Category Archives: Wine review

Wine review — Mistletoe, Bowen Estate & Bidgebong

Mistletoe Hunter Valley Home Vineyard Semillon 2008 $18 & Broke Verdelho 2008 $18; Tulloch Hunter Semillon WA Sauvignon Blanc 2008 $16
These are the first three 2008 whites to hit the tasting bench. Mistletoe’s semillon, at 9.5 per cent alcohol, has the tangy, face-twisting, eye-watering impact of fresh grapefruit – an oddity at present but one that’ll no doubt be mollified by time and sit well with fresh fish and lemon. Their verdelho, though, is juicy, sappy, fresh and ready to enjoy now. It’s from a single vineyard at Broke, one Valley over from Pokolbin. Tulloch’s Hunter-Western Australia blend is another low-alcohol drop at 10.5 per cent. It’s on the lean, herbal side of sauv blanc and seems to rely on a bit of residual sugar to fill out the palate – it’s fair value at $16.

Bowen Estate Coonawarra Shiraz 2006 $28.20, Cabernet Sauvignon 2006 $28.20, Chardonnay 2007 $20.30
Bowen’s new chardonnay shows melon-like variety flavour, barrel influence and has the slightly fat, sweet finish typical of the Aussie style. It’ll be a handy cellar door wine, but not one to stand out in the retail world. The reds, however, hit the excitement button and I wonder if, perhaps, we’re seeing the influence of new generation Emma Bowen, daughter of founders Doug and Joy Bowen. The shiraz is sensational with its bright berry fruit, elegant structure and velvety, smooth texture – the best for years in my view. The cabernet impresses, too. It’s got some leafy notes, but they’re just seasoning to a substantial and satisfying Coonawarra classic.

Bidgeebong Icon Series Tumbarumba Chardonnay 2006 $34, Gundagai Shiraz 2005 $22
Bidgeebong’s Icon Series 2006 gives some of our $60-plus chardonnays a run for their money. It’s a finely sculpted, pale, dry style showing the class of high, cool Tumbarumba – it’s lean, taut and dry but rich and smooth at the same time, with years of cellaring ahead. Watch Tumbarumba it’s taking off in its own right and moving away from its past as source of premium blending material for the big companies. Winemakers Andrew Birks and Keiran Spencer have come up with another winner, too, in the rich, plummy, supple and savoury Gundagai Shiraz – a bargain. But one query gentleman – what’s with the daggy labels?

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Sipping from the top shelf — Aussie wines that came our way

We recently lined up a dozen top-shelf Aussie reds in a Chateau Shanahan masked tasting. There were just two of us at the bench – forming our judgments without discussion, then, at the end of each bracket comparing our impressions, and later unmasking the bottles.

In the few days following the sip-and-spit tasting, we consumed the bottles over various meals to see how they held up in real life. We include these impressions in the notes below.

We don’t pretend that the wines in the tasting are a true cross section of top-end Australia. They were just samples of new-release wines that’d come our way in the week or two before the tasting – and include old favourites as well as two new faces.

Eden Road Two Trees Grenache Shiraz 2006 $75 (screw cap)
A 50:50 blend of grenache and shiraz, 89 per cent from the Eden Valley with a small amount of grenache from the Clare Valley and shiraz from Colbinabbin, Heathcote. 300 dozen produced.

Along with the Eden Road V06 shiraz below, this is a first release from Canberra based Cooper Coffman Wine Company. It’s based on very low yielding, very old vines, lending some credibility to the hefty price tag. It’s a juicy, opulent wine showing distinctive jube-like grenache flavour mingling with liquorice-like character of Eden Valley shiraz. There’s a touch of porty ripeness and alcoholic warmth. But it’s balanced and easily passed the ‘bottle test’ – the leftovers from the masked tasting drank beautifully to the last drop a few days after the tasting.

Eden Road V06 Shiraz 2006 $220 (screw cap)
Sourced from a block of shiraz vines, planted in the 1890s, on Cooper Coffman’s Eden Valley vineyard. The vines yielded just 1.2 tonnes to the hectare in 2006 from which Martin Cooper made 300 dozen of.
Putting the price aside for a moment, this is a buoyant and fragrant, supple and generous, soft and elegant, pure shiraz of a very high calibre. Martin Cooper says most of the small production is to be hand sold in export markets, so discussion of the $220 price tag may prove academic.

Jacob’s Creek Centenary Hill Barossa Valley Shiraz 2003 $42 (cork)
Produced from the Willandra Vineyard and other old sites along Jacob’s Creek, Southern Barossa Valley.
There’s some terrific fruit at the heart of this wine from the difficult 2003 vintage. But there seemed to be a battle between the fruit and the oak – and the oak won. We tried to like it, but even at a post-tasting meal we couldn’t get past the intrusive oak.

Penfolds Magill Estate Shiraz 2005 $100 (cork)
Sourced from blocks 1, 2 and 3 of the Penfolds Magill Vineyard, Adelaide.
This is the wine that saved the historic Magill site from sale and subdivision. On 9 October 1982 retired Grange creator, Max Schubert, hand wrote for the Adsteam board (then owners of Penfolds) a six foolscap page proposal (never published) of what the wine should be like, how to make it and the economics of doing so. Max’s proposal began with this description of the wine that he envisage: ‘To make a French Chateau style red wine, distinctly different to the Grange Hermitage style, in that body weight and colour would be approximately half that of Grange, whilst aroma, flavour and character would be individual and pronounced’.

The board endorsed Max’s proposal and Penfolds made the first Magill Estate wine in 1983. Over the years Magill developed a bit more weight than Max had originally envisaged. This was essential fine-tuning of the style as the early vintages proved to be a little too lean. But it remains distinctive and has an elegance that I’m sure would’ve pleased Max.

In our tasting the 2005 showed ripe but spicy varietal character that we associate more with cool areas, not sunbaked suburban Adelaide. The ripe, spicy fruit interplayed beautifully with spicy oak, creating one of the most enjoyable wines of the tasting – one that slipped down pleasurably over the next few days.

Grant Burge Meshach 2003 $120 (cork)
Sourced principally from old vines on Grant Burge’s Filsell vineyard, located between Lyndoch and Williamstown, southern Barossa Valley, supplemented with fruit from other 100-plus-year-old vines.
Reflecting the warm year and the region, this is a big, ripe and porty wine. But like it’s southern Barossa neighbour, Centenary Hill Shiraz above, the oak outweighed the fruit. Remarkably, the wine looks better now, three days after opening – suggesting that it’ll age for many years. But it’s not, to my taste, one of the better vintages of Meshach.

Penfolds St Henri Shiraz 2004 $90 (cork)
Sourced from the Barossa Valley, Langhorne Creek and the Adelaide Hills. Unlike the other Penfolds reds, matured in large old oak vats – no new oak, no small barrels.

For a while St Henri hid behind the comparatively oaky wines in the tasting. But its appeal grew with each sip. It’s all about ripe, dense, round, soft pure shiraz. From experience St Henri’s at its best beyond ten years of age – and therein lies my caveat. Why, oh why, dear Penfolds winemakers when you bottled it, in the age of the screw cap, did you put such a crappy little cork in it? St Henri and your customers deserve better than this.

Penfolds RWT Barossa Valley Shiraz 2005 $160 (cork)
Made from Barossa shiraz selected for opulence and fleshiness.
The first vintage in 1997 was lovely, the second in 1998 remains the best Barossa shiraz I’ve tasted. And the 2005 isn’t far behind. It’s fragrant, generous and fleshy with bright, varietal fruit flavours that mesh perfectly with the high quality French oak. This is a superior wine.

Brown Brothers Patricia Shiraz 2004 $54 (cork)
Fruit sources: 33 per cent Brown Brothers’ Heathcote vineyard; 33 per cent Dinning’s Vineyard, King Valley; 34 per cent Glenkara vineyard, Western Victoria.

I suspect a poor cork might’ve let Patricia down, muting the fruit and allowing oak and tannin to take over and dry the wine out. We’ll try another bottle some time.

Penfolds Bin 707 Cabernet Sauvignon 2005 $175 (screw cap)
Fruit source: Barossa Valley (including Kalimna Vineyard Block 42), Coonawarra and Padthaway.
They call it ‘Grange cabernet’ and there’s a strong family resemblance in the dense colour and combined flavour of sweet American oak and powerful fruit. Of course, the flavour and structure is cabernet, not shiraz. It gets a bit of stick from other winemakers these days because of the American oak. But to me it works and gives the wine its distinctive thumbprint. Like Grange, it begins to hit its straps at about fifteen years of age. By then its showing cabernet’s elegance and fragrance with deep, sweet, underlying fruit. The elements are all there now in the outstanding 2005. But it really isn’t meant for current drinking. Its cellaring record makes it a great long-term ‘memento’ wine.

Jacob’s Creek St Hugo Coonawarra Cabernet Sauvignon 2004 $42 (cork)
Source: Coonawarra, principally the northern end.
This was our value-for-money pick of the tasting. It’s classic Coonawarra cabernet, featuring power with elegance and textbook cabernet flavour (ripe berries with a leafy edge) and structure (firm but not hard). Its perfume and flavour blossomed during the tasting and the bottle drank well three days later. Unlike the Bin 707, St Hugo provides outstanding drinking now. It will probably evolve well for another five or six years at least.

Grant Burge Shadrach Barossa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2005 $55 (cork)
Fruit source: Grant Burge’s Corryton Park Vineyard, on the slopes of Mount Crawford, Eden Valley, plus very rich fruit from several smaller Barossa Vineyards.

First impressions were of a simpler wine, with ripe, varietal aroma and a brisk but earthy, chocolate-rich palate. While it lacked the immediate appeal of the St Hugo, the flavours built over time. It’s a solid, complex cabernet with its best drinking four or five years away.

Cape Mentelle Margaret River Cabernet Sauvignon 2004 $85 (cork)
Fruit source: Cape Mentelle’s Wallcliffe Vineyard, Margaret River.
It’s a wine with a big reputation but I suspect a dodgy cork took the edge off our sample. It wasn’t corked, but there was a dusty smelling hint and then a very dry finish that didn’t fit with the otherwise beautiful fruit. We’ll hold judgement until we try another bottle.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Wine review — Ravensworth

Ravensworth Canberra District Marsanne 2007 $22–$25
Ravensworth Canberra District Viognier 2007 $25–$28

These white Rhone Valley varieties love Canberra growing conditions. Viognier carved its niche here, both in its own right and as an adjunct to shiraz, a decade ago. But marsanne emerged only recently in a series of excellent wines from Bryan and Jocelyn Martin’s Rosehill Vineyard, Murrumbateman, planted in 2000. Both wines undergo spontaneous fermentation in oak barrels, where the combination of wild yeasts and oxidative environment add substantially to the texture and subtly to aroma and flavour. The viognier’s big but fine with distinctive apricot-like varietal flavour. The marsanne somewhat more subdued though still tending to a velvety richness.

Ravensworth Canberra District Sangiovese 2007 $22–$25
Ravensworth Hunter Valley Shiraz 2007 $25–$28

Bryan Martin planted sangiovese on his Murrumbateman vineyard in 2000. Like the marsanne described above, sangiovese was little known in the district at the time but, on the strength of those under Ravenswood label, appears to be well suited to the area. The 2007 seems the strongest yet, with a wonderful, savoury fragrance and a taut, fine palate, reminiscent of fine Chianti. Hunter shiraz in Canberra? Why not? Bryan bought a parcel of grapes from Pokolbin and used ‘Canberra shiraz’ techniques to make it. It’s a deeply coloured wine with, purely varietal in aroma and flavour and featuring the Hunter’s very soft, easy-on-the-gums tannins.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Wine review — Majella, Le Jardin Francaise, Les Nuages & Henry Pelé

Majella Coonawarra The Musician Cabernet Shiraz 2007 $17
This is a sensational red that really couldn’t have come from anywhere but Coonawarra – a blend of seventy per cent cabernet and thirty per cent shiraz from Prof and Tony Lynn’s Majella vineyard. Winemaker Bruce Gregory says the cabernet comes mainly from younger vines (a little over ten years old) and the shiraz from old vines. Unlike Majella’s sturdier, more expensive reds, the Musician finishes its ferment in tanks, not oak, and spends less time undergoing oak maturation. This treatment retains the stunning cabernet aromatics and bright fruit flavours. Shiraz subtly fleshes out the palate of a stunningly vibrant, elegant, medium-bodied red that’s made for early drinking. See www.majellawines.com.au

Le Jardin Francais Bordeaux Sauvignon Blanc 2007 $25
Cooper Coffman Wine Company, based at Elvin Group’s Kamberra wine centre, imports this wine from Bordeaux’s Entre-Deux-Mers sub-region. It’s a collaboration between French winemaker, Julien Mette, and Cooper Coffman’s winemaker, Martin Cooper. The Aussie influence can be seen in the beautifully clean, fresh fruit character, preserved by a screw cap. The fruit flavour, of course is all French – delicate and fresh, and displaying a spectrum of sauvignon blanc varietal flavours, leaning towards tropical, but with some herbal notes. It’s not too lean on the palate, as some sauvies tend to be, but it’s also truly dry and light.

Les Nuages Loire Sauvignon Blanc 2006 $13–$15
Menetou Salon (Henry Pellé) 2006 $22–$25

Coles imports these two wines from the Loire Valley, France, and sells them through their Vintage Cellars and 1st Choice outlets. The first, from the Touraine district, has a distinctly un-sauvignon, but appealing, floral aroma and a light, crisp, dry palate with fresh, apple-like flavour in the finish. It’s pleasant and restrained and a world removed from Marlborough sauv blanc. Menetou Salon, a small village near Sancerre (eastern Loire), has long been a producer of racy, delicate, taut sauvignons reflecting the very cool climate. This is a terrific example of the style, perhaps the first to be seen in Canberra for a decade or more.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Wine review — Centennial Vineyards, Tertini & Jeir Creek

Centennial Vineyards Woodside Tempranillo 2006 $20.99
Centennial Vineyards Sparkling Tempranillo Rosé $24.99

Centennial Vineyards is a substantial Southern Highlands grower, maker and exporter with an impressive cellar door facility. Of its Southern-Highlands-grown wines, these two, made from the Spanish red variety, tempranillo, appeal. The red offers attractive ripe-berry aromas and a tasty, fruity palate that becomes more savoury after a few sips. The tight structure comes from lively acidity and fine, savoury, drying tannins. The rosé sparkler has a light pink, tending to onionskin, colour. It’s very clean, bright, dry and refreshing – a style that slips down easily, partly because of its fairly neutral aroma and flavour. See www.centennial.net.au

Tertini Crossroads Pinot Noir 2006 $18
Tertini exhibited all three of its Southern-Highland-grown pinots – Crossroads, 1855 and Tertini + Night – at last year’s regional wine show. The judges rated Crossroads, the cheapest of the trio, as best and awarded it a silver medal. Long term the judges’ verdict may not hold. It’ll be interesting to try the other two when they’re released. But in the meantime watch for the release of Crossroads 2006 in June. It’s a delicious pinot for $18, delivering some of the variety’s juicy flavour and fine, silky texture. As Tertini is a new company with limited distribution, see www.tertiniwines.com.au for news of the Crossroads release.

Jeir Creek Canberra District Shiraz Viognier 2005 $25
Jeir Creek Canberra District Sparkling Shiraz Viognier 2005 $28

Increasingly we’re seeing the strength of shiraz, with or without viognier, in our region. This one’s a husband and wife effort from the Jeir Creek vineyard, near Murrumbateman. Kay Howell tends the vineyard; husband Rob makes the wine. It’s in the aromatic, fine-boned, medium-bodied district style and features the distinct pepper and spice flavours of cool-grown shiraz. It’ll probably be at its best over the next two or three years. The peppery cool-climate shiraz character shows up, too, in the sparkler, but I don’t think it’s as successful as the still version. Visit cellar door or see www.jeircreekwines.com.au

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Wine review — Wolf Blass Grey, Black and Platinum labels

Wolf Blass Grey Label McLaren Vale Shiraz 2006 $30–$40
Wolf Blass Grey Label Langhorne Creek Cabernet Sauvignon 2006 $30–$40

They’re not quite peas from the same pod, but there’s a strong family resemblance across the new-release Wolf Blass reds. They’ve a pure, rich fruit flavour and a juicy, silky texture and softness that contrasts, for example, with the firmer Penfolds style from the same company, Fosters. But there are big differences as well, driven largely by region and grape variety. The shiraz is rich, ripe and soft, but it has typical McLaren Vale savouriness, too. The cabernet is pure varietal and shows two peculiar but loveable Langhorne Creek traits – a distinct mint-like aroma and an unusually fleshy, dense palate for this variety.

Wolf Blass Black Label Cabernet Shiraz Malbec $130
Black label emerged as Blass’s flagship after winning the Jimmy Watson trophy in the early seventies. Those earlier vintages seemed very oaky at the time, but tasted terrific in a thirty-vintage line up two years ago. The style now features more intense, pure fruit character and less obvious oak. That’s partly attributable, says Foster’s Chief Winemaker, Chris Hatcher, to the better grapes available today and, in turn, less need to ‘build’ the wine with oak – although maturation in new oak remains a key element. The 2004, a Langhorne Creek-Barossa-McLaren Vale blend is an extraordinarily powerful but well-balanced drop built for long cellaring.

Wolf Blass Platinum Label Barossa Shiraz 2005 $160
Like the Black Label above, Platinum makes a good ‘memento’ wine – a red to cellar long term for that special occasion – but without the price tag of a Penfolds Grange or Henschke Hill of Grace. Caroline Dunn makes Platinum (and all the reds reviewed here) in the Wolf Blass northern Barossa winery. Platinum’s labelled Barossa, but comes predominantly from a single vineyard in the elevated, cooler Eden Valley (part of the Barossa). While the wine has a ripe, silky richness and huge flavour concentration, its Eden Valley origins show in a beautiful fragrance and elegant structure.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Wine review — Murray Street Vineyards

Murray Street Vineyards Barossa Valley Shiraz 2005 $30 and Barossa Valley Shiraz Grenache Cinsault Mataro 2005 $30
From a distance the Barossa might seem like one, big, homogenous region, churning out rich, warm, soft shiraz. There’s a grain of truth in the generalisation. But it’s a complex valley of varying landscapes, producing a diversity of styles within that generally big, ripe, soft mould. These two juicy reds provide a glimpse of that diversity – of ripe, generous, pure shiraz with its plush fruit and tender tannins; and of shiraz tempered with grenache, cinsault and mataro. These add exotic aromatic notes and a ripe jube-like fruitiness as well as a slightly more grippy structure.

MSV Gomersal Shiraz 2005 $50 and Greenock Shiraz 2005 $50
Go to maps.google.com, search ‘Gomersal Barossa Valley Australia’ and you’ll see Gomersal and Greenock, slightly to the north, as sub-regions of the Western Barossa. Follow the line north and you’ll move through Seppeltsfield and into ‘Grange country’ around Koonunga Hill and Kalimna – all wonderful wine country, producing some of the best reds in the Valley. These two reds, made by Andrew Seppelt, express subtly different characters of the Western Barossa – a plump, dense, soft style from Gomersal and a firmer, more savoury version from Greenock. These are full-bodied wines offering a juicy, youthful richness now. But they have the depth to cellar for many years.

MSV Benno Shiraz Mataro 2004 $75
Winemaker Andrew Seppelt isn’t in the Western Barossa my accident. This is where the Seppelt family settled in the nineteenth century and Andrew’s now located at Greenock just a little south of Seppeltsfield. This wine honours Andrew’s great-great grandfather, Benno Seppelt, ‘a pioneer of grape growing and winemaking on the Western Ridge of the Barossa’.  Benno combines almost equal proportions of shiraz and mataro (the preferred local name for mourvedre). It’s seductively fragrant, opulent and supple with layers of fruit, tannin and spice – darker and more powerful than the straight shirazes reviewed above, but still part of the family. Available through www.murraystreet.com.au and selected fine wine outlets.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Wine review — Giesen, Mitolo & Murdock

Giesen Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc 2007 $14–$20
Giesen sources its fruit from a diversity of vineyards across the Marlborough district. This has an impact on flavour as the area is far from homogenous and produces a spectrum of sauvignon flavours, ranging from cat’s-pee pungent to sweet, tropical-fruit. The 2007 leans more to a ripe, highly aromatic passionfruit-like character, with herbal and pungent notes spicing up the background. Typical of Marlborough, there’s juicy mid-palate richness cut by a bracing, refreshing acidity. It’s widely distributed in Australia with sufficient presence to attract retailer discounting. It’s good value even when fully priced and a bargain when it hits  $14 or so.

Mitolo McLaren Vale Jester Shiraz 2006 & Jester Cabernet Sauvignon 2006 $24–$28
The Mitolo brand arrived out of the blue in 1999, combining the viticultural and winemaking talents of Frank Mitolo and Ben Glaetzer respectively. The new releases are delicious regional specialties sourced from Frank’s vineyards at Willunga, at the southern end of the Vale. The shiraz is absolutely scrumptious. It’s full and ripe and soft, as warm climate shiraz ought to be. But it’s also savoury and complex without the jammy fruit sweetness sometimes seen in warm-area reds. The cabernet is idiosyncratic – pure and fruity, with an unusually fleshy palate, derived says the press release, from drying the fruit on racks for weeks prior to fermentation, a-la Verona’s Amarone method.

Murdock Coonawarra Cabernet Sauvignon 2003 $42, Merlot 2005 $23
‘The Merger’ 2005 $18.50

Former Wynns’ viticulturist David Murdock tends the family vineyards in Coonawarra (planted 1973) and the Barossa (planted 1982) before handing the grapes over to Peter Bissell at Balnaves, Coonawarra, for winemaking. The cabernet is a beautiful, classically Coonawarra wine – strong yet elegant and best after years of bottle ageing. The current release 2003, for example, should drink well for decades. If you thought Aussie merlot had little going for it, try Murdock’s 2005 – it captures the fragrance, elegance and taut structure this great, but usually blended, variety. ‘The Merger’ tempers the fruity generosity of Barossa shiraz with firm, powerful Coonawarra cabernet. See www.murdockwines.com

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Wine review — Wirra Wirra, Hanging Rock & Lou Miranda

Wirra Wirra McLaren Vale Church Block $18–$22
We won’t hold it against Church Block that it’s named for a particular vineyard but not sourced from it. Its saving grace is the rich flavour that it delivers and the smooth, soft finish. We’re also in a forgiving mood because that richness and smoothness really does come from McLaren-sourced grapes – from a number of vineyards sprinkled through the district. It’s a bright-fruited, thoroughly modern-style blend of cabernet, shiraz and merlot. But it also has the structure of a real red and on a recent road test it held our interest to the last drop. Samantha Connew made it for drinking over the next four or five years.

Hanging Rock Macedon Ranges Jim Jim Vineyard
Sauvignon Blanc 2007, Pinot Gris 2007, RS Fifty Riesling 2007 $27

These are very delicate, intense whites from Hanging Rock’s cold, south facing Jim Jim Vineyard at 650 metres above sea level. The cool site produces aromatic whites with a flavour spectrum not often seen in Australia. The sauvignon blanc is on the minerally, lean, dry side with a pronounced acidity like a delicious, ultra fresh granny smith. The pinot gris is weighty for the variety and smoothly textured but still has a fine acid edge. The riesling is a baby – and a very promising one. It’s only nine per cent alcohol and contains fifty grams per litre of residual sugar – in the classic German dessert style, complete with the high acidity to carry this level of sweetness.

Lou Miranda Old Vines Barossa Valley Shiraz 2005 $25.95
Some years back I walked with Lou Miranda amongst the lovely old bush vines on the Miranda family’s vineyard at Rowland Flat. The family later sold up, but Lou hung onto the old vines (now 90–100 years old) and recently released this wonderful red made from their tiny crop. This is a modest price for a wine of this calibre and provenance. And it’s unapologetically, big, bold Barossa. Tasted at a crowded, noisy, dinner party amongst many other reds, it was the first to disappear. People loved its ripe, rich, juicy flavour and soft, easy tannins. An English guest soaked off the label as a shopping reminder. If you’re reading this Robert, just visit the website – www.loumiranda.com.au

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Wine review — Constable Hershon, Briar Ridge & Kooyong

Constable Hershon Hunter Valley Semillon 2004 $14.80-$18.50
On a recent trip to Newcastle I found several local wines available by the glass at Terminal One Bar + Dine, on the harbour foreshore. The locals apparently know Constable Hershon well. But as this tiny Pokolbin-based winery sells most of its wine at cellar door, and the balance through restaurants, it’s not well known. It’s a delicious drop, in the delicate, slightly austere, low-alcohol Hunter mould. While bottle age adds richness, it’s still trim, taut and bone dry with lime-like varietal flavour and fine acid tang. The lightness and bracing edge made it a refreshing match with a rocket, prosciutto and Parmesan salad. It’s available at www.constablevineyards.com.au.

Briar Ridge ‘Stockhausen’ Hunter Valley Shiraz 2006 $29
Briar Ridge, located at Mount View in the lower Hunter, named its flagship red after former Lindemans winemaker, Karl Stockhausen. Karl made his first wines in the area in 1960, has the legendary Lindemans 1970 Chablis to his credit, and today consults to Briar Ridge’s winemaker, Mark Woods. This is a full-bodied style for a Hunter shiraz. But at 13.5 per cent alcohol it’s not in the monster-mould 15 per cent range that we see in many Aussie shirazes. It’s warm and rich and soft and very ripe tasting. But there’s a savouriness and earthiness to it as well. See www.briarridge.com.au.

Kooyong Mornington Peninsula Pinot Noir 2006 $34-$40
Kooyong’s rise to the front ranks of Australian pinot noir and chardonnay making has been extraordinary. It’s a must-try for pinot lovers and a must-visit if you’re down Mornington way. Along with Port Phillip Estate, it’s owned by the Gjergja family and can be tasted at Port Phillip’s cellar door. It’s been a Chateau Shanahan favourite for a few years now because it delivers the real pinot experience at a modest (for pinot) price. A few weeks back the 2006 compared favourably, in a youthful way, to a glorious, mature 1990 Claude Dugat Gevrey Chambertin (Burgundy) from Rob and Sandy Forbes’ cellar.  It’s available at fine wine stores and cellar door.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008