Category Archives: Wine review

Wine review — Pizzini, McWilliams Mount Pleasant, Tim Adams and Grosset

Pizzini King Valley

  • Sangiovese Shiraz 2009 $17.50–$19
  • Il Barone 2006 $40–$43

Fred and Katrina Pizzini’s vineyards, in Victoria’s King Valley, reflect the family’s Italian heritage. They offer straight Italian varietals, but sometimes blend Italian grape varieties with old Australian favourites, of French origin. These are Italian in style, with an Aussie accent. In the sangiovese shiraz blend, shiraz adds a fruity g’day to the mid palate of a wine generally dominated by the lean, savoury, dry sangiovese. It’s a lighter style for pizza, pasta and picnics. Il Barone, a serious blend of cabernet sauvignon, shiraz, sangiovese and nebbiolo, delivers huge drinking satisfaction in a unique rich and fruity but dry and savoury way.

McWilliams Mount Pleasant
“Jack” Coonawarra Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 $14.99–$17.99,
Coldstream Hills Yarra Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2008 $27.99–$34.99

Coonawarra cabernet at $17.99 or less? Yes indeed, and it’s a decent, drink-now drop, made from McWilliams large holdings in the area. It smells and tastes like cab sauv – ripe berry flavours and elegant structure – with a clever touch of oak filling the mid palate, and finishing firm and dry. McWilliams named it after Jack McWilliam, founder of the Riverina’s first winery. Riverina and Mount Pleasant (Hunter Valley) are both a long way from Coonawarra, so I wonder about the label. For double the price Coldstream Hills delivers a highly polished, deeply flavoured cabernet for the long haul. It’s a gem.

Tim Adams Clare Valley Riesling 2010 $19–$25
Grosset Springvale Watervale Riesling 2011 $37

Riesling’s unique finesse and delicacy show in these two lovely but very different Clare Valley whites. Tim Adams’ version, at a low 11.5 per cent alcohol, starts a little on the austere side with the delicious, teasing, racy, lemony edge of just-ripe riesling. But a core of delicate fruit offsets the lemony tartness. Great value and potentially long cellaring here. Grosset’s classic appeared in a masked tasting held by Jeir Creek’s Kay Howell. This is perfection: classic Watervale (a Clare sub-region) floral and lime aroma; amazingly fine, gentle, juicy, limey palate and clean, fresh, lingering acidity.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

Wine review — Philip Shaw, Penfolds, Punt Road and Helm

Philip Shaw The Architect Chardonnay 201 $20
Koomooloo vineyard, Orange, New South Wales
It takes just a few sips of “The Architect” to see why Orange and chardonnay intersect. The area’s cooler sites produce pristine, intense varietal flavours. And, as Philip Shaw demonstrates, these flavours can be captured and delivered for our pleasure at a modest price. He sources the wine from “our younger vines, planted in 1995” – a particularly cool, south-facing block. It’s a tingly, fresh white with a delicate core of citrus and nectarine varietal flavour, tightly wound with natural acidity and underpinned by a subtle textural and flavour influence of yeast lees.

Penfolds Bin 311 Chardonnay 2010 $33.99–$39.99
Tumbarumba, New South Wales
In 1982, Ian and Juliet Cowell established vines for sparkling wine in high, cold Tumbarumba. Others followed, and by the late eighties Seppelt was sourcing high quality sparkling material from the area. Adelaide Steamship later blended Seppelt and Penfolds together, giving Penfolds access to Tumbarumba fruit. Subsequently, chardonnay from Tumbarumba became a key player in the “white Grange” project that culminated in the company’s flagship chardonnay, Yattarna. Bin 311, a virtual poor person’s Yattarna, is a spin off of that project – an ultra fine, taut, elegant, utterly delicious, chardonnay.

Penfolds Cellar Reserve Gewurztraminer 2008 $29.99–$33.99
Woodbury Vineyard, Eden Valley, South Australia
The Woodbury vineyard, planted by Tollana in the 1960s, ultimately became part of the conglomerate of assets owned by Foster’s Treasury Wine Estates. One part of the vineyard, prosaically named Bay F1 Block, produces wonderful gewürztraminer – the muscat clone of traminer. Despite having identical DNA they taste totally unalike – traminer being vinous and savoury, and gewürztraminer sensuously muscat like. This dry version, captures the variety’s pure, heady musk and Turkish delight aroma and flavour. While a few months maturation on yeast lees added textural richness to a wine that seems made for Asian food.

Philip Shaw The Idiot Shiraz 2009 $20
Koomooloo vineyard, Orange, New South Wales
In a wine industry first, an idiot won a gold medal and three trophies at this year’s Royal Sydney Wine Show. It wasn’t just any idiot, but a pure, vibrant, peppery, fine-boned, medium-bodied shiraz from Philip Shaw’s Koomooloo vineyard, located 900 metres above sea level at Orange. Shaw, former chief winemaker for Rosemount, planted the vines in 1989 and grafted them to shiraz between 2003 and 2005. “The Idiot”, an appealing drink-now wine, is one of several in Shaw’s character series. Shaw says, “with the lighter, livelier food of today, I believe wine should be a match for that”.

Punt Road Airlie Bank Cabernet Merlot 2008 $18
Yarra Valley, Victoria
Like the two Philip Shaw Orange wines reviewed today, Airlie Bank delivers true regional, varietal character at a realistic price. The Yarra Valley, because of its diverse sites, produces high quality in an unusually wide range of styles. Airlie Bank, for example, combines the ripe, bright cassis-like flavour of cabernet with merlot pluminess. It’s a seamless, medium-bodied combination, leading with vibrant fruit in the aroma and palate, and finishing with the fine but quite firm tannins of the two varieties. It’s made to enjoy young.

Helm Premium Cabernet Sauvignon 2008 $52
Murrumbateman, Canberra District, New South Wales
Long-term collaboration between winemaker Ken Helm and neighbouring grape grower, Al Lustenberger, ultimately produced outstanding riesling. A similar collaboration on cabernet sauvignon, however, hasn’t scaled the same heights – despite significant quality shifts in recent years. The 2008 is probably the best yet, built on sumptuous, ripe varietal fruit, boosted by the obvious but not too intrusive flavour of Missouri oak. Helm says he and daughter Stephanie “have been working hard to balance the oak and fruit” and from 2009 have been trialling French oak alongside the American. This is good wine, though I baulk at the price when classics like Majella Coonawarra are available at $33.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

Wine review — Helm, All Saints and Punt Road

Helm Canberra District Cabernet Shiraz 2008 $35
Ken Helm says he’s back to where he started in 1979 with this charming blend of cabernet sauvignon and shiraz. Back then, says Ken, it was a blend of necessity – the only red grapes available for his first vintage. This time around it’s an intentional blend, sourced from mature vines on Virginia Rawling’s neighbouring vineyard. It’s a soft, easy drinking elegant red built on vibrant, fresh, berry fruit flavours. Cabernet provides a fine backbone of tannin and shiraz gently fleshes out the mid palate. There’s oak in the equation, too, but playing an appropriate support role to the fruit.

All Saints Rutherglen Shiraz 2009 $25
St Leonards Vineyard Cabernet Franc 2010 $26
Some years back Peter Brown of Brown Brothers, Milawa, bought the historic All Saints winery. Following his death, his children carry on the venture, making bright modern wines, some new, some traditional. Their shiraz is a modern take on an old local classic. It’s particularly fragrant, with attractive sweet, fruity high notes that carry through to a bright, fresh, full-flavoured palate. A load of firm tannin then asserts itself, in a reassuring Rutherglen kind of way. The cabernet franc, on the other hand, is medium bodied, featuring herbal and savoury flavours with a gently tannic finish.

Punt Road Yarra Valley Airlie Bank

  • Chardonnay 2009 $18
  • Pinot Noir 2009 $18

I was at a pinot noir conference on the Mornington Peninsula in February 2009 when the Yarra winemakers dashed home to fight bushfires engulfing their vineyards. It’s a wonder after the intense heatwave, culminating the fire, that the Yarra makers produced any wine at all, let alone as appealing as these two, made by Kate Goodman. The chardonnay is at the taut, lemony end of the varietal spectrum, with a delicious acidic, leesy bite. The light bodied pinot noir delivers savoury varietal flavour, a smooth texture and lean, tannic bite. These are understated wines that grow on you.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

Wine review — Stella Bella, Tamar Ridge, Printhie, All Saints and Paxton

Stella Bella Cabernet Merlot 2008 $25–$33
Margaret River, Western Australia
Stella Bella; stellar quality, too, doing what Margaret River does best: combining the Bordeaux varieties cabernet sauvignon and merlot in a powerful but elegant potentially very long-lived red. The 2008, made by Stuart Pym from vineyards near the town and further north at Cowaramup, is sensational – an extraordinarily sweet perfumed, seductive cabernet. Though the aroma borders on floral, with the intensity of violets, the deep, sweet fruit comes in a tight, firm matrix of tannin – cabernet’s indelible thumbprint. You can pay a lot more for cabernet of this calibre.

Tamar Ridge Devil’s Corner Pinot Grigio 2010 $18.95
Tamar Valley and East Coast, Tasmania
In August 2010 Brown Brothers of Milawa, Victoria, bought Tamar Ridge Estates from Gunns Limited. The move, says Ross Brown, fitted a company strategy to mitigate the effects of global warming by sourcing grapes from cooler areas. And cool it is, demonstrated by the pristine, pear-like varietal flavour and spritely acidity of Devil’s Corner 2010. Pinot gris simply doesn’t deliver this purity and racy freshness in warmer areas. It’s a wine to enjoy right now; trade up to the 2011 this time next year.

Printhie Chardonnay 2010 $16.15–$18
Orange, New South Wales
Really good, regional wine needn’t cost the earth. There’s proof in Printhie’s 2010 chardonnay, sourced by winemaker Drew Tuckwell from five vineyards located between 650 and 1060 metres above sea level. The high altitude and consequent cool conditions suit early-ripening chardonnay, concentrating the varietal flavour and retaining acidity. The wine’s tight acid backbone lends vitality to its intense melon and citrus varietal flavour – a full bodied but elegant style to enjoy young.

Tamar Ridge Devil’s Corner Pinot Noir 2010 $18.95
Tamar Valley and East Coast, Tasmania
Brown Brothers purchase of Tamar Ridge from Gunns Limited also gave it entrée to the pinot noir market, the fastest growing red wine style, says Brown. The variety makes up 30 per cent of Tamar’s harvest. Devil’s Corner, the cheapest of Tamar’s three pinots, rates among the best sub-$20 versions on the market. It presents the variety’s high-toned fragrance, delicacy, silkiness and elegant, fine-boned structure – but not the too-simple, confection-like fruit of many budget pinots. Yes, it’s at the lighter end of the pinot spectrum. But that just means good early drinking: now to 2013.

All Saints Durif $25
Rutherglen, Victoria
Durif, also known as petite syrah, is an accidental cross of shiraz and peloursin, first identified by Francois Durif at Montpellier, France, in 1880 and brought to Australia by Francois de Castella in 1908. It thrived in Rutherglen’s hot climate and became the region’s signature red variety, tending to a porty ripeness and burly tannic structure. Where some might politely be called “rustic”, All Saints’ highly polished version packs the variety’s aromatic, very ripe, plummy flavours into a supple, smooth palate, albeit underpinned with a truckload of tannin.

Paxton Quandong Farm Vineyard Shiraz 2009 $30
McLaren Vale, South Australia

David Paxton established vineyards in McLaren Vale in 1979 and in recent years used Quandong Farm vineyard “as the test-bed for the Paxton biodynamic programme that focuses on soil health, bio-diversity and non-chemical weed control”. His son Michael makes shiraz from the vineyard, using wild yeast and extended maceration on skins. He matures it in mainly older French oak barrels and bottles it without fining or filtering. The result is a limpid and lovely McLaren Vale red of a modest 13.5 per cent alcohol. It’s rich and pure, with gentle but abundant tannins and an appealing earthy, savoury undertone.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

They’ve Bin everywhere — Penfolds releases new reds

Price seems always at the heart of any new release of Penfolds much-loved, highly traded bin number wines. Fierce retail battles became part of the landscape from the late seventies, following the collapse of retail price maintenance.

In recent years, however, a reticence to be first to cut means a little retail shadow boxing precedes the first real punch being landed – usually a king hit of margin numbing power.

This year for example, Kemenys, a large Sydney independent, and 1st Choice, owned by Coles, swung the first air punches. Both promised not to be beaten; but neither revealed their prices. Then Dan Murphy, the Woolworths-owned industry giant, burst out of its corner, smashing prices to around cost – forcing the “We won’t be beaten” retailers to follow.

This all happened about two weeks ago (from day of publication), so prices will have moved on, as liquor specials normally run for one week. But competitive pressure remains hot, increasing the likelihood of retailers taking out the Penfolds bins a few more times yet.

The extreme price variability of Penfolds reds isn’t unique. Any wine capable of driving retail traffic can be sucked into the weekly discounting cycle. But Penfolds stands alone in its appeal to collectors and the volume of older vintages moving through the secondary market.

Indeed Penfolds reds underpin traditional auctions. But if auction volumes are large, they remain a buyers market. Recent prices suggest that collectors simply have to buy at peak discount if they want their collections to even hold value.

The accompanying table compares retail prices for the new releases and the most recent auction prices for the previous vintage, released a year ago.

The just released Bin 128 Coonawarra Shiraz 2009, for example, has a recommended retail price of $33.99 but sold at $18.45 shortly after release. At about the same time, the 2008 vintage fetched a hammer price of $20 at Langton’s auctions – translating to about $18 net for the seller (after an estimated 10 per cent commission to the auctioneer) and a net price to the buyer of $23, after adding Langton’s 15 per cent buyer’s premium and GST.

In this example the seller received 45 cents a bottle less than the rock bottom discounted retail price of the new release; and the buyer paid $4.55 more – but still $10.99 below the recommended price. And the auctioneer clipped the ticket on both sides.

Whatever we make of the price disparities, not everyone piles into the specials and much of the new release will trickle through retail stores at or around the recommended price.

Winemaker Peter Gago says prices of the bin wines are now underpinned by very strong overseas demand. “We can’t keep up with it”, he says, “especially Bin 389 and Bin 407”.

Interest is “enormous” in Europe and America, Thailand loves Bin 2 Shiraz Mataro (little known in Australia) and China can’t get enough – literally. Gago says people are “buying in California and Europe and on-selling to China” outside official distribution channels.

Still, there’s ample to satisfy demand in Australia and the wines are very, very good – even those from the 2008 vintage, perhaps the hottest and most difficult ever in South Australia.

Gago describes 2008 as “a vintage of two parts – pertaining to the profound differences of fruit before and after the extreme SA heatwave of March 3–16”. In the unprecedented heatwave the temperature exceeded 38 degrees for 12 days and 35 degrees for the balance.

We’ve heard lots of talk about pre- and post-heat 2008 vintage – including stories of wine fermenting out to a port-like 18 per cent alcohol. Unlikely as it seems, though, we’ve yet to find a post-heat winemaker.

Before talking to Gago, though, we popped the wines on the tasting bench, sipping them over three or four days. The 2008s in the line up passed the taste test with honours, with no sign of the porty flavours or hard tannins expected of a very hot vintage. After that, knowing whether they were pre- or post-heat seemed academic. But we asked Peter Gago.

He says he harvested Magill Estate from February 6, a month before the heatwave commenced, and had 90–95 per cent of Barossa material in the winery by the time the heat arrived on 3 March. Quite a lot of grapes from later-ripening cooler areas like Coonawarra arrived after the heat – but the heat in those areas proved less damaging.

We can assume much of the cabernet in Bin 389 and Bin 407 to be in this category, though neither shows any ill effects.

Bin 23 Adelaide Hills Pinot Noir 2010 $32–$39.99
Bin 23 is an unlikely star of this year’s line up. It’s the least traded of the bin wines – just one sale we could trace in Langton’s records and no sign of retailer discounting in our Google search, with the exception of Glengarry of Auckland. It’s fully priced at the recommended price but if you can persuade a retailer to around $30, you’re on the money. Penfolds early pinots tended to be big and burley without what pinotphiles call “pinosity”. The 2010 is simply lovely – a fragrant, silky, complex pinot with the Penfolds structural stamp.

Bin 138 Grenache Shiraz Mourvedre 2009 $17.55–$29.99
GSM stands for good stuff, mate or grenache shiraz mataro, in this instance led by 2009’s pure fruitiness. Grenache leads the charge here with its high-toned, musky, fruity perfume – characters that comes through in the smooth, fruity palate. Shiraz adds body and depth, while mourvedre injects spiciness and firm structural tannins. The juicy fruitiness makes Bin 138 a good drink now but it also cellars well. But try before you buy, as grenache’s distinct flavour doesn’t appeal to everyone.

Bin 128 Coonawarra Shiraz 2009 $18.45–$33.99
Young Bin 128 often proves tricky in masked tastings. The elegant structure and firm tannins sets our thoughts down the cabernet track. But ultimately the ripe berry flavours and spiciness at the core point back to cool-climate shiraz, albeit in a particularly tannic Penfolds mould. We prefer Bin 128 with five to ten years bottle age.

Bin 28 Kalimna Shiraz 2008 $18.45–$33.99
Though priced the same as Bin 128, Bin 28 tends to appeal more widely and outperform Bin 128 at auction. It was originally sourced from Penfolds Kalimna vineyard in the northern Barossa then decades back became a multi-region, warm-climate blend, with a significant Barossa component. It’s bold and tannic But the abundant, soft tannins form a deep, complex matrix with the wine’s sweet, ripe fruit – reminiscent of very ripe black cherries. It’s ripe but not over-ripe; tannic but not hard; and built to cellar, though it’s appealing now, too.

Bin 407 Cabernet Sauvignon 2008 $33.65–$54.99
Bin 407 is a straight cabernet sourced principally from the Limestone Coast region, stretching from Padthaway to Coonawarra. In the 2008 vintage it’s built on very ripe cabernet flavours towards the cassis end of the variety’s spectrum. Over a few days’ tasting this sweet, purely varietal fruit flavour gradually seeped through the tight, fine cocoon of oak and fruit tannin. Despite the wine’s strength and backbone, it’s elegantly structured — a character that sure to be revealed after cellaring over the next five to ten years.

Bin 150 Marananga Shiraz 2008 $47.90–$64.99
The new Bin 150 acknowledges the unique quality of shiraz grown around gently undulating Marananga, Gnadenfrei, Stonewell and Seppeltsfield on the Barossa’s western rim. Penfolds winemakers revere the area. Peter Gago says the new wine, matured in a combination of new and old French and American oak, comes from several vineyards around Marananga. It’s a big, buoyant wine, flouncing with fruit and oak, the aroma and palate boosted by volatile acidity (winemaker jargon for vinegar). It’s present in all wines in trace amounts, though not normally detectable. A tiny increment in volatile acidity, as Bin 150 illustrates, adds a thrilling dimension to the oak-fruit interplay. Grange creator, Max Schubert, enshrined the practice in Penfolds red wine making, though his successors appear to have backed off (until now).

Bin 389 Cabernet Shiraz 2008 $37.45–$64.99
Bin 389 was originally an extension of the Grange style — big, bold, tannic and matured in American oak — but using cabernet, rather than shiraz as the leading variety. Over the decades fruit sourcing for the cabernet component shifted decisively to the cool southeast and now includes Bordertown, Wrattonbully, Padthaway and Coonawarra. Shiraz continues to come from warm areas. In 2008 we see Bin 389 at its biggest and boldest – led by intense, firm cabernet; filled out by shiraz and flaunting the influence of American oak. These all come through, though, as a single unified flavour, albeit idiosyncratic, in a wine of great power. Bin 389 is best after extended cellaring – ten years and more.

WineRecommended retail $Best advertised $Auction seller’s net price $ 2Auction buyer’s net price $ 3
Penfolds Bin 23 Pinot Noir39.9924.65 122.5028.75
Penfolds Bin 138 Barossa Valley Grenache Shiraz Mourvedre29.9917.5518.9024.15
Penfolds Bin 128 Coonawarra Shiriaz33.9918.4518.0023.00
Penfolds Bin 28 Kalimna South Australia Shiraz33.9918.4518.9024.15
Penfolds Bin 407 South Australia Cabernet Sauvignon54.9933.6523.4029.90
Penfolds Bin 150 Marananga Barossa Valley Shiraz64.9947.90No saleNo sale
Penfolds Bin 389 South Australia Cabernet Shiraz64.9937.4532.4041.40
  1. Glengarry wines, Auckland. Price in Australian dollars. All other prices Dan Murphys.
  2. Last sale of previous vintage, Langton’s Auctions, assumed 10% auctioneer’s commission.
  3. Last sale of previous vintage, Langton’s auctions, including auctioneer’s premium and GST.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

Wine review — Pizzini, Waipara Hills and Paxton

Pizzini King Valley Verduzzo 2010 $20–$22
Verduzzo, a native of north eastern Italy’s Friuli-Venezia Giula region, thrives on the Pizzini family’s vineyards on the river flats of Victoria’s King Valley. It makes full-bodied dry white (although there’s a sweet version, too), with an aroma and taste reminiscent of melon rind and lemon. The fresh, full palate finishes with a pleasant, tart bite, setting it apart from mainstream varieties. It’s fermented mainly in stainless steel tanks at low temperature to capture fresh fruity flavours. But a small component fermented in oak barrels adds subtle complexity and rich texture.

Waipara Hills Equinox Pinot Noir 2009 $27–$30
New Zealand’s Waipara region sits between Christchurch and Marlborough in northern Canterbury. Clearly its long, cool, dry ripening season suits pinot noir. Equinox is a pale to medium in colour, with a bright, youthful crimson hue at the rim. It’s highly aromatic, featuring much of the pinot spectrum: spice, musk, red berries and earthiness. These characters come through, too, on a very fine and elegant, tasty palate. High acidity joins with fine tannins to give structure and a racy, freshness. It’s a wine to enjoy over the next two or three years but seems to lack the length or depth to develop over the long term.

Paxton AAA McLaren Vale Shiraz Grenache 2009 $20–$23
This is an irresistibly slurpable, gentle wine built on vibrant fruit flavours and proven symbiosis of the shiraz-grenache blend. It’s generously flavoured and ripe, as you’d expect from warm McLaren Vale. But there’s nothing heavy, hot or overly tannic about it as we sometimes see from these warmer areas. David Paxton writes that it’s a blend of five parcels of shiraz with three of grenache – ultimately in a ratio of two-thirds shiraz to one-third grenache. The grenache tempers the shiraz, adding fragrant high notes and an attractive spiciness to the fuller earthy, savoury shiraz character.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

 

Wine review — St Hugo, Grossett, McWilliams Mount Pleasant, Chapel Hill, Quinta das Stencostas and Bremerton

Jacob’s Creek St Hugo Cabernet Sauvignon 2007  $33–$50
Coonawarra, South Australia

Cabernet sauvignon has been called the king of grapes; but never the queen. Anthropomorphically speaking, it’s a commanding, manly variety, personified by St Hugo – a solid, square-jawed, broad-shouldered, unapologetic Don Draper of a red, bristling with five-o’clock-shadow tannins. Like Draper, though, it charms with a combination of power, elegance and sweet complexity, underlying a tough, inscrutable surface. Our sample drank well for a week after opening – its deep, sweet, ripe varietal fruit flavour gradually welling up through the firm tannins.

Jeffrey Grosset Gaia 2008 $60
Clare Valley, South Australia

Cabernet sauvignon reveals a feminine side in mixed company – usually its companions from France’s Bordeaux region, cabernet franc and merlot. In Jeffrey Grosset’s Gaia these varieties boost the perfume, create a unique but cabernet-based flavour and mollify the still significant tannins. Where brooding St Hugo leads with tannin and slowly reveals fruit, Gaia dazzles with fruit then follows with deep, velvety tannins. Grosset’s winemaking signature – shimmering, pristine, varietal fruitiness –probably stems from his mastery of riesling, a wine that relies on fruit alone. He transposes that effectively into this generous, graceful, oak-matured, potentially long-lived red.

McWilliams Mount Pleasant Elizabeth Semillon 2010 $11.99–$17.99
Hunter Valley, New South Wales

These days the word “semillon” unaccompanied by “sauvignon blanc” is the wine marketer’s kiss of death. Yet this unloved (on its own) variety performs beautifully in parts of Australia and in the Hunter makes unique, lemony, tart, low-alcohol dry whites capable of prolonged ageing. They’re written about a lot, but remain a niche variety largely, I believe, because of the idiosyncratic, love-it or hate-it flavour. Fortunately for true believers, anti-fashion comes at a discount. So, Elizabeth, one of the oldest and biggest selling of the style is often slashed to around $12. It’s simply delicious in that unique, lemony, tart, bone-dry way.

Chapel Hill Il Vescovo Savagnin 2010 $16–$20
Kangarilla, McLaren Vale, South Australia

Last decade Australian vignerons planted the Spanish white variety albarino, then found that it was actually savagnin, a non-musk clone of traminer. By whatever name, it’s thriving in a variety of sites with makers largely settling on “savagnin” rather than its other synonyms. Chapel Hill’s savagnin grows at Kangarilla, one of McLaren Vale’s cooler, elevated sites, towards the southern boundary of the Adelaide Hills. The flavour’s unique – combining stone fruit, citrus and savouriness in a full, but subtle way. Contact with the skin after crushing and maturation on spent yeast cells added texture and a pleasant tannic tweak to the finish.

Quinta das Setencostas Branco 2009 $10.49–$14.99
Alenquer, Portugal

Until recently we’d not have found this on an Australian retail shelf. But the strong dollar combined with the growing confidence and international knowledge of our big retailers sees them scouring the world for profitable direct imports – like this tasty Portuguese white imported by Coles for its 1st Choice and Vintage Cellars stores. It’s from the Alenquer region, not a household name in Australia, and a blend of ferneo pires, arinto, chardonnay, rabo de ovelha and vital. It’s a medium bodied, bone-dry style with what we might call vinous rather than varietal flavours against a leesy background, with quirky, dry savoury finish. It’s fully priced at $14.99 but very good value during periodic discounts to $10.49.

Bremerton Coulthard Cabernet Sauvignon 2008 $19–$22
Langhorne Creek, South Australia

Langhorne Creek, one of Australia’s biggest and most important winegrowing regions, produces rich, full-flavoured reds economically. Its varietally pure, sumptuous reds, particularly cabernet sauvignon, earned the area’s reputation as Australia’s mid palate – and drove large scale planting there in the 1990s. While the multi-region blends have a role, it’s far more interesting, I believe, to enjoy Langhorne Creek on its own. In this lovely red, winemaker Rebecca Wilson captures the full, ripe flavour of cabernet from her family’s vineyard. It has the region’s thumbprint slurpy, juicy fruit flavours and abundant but velvet tannins.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

Wine review — Grosset, Bleasdale and Tower Estate

Grosset Adelaide Hills

  • Pinot Noir 2009 $66
  • Chardonnay 2009 $53

Jeffrey Grosset is best known as a producer of pristine Clare Valley rieslings – wines made protectively to display fruit, fruit and nothing but fruit. This mastery of riesling making shows, too, in the intensity and varietal purity of his pinot noir and chardonnay – barrel aged wines that we might expect to reveal significant winemaker inputs. Sip through the wines over a couple of days, and the winemaking textures and complexities emerge. But shimmering fruit remains always at the front. Both come from the cool Adelaide Hills (to the south of Clare on the same Mount Lofty Ranges).

Bleasdale Langhorne Creek Potts’ Catch Verdelho 2010 $16–$18
The Potts family say that verdelho was one of the first varieties planted in their vineyards back in nineteenth century. It thrives there. And while probably originally planted to make fortified wine (as it does in Madeira), verdelho retains good acidity in this warm region, endearing itself as a variety for dry white wines. The aroma’s of tropical fruit, with an appealing sappy undertone – characters that come through on a fresh and fruity drink-now palate. The vineyard, established by Frank Potts in 1850, is on the Bremer River flood plain near Lake Alexandrina, South Australia.

Tower Estate Adelaide Hills Pinot Gris $22–$25
Samantha Connew took over winemaking at the Hunter’s Tower Estate in 2010, following ten brilliant years at Wirra Wirra, McLaren Vale. Connew’s arrival coincided with Tower’s belated but welcome shift to screw cap seals – a tremendous boon for all of their wines, but especially for vibrant, fresh whites like this, their second pinot gris from young vines in the Adelaide Hills. The wine presents a zesty, citrusy freshness with subtle pear-like varietal flavour and just a trace of the rich texture (but not the oiliness or viscosity) often seen in some expressions of the variety.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

 

Wine review — Louee Wines, Yering Station, Jacob’s Creek, Paxton, Innocent Bystander and Terra a Terre

Louee Nullo Mountain Riesling 2010 $25
Rylstone, New South Wales

It’s just 50 kilometres from Mudgee (450 metres) but Nullo Mountain vineyard sits at 1,100 metres. At that altitude grapes develop varietal flavour at low sugar levels while retaining spine-tingling acidity that’d make a German vigneron smile. Over at Mudgee David Lowe helps these wonderful grapes become intense, delicate, low-alcohol wines. There’s the brisk, lemony, 10.5 per cent alcohol, bone-dry version made for the long haul but wonderful now, too. And there’s the sinfully pleasurable 12-per-cent alcohol late-picked version – lush and sweet, combining lemony varietal flavour with apricot-like tang of botrytis and drying, cleansing acidity.

Yering Station Shiraz Viognier 2008 $28
Yarra Valley, Victoria

Alcohol in red wine is a hot topic. But it’s surprising how little a wine’s alcohol content tells you about its aroma, flavour or structure. For example, this cool-climate shiraz is a world apart from the warm-grown Jacob’s Creek Barossa wine reviewed here today. Yet both weigh in at 14.5 per cent alcohol. For Yering Station, that’s partly the result of a hot vintage. But even so it’s a cool-climate shiraz to its boots – concentrated, for sure, but medium bodied, spicy and peppery with a supple and soft but still tannic palate.

Jacob’s Creek Centenary Hill Shiraz 2006 $60
Jacob’s Creek and Rowland Flat, Barossa Valley, South Australia

A decade ago, with an eye to evolving markets, Jacob’s Creek introduced a “reserve” range. About five years later they added to the brand several super premium wines that’d lived under other Orlando labels. Appropriately that included the flagship Centenary Hill shiraz sourced from three old shiraz blocks on Jacob’s Creek (yes, it really exists) and an old block at nearby Rowland Flat. The 2006 is a highly aromatic wine combining the immense power and chocolaty richness of Barossa shiraz with an attractive spicy overlay, probably resulting from cool breezes flowing down the creek.

Paxton Tempranillo 2009 $23
Thomas Block and Landcross Farm vineyards, McLaren Vale, South Australia

Yum. Very drinkable. And surprising for warm McLaren Vale, Paxton Tempranillo tastes ripe but weighs in at just 12 per cent alcohol – a rare feat in Australia.  Our makers generally sweat on flavour ripeness as sugar levels (and hence potential alcohol levels) climb ever higher. David Paxton says the wine underwent extended maceration on skins to build structure and flavour. Maturation in older barrels gave mellowness but not obvious oak flavour. The style is medium bodied and soft featuring sweet but savoury berry flavours.

Innocent Bystander Pinot Gris 2010 $19
Yarra Valley, Victoria

Innocent Bystander’s latest pinot gris offers fresh and pure, if subtle, pear-like varietal character, backed by a fine, silky textural richness. This textural richness comes from maturation on yeast lees both in tank and in older oak barrels – executed so well that there’s no overt oakiness. Without the texture there might be little to the wine. But the combination of subtle flavour and rich texture add up to a very enjoyable drink. The grapes come from the cool upper Yarra Valley.

Terra a Terre Sauvignon Blanc 2010 $25
Wrattonbully, South Australia

Ah, no, not another bloody sauv blanc. Bloody cat’s pee. Whoa, hold on. Oh, ahhh, mmmm. Wow. This is Lucy Croser’s and Xavier Bizot’s Australian take on a sauvignon blanc style made by leading small makers in Sancerre, France. It’s barrel fermented and matured in a way that builds texture and body and mutes varietal exuberance while retaining an exciting acid-driven vivacity. Terre a Terre may mean down to earth. But this is heavenly stuff (for sauv blanc) from a daughter of Brian Croser (founder of Petaluma and Tapanappa) and a scion of France’s Bollinger family. These two have wine in the veins.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011

Wine review — Alinga, Louee Wines and McKellar Ridge

Louee Nullo Mountain Pinot Grigio 2010 $25

Louee Wines, established in 1996 by Rod James and Tony Maxwell, has two vineyards at Rylstone, near Mudgee – one on Nullo Mountain at an altitude of about 1100 metres. This high, cool site produces intensely flavoured whites with a strong but delicate spine of acid. This accentuates the vivid varietal flavour in the 11-per-cent-alcohol pinot gris and sharpens up the clean, bone-dry refreshing finish. Last year Louee Wines merged with David Lowe Wines of Mudgee. Lowe, a Hunter veteran, excels at making this low alcohol, high acid, slow maturing style of white.

McKellar Ridge Canberra District

  • Shiraz Viognier 2009 $26-$28
  • Trio Cabernet Sauvignon Cabernet Franc Merlot 2009 $26-$28

Brian and Janet Johnston make just 600 cases of wine each year. They are truly handmade – hand picked from their 650-metre altitude Point of View vineyard and hand plunged. Their ‘Trio’, combining three of the Bordeaux varieties, seems a bit bigger a broodier than earlier vintages – a solid, deeply fruity wine with assertive tannin but nevertheless elegant structure. In a similar solid vein, the 2009 shiraz viognier blend seems particularly ripe and full (in the fine-boned Canberra context) with noticeable seam of oak flavours through the fruit. These are excellent wines but need another few months in bottle before drinking.

Alinga Four Winds Vineyard Canberra District

  • Chardonnay 2009 $17
  • Shiraz 2008 $19

The Lunney family planted their 13-hectare Four Winds vineyard at Murrumbateman in 1998 during BRL Hardy’s push into the region. Indeed, daughter Jaime Lunney worked two Canberra vintages with Hardys and now makes the family wines. The unoaked chardonnay, sourced from Four Winds and other Canberra vineyards offers a great big gob full of ripe melon-and-peach chardonnay flavours – a simple, generous, fruity and fresh wine. The estate-grown shiraz is just lovely, and great value. It’s in the elegant, refined Canberra style – limpid colour; bright and ripe berry fruit underlying spicy and savoury characters; and a juicy, easy-drinking medium-bodied palate.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2011