Category Archives: Wine review

Wine review — Redbank The Long Paddock, Mount Majura, Cloudy Bay & Giant Steps

Redbank The Long Paddock Shiraz 2005 & Chardonnay 2006 $12.95
The Redbank brand originated in Victoria’s Pyrenees region. However, ownership of its ‘Long Paddock’ budget range shifted to Robert Hill-Smith’s Yalumba some years back. Quality is exceptional for the price and fruit sourcing generally from the King Valley, although the current shiraz contains some Pyrenees material as well. The shiraz has lovely, ripe plummy flavours with a cool-climate peppery note and a dry, food-friendly savouriness. The chardonnay is generous, but not fat, with attractive melon-like varietal flavour and an attractive, apple-fresh finish. The smooth texture suggests a touch of malo-lactic fermentation and some maturation on yeast lees. This makes it all the more interesting.

Mount Majura Canberra Chardonnay 2005 $20
Cloudy Bay Marlborough Chardonnay 2005 $42

These are the Yin and Yang of chardonnay, even if both are made in a broadly similar way: fermented and matured in oak barrels. Frank van de Loo’s, from the Mount Majura Vineyard Canberra is minerally, racy and dry. There’s a brightness to it and though some of the winemaker inputs stand out, there’s a lovely cool-climate, grape-fruit-like varietal flavour that maintains the lean, taut style. Cloudy Bay, from even cooler Marlborough, shows extraordinary fruit opulence and accompanying viscous texture. Despite the sheer flavour volume, this is a balanced wine of great freshness and seductive slipperiness. Cloudy Bay you’ll find in stores; for Frank’s wine see www.mountmajura.com.au

Giant Steps Yarra Valley Sexton Vineyard Pinot Noir 2005 $29.95
Giant Steps Yarra Valley Tarraford Vineyard Pinot Noir 2005 $39.95

By the law of diminishing returns the $40 pinot ought to be maybe ten per cent better – not 33 per cent better — than the $30 one, right? Not with this two from Phil Sexton, though: the $40 Tarraford Vineyard wine delivered, to may taste, almost double the drinking pleasure. But I wouldn’t say no to either. These are elegant but substantial pinots, well removed from the lighter, simpler styles. They share a savouriness and strong structure. In the Sexton that fruit versus tannin arm wrestle seems to lean a little towards tannin. In the Tarraford, however, the beautiful fruit aroma carries through into a glorious, supple palate.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine review — Lerida Estate, Henschke & Clos Pierre

Lerida Estate Lake George Reserve Shiraz 2005 $49.50, Pinot Noir 2006 $22
Jim Lumbers and Anne Caine planted the first vines at Lerida Estate – the southernmost of the three vineyards flanking Lake George – in 1997. They later added the striking Glen Murcott designed winery-cellar door-café building. I’ll be covering Lerida and its neighbours in my Wednesday column over the next few weeks. And in a brief visit recently thought these two estate-grown wines to be outstanding. The shiraz, a gold medal winner, is a generous, silky wine with lovely, peppery, cool-climate varietal character. The pinot is the best I’ve seen from the estate yet. It’s clean as a whistle and though in a lighter style, shows pure varietal perfume, flavour and layered texture.

Henschke Lenswood Croft Chardonnay 2006 $45, Lenswood Giles Pinot Noir 2005 $46, Mount Edelstone Shiraz 2004 $93, Cyril Henschke Cabernet Sauvignon 2004
These and the Abbott’s Prayer Merlot and Louis Semillon reviewed last week make up the current Henschke release – an extraordinary line up of estate-grown Eden Valley and Lenswood wines. Croft Chardonnay shows the white peach character and finesse and style of cool-grown chardonnay; Giles Pinot shows very pure, fine varietal character and depth; Mount Edelstone expresses Eden Valley shiraz from very old vines: it’s highly aromatic, has limpid colour with an elegant structure to match and delivers exceptional flavour concentration without heaviness. ‘Cyril’, too, shows great flavour concentration in its own very cabernet way – and that means heaps of firm tannin to match the powerful fruit.

Clos Pierre Yarra Valley Pinot Noir 2005 $15.90 to $20
Burgundian winemaker Pierre Naigeon met France’s trade commissioner while visiting Australia, married her and now has the perfect excuse to return with her each year. In an exchange arrangement with De Bortoli’s Steve Webber, Pierre makes Yarra Valley pinot noir at De Bortoli’s winery while Steve makes real Burgundy in the village of Gevrey-Chambertin. Woolworths buys Naigeon’s Aussie pinot and other wines, offering them under the Clos Pierre label at Dan Murphy outlets. The 2005 Pierre’s second vintage continues to drink well six months after its release and delivers much of this difficult variety’s charms at a low price.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Niche white that viognier

Viognier’s a niche variety and likely to stay that way. Why? Well, for one it has too much flavour and individuality.

How can a wine have too much flavour? Well, look, for example, at gewürztraminer. Its heady, lychee-like aroma and viscous texture might be unforgettable, and a joy to drink on occasion. But that’s the problem: a little goes a long way. It’s simply too much to drink regularly.

If viognier (a native of France’s Rhône valley) falls into that category it has, in Australia, the considerable advantage of being relatively unknown.

While gewürztraminer – of which there are some very fine examples, like Hanging Rock from Macedon, Victoria – suffers from its use in bland, sweet blends with riesling, viognier walked straight into the premium end of the market sans popular pre-conception.

Viognier’s short history in Australia, as outlined here a few weeks back, parallels its resurgence in France.

Winemaker interest in the variety seems to have begun in the late seventies. According to Yalumba, Heathcote winery, central Victoria, probably trialled viognier prior to Yalumba’s acquisition of cuttings from Montpellier, France, in 1979. Yalumba propagated these cuttings and planted 1.2 hectares on the Vaughan vineyard, Eden Valley, in 1980, and claims this as Australia’s first commercial planting.

This vineyard remains a source of Yalumba’s ‘The Virgilius’, its flagship viognier that inspired many of the outstanding wines to have emerged from eastern Australia in the past decade.

These come, broadly speaking, in two main styles: those that feature the unadorned, plump, viscous, opulent, apricot-like flavour of the variety; and those attempting to incorporate that flavour into a matrix with others derived from fermentation and maturation on yeast lees in oak barrels.

The latter, modelled on the best of Condrieu, a village in France’s Rhône Valley, can achieve a high level of complexity. But even with this high level of winemaker artifice, ultimate quality is driven by the quality of fruit – just as it is with oak fermented chardonnay.

The divergence of the two styles is reflected in price, too. The opulent, simple, fruity wines generally come from higher cropping vineyards and don’t bear the purchasing or winemaking costs of oak. Wines like Canberra’s Meeting Place, Stepping Stone Padthaway and Yalumba Eden Valley, for example, generally deliver the variety’s plush flavour and leave change out of $20.

But as you move up to the hand crafted versions (with the high costs of lower yields, hand-picking and sorting and oak fermentation) prices step up accordingly – to $45 a bottle and more.

Regardless of which style you go for, viognier delivers a unique spectrum of flavours, whether overtly or subtly. That’s what the winemaker quest is all about – capturing the varietal character and, at the same time, expressing regional, clonal and winemaker inputs.

A tasting of eight Aussie viogniers this week showed the common and divergent traits of the variety. I describe them very briefly below in the order in which they were tasted, along with my score out 20 points.

I use the Australian wine-show scoring system in which 12 points or lower is a faulty, unpleasant wine; 13-15 is sound but unexciting; 15.5-16.5 wins a bronze medal – meaning a faultless wine that fits the class description; 17-18 point wins a silver medal – meaning an exciting drop, but not quite in the first league; and 18.5 to 20 points wins a gold medal – these are outstanding wines.

Ravensworth Canberra District Viognier 2006 17.5 points
Another classy barrel-ferment viognier from Bryan Martin. Not far behind the best.

Tahbilk Nagambie Lakes Viognier 2006 15/20
A vibrant and pleasant wine with a strong, estery/passionfruit like aroma and flavour that was a little over the top for me – and not quite ‘viognier’ enough.

Grant Burge Chaff Mill Adelaide Hills Barossa Valley Viognier 2005 17 points
Shows considerable complexity from the barrel input, quite fresh and varietal. Very easy to savour a few glasses.

d’Arenberg The Last Ditch McLaren Vale Adelaide Hills Viognier 2006 16 points
An outstanding example of the ‘let-it-rip’ varietal style – apricot-like, opulent and very fresh, but simply upstaged by the more complex company.

Fox-Gordon Barossa Valley Viognier 2006 15.5 points
From the southern Barossa, this one’s big, fat and juicy – definitely viognier but will probably fatten up quickly, so drink now.

Petaluma Adelaide Hills Viognier 2005 19.0
A simply stunning wine – seductively aromatic, tingly fresh, finely textured for viognier, yet unmistakably of that variety and with a lingering, delicious flavour.

Clonakilla Canberra District Viognier 2006 18.5 points
Not long bottled and very complex, soft and layered, with a wonderful texture. Only just pipped by the Petaluma in this tasting but it could be a different result after another six months in bottle.

Yarra Burn Yarra Valley Viognier 2004 16.0 points
This was surprisingly fresh and fine for viognier – as the variety normally fattens and fades quickly. The focus seemed to be more on texture and structure and less on overt varietal flavour, although it was definitely there.

Conclusion? Our best viogniers, like our best chardonnays, are whites to savour; the cheaper ones are more in-your-face, fade young and tend to heaviness. The flavours, however, are unique and pleasant. Be adventurous and try the best. But, like me, you might find that one or two bottles a year are enough.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine reviews — Philip Shaw, Henschke, Lindemans

Philip Shaw Orange Sauvignon Blanc 2005 $23, Chardonnay 2004 $30, Shiraz Viognier 2004 $44 and Merlot Cabernet Sauvignon Cabernet Franc 2004 $25
In 1985 Rosemount winemaker Philip Shaw spotted a promising vineyard site as the corporate aircraft limped to an emergency landing at Orange. In 1988 Shaw purchased the site, at 900 metres above sea level, and planted Koomooloo vineyard on it in 1989. He sold fruit from the vineyard to Rosemount before launching his own brand in recent years. The by-now-mature vines produce tremendously appealing wines: a pungent, crisp, deeply textured sauvignon blanc; a restrained, slow-evolving, elegant chardonnay; a spicy, savoury, silk-smooth shiraz and a beautifully scented, elegant, firm blend of merlot and cabernets sauvignon and franc. See www.philipshaw.com.au

Henschke Lenswood Abbotts Prayer Vineyard Merlot 2003 $75, Louis Eden Valley Semillon 2006 $28
In 1981 Stephen and Prue Henschke ventured fifty kilometres beyond their Eden Valley heartland, to establish the Abbotts Prayer vineyard at higher, cooler, wetter, more-humid Lenswood in the adjoining Adelaide Hills, part of the Mount Lofty Ranges. Over time the predominantly Abbots Prayer has emerged as, perhaps, Australia’s greatest merlot, albeit bolstered with a touch of cabernet. Surprisingly, the hot and difficult 2003 vintage produced a wine of unusual fruit intensity and elegance – one that’ll blossom for years. And from the Eden Valley (the portion of the Mount Lofty Ranges bordering the eastern rim of the Barossa) comes this crisp, fine, lemony semillon – a largely unsung, but sometimes sensational, regional specialty.

Lindemans Bin 50 Shiraz 2006 $7 to $10
What began as an export brand, led by the hugely successful Bin 65 Chardonnay, later won Australian palates, too, and continues to be amongst our most reliable budget wines right across the range, despite reported large market-share losses for Lindemans under Foster’s ownership. The latest Bin 50 is appealing, offering pure, plummy varietal aromas and flavours and soft, palate caressing, drink now tannins. It has a recommended price of around $10. But with strong retail competition, watch for specials at dollars a bottle below normal. Wines like this are made for current drinking, so don’t bother cellaring — there’ll be another vintage next year.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine review — Mistloe Hunter Valley Semillon, Chardonnay & Shiraz

Mistletoe Hunter Valley Semillon 2007 $17, Reserve Semillon 2006 $20
There’s a paradox in Hunter semillon. The very warm climate ought to produce alcoholic, fat whites. Instead, early-picked Hunter semillon has a delicacy and at times austere edge — and a trim ten per cent alcohol – more akin to whites from very cool climates. Tiny Mistletoe produces two outstanding versions of this style: the lemony and fresh, but soft, drink-young 2007; and the intense, steely-dry, but deeply-layered Reserve 2006. The 2007 benefits from a tiny residue of unfermented sugar – just enough to plump out the mid palate; and the reserve benefits texturally and in flavour from extended maturation on yeast lees.

Mistletoe Hunter Valley Chardonnay 2006 $20
Reserve Chardonnay 2006 $24
Like the standard and Reserve semillons reviewed above, Mistletoe’s two chardonnays offer variations on a Hunter theme. But instead of lemony, tart, semillon, we have juicy, rich chardonnay. Hand picking and whole-bunch pressing means little juice contact with skins and, hence, greater delicacy. Fermentation and maturation in barrels adds textural richness and subtle aromas and flavours to the very good fruit. This process, applied to very high quality fruit, produces fresh, full, soft, very complex wines, which, though dry, have a fairly typically Aussie impression of sweetness. Both, and especially the more intense Reserve wine, have the potential to age for several years.

Mistletoe Hunter Valley Reserve Shiraz 2005 $26
Former Lindeman winemaker Phil Laffer told me once that he’d shoot any winemaker maturing Hunter shiraz in new oak. By Phil’s measure, the jig’s up for Mistletoe’s Ken Sloan. But, hey, unload the gun. Ken used new French oak hogsheads for this Reserve Shiraz – but still captured the unique, gentle, even tender character of Hunter shiraz beautifully. It’s sourced from an old vineyard in Pokolbin. Though young and intensely flavoured, there’s an elegance and finesse to this wine that might suggest a cool rather than warm growing region. It’s a beautiful regional wine to savour any time in the next twenty years. See www.mistletoewines.com

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine review — Petaluma, Mount Horrocks & Illuminati

Petaluma Coonawarra 2004 $45-$60
As the last of the outstanding 2002 Petaluma Coonawarra sells out, along comes the 2004. So where’s the 2003? Winemaker Andrew Hardy says, ‘we have decided not to release the 2003 Coonawarra as it is still too immature and tightly bound and will benefit from some prolonged cellaring. We will release this small vintage some years down the track’. No problems with the 2004, product of a strange, but ultimately. very good vintage. A blend of 65 per cent cabernet sauvignon and 35 per cent merlot, this is elegant, limpid Coonawarra – built on fine, ripe berry flavours and firm tannins that’ll see it through many, many years in the cellar.

Mount Horrocks Watervale Semillon 2006 $27
As semillon-sauvignon blancs blends roar ahead, poor old semillon languishes as a stand-along variety – despite its long and, at times, popular and distinguished history in Australia. To see how good semillon can be, try Stephanie Toole’s 2006 Mount Horrocks from the Clare Valley’s Watervale sub-district. It’s full-flavoured, but delicate – with the fine, smooth texture and delicious, subtle flavour add-ons derived from fermentation in oak and subsequent maturation therein on spent yeast cells. If you want something that’s not chardonnay, not riesling, not sauvignon blanc and not boring try Stephanie’s beguiling drop. It’ll click all your hyperlinks. See www. Mounthorrocks.com

Montepulciano d’Abruzzo ‘Riparosso’ (Illuminati) 2004 $8 to $11
Just to show that Australia doesn’t have a monopoly on value, here’s a savoury favourite from Italy that offers terrific value. I confess to having sourced Riparosso for Farmer Bros in 1991 and, after their demise, introducing it to the Coles Myer group (now Coles Group, but subject about to be taken over) in 1995. They continue to offer Riparosso through Vintage Cellars, Liquorland and First Choice. It’s made in Abruzzi, on the Adriatic coast by the Illuminati family using the local Montepulciano grape. Family patriarch, Dino, elevated this variety to new heights and now his son, Stefano, continues to fine-tune Riparosso. The modern version has a core of bright fruit, delivered in typically, dry, savoury, Italian tannins.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine review — Hatherleigh, d’Arenberg & Wyndham Estate

Hatherleigh Pinot Noir 2003 & 2004 $35
One of the industry’s most respected figures recently moved, unheralded, to Canberra. Nick Bulleid, Master of Wine, partner in Brokenwood Wines, consultant, show judge, Champagne Award Winner etc etc, arrived here from Lagan (near Crookwell) where he and partner, Susan Herborn, had planted a pinot vineyard between 1996 and 1999. These wines, made by Nick and Brokenwood’s PJ Charteris, are the first two under the Hatherleigh vineyard name. 2004 delivers the variety’s delightful perfume and supple depth; 2003, partly as a result of a juice-spilling accident, is little more burly and tannic, but still offers intense, ripe, varietal flavour. They’re available from Nick, phone 0418 688 794.

d’Arenberg McLaren Vale The Money Spider Roussanne 2006 $20
d’Arenberg McLaren Vale The Sticks and Stones Tempranillo Grenache Souzao 2004 $30

d’Arenberg, The Vale’s master of the Rhône Valley red varieties grenache, shiraz and mourvedre, some years back turned its hand, with equal panache, to the white varieties, marsanne, viognier and roussanne. The shy Roussanne appealed again at a recent dinner. It’s silky smooth, offers stone-fruit-like flavour and is subtle, more-ish and deliciously crisp and refreshing. But there’s more. In 2004, winemaker Chester Osborne took Spain’s natural red partners — tempranillo and grenache – added a splash of the rustic souzao (Spain and Portugal), to produce a lovely, full, fruity, savoury, and distinctive dry red. There’s lots of detail on www.darenberg.com.au

Wyndham Estate Bin 777 Semillon Sauvignon Blanc 2006 $11-$14
I’ve tasted this several times now, at the dinner table as well as on the tasting bench. It really gives some of the more expensive sauv blancs a run for their money. The winemaking team behind it includes luminaries like Phil Laffer and Bernard Hickin. They’re masters of the large commercial blend, and take pride in impressing drinkers who actually taste wines rather than read labels. They know that a judicious blend that includes material from top-ranked regions and bulk regions delivers the right flavour at the right price. They’ve done it with this gold-medal and trophy-winner from the 2006 National Wine Show.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine review — Tulloch, Taittinger, Shingleback

Tulloch Hunter Valley Private Bin Pokolbin Dry Red Shiraz 2005 $35
There’ll be a stampede at Tullochs when word gets out. This is history in a bottle: made from the 100-plus-year-old vines of the Tallawanta vineyard under a label that left the Tulloch family in 1969 and came back to it in 2001, with the help of Inglewood and Angoves. Hunter veteran, Jay Tulloch, surely sees in this wine a resemblance to the distinctive reds made, under the same label, by his father Hector until his death in 1965. This is pure, beautifully made Hunter shiraz – intensely flavoured, finely structured, silk smooth and elegant. There’s not a rough edge to it – tribute to superb fruit, captured by winemaker Jim Chatto’s mastery of the regional style.

Taittinger Comtes-de-Champagne Blanc-de-Blancs 1998 $180-$240
Taittinger Comtes de Champagne comes from top-ranking chardonnay vineyards in the Côtes-des–Blancs sub region of France’s Champagne district. Its pale colour and racy delicacy – typical of the best all-chardonnay styles – makes it a luxurious aperitif, and one of the best you’ll ever taste. The blanc-de-blancs style (meaning white wine of white grapes) contrasts strongly, however, to the more powerful, traditional Champagnes that combine about fifty to seventy-five per cent of the red varieties, pinot noir and/or pinot meunier, with chardonnay. The rarer blanc-de-noirs – made of one or other or a combination of both red varieties – occasionally show up in Australia.

Shingleback Red Knot McLaren Vale Shiraz $14.95, Shingleback McLaren Vale Shiraz 2004 $24.95
These are two very appealing faces of McLaren Vale shiraz made and grown by brothers Kym and John Davey. Red Knot, sealed with the Australian-designed ‘Zork’ tear-off seal, is the upfront, drink-now, all-fruit version. It’s deep and ripe and soft and juicy, but not savory or complex or red-winey. The more expensive Shingleback shows the depth and class of the 2004 vintage. It’s a complex, satisfying drop built on ripe, soft warm-climate shiraz flavours, with the Vale’s earthy, savory edge and sympathetic, subtle oak characters. Where a glass or two of the Red Knot is enough, Shingleback holds the drinker’s interest to the last drop.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine Review — Saltram Mamre Brook, Wolf Blass & Metala

Saltram Mamre Brook Barossa Shiraz 2004 $18–$26
On a day trip to Foster’s main winery in the Barossa recently 2004 vintage showed great class across several of the company’s brands and regions – Saltram Barossa, Metala Langhorne Creek, Wolf Blass Langhorne Creek, Barossa and McLaren Vale, Annie’s Lane Clare Valley and Mildara Coonawarra. This buoyant, plush, silky shiraz with its pleasant overlay of oak really hit the spot and ought to drink well for the next five or six years at least. It’s from the Eastern side of the Barossa, where the Saltram historical connections lie, and made by Nigel Dolan whose father, Bryan, made wine at Saltram from the late 1940s.

Wolf Blass Grey Label Langhorne Creek Cabernet Sauvignon 2004 about $35
Caroline Dunn makes the Wolf Blass wines these days, drawing on traditional fruit sources, but bringing out varietal purity more strikingly than in the older Wolf Blass wines. It was a toss up between Grey Label McLaren Vale Shiraz 2004 and this distinctive Langhorne Creek Cabernet for top spot in my tasting notes. For sheer individuality, though, the cabernet wins as it shows vivid varietal character, overlaid with an intriguing regional character, variously described as ‘peppermint’, ‘eucalypt’ and ‘choc-mint’ – the latter being favoured by Caroline. The shiraz, too, shows pure varietal flavour with the Vale’s distinctive savouriness.

Metala Original Plantings Langhorne Creek Shiraz 2004 about $58
This column recently featured a couple of Brothers In Arms wines, made by the Adams family, owners of the Metala vineyard. Foster’s, however, owns the Metala trademark and releases two reds under the label, both sourced from the vineyard. The huge-value Metala White label Shiraz Cabernet ($14–$20) goes back to 1932, though it adopted the vineyard name only in 1959. Original Plantings Shiraz, the flagship, comes, as the name suggests, from the oldest vines on the block, planted in 1891 and 1894. There was none made in 2003 or 2006. But, as if to compensate, 2004 is stunning. It’s ripe and plumy, generous and silky, with a real depth of fruit and matching tannin – a wine that’ll evolve for decades.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Wine review — Tahbilk, Balnaves & Peter Lehmann

Tahbilk Nagambie Lakes Shiraz 2003 $17-$22
‘I predicted a crop loss of 50% – the bad news is that is more like 70–75% which is a disaster’, writes proprietor Alister Purbrick of the 2007 vintage (see my column in next Wednesday’s Food & Wine for more info on Australia’s 2007 grape harvest). The problem has not been quite so severe as a whole, but a small vintage, and consequent drying up of the surplus, means that prices have begun to firm. Hence, stocking up on big-value wines like Tahbilk’s shiraz makes sense. The 2003 is in the typical Tahbilk medium-bodied style with focus on savoury shiraz flavours and firm tannins to match – a very natural, low oak, real red.

Balnaves Coonawarra Cabernet Sauvignon 2004 about $35
Long-time Coonawarra grape grower, Doug Balnaves, turned to winemaking more than a decade ago, hiring former Wynns winemaker, Pete Bissell. With Doug running the vineyards and Pete calling the winemaking shots, the business has produced consistently outstanding wines including the current release 2005 Chardonnay ($30), 2004 Shiraz ($26), 2004 The Blend ($21), 2004 Cabernet Merlot ($26) and especially this 2004 Cabernet Sauvignon. It’s what Coonawarra ought to be – definitively cabernet sauvignon in aroma, flavour and structure with the mid-palate fruit richness to balance the variety’s naturally firm tannins. In fact, it slips down all to easily at present, belying the depth that’ll see it through a decade or more in the cellar.

Peter Lehmann Barossa Semillon 2005 $11-$14
Peter Lehmann describes this appealing white accurately as sitting ‘beautifully between the freshness of Riesling and the greater weight of Chardonnay’. It represents a style evolution that began with fairly heavy, oak-matured Barossa semillons — like Basedows White Burgundy – and morphed to a more approachable no-oak, lower alcohol version, largely through the work of Peter and Doug Lehmann’s winemaker, Andrew Wigan. Wig, as everyone calls him, reminds me, too, that the even more wonderful Lehmann Reserve Semillons (2001 and 2002 both won gold at last year’s Barossa show) are also made without oak and not with it as reported in this column earlier this year.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007