Kirin to take over Lion

On 27 April Lion Nathan issued a media release saying its board had agreed to terms for Kirin’s takeover of the company. Japanese based Kirin currently holds about 46 per cent of Lion. The board’s recommendation of the takeover and terms is subject to no better offer emerging and confirmation from an independent expert that the offer is ‘in the best interests of Lion Nathan’s non-Kirin shareholders’.

Assuming the takeover goes through, Kirin will own the Hahn, XXXX, Malt Shovel/James Squire, Tooheys, Boags, West End, Swan, Emu, Waikato, Macs, Steinlager, Lion, Speights and Knappstein beer brands as well the rights to brew under licence, and distribute, Heineken and Beck’s beers.

It will also give to Kirin ownership of a range of premium wine brands – Stonier, Knappstein, Tatachilla, Wither Hills, St Hallet, Argyle, Smithbrook and Mitchelton – as well as Fine Wine Partners, a distribution business focused on top end products.

Kirin owned about 46 per cent of Lion before the takeover offer. Public statements to date say that the Australian crew running Lion Nathan will remain in place, becoming part of a bigger regional team.

This could be good news for some of our leading beer and wine brands. But given the scale of the Kirin operation and the peculiarity and capital-intensive nature of the wine business, I wonder if they’ll continue as a producer?

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Wine tasting — McWilliams Hanwood and Crittenden Estate

McWilliam’s Hanwood Chardonnay 2007 $9–$13
This is the story of the cheeky ocker wine that took on posh champs from around the world and won! In the Chardonnay du Monde competition, Burgundy, in March, humble Hanwood earned a gold medal and a top-10 placing. It’s not an unusual achievement for a cheaper Australian wine. And it underscores the value of cross-regional blending. In this case the McWilliam winemakers blended warm grown (and cheaper) chardonnay with more elegant, intensely flavoured material from cooler regions – achieving economy, flavour and freshness without heaviness. It’s consistently one of the best, so simply move on to the next vintage when this one’s gone.

Crittenden Estate Mornington Peninsula The Zumma Pinot Noir 2007 $49.99
I think Mornington offers more top-end pinot than any Australian region at present – a position that may change over time. It’s clearly well suited to the variety, has a substantial mass of plantings and almost thirty years’ intensive work under its belt. The Zumma is a great example of what the region can achieve. It’s sourced from the Crittenden family’s vineyard, established in 1982 in the very early days of Australia’s fascination with this great Burgundian variety. The wine’s heady perfume, richness and depth belie its light colour – but that’s pinot. It’s finely structured, silky textured, pure and complex.

Crittenden Estate Los Hermanos Tempranillo 2008 $30
Garry Crittenden, one of Australia’s pioneers of alternate varieties, blazed a trail with Italian varietals before turning, with the help of his children, Rollo and Zoe, to Spanish reds and whites. Among them, they’ve produced an exciting Los Hermanos Tempranillo 2008. It’s deep and crimson rimmed with fragrant, ripe, fruity aroma and plush, juicy palate with flavours reminiscent of very ripe cherries. But there’s plenty of soft tannin layered in with the fruit so that even though it’s very young and very enjoyable now it has the grip and texture of real red. It’s sourced from the Crittenden’s vineyard at Patterson Lake, 20km north of the Mornington Peninsula.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Wine review — Ara and Penfolds

Ara Marlborough Composite Pinot Noir 2007 $24–$27
Ara Marlborough Pathway Pinot Noir 2008 $19–$22

Nowhere is the old saying ‘by their fruits shall you know them’ more apt than in winemaking – a wine that speaks for itself beats even the fruitiest press release. And these two new releases from Ara did just that -– ‘Pathway’ presenting a particularly bright and zesty face (but still with savouriness); and ‘Composite’ focusing more on savouriness (but still with bright fruit). They’re absolutely outstanding – wines that build in interest as you sip through the bottle. Encouragingly, both blossomed for a few days after tasting, a good indicator of cellaring ability. They’re from a terrace on the junction of Marlborough’s Wairau and Waihopai Valleys.

Ara Marlborough Composite Sauvignon Blanc 2008 $19–$22
Ara Marlborough Pathway Sauvignon Blanc 2008 $16–$19

Like the pinot above these come from a large terrace near the junction of Marlborough’s Wairau and Waihopai Valleys. The terrace covers some 1,600 hectares and contains vines of varying ages. And like the pinot’s they’re outstanding wines. ‘Pathway’ is on the pungent, high-acid side of sauv blanc – but has a fruity depth to make these attributes tantalising. ‘Composite’ shows a wider spectrum of sauv blanc characters – a bit pungent, a bit tropical fruit and with an appealing, minerally dry finish. Ara is an exciting new face on the Marlborough wine scene. It’s headed by Dr Damian Martin. What an impressive debut.

Penfolds Grange 2004 ($550) and other ‘icon’ wines, various prices
Don’t look for massive discounts on the just released Penfolds Grange 2004. Global demand, shortage and stellar quality should kick this vintage off at around $550 a bottle – and it’s up there with the best. The other wines are as sublime, each in its own way: the powerful, cellarable Cabernet Sauvignon Bin 707 2006 ($185); the fragrant, opulent, gorgeous RWT Barossa Shiraz 2006 ($170); the graceful Magill Estate 2006 $100); the taut, elegant, low-oak St Henri 2005 ($95); the elegant, refined Yattarna Chardonnay 2006 ($130) and the bold, complex Reserve Bin A Adelaide Hills Chardonnay 2007 ($90).

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Brown Bros caters for Australia’s sweet tooth

Ross and Judy Brown visited Canberra in March to launch the new vintage Brown Brothers ‘Patricia’ range – the company’s flagships. They’re wonderful wines and good value. But the visit highlighted the sheer depth of the Brown Brothers’ offering. Much of it’s driven, beneath the radar of wine columns, by a range of high-volume sweet whites and reds.

The company’s innovative approach is probably best seen from the cellar door, visited by about 90 thousand people each year. Here Browns offer an ever-changing menu of new wines, gauging drinkers’ reaction, before moving to larger production of successful products. The diversity offered at the cellar door can be glimpsed from the comfort of your computer screen on the cellar price list, available at www.brownbrothers.com.au

Current list of non-traditional styles includes prosecco, zibbibo, pinot grigio, albarino (temporarily withdrawn, and potentially to be renamed, following CSIRO DNA testing of Australia’s stocks of this variety), viognier, chenin blanc, vermentino, moscato, crouchen-riesling blend, tarrango, dolcetto-syrah blend, cienna, sangiovese, nero d’Avola, barbera, tempranillo, tempranillo-graciano blend and nebbiolo – representing thirty years of innovation.

As reported here a few weeks back, Ross attributes part of Brown’s success across the generations to high-quality sweet and fruity wines, both red and white. These seldom rate in wine columns but two of Brown’s sweeties – the red Dolcetto & Syrah and white Moscato – ranked ninth and fourth respectively in an AC Nielsen listing of Australia’s top selling wines (by value) in the year to 22 March 2009.

Now, you might wonder what link there is between the small-volume $57 top-end Patricia wines and the modestly priced, big-volume sweeties. The simple answer is that Browns take all of the styles they make deadly seriously.
And who drinks the sweeties? Ross says there’s no simple profile. The wines appeal right across the population, across ages, sexes and social status. And if there’s generally a trend for people to discover sweet, fruity wines, then progress to dry versions, it’s not universal. Many people stick to sweet wines for life.

Here, then, is a glimpse of Brown Brothers’ current popular sweeties and reviews of two exciting, dry pinot grigios and the flagship Patricia range

Brown Brothers Victoria Crouchen Riesling 2008 (10.5% alcohol) $13.40
This is like a slightly fat riesling – plumped out by the crouchen, a variety once known in Australia as Clare riesling but originally from the Landes region, southwestern France. It’s a crisp, easy drinking style but not made for cellaring. Note he modest alcohol content.

South Eastern Australia Moscato 2008 (5.5%alcohol) $15.40
This is one of the early Australian takes on the spritzy styles made originally in Asti, Piedmont. In both countries it’s made from Muscat of Alexandria grape, perhaps the most ancient of all cultivated varieties. The wine’s pale, spritzy and intensely musky/grapey – sweet but beautifully invigorating.

Zibbibo (6.5% alcohol) $15.40
In this sparkling version of moscato Brown Brothers use the southern Italian name for the muscat grape, Zibbibo. The bubbles make it even brisker than the still version but mutes the fruity, musk aroma and flavour.

Victoria Dolcetto & Syrah 2008 (11% alcohol) $15.40
Syrah equals shiraz and therefore needs no introduction.  But dolcetto – meaning little sweet one – is less well-known in Australia. Competing theories place it as a native of Dogliani, a Piedmontese village, or of France, having arrived in Monferrato, Piedmont, in the eleventh century.

Whichever is true, dolcetto’s by now a thoroughly Piedmontese grape making stunningly purple, fruity and generally soft, dry early-drinking wines – a real contrast to the mouth puckering wines made from nebbiolo, Piedmont’s most acclaimed red variety.

Brown’s blend is a vibrant crimson colour, spritzy and with pleasant mulberry-like fruit flavour, a grapey sweetness and lick of tannin in the finish.

Victoria Cienna 2008 (5% alcohol) $13.90
The CSIRO bred cienna from cabernet sauvignon and the Spanish sumoll variety in 1972, but it wasn’t bred until 2000. Brown’s version is brilliantly coloured and light and fresh on the palate, the fruit flavour having traces of cabernet’s leafiness.

Brown Brothers Victoria Pinot Grigio 2008 $18.99
Browns produce two classy dry pinot grigios – the standard blend, available at $18.99, and a limited release version, from a single block on the cold, 800m-high Whitlands vineyard. The standard blend (sourced from Whitlands and the 450m Banksdale vineyard) is a rich, soft dry white with crystal clear varietal flavour – it’s the real thing. The limited release wine, due for release next year, offers more intense flavours and a tighter structure with a lovely core of delicious fruit.

Brown Brothers ‘Patricia’ Cabernet Sauvignon 2004 $56
Brown Brothers ‘Patricia’ Shiraz 2005 $56

These are modestly priced for ‘flagship’ wines of the calibre. The shiraz, a blend from Avoca, Heathcote and King Valley shows cool-climate peppery/spicy varietal aromas and flavours and a solid, deep palate with quite an impact from the American oak – the one area that might be fine-tuned in future vintages. The cabernet comes from Western Victoria, the Dookie Hills and King Valley. It’s strongly varietal with deep fruitiness and leafy hints on the nose and a powerful but finely structured and assertively tannic palate – it’s a classic cellaring style and ought to drink well between 10 and 20 years’ age.

Brown Brothers Patricia Pinot Noir Chardonnay Pinot Meunier 2004 $39.90
Brown Brothers Patricia Noble Riesling 2006 375ml $35
These easily rank with best Australian examples of the styles. The bubbly comes from the cold Whitlands vineyard on a plateau above the southern end of Victoria’s King Valley. It’s cold enough to produce the intense but delicate flavours essential for top-end bubbly. This is juicy and fresh but very delicate, with a special textural richness and roundness probably attributable to the pinot meunier in the blend. The amazing, luscious ‘Noble’ offers the zesty, varietal ‘lime’ character of riesling and the exotic ‘marmalade’ notes of botrytis and a little bottle age. It’s from a single block of vines first noted for botrytis in the 1930s.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Where all the barley grows

Ever wondered where the world’s ocean of beer comes from? There’s a guide, of sorts, in the source of barley, beer’s building block. And the figures are staggeringly large – not surprising when we consider that the world’s two biggest beer drinking nations, China and the USA, drink about 64 billion litres between them.

According to the United States Department of Agriculture’s Foreign Agricultural Service, the world consumed about 143.9 million tonnes of barley in the year to April 2009. The figures don’t differentiated between brewing barley (surely the finest way to consume these precious little grains) and eating barley.

Europe is by far the biggest barley producer (65.5 million tonnes) and consumer (57.5 million tonnes), ahead of the second placed Russian Federation on 23.1 million tonnes and 17.4 million tonnes respectively – making both groups nett exporters.

China, the world’s biggest beer drinker, consumed 4.2 million but produced only 3.3 million tonnes, while the second biggest beer drinker, the USA, produced about 100,000 tonnes more than it produced (production 5.2 million tonnes; consumption 5.2 million)

Australia remained a nett exporter, having consumed 3.9 million tonnes and harvested 7.0 million tonnes.

The Ukraine and Canada are both major producers (12.6 million tonnes and 11.8 million tonnes) and consumers (5.8 million and 9.4 million tonnes) and therefore important exporters.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Albarino mix-up spreads to Spain

Until recently Australia’s vignerons had – or thought they had – about 150 hectares of albarino in the ground. But DNA testing initiated by the CSIRO in January found that our albarino was, in fact, savagnin blanc (not related to the popular variety sauvignon blanc, and also known as traminer).

The discovery opens a can of worms for every one in the supply chain from vine nurseries, to growers, makers, distributors, retailers and scientific and regulatory bodies around the world.

In Australia, the first and most immediately affected are successful albarino makers with stock labelled and ready for market or under production from the 2009 vintage. These include the Barossa’s Damien Tscharke (our largest producer, with 4,000 cases of the 2009 vintage in the making), Brown Brothers, Crittenden Wines and Bermagui’s tiny Rusty Fig vineyard, owned by Garry Potts and Frances Perkins.

Following the CSIRO discovery, the Australian Wine and Brand Corporation – the federal body responsible for administering wine law – issued a blunt press release. It told winemakers that it was an offence to sell wine with a false description and that “if you have ‘albarino’ vines that were sourced from the CSIRO collection, then the wine produced from those vines cannot be described using that name”. It also urged growers with vines from other sources to have their material DNA tested.

On the surface that sound fair enough. Indeed, all of the albarino makers I’ve spoken to are preparing for the change. But the black letter of the law doesn’t take into account the peculiar circumstances of this error. It appears to have originated in Spain, affects many wine producing countries (including Spain, Portugal and Australia) and its origins may go as far back as 1100AD.

In a paper to be published in the May edition of Grape Grower & Winemaker, Chris Bourke (owner of Sons & Brother vineyard, Orange) traces the history of savagnin and discusses its confusion with albarino. He told me that savagnin probably found its way from France’s Jura region to Galicia, northwestern Spain, around 1100AD.

There it would have grown side-by-side with albarino, the region’s current signature variety, ever since. He says there is good evidence that modern Spanish and Portuguese ‘albarino’ vineyards contain a mix of three varieties – albarino, savagnin and caino blanco – and, therefore, that much of what Spain sells as ‘albarino’ is probably a blend of the three varieties.

This may explain why experts see so much similarity between Australian ‘albarino’, made from savagnin, and Spanish albarino

Just as a visiting French vine expert precipitated Australia’s recent ‘albarino’ testing, another Frenchman, Paul Truel, questioned the identity of Spain’s albarino as far back as 1983, Chris Bourke claims.

Ultimately the Spanish established that ‘true’ albarino had a distinctive DNA, identified savagnin as a ‘false’ albarino and removed it from the national collection – but not before the damage was done.

The Spanish, says Bourke, claim that a single mis-identified vine is responsible for the false albarino that spread around the world.

For Australia, the problem began unknowingly when the CSIRO sourced ‘albarino’ from Galicia, Spain, in 1989. This is thought to be the ultimate source of all the ‘albarino’ now planted here. In a letter to his albarino customers last week, Mornington Peninsula vigneron Garry Crittenden wrote, “The problem seems to be generic in that the only known source of planting material in the whole of Australia is CSIRO so every producer, Australia wide, is caught up in the issue. Somehow there has been a stuff up along the line”. Indeed.

Garry said that he sources albarino from two blocks on the Mornington Peninsula and Sam Miranda’s vineyard in the King Valley and that he’s tracked all three back to the CSIRO.

So if what we’ve been drinking as albarino is actually savagnin (an unfamiliar variety to most of us) and savagnin is just another name for traminer (a familiar old friend to Australians), why doesn’t it taste musky and grapey like the traminer we’re used to?

This is probably where the whole world is confused – and why experts like the Barossa’s Damien Tscharke and Mornington’s Garry Crittenden find it impossible to distinguish between savagnin and albarino vines or the wines made from them. The same might be said for all those Portuguese and Spanish growers, too.

It highlights the subtleties of the vine, the limitations of DNA testing and also the persistence of muscat, perhaps the oldest of our cultivated varieties. Muscat influences many varieties and accounts for the aroma and flavour difference between savagnin (traminer) and gewürztraminer.

Now, Australians and Germans use traminer, incorrectly, as a synonym for gewürztraminer. The difference between the two is easily discernible in the colour of the berries and the aroma and flavour of wine made from them. But, says Chris Bourke, the two have identical DNA.

He says the difference is probably made by a single enzyme that boosts production in the berries of monoterpenes – the compounds that give gewürztraminer its powerful, distinctive musky aroma, flavour and viscosity – traits absent in mere traminer (savagnin).

While the existence of the two strains (sometime called musque clones and non-musque clones) has long been known, Bourke believes that this is the first appearance in Australia of the non-musque strain since James Busby’s importation of it in 1832. But Bourke sees its presence as a positive.

However, Australian albarino makers now face a challenge in re-branding their product and selling the message to drinkers. But they have much on their side, including knowledgeable drinkers, strong trade support, especially among sommeliers, and a tasty product with a real flavour difference.

Garry Crittenden is hopeful that a coming stakeholder meeting with the AWBC can produce a practical result – perhaps giving producers a phasing-in period to sell existing stock in the domestic market as ‘albarino’.

However, other options could be available. Those with proprietary names, such as Tscharke ‘Girl Talk’ and Crittenden ‘Los Hermanos’ might remove the varietal tag from the front label altogether – and perhaps tell the savagnin story on the back label.

Tscharke, Crittenden, Brown and Potts all say that regardless of the outcome they intend to continue with the variety whatever it’s called. It’ll still taste the same.

With Australian winemakers preparing to rename their albarinos, what should we expect of Spanish producers? If, as seems likely, much of their albarino production is a blend of albarino, savagnin and caino blanco, shouldn’t it, too, be renamed to reflect the reality?

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

China leads the beer world

The world’s barley growers are going to make a killing the way China’s beer market’s growing. Sometime early this decade it overtook the United States as the world’s biggest consumer and, according to a Reuter’s report in March, ‘is now over 50 per cent larger’.

I’m not sure when the crossover happened, but as recently as 2004 China’s annual consumption of 28,640 million litres beat America’s 23,974 million litres by a mere 20 per cent.

But with a per capita consumption of just 22.1 litres in 2004 – compared to Australia’s 109, the USA’s 81.6 and the Czech Republic’s awesome 156.9 – Chinese growth may have barely started.

The Reuter’s report of 31 March also cited preliminary data from researcher Plato Logic placing China’s Snow beer range as the world’s biggest seller in 2008 at 61.0 million hectolitres, ahead of America’s Bud Light Range (55.6 million) and Budweiser (43.4 million), Brazil’s Skol (35.4 million), Mexico’s Corona (32.7 million) and Holland’s Heineken (29.1 million).

Reuter’s says that Snow is brewed by SABMiller and its Chinese partner China Resources Enterprises Ltd.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Wine review — Tyrrell’s, Tulloch and Penfolds

Tyrrell’s Rufus Stone Heathcote Shiraz 2007 $16–$24
Tyrrell’s Rufus Stone McLaren Vale Shiraz 2007 $16–$24

This excellent pair from Tyrrell’s invariably attracts trade attention, resulting in very low prices for wines of such quality and provenance. As I write they’re available for as little as $15.99 by the dozen – a real bargain as they drink so deliciously and have the capacity to age well for another five or six years. The Heathcote (Victoria) wine is a big but harmonious red — generously fruity and showing peppery varietal character with fine, soft tannins.  The McLaren Vale wine presents the riper, warm-grown face of shiraz with chocolaty rich flavours and distinctive regional savouriness.

Tulloch Private Bin Pokolbin Dry Red Shiraz 2007 $35
This is the third vintage of the reborn Tulloch Private Bin Red, a once legendary, long-cellaring wine that was as much an icon to the red drinkers of the fifties as Grange is today. The modern version’s made from the 100-plus-year-old vines of the Tallawanta vineyard.  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 and sympathetic wine making. It should drink beautifully for decades if well cellared. The Tulloch label returned to the Tulloch family in 2001 after 32 years under corporate ownership.

Penfolds Bin 51 Eden Valley Riesling 2008 $26–$32
Penfolds released this wine last year and after a re-tasting a few weeks back I rate it as the best 2008 riesling yet tasted – and that’s saying something in such a stellar vintage. It’s of impeccable pedigree, coming from two famous Eden Valley vineyards – the former Tollana Woodbury site and High Eden, established by David Wynn. It’s bone dry, weighs in it just 11.5 per cent alcohol and has classic, intense, fine lemon/lime flavours and taut, steely acid backbone. Penfolds estimate its drinking life at 5–7 years, but I’ve no doubt it’ll be pleasing drinkers in 20 years if it’s well cellared.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Gago keeps the Penfolds flame burning

Peter Gago presented the soon-to-be-released Grange 2004 and other top-end Penfolds wines in Canberra recently. What a contrast I noted between these confident, beautiful, unique, world-class wines and the dour attitude of Foster’s (Penfolds’ parent company) towards its suffering wine division.

The survival of the Penfolds culture across decades of rationalisation, culminating in Foster’s disastrous acquisition of Southcorp (previous owner of Penfolds), seems to be a result largely of the tenacity of winemakers and grape growers behind the wines.

What Gago and his team have achieved is remarkable. It’s hard to over estimate just how profoundly good these top end wines are and how important they are to Australia’s export push into the future.

The ‘halo’ effect created by Penfolds wines now extends well beyond Grange as critics and some consumers in our major export markets realise the depth of what Max Schubert created and his successors, Don Ditter, John Duval and Peter Gago, extended. Much of the mystique rests on the outstanding cellaring capacity of the wines, with vintages back to the fifties and sixties periodically bowling the critics over.

The historic cellar at Magill, in urban Adelaide, is now a hub of innovation – where Gago and the team continue to fine-tune the traditional styles and develop new ones. They make many of the top wines, including Grange, in the same old open concrete fermenters that Max used back in the early fifties.

The traditional wines evolved over the last decade or so, maintaining their robust structure, but becoming perhaps a little brighter and purer in fruit expression with finer tannin structure. The new 2004 Grange is an extraordinary example of this subtle shift. It’s a powerful expression of warm-climate shiraz, still vibrant and crimson coloured at five years, with deep layers of fruit and tannin. Gago sees it as the ‘best in the last 25 years’, comparing it stylistically to the 1990 and 1996. But in true Grange fashion, it won’t begin to reveal its best for another decade.

Some of the zealots now spruiking our elegant cool-climates shiraz and pooh-poohing traditional styles might have a rethink when they taste 2004 Grange – or its robust but graceful and elegant cellar mate RWT Barossa Valley Shiraz 2006. This is as good as Barossa shiraz gets.

The third shiraz among the new releases, St Henri 2005, sits apart stylistically from Grange. It’s a taut, elegant style aged in very old, large oak casks. These provide maturation but not oak flavour – an inherent component, in different ways, of both Grange (100% new American oak) and RWT (French oak barrels, 70% new).

From experience, St Henri, despite its lighter body, needs time to reveal its best – perhaps from about ten years’ age, although good vintages like the 1983 and 1971 still drink beautifully.

The only single-vineyard red among the upcoming releases is the Magill Estate Shiraz 2006, matured, for the first time since 1998 in all new oak – 71% French, 29% American. It’s a fuller style than St Henri, but still fine boned and needing another four or of five years to reveal its best.

Bin 707 2006, the cabernet equivalent of Grange, is a multi-region blend matured in all new American oak. Current orthodoxy says that cabernet should be in French oak. But American oak works for modern Bin 707, principally because it’s such fine oak, but also because the fruit has the power to support it. Gago accurately describes 707 and Grange as being like wound-up springs, needing time to uncoil. This gels with my own experience as we are currently drinking the 1986 vintage at Chateau Shanahan and see no need to rush the last few precious bottles.

Gago says that from the 2008 vintage there’ll be an upmarket cabernet to accompany Bin 707. He believes that just as the fragrant, French-oak-matured RWT Barossa Shiraz protects the powerful American-oak-matured Grange style from change, the new French-oak-matured Coonawarra Cabernet (yet to be named) ought to protect the Bin 707 style.

And for visitors to the cellar door and restaurant at Magill, Gago offers several ‘Cellar Reserve’ wines made and matured on the estate.

The opulent, ripe, French-oak-matured, Cellar Reserve Barossa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2006 comes from very old vineyards, including Penfolds Kalimna vineyard in the northern Barossa. This one could be cellared, but it’s succulent and lovely to enjoy now, too.

Cellar Reserve Adelaide Hills Pinot Noir has been on the menu for many years, but the 2007, to me is outstanding. It’s in the deeply layered Penfolds style, with silky, deep tannins and a spectrum of very complex varietal flavours. This should evolve well for a decade or more.

The first release of a Cellar Reserve McLaren Vale Tempranillo (2007 vintage) follows several earlier trials with the variety. It’s from the Oliver vineyard, McLaren Vale, and goes straight to the top of the class for this variety in Australia.

Even more accomplished is the Cellar Reserve Barossa Valley Sangiovese 2007, sourced from vines planted on the Kalimna Vineyard in the early eighties and the ten-year-old Georgiadis Vineyard at nearby Marananga.

I’ve not tasted another Australian sangiovese that comes near this for quality. It has richness, purity of varietal flavour, complexity and the loveliest ripe-tannin structure imaginable. This is a masterpiece.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009

Amazing brew marks Chuck Hahn’s double anniversary

Chuck Hahn should take a bow for his brewing masterpiece – Ten20 Commemorative Ale – an almost impossibly luxurious, harmonious, and complex beer. Other brewers are going to look at this in awe.

Chuck brewed it to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of Hahn Premium and the tenth of James Squire. And in a salute to his brewing alma maters, he used hops from the USA, New Zealand and Australia.

Chuck says that dry hopping with Pacific Hallertau from New Zealand gives the beer its distinctive, herbal/citrus aroma. But that’s just the entrée to a remarkably powerful but harmonious brew.

It’s a deep copper colour, tinged with mahogany: and behind the tangy hops aroma lies a huge depth of malt. It’s there in the aroma, but in the mouth it’s opulent, bordering on viscous – with a silky, smooth texture that could be too much if it weren’t for the heady alcohol (7.9 per cent) and countervailing hops bitterness.

It’s risky brewing beers of this dimension as one or another flavour easily dominates (many undrinkable curiosities in the market testify to this). Chuck’s mastery is in creating such a bold, malty, hoppy, alcoholic beer that’s such a pleasure to drink. It’s one to sip, like wine.

Alas, he’s brewed but 1,900 cases. It’s just come into the market and available in selected retail outlets.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2009