
1986 – good vintage$550$495$633
1983 – good vintage$450$405$518
1982 – average vintage$355$320$408
1976 – good vintage$575$518$661
1975 – average vintage$405$365$466
1971 – good vintage$1,050$945$1,208
1970 – average vintage$480$432$552
1962 – good vintage$1,950$1,755$2,243
1958 – exceptionally rare bottle$3,950$3,5554,543
1955 – good vintage$3,250$2,925$3,738
Source:www.langtons.com.au
Seller’s price assumes 10% commission to Langtons
Buyer’s price assumes 15% buyer’s premium paid to auctioneer and GST

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
Published first in The Canberra Times 6 July 2011

Wine review — Capital Wines, The Hut by Dalwhinnie and Yarra Loch

Capital Wines “The Foreign Minister”
Canberra District Sangiovese 2010 $25

Capital Wines recently released this sangiovese (Italian red variety) together with their tempranillo (Spanish red variety). Capital Wines partner, Jennie Mooney, says it’s a blend of three sangiovese clones, including two Brunello clones, grown at Pialligo Estate and made by Andrew McEwin at Capital Wines. The wine came out of oak barrel earlier than usual, allowing the vibrant, sweet, cherry-like varietal flavour to flourish. It’s a light to medium bodied style with the sweet, pleasing fruit flavours to the fore – but supported by soft, easy-on-the-gums tannins. It’s a style to enjoy in its youth and probably all the better for not trying to be too serious.

The Hut By Dalwhinnie Pyrenees

  • Chardonnay 2010 $25
  • Pinot Noir 2010 $25
  • Shiraz 2010 $28

David Jones of Dalwhinnie, located at Moonambel in Victoria’s Pyrenees region, visited Canberra recently promoting his new “The Hut by Dalwhinnie” range. The wines are all estate-grown and made show the hallmark bright fruit and elegant structure of the more expensive premium wines. David says they’re made for current drinking and targeted at the on-premise trade and independent retailers. The delicate barrel-fermented chardonnay offers clear-cut white-peach varietal flavour and delicious, fresh soft acidity. The pinot offers bright, pure dark-cherry varietal flavour and good pinot structure and texture. There’s a hint of mint in the bright, medium bodied shiraz and a good bit of juicy, savoury tannin.

YarraLoch Yarra Valley Pinot Noir 2010 $27–$30
YarraLoch is a small, well-capitalised Yarra Valley operation, with 13-hectares of vines planted at Coldstream, Whittlesea and Kangaroo Ground. Varieties planted include arneis, cabernet sauvignon, chardonnay, merlot, pinot noir, shiraz and viognier – indicating the amazing range of terroirs in the valley. The pinot’s a very attractive, delicate style. The aroma combines floral notes with varietal ripe-cherry and savoury oak. These come through, too, on a silk-smooth, beautifully balanced palate, layered with sweet fruit and fine tannins. The flavours remained fresh several days after opening our sample bottle, indicating the staying power of this understated, irresistible drop.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
First published in The Canberra Times 3 July 2011

Wine review — Capital Wines, Stella Bella, Hewitson, Yangarra and Turkey Flat

Capital Wines “The Ambassador” Tempranillo 2010 $27
Kyeema Vineyard Murrumbateman, Canberra District, New South Wales
The two tempranillos reviewed this week, though of comparable quality, reveal different faces of this Spanish variety – and its potential to go mainstream in Australia in the long term. The Ambassador, from six-year-old vines, emphasises vibrant, red-berry varietal flavour and the variety’s naturally assertive, but fine and soft tannins. It starts fruity, then the tannins move in reassuringly. Jennie Mooney writes, “It is the first year that we had the depth of fruit to allow the wonderful tempranillo tannins to start to sing. In previous years we have softened them off in barrel”.

Stella Bella Tempranillo 2008 $30
Karridale and Rosabrook, Margaret River, Western Australia
Where Capital Wines tempranillo focuses on vibrant, youthful fruit and natural grape tannins, Stella Bella’s brings in the influences of additional oak and bottle ageing. Winemaker Stuart Pym writes that it, “leans towards this style [of Toro, Spain] – showing brighter sweeter characters, but in the Riserva style – being at least three years old with eighteen months in oak as a minimum”. The red-berry varietal flavours are off in the background and now showing secondary, aged character in a matrix with barrel-derived flavour and textural influences.

Hewitson Old Garden Mourvedre 2009 $120
Koch Family Vineyard, Rowland Flat, Barossa Valley, South Australia

Mourvedre, aka mataro, is a very late ripening variety and a great survivor in Australia’s hot, dry growing regions. This version, from Dean Hewitson, comes from a vineyard planted in 1853 by Friedrich Koch and still tended by his descendents. Hewitson believes it may be the world’s oldest mourvedre vineyard. Though the palest colour of three mourvedre’s reviewed today, its fruit is clearly very powerful as it effortlessly gobbles up 18 months’ maturation in all-new French oak. There are cherry- and chocolate-like fruit flavours in this deep, savoury red. It seems even more lifted and aromatic than usual in the 2009 vintage.

Yangarra Estate Mourvedre 2009 $32
Yangarra Estate Vineyard, McLaren Vale, South Australia
Peter Fraser’s 100-hectare vineyard focuses predominantly on shiraz and grenache, but with significant plots, too, of other Rhone Valley varieties – including the white viognier and roussanne and the red mourvedre, cinsault and carignan. The mourvedre’s a deep, purple-rimmed, dense, spicy wine – its ripe dark-berry fruits deeply layered with its assertive but soft tannins. Fraser writes of mourvedre, “early on it has beautiful aromatics with angular tannins, but as the seeds go brown and the tannins become rounder and softer, the alcohol becomes prominent and brightness and aromatics are dulled. 2009 is the first vintage where we think we have got the balance of ripeness spot on”.

Turkey Flat Mourvedre 2009 $32
Turkey Flat Vineyard, Barossa Valley, South Australia
Peter and Christie Schulz’s Turkey Flat vineyard has shiraz vines dating from 1847 as well as mature, dry-grown mourvedre vines, source of this wine. It’s deeply coloured, purple rimmed and on first opening the oak influence is obvious (20 months in new and seasoned French puncheons). But tasted over several days the beautiful, ripe and spicy fruit dominates a rich but gracefully structured wine – and the oak becomes background seasoning, adding as well to the substantial tannin structure of the wine.

Stella Bella Semillon Sauvignon Blanc 2010 $21
Margaret River, Western Australia
This is a distinctive Margaret River twist on the ubiquitous sauvignon blanc style – quite a departure from those we see from Marlborough, New Zealand. Semillon accounts for a large part of the difference in aroma, flavour and texture. From this neck of the woods semillon leans to a distinctive grassy, “canned-pea” aroma. Barrel ferment some components at higher temperatures, tank ferment others at lower temperatures, throw in sauvignon blanc, keep all of the components on yeast lees – and then blend it all together. You get a distinctive, pungent, dust-dry white with greater textural richness than straight sauv blanc.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011
First published in The Canberra Times 29 June 2011

Wine review — Dog Trap Vineyard, Yangarra and Wynns

Dog Trap Vineyard Canberra District Shiraz 2010 $12
Dr Dennis Hart bought the Dog Trap vineyard, then contracted to Hardys, on the outskirts of Yass in 2003. He makes a small quantity of cabernet sauvignon on site but sells much of the fruit to other makers and has part of his shiraz crop vinified at Brindabella Hills, Hall, by Brian Sinclair. Brian’s boss, Roger Harris, says the vineyard grows beautiful fruit. The quality shows in this vibrant, delicious, light-style shiraz with its lovely red berry flavours and brisk acidity. It surely rates as the district’s best-value red at $12. Available at www.dogtrapvineyard.com.au

Yangarra McLaren Vale Viognier 2010 $25
Down in McLaren Vale, Peter Fraser specialises in Rhone Valley varieties, grown on a cooler, elevated, east-facing ridge. The viognier is an outstanding example of the variety, with pure apricot-like aroma and flavour and a richly textured, slightly viscous palate – but not over the top and oily as the variety can be. Fraser removed all the non-perfect berries from the bunches before naturally fermenting the wine “in older French barriques [225-litre oak barrel]. They have been lees stirred and topped monthly, and aged in barrel for nine months”, he writes. This process added a pleasing texture without inserting oak flavours.

Wynns Coonawarra Estate Shiraz 2009 $8.75–$20
Bargain alert! The big retailers periodically punish Wynns for making such good wine – by slashing the price to plain silly levels. Just a few weeks back Coles’ 1st Choice and Woolworths’ Dan Murphy outlets beat the price down to $8.75. Watch carefully as it could happen again. If it does, pile in. The 2009’s a beautifully aromatic, vibrant, cool climate shiraz featuring ripe but spicy and juicy fruit flavours and ever-so-fine, soft tannins. It’s sourced from central and northern Coonawarra and matured for just six months in older French and American oak barrels. A year after its release, it drinks beautifully, but there’s a decade or so left in it.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

Wine review — Yangarra, Hewitson, Cullen and Shelmerdine

Yangarra Estate Vineyard Roussanne 2010 $25
McLaren Vale, South Australia
Roussanne, a Rhone Valley white variety, occasionally appears on its own in Australia, but more often in tandem with viognier or marsanne. Jancis Robinson called it the “shy” member of the trio as it avoids the viscosity of viognier or tannins of marsanne. In this version, vigneron Peter Fraser subtly sets the comparatively delicate roussanne fruit flavour in a web of barrel-ferment characters that add more to texture than flavour. A soft but bright and savoury white with a difference, it keeps inviting another sip. Fraser says it’s estate grown and made, with quality selection drilling down to individual, healthy berries.

Hewitson Gun Metal Riesling 2011 $21.50–$26
Eden Valley, South Australia
Our first 2011 white review gives exciting hope for the vintage. In this cool season, Dean Hewitson’s austere, stony, elevated Eden Valley site, near Mengler’s Hill, delivered a highly aromatic white (lemony and floral) with high natural acidity and intense, lingering, citrus and apple-like varietal flavours. The delicate but austere acid intensifies the wine’s flavour, and adds to the clean, fresh, brisk, dust-dry finish. It’s a style to enjoy now in its lively, fresh youth – or, alternatively, during its evolution over the next decade.

Cullen Mangan Malbec Petit Verdot Merlot 2010 $39–$45
Margaret River, Western Australia
The deeper, fuller and more overtly fruity of today’s two Cullen wine draws its firing power from malbec and petit verdot. Together they make comprise 70 per cent of the blend. The two varieties “provide the middle palate with richness and depth, while the third [merlot] adds lovely aromatics and good acidity, which contribute to the excellent structure of this wine”, writes winemaker, Vanya Cullen. The excellent structure includes an assertive line of ripe tannins in harmony with the rich, lively black-cherry fruit flavours. Mangan is a strong but elegant red at a modest 13 per cent alcohol.

Cullen Diana Madeline 2009 $105
Margaret River, Western Australia
Vanya Cullen regularly achieves what so many Australian winemakers seek – fully ripe fruit flavours at comparatively low sugar levels. Low sugar levels, of course, mean less alcohol – in this beautiful red, just 12 per cent. It’s a blend of cabernet sauvignon (88 per cent) with six per cent cabernet franc and four per cent merlot – the cabernet sourced from vines planted by Vanya’s parents in 1971. Vanya writes, “the wine was naturally fermented and matured for 13 months in French oak, of which 55 per cent was new”. It’s an extraordinary, harmonious, elegant cabernet, easily among the best yet made in Australia.

Shelmerdine Shiraz 2008 $29–$32
Heathcote, Victoria
What are we to make of two wines from the same producer, same variety and same region, but one selling at $32, the other at $65? What we found on the tasting bench were significant style differences but a tough call on quality variance – the majority of tasters rating the cheaper wine ahead of its more expensive cellar mate from the Merindoc vineyard. The $32 wine rated highly for its bright fruit, exceptionally lively palate and fine, savoury tannins – a big but balanced shiraz, relying as much on acidity as tannin to give structure.

Shelmerdine Merindoc Shiraz 2008 $59–$65
Heathcote, Victoria
Winemaker Sergio Carlei made this from a four-tonne, hand selection of shiraz from the Merindoc vineyard – a three-hectare, amphitheatre block in the southern foothills of Victoria’s Heathcote region. It’s slightly deeper coloured than the cheaper Shelmerdine shiraz – and from the first sniff we’re enjoying gamey, earthy notes in with the underlying fruit. The fruit gives sweetness to the generous palate and the gamey, earthy, mushroom-like flavours add a distinctive savour to the richly textured palate. Both wines blossomed for five days after opening. In the end we rated Merindoc half a star ahead of its cellar mate.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

Wine review — De Bortoli, Cullen and Penfolds

De Bortoli

  • Windy Peak Victoria Chardonnay 2010 $11.40–$16
  • Gulf Station Yarra Valley Chardonnay 2010 $13.20–$20

Our top chardonnay makers, including De Bortoli, long ago moved away from the fat and oaky old-fashioned styles. In this vibrant, delicious pair, from Leanne De Bortoli and Steve Webber, we taste chardonnay as good as it gets in the middle price bracket. Windy Peak – sourced from various Victorian regions, including the King and Yarra Valleys – is the softer of the two, in a subtle, taut but generous way. In Gulf Station, high acidity accentuates the lean, citrusy varietal flavour teasing its way through the richly textured, bone-dry palate. Both wines drink well now, but I expect the Gulf Station to gain complexity over the next 3–4 years.

Cullen Kevin John Margaret River Chardonnay 2009 $75–$105
Penfolds Yattarna Derwent Valley Chardonnay 2008 $72–$130

We move from two really nice chardonnays to a sublime pair – one from a tiny producer, the other from the massive Treasury Wine Estates. Yattarna, a blend of the best material available to Penfolds in any season, comes in warm 2008 mainly from the Derwent Valley. The cool origins show in the delicacy and intense grapefruit-like varietal flavour underpinning this superb white. Sipping away, the fine texture and subtle, barrel derived complexities gradually reveal their presence. Cullens, from three separate blocks on the family vineyard, presents melon and citrus varietal flavours on a wonderfully, bright, complex, deeply layered palate.

Cullen Margaret River Red 2009 $20
Vanya Cullen’s impressive $20 blend of merlot, malbec and petit verdot weighs in at just 12 per cent alcohol – yet tastes fully ripe. The healthy soils, and consequent healthy vines (probably a result of biodynamic management), have much to do with this ability to achieve ripe flavours at low sugar levels. The medium-bodied wine features high-toned red-berry aromas and a lively palate reflecting these same berry flavours. Vanya says merlot and malbec comprise the majority of the blend, making it fleshy and supple. It must be the petit verdot, then, providing the farewell tweak of austere, savoury tannin.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

Wine review — Shelmerdine, Yealands Estate, Running with Bulls, Dandelion and Penfolds

Shelmerdine Pinot Noir 2010 $26–$36
Yarra Valley, Victoria

Stephen Shelmerdine writes, “Between the drought-affected vintage 2009 and rain-influenced vintage 2011, vintage 2010 is now shaping up as an absolutely classic year”. I’m not sure what “classic” means, but Shelmerdine delivers the goods in this lovely pinot from his family’s Lusatia Park Vineyard, high in the Yarra Valley. The buoyant, red-fruit perfume of pinot leads to a medium bodied palate, featuring vibrant fruit, spice and savouriness, cut by quite firm but fine-boned tannins. The wine grew in interest over several days on the tasting bench, eventually joining us for dinner on day four.

Yealands Estate Pinot Noir 2009 $17–$22
Awatere Valley, Marlborough, New Zealand
In Australia we can make pretty good regional shiraz and cabernet for around $10. But the starting price for half decent pinot seems to be around $20, and exclusively the domain of cool growing regions. This puts Marlborough, New Zealand, in a dominant position to capture the emerging pinot noir market. Yealands is one of a growing number of producers there putting out the genuine article at a fair price. From Marlborough’s Awatere Valley, it captures much of pinot’s unique perfume and flavour. It’s medium bodied and savoury with a structure as much dependent on high acid as it is on tannin.

Running with Bulls Vermentino 2010 $17–$19
Barmera, Murray River, South Australia
This Italian white variety from the coasts of Liguria, Sardinia, Tuscany and Corsica is attracting some attention in our hot inland regions, like Barmera. “The conditions are perfect for a variety like vermentino, which thrives in the heat”, writes Yalumba, owner of Running with Bulls. Yalumba’s version preserves the freshness of the grape and adds a little texture through skin and yeast-lees contact. It’s a simple, savoury and appealing wine to quaff with basic food – to me a more sympathetic approach than the Chalmers’ more highly worked version.

Running with Bulls Tempranillo 2010 $14–$19
Barossa and Wrattonbully, South Australia
Shhhhh! Don’t tell the editor but this is actually a review of two equally good but different tempranillos under Yalumba’s Running with Bulls label – one from the warm Barossa, the other from somewhat cooler Wrattonbully. The Barossa version presents heaps of blueberry and plum-like varietal fruit flavour in the aroma and flavour. But firm, savoury tannins move in very quickly, giving an authoritative red-wine grip and finish. The Wrattonbully wine seems more savoury and earthy from start to finish, without fruity high notes – a tight and grippy red to enjoy with roasted red meat.

Dandelion Vineyards Lion’s Tooth Shiraz Riesling 2008 $27–$30
McMurtrie’s Vineyard, McLaren Vale, South Australia

The Dandelion label presents wines from mature single vineyards in the Barossa, Eden Valley, Adelaide Hills and McLaren Vale. Lion’s Tooth, from the very hot 2008 vintage, comes from Nat McMurtrie’s McLaren Vale vineyard. Dandelion Partner, Zar Brooks, says hand picked shiraz was “naturally fermented in open fermenters on top of some riesling skins for seven days”. After a good aeration, this deep and brooding red began releasing its sweet, ripe-dark-cherry aromas. The ripe black-cherry flavours carried through to a deep, layered savoury and fruity palate – a rich and sturdy but not plump style.

Penfolds Reserve Bin 09A Chardonnay $71.25–$90
Adelaide Hills, South Australia
Penfolds “white Grange” project of the early nineties produced the company’s flagship white, the multi-region Yattarna Chardonnay, and this superb sidekick from the Adelaide Hills. Putting the two in a Burgundy context, we might compare the oh-so-refined Yattarna with Montrachet and the more robust Reserve Bin A with Meursault. In 2009 the style seems a little less powerful than the 2008 – the aroma combining “struck match” character with intense grapefruit and nectarine-like varietal notes. The intense palate presents the same flavour characters, all tied together by lean, taut, brisk acidity. It’s a complex, distinctive wine to enjoy for many years.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

Wine review — Shelmerdine, Campbells and Houghton

Shelmerdine Heathcote Viognier 2010 $23–$26
Viognier, a white variety noted for its cameo role in some northern Rhone Valley reds, and the sometimes glorious whites of Condrieu, enjoys several identities in Australia, too. As a straight white wine it ranges from big, fat and alcoholic with a distinctive apricot-like flavour, to more restrained, slow-evolving versions like those Nick Spencer makes at Eden Road Winery. Shelmerdine’s sits in between these styles. It’s big and alcoholic, but exuberant, juicy and vibrant rather than fat. It’s intensely aromatic with zesty apricot and nectarine-like flavours and a sweetish, vibrant, slightly grippy finish.

Campbells Bobbie Burns Rutherglen Shiraz 2009 $19.95–$23.40
I missed Campbell’s recent retrospective 40-vintage Bobbie Burns tasting, but Colin and Malcolm Campbell say the wines held up well and “the vintages from 2004 onwards shone with notable consistency and quality”. Certainly the 2009 scrubs up – starting with the lovely fruit perfume evident in so many 2009 reds from across eastern Australia. The palate’s vibrantly fruity and ripe without pushing into “porty” territory. Although it’s soft and easy to drink, there’s ample tannin providing structure, with oak subtly in the background. This is a long way removed from the old-time, ballsy, gum-crunching Rutherglen shiraz styles.

Houghton Wisdom Margaret River Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 and Frankland River Shiraz 2009 $30–$35
Thomas Hardy and Sons (Houghton’s owner) became BRL Hardy, then The Hardy Wine Company, then Constellation Wines Australia – now owned (after a mass sell off of vineyards and wineries by its American parent company) by CHAMP Private Equity. This was all very unsettling because some brands lost the vineyards and wineries they were based on. Fortunately, the two new-release Houghton reds remain superb regional specialties. The medium-bodied shiraz has a core of ripe fruit, overlaid with Frankland River’s spicy, savoury notes and fine tannins. The Margaret River wine delivers cabernet’s classic cedar, black-olive and herbal aromas on a generous, elegantly structured palate.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

 

Wine review — Curly Flat, Heartland and Leconfield

Curly Flat Macedon Ranges Pinot Gris 2010 $26–$29
Phillip and Jeni Moraghan’s pinot gris sits right at the top of the pile in Australia – a pile comprising largely insipid wines, labelled as either “pinot gris” or “pinot grigio”. But grown in a cool region, like Victoria’s Macedon Ranges, and handled properly, the variety can make delicious, richly textured wines, sometimes with a grey or pink tint. Curly Flat, though, is a pale, bright lemon-gold colour with seductive pear, spice and musk aroma. The pear and spice follow through on a savoury, richly textured palate with its satisfying little tannin bite as it slips down.

Heartland Langhorne Creek-Limestone Coast Shiraz 2009 $18–$20, Director’s Cut Shiraz 2009 $28–$33
Heartland, a joint venture by several long-term wine industry people, including winemaker Ben Glaetzer, focused originally on the export market. But economic turbulence, and no doubt the strong dollar, means we’re seeing more Heartland wines at home. They offer terrific value. Both shirazes come from Langhorne Creek (near Lake Alexandrina) and the Limestone Coast, a little further south. The medium bodied shiraz packs in oodles of bright, ripe, varietal fruit flavours with a layer of oak and quite firm tannins. Director’s Cut moves up a notch with deeper, more savoury, fruit flavours and greater flavour length – a good cellaring wine.

Leconfield Coonawarra Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 $25–$33.50
Septuagenarian Syd Hamilton came out of retirement in the mid 1970s, bought land in Coonawarra, established a vineyard and built the elegant Leconfield Winery from Mount Gambier limestone. Hamilton, a 1930’s pioneer of refrigerated fermentation for white wines, proved a adept at red winemaking, too, making classics like the long-lived Leconfield Cabernet 1980 (“hand picked by experienced girls”, read the label). He eventually sold to his nephew Richard Hamilton and today the wines are made by Paul Gordon. Under Gordon the wines seem to have become riper and fuller, like this generous but still elegant and clearly varietal 2009.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

Wine review — Pepper Tree, Grant Burge, Vasse Felix, Chrismont and Rutherglen Estate

Pepper Tree Limited Release Chardonnay 2010 $22
Wrattonbully, South Australia
Yes, this is the third Jim Chatto-made chardonnay reviewed here in as many weeks – expressing yet another facet of the variety. First we saw the thrilling acid spine and intense nectarine-like flavour of Orange chardonnay; then the generous, round, softness and delicacy of the Lower Hunter version. Now we finish with what Chatto calls a Burgundian style, made with the French “Bernard” clones grown at Wrattonbully, near Coonawarra. The underlying varietal flavour seems more melon- and fig-like, but it’s bound up in a tight, fine structure. The barrel and lees influences are subtle indeed, but the overall impact is of restrained power with elegance. All three Peppertree chardonnays deliver rare quality at their prices.

Grant Burge Thorn Riesling 2010 $15–$17
Thorn Vineyard, Eden Valley, South Australia
Grant Burge first bought fruit from the Thorn family’s Eden Valley vineyard in 1988. Now 30 years old, the vines produced magic in 2010 – a peculiar vintage, says Burge, ending with a very cool ripening period, ideal for white varieties. In Thorn this translates to a beautifully aromatic riesling, featuring floral and lime-like varietal character. The intense, zesty, lime character carries through on a pure, delicate, shimmering, dry palate. Provides exciting drinking at the price.

Grant Burge Meshach 2006 $104.50–$155
Filsell Vineyard, Southern Barossa Valley, South Australia
Today’s two five-star reds (Burge and Vasse Felix) couldn’t be more different. They’re chalk and cheese – but brilliant, highly polished examples of long-established regional styles. Grant Burge’s Meshach tells the traditional Barossa Valley shiraz story. Sourced from old vines, mainly at the southern end of the valley, it’s partially barrel fermented and all matured for 22 months in American (85 per cent) and French oak, 70 per cent of it new. While that makes a dark and potent wine initially, at five years Meshach is blossoming with its wonderfully complex aromas, deep, sweet fruited palate and layers of soft tannins. It’s big, for sure, but harmonious and, over time, it’ll become increasingly refined and elegant.

Vasse Felix Heytesbury
Cabernet Sauvignon Petit Verdot Malbec 2008 $75–$88

Vasse Felix Vineyard, Margaret River, Western Australia
We watch in wonder as China’s billionaires drive up prices of Bordeaux’s top reds. Nick’s wine merchants, for example, offers Chateau Lafite Rothschild 2009 at $1,999 a bottle pre-arrival in Australia. Is any wine worth that much? It’s great business for the French. But if we’re more interested in the wine in front of us than the label, several Australian cabernet blends, including the sublime Heytesbury 2008, easily bear comparison with their far more expensive Bordeaux counterparts. It’s a blend of cabernet sauvignon, petit verdot and malbec grown at Vasse Felix (owned by the Holmes a Court family) and made by Virginia Willcock. The three varieties combine harmoniously with French oak, delivering a fragrant, complex, powerful-but-elegant, world-class red.

Chrismont La Zona Barbera 2010 $26
King Valley, Victoria
La Zona Barbera 2010 and Rutherglen Estate Durif 2008 are just two of more than 120 wines on tasting at Taste of Two Regions (King Valley and Rutherglen) at Rydges Lakeside on Sunday, 3 July, 10am to 5pm. Entry fee for the tasting of regional produce and wine is $25. Chrismont, owned by Arnie and Jo Pizzini, represents the King Valley’s Italian heritage with this delicious, medium-bodied barbera. It’s purple rimmed with summer-berry fruit flavours as vivid as the colour. Typical for barbera, the structure relies as much on high acidity as it does on tannin, differentiating it from mainstream varieties.

Rutherglen Estate Durif 2008 $21.95
Rutherglen, Victoria
Although durif emerged in southern France in the nineteenth century, it took well to Rutherglen “as it is a late ripening variety, requiring a warm climate and an extended ripening period to develop its full flavour and structural potential”. It became Rutherglen’s idiosyncratic signature red variety, noted for its dense colour, formidable tannins and ability to age for decades. Rutherglen Estate’s version turns down the volume slightly, avoiding the variety’s sometimes port-like alcohol and impenetrable colour. However, it’s still recognisably durif with its ripe, full palate and firm tannins.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011