Category Archives: Wine review

Wine review — McKellar Ridge, Jacob’s Creek Steingarten, Stefano Lubiano and Tower

McKellar Ridge Canberra District Shiraz Viognier 2006 $22-$24
Brian and Janet Johnston’s McKellar Ridge is a tiny operation focusing on small parcels of high quality Canberra district fruit. The wines have always been good. But this latest release, to my taste, does away with a few little blemishes that kept earlier vintages out of the top ranks. In the past I thought that the oak intruded slightly on what were otherwise very fine-boned wines. But what we see in the 2006 is the pure, lovely fragrance and flavour and supple, smooth texture of cool-grown shiraz. Brian sourced the grapes from Martin Susans’ Murrumbateman vineyard and made the wine using traditional techniques. See www.mckellarridgewines.com.au

Jacob’s Creek Steingarten Riesling 2005 $28
In 1962 Orlando’s Colin Gramp planted the Steingarten vineyard on a high, exposed ridge a few kilometres to the east of his family’s historic homestead on Jacob’s Creek. The vineyard struggled but produced a number of long-lived rieslings over the years.  By the time Steingarten shifted from Orlando to Jacob’s Creek branding a couple of years back, it had become a blend of material from Steingarten and other nearby vineyards. The just-released 2005 seems to mark a style shift for Steingarten – away from austerity and towards softness and more easy drinkability when young. The makers have done this beautifully. It’s a magnificent, delicate drop now but has very long-term cellaring potential, too.

Stefano Lubiano Tasmania Pinot Noir 2005 $52
Tower Tasmania Pinot Noir $58

Some time back I reviewed Stefano Lubiano’s Primavera Pinot Noir – as the name suggests a fresh and youthful expression of the variety. This is a more sophisticated drop, showing the depth of a superior vintage with ripe varietal definition, layered, soft tannin structure and complexity. It’s a wine that intrigues and holds your interest from first sip til last and ought to develop with five or six years bottle age. Hunter based Tower, founded by the late Len Evans, makes regional specialties from around Australia. I think Len would’ve loved this, the last vintage fermented at Tower before his death last August. Tassie’s cool climate shows in the wine’s intense, delicate flavour and very fine-boned structure.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2008

Wine review — Pol Roger, La Chablisienne, Madfish, Clos Pierre & PHI

Pol Roger Champagne Brut NV $54-$65 & Vintage 1998 $80-$100
As the world’s most famous wine region struggles to meet demand for its product – around 330 million bottles annually – the Christmas scene remains wonderfully competitive, if volatile. Last week, for example, the value buys, to my taste, were Pol Roger NV and 1998 vintage at  $53.90 and $79.90 respectively, down $10 to $20 a bottle on their regular prices. The NV is slightly deeper coloured than the vintage version, with round, soft palate and delicate, crisp finish. The pale, bright-coloured 1998, though, captures all of Champagne’s magic – a unique combination of intense, delicate flavour, balancing pinot noir’s power and backbone with chardonnay’s ethereal elegance.

La Chablisienne Chablis 2005 $29.99
& Chablis Premier Cru Cote de Lechet 2002 $47.99

Like the Champagne region, Chablis offers just one, highly distinctive regional specialty. In Champagne, at a cold 49-degrees north, it’s delicate bubblies made from pinot and chardonnay; in Chablis, just two degrees to the south it’s bone-dry, delicate chardonnay – perhaps the most recognisable chardonnay in the world. It’s the northernmost point of Burgundy but, thankfully, its whites don’t fetch the heady prices of those made to the south. In this pair from the La Chablisienne cooperative we see two brilliant variations on the regional theme – the fresh, textbook-Chablis 2005 and the slowly maturing, deeper, more complex version from the Cote de Lechet vineyard. Imported by Coles and available at 1st Choice and Vintage Cellars.

Madfish Western Australia Pinot Noir 2006 $19
Clos Pierre Reserve Yarra Valley Pinot Noir 2006 $29.99
PHI Yarra Valley Pinot Noir 2006 $54

It’s not hard to find a good Aussie pinot these days. And it’s such a wonderful Christmas drink. But the starting price for good examples is a little higher than it is for shiraz or cabernet. Two sub-$20 versions that measure up are DeBortoli Windy Peak Victoria 2007, and a tad more mature, Madfish WA 2006 (available only at cellar door). For another $10, Close Pierre Reserve 2006, made for Woolies’ Dan Murphy outlets by Burgundian Pierre Naigeon, is twice as good, in my opinion, and an absolute bargain. Kooyong Mornington Peninsular Estate 2005 is exciting at around $40 and PHI 2006 at $54 is one that grows in interest with every sip.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Chateau Shanahan tastes Oz and Kiwi pinots

With Christmas drinking in mind, the Chateau Shanahan team recently tasted a range of pinot noirs. It’s a great variety. And because it’s medium bodied, soft and supple, it suits the foods we eat at Christmas – ham, pork, turkey and even seafood, especially the more robust kinds like lobster and salmon.

Our samples came unsolicited from wine companies. And we topped up the range with purchases from Canberra retail stores. What I offer below is a warts and all view of what we tasted.

As you can see there’s a bias towards more expensive wine – but, hey, it’s Christmas. And, as well, pinot’s a little more expensive than other varieties at all quality levels because it costs more to make. That said, there are lovely examples at under $20, even if the real magic kicks in at around $30 – after that the sky’s the limit.

We limited our tasting to wines from Australia and New Zealand – poor Burgundy, home of pinot – didn’t get a look in. But even so, we covered only a fraction of the good pinots now on offer, such are the rich pickings with this variety.

The recommended wines should be readily available at fine wine outlets around Canberra. And one tip – for the greatest enjoyment try to keep the serving temperature at around eighteen degrees as Aussie room temperature is too much for pinot. Merry Christmas.

Long Flat Destinations Yarra Valley Pinot Noir 2006 $12-$16
Although overshadowed, understandably, by the big guns in our tasting, we’d still rate Long Flat as providing only fair value. There’s some pinot flavour and structure, but it’s not going to turn pinot agnostics into true believers.

Little Rebel Yarra Valley Pinot Noir 2006 $18
This was our first encounter with Little Rebel and we’ll not be rushing back for another.

De Bortoli Windy Peak Victoria Pinot Noir 2007 $15-$19
Yes, it is still 2007 and here we are drinking wines that were on the vine a few months back. Despite its youth, there’s some nice, ripe varietal flavour here and it provides good value towards the lower end of the price range. I suspect in another six months ageing it’ll have moved into a more savoury pinot mode.

Madfish Western Australia Pinot Noir 2006 $19
This is Howard Park’s second label. They sourced the fruit from Denmark and though it’s not classic pinot country, this is an above average effort. It’s fragrant and silky and gives more of the pinot experience than we expected. It’s available only from the cellar door. See www.howardparkwines.com.au

Philip Shaw No. 8 Orange Pinot Noir 2006 $39.95
Pinot needs a cool climate and our best versions tend to come more from high latitudes – like Gippsland, Yarra, Mornington and Tasmania – than high altitudes. Stephen George’s Ashton Hills, from the Adelaide Hills, is an exception and Philip Shaw’s heading that way up at Orange.  This one’s got a beautiful aroma, bits of pinot stalkiness and savouriness and is more about subtlety and structure than volume. Very, very promising (and enjoyable).

Blind River Marlborough Pinot Noir 2006 $39.99
Blind River is in the cool Awatere Valley, to the south of the Wairau Valley, site of Marlborough’s earliest plantings and still its heartland. While this one had some pleasing aromas at first, over time it developed intense and, to our palates, not all that pleasing, acidic, berry flavours. Sorry, but we’re not enthusiastic.

St Huberts Yarra Valley Pinot Noir 2006 about $29
This one didn’t quite click with us and seemed more like a big, warm red wine than subtle, silky pinot. It’s fault free but to us lacked the pinot magic.

Coldstream Hills Yarra Valley Reserve Pinot Noir 2006 about $85
The deep, youthful colour, fruit sweetness, velvety smoothness and beautiful oak seem, at first sniff and sip to align with the hefty price tag. This is unquestionably a wine of substance, complexity and ageing ability. But the caveat we had is one of style. Has this moved too far into a generic red wine style? It impresses for size and weight, but it’s not a style we enjoy drinking.

Coldstream Hills Yarra Valley Amphitheatre Pinot Noir 2006 $90
This is literally a hand made wine – just three barrels having been produced from the A Block of Coldstream’s Amphitheatre vineyard. There’s a juicy, velvety, seamless richness and texture to it and it will clearly age for many years. But as for the ‘Reserve’ Coldstream above, it’s not a style that’d we’d buy for our own cellar, nor one that we want to drink now.

Clos Pierre Yarra Valley Reserve Pinot Noir 2006 $29.99
Burgundian winemaker, Pierre Naigeon, owns this brand but sells it exclusively to the Woolworths’ owned Dan Murphy chain. He makes the wine at De Bortoli’s Yarra winery. It was a sleeper in our tasting, appealing, at first for its lighter colour (ah, yes, that’s pinot), pleasant fragrance subtle, easy palate. With time the fruit sweetness became more accentuated but held in check by fine, drying tannins. It grew in interest over the course of the tasting and still impressed two days later. This is a bargain and an excellent introduction to pinot at a fair price.

Stonier Mornington Peninsula Pinot Noir 2006 $26
In our tasting the two Stonier wines stood out at first for their comparatively pale colours – not a bad sign in pinot, especially when, as this wine did, it’s followed by varietal perfume and flavour and fine, silky, supple texture. This is a very attractive wine indeed and the price is about right.

Stonier Mornington Peninsula Windmill Vineyard Pinot Noir 2005 $60
Geraldine McFaul made this distinctive, single-vineyard wine using a high proportion of whole bunches, including stalks, in the ferment. There’s a distinct stalky note to the aroma and palate. But that’s only one of many parts in this exceptionally complex, fine, delicate and irresistible pinot.

Wither Hills Marlborough Pinot Noir 2005 and 206 $41
Founder Brent Marris recently moved on, leaving winemaking in the hands of his long-term offsider, Ben Glover.  Ben says that he uses ‘feral yeast strains’ for his ferments and perhaps this is responsible for the distinctly funky edge to the Wither Hills pinots. They’re on the robust side of pinot with beautifully ripe but pure varietal character. They appeal strongly. Both vintages can be found on Canberra retail shelves. We have a slight leaning to the 2005.

Carrick Central Otago Pinot Noir 2005 $63.69
Steve Green’s Carrick winery rubs shoulders with two of Central Otago’s other pinot stars, Felton Road and Mt Difficulty. It’s been a Chateau Shanahan favourite since our first visit in 2003 and the 2005 strengthens our regard for it. It covers a fair bit of pinot’s spectrum with musky, floral high notes, a stalky edge and more-ish savouriness.

Neudorf Nelson Pinot Noir 2005 $44.99
Nelson’s at about the same latitude as Marlborough, at the top of New Zealand’s south island, and a couple of hours’ drive to the west. It’s hop-growing country, but for several decades now Tim and Judy Finn have been producing very fine chardonnay and pinot noir. From experience the pinots age very well, but the current-release 2005 has terrific drink-now appeal, too.

Tower Estate Tasmania Pinot Noir 2006 $58
Hunter based Tower, founded by the late Len Evans, makes regional specialties from around Australia. I think Len would’ve loved this, the last vintage fermented at Tower before his death last August. Tassie’s cool climate shows in the wine’s intense, delicate flavour and very fine-boned structure.

PHI Lusatia Park Vineyard Yarra Valley Pinot Noir 2006 $54
This is the second vintage from a joint venture between the De Bortoli and Shelmerdine families. Fruit comes from Stephen Shelmerdine’s Lusatia Park vineyard, high in the south east of the Yarra Valley. And Steve Webber makes the wine at De Bortoli Yarra Valley winery. This was one of the standouts of our tasting, a seductive drop.

Kooyong Mornington Peninsula Estate Pinot Noir 2005 $39.49
This one passed the bottle test at The Journeyman Restaurant, Berrima, on election night gliding down beautifully with pork belly. A few weeks later at our masked tasting it showed pure class – and at this price provides great value in the pinot stakes.

Copyright © Chris Shanahand 2007

Wine review — Coriole, Hewitson & Lustau

Coriole McLaren Vale Sangiovese 2006 $20 and Fiano 2007 $23
Coriole’s Mark Lloyd planted sangiovese in 1985, a decade or so after Carlo Corino in Mudgee, but well ahead of a wider move to Italian varieties in Australia. The Coriole style has evolved considerably over the years and shows great maturity in this 2006. It’s a terrific expression of the variety, capturing its exotic ripe-cherry aroma and taut, sinewy structure. This is a savoury, tasty world away from the Aussie, oaky, fruit bomb style. And after a visit to VinItaly, Verona, in 2001, Mark planted the white fiano variety, from Campagna. It manages to be savoury, tart, lush and dry – all in the same delicious mouthful.

Hewitson Barossa Valley Miss Harry 2006 $22
Like the Coriole Sangiovese reviewed above, but for different reasons, Dean Hewitson’s Miss Harry makes a great match for Christmas ham and Turkey. Where the Coriole wine focuses on savouriness and fine, drying tannins, Miss Harry is in the soft, Barossa mould. She has some of the lifted, ripe aromatics of grenache, tempered by earthy shiraz and spicy mourvedre – giving an overall earthiness to the aroma and generous flavour. But even at 14.5 per cent alcohol, she’s not hot or astringent as the fruit’s rich enough to handle it. Dean says he sourced the fruit from dry-grown old vines, some dating from the nineteenth century.

Lustau Manzanilla Papirusa Sherry 375ml $14.99
Manzanilla, the palest, most delicate of the flor fino sherry family, comes from the Spanish seaside town of Sanlucar de Barameda. The humid environment encourages an extra thickness in the film of yeast cells (flor) on the surface of the sherry maturing in barrels. While this layer contributes distinctive ‘sherry’ character, the extra thickness protects the wine from air and accounts for the dazzling freshness of good Manzanilla – like this one. There’s a slight salty tang, a subtle, pungent ‘sherry’ note and a bone-dry, delicate, mouth-watering finish. At just 15.5 per cent alcohol it’s a superb aperitif and great with Christmas seafood.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine review — Misteltoe, Tulloch & Chrismont La Zona

Mistletoe Hunter Valley Silvereye Semillon 2006 (8.1% alcohol) $17
You might call this a Hunter semillon for people who don’t like Hunter semillon. The classic style tends to low alcohol and a bone-dry austerity in youth. Although time adds meat to the bone, its appeal remains limited. But Silvereye captures the fresh, lemony flavour and crisp acidity of semillon, without the austerity. It’s simple enough to do. All someone had to do was to do it. And Ken Sloan did. He made the wine, then arrested the fermentation before the yeasts consumed all the natural grape sugar. The resulting wine smells and tastes of semillon. But the residual sugar gives it a delicious sweetness.  See www.mistletoe.wines.com

Tulloch Upper Hunter Semillon 2007 (11.5% alcohol) $12.80–$16
Tulloch Hunter ‘Julia’ Semillon 2006 (10% alcohol) $22.40–$28

While based at Pokolbin, in the Lower Hunter Valley, Tullochs sources fruit from the distinctly different Upper Hunter Valley, too. The younger of the two semillons expresses this difference. It’s still ‘Hunter’ semillon in its lemony freshness. But it’s slightly rounder and softer than many and has great drink-now appeal, especially with delicacies like fresh seafood. ‘Julia’, from the Pokolbin property, is in the classic, somewhat austere Lower Hunter style. It’s taut, intensely flavoured, bone dry and destined to take on mellow ‘toasty’ character with age. The lower prices given above are ‘club’ prices. See www.tullochwines.com.au

Chrismont La Zona King Valley Marzemino Frizzante (12.5% alcohol) $18
Try Marzemino Frizzante for something different: a slightly effervescent (frizzante) red made from the Italian variety Marzemino. It’s totally unlike traditional Aussie red sparklers – which tend to be older and more serious-red-wine-like. Marzemino’s flavours, to me, seem more summer-pudding like with lots of tangy berry character. The light bubblies zest this up even more. And a touch of residual sugar balances those delightful berry flavours and acidity. I tried it recently with Thai food and it worked well. The makers also suggest it as company for light cheese or tortellini skewers with pesto. See www.chrismont.com.au

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine review — Tulloch & Kalleske

Tulloch Hunter Valley Pokolbin Dry Red Shiraz 2005 $20-$25
Petite Verdot 2006 $$17.60-$22, Viognier 2007 $16-$20, Marsanne $16.20

With the Tulloch family back in control after thirty-odd years in the corporate wilderness, the old firm is a must-visit if you’re in the Hunter. The semillons and shirazes are classic lower Hunter styles made with the self-assurance of people who know what the area does best. I’ll review the semillons next week. Meanwhile buy some of the gentle, supple Shiraz 2005 available at cellar door for $20 if you join the wine club. It’s in the old ‘Hunter Burgundy’ medium bodied mould – a wine that just grows in interest with every sip. The Viognier and Marsanne are beautifully made, crisp modern additions to the range and sourced from Denman in the Upper Hunter. See www.tullochs.com.au

Kalleske Barossa Valley Pirathon Shiraz 2005 $22-$24
and Johann Georg Shiraz 2005 $100

Johann Georg migrated from Prussia to South Australia in 1838 and established vines at Greenock, in the northwestern Barossa in 1853. The first five Kalleske generations grew and sold grapes. Then in 2004, after 151 years in the business, sixth-generation Troy and Tony released the family’s first wines. With the exception of the ‘Pirathon’ shiraz, the wines are estate grown and made. Pirathon comes from family growers in Greenock and neighbouring Moppa, Belvedere, Stonewell, Seppeltsfield, Koonunga and Ebenezer. It’s a traditionally robust, chocolaty and soft Barossa shiraz – built to last and a bargain. Johan Georg sourced from the Kaleske’s oldest vines (planted in 1875) is a more concentrated and powerful but beautifully balanced expression of the regional style.

Kalleske Barossa Valley Grenache Shiraz 2006 $18-$20
and Old Vine Grenache 2005 $45

Like the Johann Georg Shiraz above, fruit from these two wines came from the Kalleske family’s organically certified Greenock vineyard. All of the wines are made in open fermenters and pressed gently basket pressed before maturation in barrels. The grenache shiraz blend combines the lovely, spicy fragrance and vibrance of grenache with the more earthy, chocolaty character of shiraz. The result is full but vibrant wine that’s ready to enjoy now. The straight grenache wine is a glorious, exotic drop with none of the ‘confection’ character seen in some grenache. This is a serious red with considerable cellaring potential. See www.kalleske.com

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine review — Louee Wines, Miramar, Wirra Wirra & Cloudy Bay

Louee Wines Mudgee Rumkers Peak Shiraz 2003 $18
Louee Wines Mudgee Nullo Mountain Pinot Gris 2006 $18

A too-short visit to Mudgee recently unearthed a few exciting wines, plus three refreshing beers from the new Mudgee Brewing Company. We discovered these Louee wines at Elton’s bistro. The medium bodied shiraz, from a vineyard near Rylstone, impressed for its delicious earthy, savoury flavours – just perfect with pizza. The pinot gris showed the importance of site for this variety. It comes from Nullo Mountain Vineyard located at 1100 metres — about double Mudgee’s altitude. The altitude means a very cool ripening season. In turn, that means terrific varietal flavour, rich texture and zesty, high-acid structure. It’s worth the drive to Elton’s to try it. See louee.com.au

Miramar Mudgee ‘Eljamar’ Chardonnay 2005 $25
This is a lovely wine from one of the most under-rated wineries in Australia. Owner and winemaker, Ian McRae, founded Miramar in 1977 and produces delicious, understated wines from a 45-hectare estate. The chardonnays have been a Chateau Shanahan favourite for decades as they offer delicious drinking when young and, unlike most chardonnays, age very well. I’ve had ‘em and loved ‘em at up to twenty years from vintage. This latest, from a special site within Miramar’s ‘Hidden Garden’ vineyard, offers generous, bright, intense, melon-like varietal flavour without a trace of heaviness. See miramarwines.com.au

Wirra Wirra ‘Hiding Champion’ Adelaide Hills Sauvignon Blanc 2007 $22.95
Cloudy Bay Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc 2007 $34.95

These are too quite different and excellent expressions of sauvignon blanc. Samantha Connew’s Adelaide Hills version is lighter, citrusy and less in-your-face varietal than the Cloudy Bay wine. It sits more towards the citrus and passionfruit end of sauv blanc’s flavour range – and it becomes more of a subtle backdrop as the bottle steadily disappears. Kevin Judd’s Cloudy Bay presents the more serious end of Marlborough’s now very broad style spectrum (ranging from thin and green to weighty, pure and intense). It’s textbook stuff – purely, unmistakably sauv blanc with the intensity, mid-palate weight and integrated, high-acid structure that characterise the best.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Macedon Ranges — really cool

Look at today’s feature picture for an idea of how cool Macedon is – in both senses. What you see is Hanging Rock’s south-facing Jim Jim vineyard, one of the coolest wine-growing sites in Australia, covered in winter snow. And that’s winemaker John Ellis’s son, Robert, making the most of it.

John and Anne Ellis established the vineyard in 1982, specifically to produce top-end bubblies from pinot noir and chardonnay grapes.  And for that you need a cold climate, barely capable of ripening grapes. But they were not the first in the area with this aspiration as Gordon Cope-Williams had arrived at nearby Romsey in 1977.

The Ellis’s Jim Jim vineyard represents the coolest end of Macedon’s climate spectrum – a fascinatingly diverse region that rolls the equivalent of France’s Champagne, Burgundy and northern Rhone regions into one.

It achieves this largely through variations in altitude and aspect. Jim Jim vineyard, for example, sits on a southern slope of the Great Divide at an altitude approaching 700 metres. The site is too cool to produce still table wine. But it creates the perfect high-acid, delicate-but-intense flavours for sparkling wine.

Baynton, just a few kilometres to the north through the Macedon Ranges, sits at the other end of the climate spectrum. A drop in altitude to around 400 metres above sea level means a growing season that’s not only too warm for pinot and chardonnay sparkling wine but too warm even to make good table wine made from those varieties. Here, Granite Hills Winery (founded 1970) makes intense, peppery shiraz, a variety that doesn’t cut the mustard a little higher up.

This altitude-driven style variation is a feature that separates Australian wine regions of the Great Dividing Range from the more homogenous classic regions of France. In France, distinctive wine styles defined their regions over great periods of time. Legal confirmation of these followed long after the reality.

For example, after a long winemaking history Champagne emerged as a sparkling specialist, using pinot noir, pinot meunier and chardonnay, in the eighteenth century – its specialty being driven largely by the cold climate at forty-nine degrees north. But the statute of Champagne, defending its name and boundaries, came only in 1927.

A little to the south, and again over many hundreds of years, sublime, elegant table wines made from chardonnay and pinot noir defined Burgundy. And a little south again, shiraz defined the appellations of the northern Rhone Valley.

In Australia our regional definitions grew less from the wines we made and more from an imperative to define legally defensible boundaries. Hence we rolled out our geographic indications system following wine agreements with Europe and America in the early nineties.

Along the Great Divide the boundaries we drew create far from homogenous regions. Mudgee, for example, has vineyards clustered mainly in the 500-600 metre range, but with at least one outlying extreme – Louee Wine’s Mount Nullo vineyard at 1100 metres. It’s almost another country in terms of the wine styles it makes.

But in high, cool Orange, the boundary makers recognised the importance of altitude on wine style and set a lower-altitude limit of around 650 metres. Famously, this put the boundary on the contours of the Little Boomey Vineyard. It literally rolls in and out of Orange.

Though the Macedon Ranges boundary covers a wide range of altitudes, in reality, the vineyards seem to be focused on the higher, cooler sites, with the very coolest sites focusing on sparkling wine production and the more moderate sites specialising in pinot noir and chardonnay table wines.

Judging at the regional show a few weeks back these were certainly the styles that shone. We tasted some attractive pinot gris, gewürztraminer, sauvignon blanc and shiraz. But the sparkling wines were the best I’ve ever seen at an Australian wine show – vindicating the judgment made by Gordon Cope-Williams and John Ellis several decades ago.

The pinots and chardonnays, too, were extraordinarily good and driven largely by a comparatively new wave of makers.

The gold medallists from the show, reviewed below, give a taste of what Macedon does best and are worth seeking.

Curly Flat Macedon Ranges Pinot Noir 2005 $46
Williams Crossing Macedon Ranges Pinot Noir 2005 $20
Portree Macedon Ranges Pinot Noir 2005 $33

The very cool climate of the Macedon Ranges wine region, an hour’s drive north west of Melbourne, produces top-notch pinot noirs – wines of great perfume, clear varietal flavour and silky, fine texture. Judging there two weeks ago 21 of the 29 pinots tasted won medals – three golds, three silvers and fifteen bronzes. The high strike reflected the quality, especially of these three gold-medallists. Portree wine, the fullest bodied of the trio, shows a more powerful face of pinot. Curly Flat, the most complex and interesting, needs time (it’s not released yet anyway). And Williams Crossing, Curly Flat’s second label, is taut, fine and delicious. See www.portreevineyard.com.au and www.curlyflat.com

Cope-Williams Romsey Brut Pinot Noir Chardonnay NV $26
Hanging Rock Macedon Cuvée VII LD $115
Mt William Winery Blanc de Blanc 2001 $35

I’ve never judged a class of Australian sparklings as striking and delicious as those at the recent Macedon show. A maturity of winemaking, coupled with the extremely cool growing conditions delivers flavour and structure seldom found outside of France’s Champagne district. These three gold-medallists show pretty well the full spectrum of the region’s sparkling styles: the ultra-fine, elegant, marvellously fresh, all-chardonnay Mt William 2001 (www.mtwilliamwinery.com.au); the classically fine and intense Cope-Williams Brut NV (www.copewilliams.com.au) and Hanging Rock’s idiosyncratic tour-de-force of powerful fruit, tight structure and edgy, tangy cask maturation complexities (hangingrock.com.au).

Shadowfax Macedon Ranges Chardonnay 2006 $35
Lanes End Macedon Ranges Chardonnay 2005 $28
Curly Flat Macedon Ranges Chardonnay 2005 $38

Macedon’s third grape specialty, chardonnay, probably faces more Aussie competitors than its pinots and bubblies do, partly because of the sheer versatility of this variety. That said, the chardonnays that it makes are in a very fine, restrained style — the best of which could take on any competitors.  Amongst twenty eight chardonnays judged we found these three zingy fresh chardonnays: the very fine, stunningly fresh Shadowfax 2006 (www.shadowfax.com.au), the more robust, slightly oakier, but still very fine Lanes End (www.lanesend.com.au), and the more restrained, slightly funky, deliciously fresh Curly Flat (www.curlyflat.com).

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine review — Yalumba, Henschke, Petaluma, Mitchell, Grosset & Mount Horrocks

Yalumba South Australia Riesling 2007 $10-$12
Henschke

  • Eden Valley Julius Riesling 2007 $27
  • Green’s Hill Lenswood Riesling 2007
  • Peggy’s Hill Eden Valley Riesling 2007 $20

This week’s recommendations are all rieslings from the outstanding 2007 vintage, selected at a tasting a few weeks back. The Yalumba wine, a Barossa-Eden Valley blend, and value champ of the line up, offers plump, ripe, fresh varietal flavour at a bargain price. Henschke’s Julius, one of the big hitters, is intense, tight and in for the long haul. Peggy’s Hill, too, shows the Eden Valley’s restraint and taut structure but seems a little more approachable now than Julius. Green’s Hill, from Lenswood, a high, cool site in the Adelaide Hills, presents restrained but clear varietal flavours cut with bracing, fresh acidity. It should age well.

Petaluma Hanlin Hill Clare Riesling 2007 $25-$29
Mitchell Watervale Riesling 2007 $22
With the Bay of Fires Tasmania Riesling 2007 reviewed last week, Petaluma was a standout of the tasting – but the two are stylistic poles apart: the Tassie wine is delicately perfumed, ultra-fine and nothing like our mainland rieslings; the Petaluma is big and rich, but oh so fresh and delicate, too. It’s just about sold out I’m told and in limited supply thanks to the difficult 2006–07 growing season. Andrew and Jane Mitchell’s 2007 offer yet another style alternative, perhaps influenced by a spontaneous fermentation. There’s real flavour concentration, a rich texture and a little bite to the finish. It, too, was made in tiny quantities in 2007 – the forty-year-old vines yielding just 2.5 tonnes to the hectare.

Grosset

  • Polish Hill Riesling 2007 $42
  • Springvale Vineyard Watervale Riesling $35

Mount Horrocks Watervale Riesling 2007 $28

These three sat towards the top of the tasting in a cluster with Bay of Fires, Petaluma and Henschke Julius. While the two Grosset wines share a wonderful purity, delicacy, fine-ness and unique, smooth silky texture, a lime-and-green apple tang gives the Polish Hill (a cool sub-region of Clare) a please-cellar-me, slightly austere edge. The softer Watervale offers delicious, lime-like varietal aroma and flavour. Like the Petaluma and Bay of Fires, these were hard to stop sipping after the tasting. Stephanie Toole’s Mount Horrocks 2007 grew in interest with every sip, delivering pure, lime-like varietal flavour. It’s intense but subtle, elegant and restrained.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine review — Bay of Fires, Peter Lehmann & Clonakilla

Bay of Fires Tasmania Riesling 2007 $30
The 2007 rieslings look terrific, right across the country – from Mount Barker in the West to the variety’s Clare and Eden Valley heartland, to Canberra, and way down south to Tassie. In a recent tasting Bay of Fires stole the show, even from stars like Grosset and Petaluma. And for once a professional judge’s palate aligned with those of consumers – and that’s not all that common. After the tasting, I put the top four wines to a table of consumers aged 21 to 56, and all five preferred the Tassie wine. Part of the Hardy portfolio, and made by Fran Austin, it’s an irresistible, ultra-fine, delicate-but-intense aperitif style. It’s to be released in December.

Peter Lehman Barossa Valley

  • Shiraz Grenache 2006 $12.50
  • Shiraz 2005 $19.50
  • Cabernet Sauvignon 2004 $19.50
  • Mentor’ Cabernet Sauvignon 2002 $38

These are just knockout wines and great value, delivering the Barossa’s great generosity and softness. Grenache in the Shiraz Grenache blends gives attractive aromatic high notes and great buoyancy to a palate that’s all juicy fruit and pure pleasure right now. The straight shiraz shows the earthy, chocolaty richness of this regional specialty – and the tender tannins that makes even a solid vintage like 2005 so enjoyable and satisfying now. And a couple of times each decade cabernet succeeds well in the Barossa. Lehmann’s 2004 is pure-varietal, elegant, generous and soft, all in one. The flagship, ‘Mentor’, from the cool 2002 vintage is denser, varietal, amazingly youthful at five years and built to age for decades.

Clonakilla Canberra District Shiraz Viognier 2006 $80
Not all wines measure up to the trophies and rave reviews they receive. But true champs, like Clonakilla, cut the mustard year after year – both with critics and consumers prepared to pay a premium. Another test is that of time. Does a wine age well? In a recent Canberra tasting Tim Kirk showed his ten Shiraz Viogniers from 1997 to the current release 2006. Within a generally refined, elegant theme, the wines reflected their growing seasons, with the slightly green 2000 marking the coolest end of the spectrum and the burly (comparatively) 2003 the warmest. For me, highlights in this stunning line up were 1998, 2001, 2005 and 2006.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007