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

Coonawarra — almost a sheep paddock

Coonawarra reds fetch a premium today. But behind their reputation lies a twisting, sometimes profitless and often frustrating struggle that stretches back to the 1890s. Indeed, had it not been for the foresight of Samuel and David Wynn in 1951, our most famous cabernet region might be a sheep paddock today.

The ‘estate that made Coonawarra famous’ remained largely unknown, under various guises, for sixty years before the inspired marketing of the Wynns gave an identity and, ultimately, fame, to the area’s unique, elegant table wines – building on a potential that had been recognised half a century earlier.

In 1899, W. Catton Grasby, editor of ‘Garden and Field’ wrote ‘As long as grapes mature properly, the more gradual the process the better, so that the conditions are as favourable, if not more so, at Coonawarra than anywhere else in Australia for making very high-class, light, dry wine. The results are bearing out the theoretical statement of what should be, and Coonawarra claret promises to have a very high and wide reputation—indeed, there is no doubt but that it will be a beautiful wine of good body, fine colour, delicate bouquet, and low alcoholic strength”.

Grasby’s words followed a visit to John Riddoch’s Coonawarra fruit colony and, presumably, a tasting of the first few vintages made in Riddoch’s imposing, triple-gabled, Coonawarra Wine Cellars – the icon that still appears on Wynns labels today.

Grasby notes the first vine plantings in 1891 and an expansion of the area under vine by 1899 to about 140 hectares — 89 owned by ‘blockers’ on the fruit colony and 51 hectares belonging to Riddoch — consisting principally of shiraz and cabernet sauvignon with smaller plantings of malbec and pinot noir, the latter not faring well.

According to James Halliday (‘Wine Compendium’ 1985), production from these vineyards exceeded 300 thousand litres per annum from 1903 until 1909 with John Riddoch actively seeking markets for the wine in Australia and in Great Britain.

However, after Riddoch’s death at about this time, Coonawarra’s famous estate turned to distilling its ever-accumulating wine stocks — a practice that continued through two changes of ownership until Woodleys purchased the triple-gabled winery and 58 hectares of vineyards in 1946.

Woodley’s owner, Tony Nelson, installed as winemakers, at what was now ‘Chateau Comaum’, Bill and Owen Redman – from whom he’d been buying Coonawarra wine for many years. Although the arrangement fell over a few years later, at least, after a break of 37 years, Coonawarra’s original winery was once again making table wine.

In 1951 Samuel Wynn and his son David bought the vineyards and Chateau Comaum, renamed it Wynns Coonawarra Estate, and installed 22-year-old Roseworthy graduate Ian Hickinbotham as manager. The Estate was set to make Coonawarra famous.

During a tasting of fifty years of Wynns cabernets a few years back, Ian recalled ‘the stink of failure’ that hung over the area’s tiny wine industry when he arrived in late 1951. And he recalled the disdain felt for it by a remote community riding the Korean war wool boom.

As the first qualified winemaker to arrive in Coonawarra since John Riddoch had hired Ewen Ferguson McBain in 1898, Ian confronted the challenges of isolation, labour shortages and the most rudimentary winemaking equipment. Roads and transport were poor, there was no electricity and the winery still relied on steam power to drive its pumps.

In that first year Ian brought to Coonawarra six Roseworthy students to help with the pruning. They ‘batched’ with him in a little shack near the winery.

A gifted Aussie rules player, Ian then called on 70 mates from the local footy club for the heavy work of pulling the cuttings from the vineyards.

During vintage, David Wynn fixed the labour problem by bringing in a group of Italian immigrants. A mixed lot – professionals, craftsmen, workers and even a chef – they proved themselves cheerful and skilled as grape pickers and cellar hands.

As soon as the manual press began turning, they bust into song’ Ian recalls. And that set the tone for the 1952 vintage.

Although the Wynns sold most of the 1952 vintage in bulk, it also marked the birth of the famous label depicting John Riddoch’s triple-gabled, limestone winery.

Indeed, Wynns labels were two generations ahead of their time and might teach today’s brand managers a lesson. They were boldly branded, declaring region of origin, wine style and vintage on the front label, and emphasises the region with a clear map on the back label. They spoke the international language of great wine.

Samuel and David put their judgement on the line in choosing little known, isolated Coonawarra back in 1951. That they were on the money shows in the string of superb, long-lived wines created from 1952 on.

It’s a fascinating story that’s remained intact for half a century, despite several ownership changes. And what the Wynns established still instructs winemaker Sue Hodder today – in turn, delivering benefits to drinkers.

Watch this space in early July and learn how Sue and her team boosted quality by peering into old Wynns wines for clues.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Beer review — James Squire & Trumer

James Squire Original Amber Ale 345ml six-pack $17.99
The creation of Amber Ale in 1998 marked Chuck Hahn’s return to small batch brewing, after several years as head brewer for Lion Nathan. Available on tap and in bottle, it’s a deep, copper-coloured brew with citrusy hops notes, rich malt, fruity highnotes and lingering bitterness. The quality’s still there despite increased production.
*****

Trumer Pils 330ml $3.40
A bright lemon colour and pure-white foam give Trumer a refreshing appeal, confirmed by the fresh, attractive herbal hops aroma. This appeal carries through on a lively, fresh and tasty-but-light palate with a fine balance of rich malt and herbal, drying, bitter hops. Brewed and bottled in Salzburg, Austria.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Ale and ‘earty at 140 — Worthington 1869

We’ve been cellaring beer at Schloss Shanahan since Cooper’s released its first vintage ale in 1998 – and still hold a single stubby each of every vintage. They’re right next to the Grange, in the coolest corner, of course.

What these vintage ales show is that beer that’s high in alcohol, high in hops and bottled with live yeast dismisses the old adage that all beer should be drunk young and fresh.

As Cooper’s brewer, Nick Sterenberg says, ‘Ales which undergo secondary fermentation… are bottled with live yeast that converts sugar to alcohol and mops up dissolved oxygen, extending the shelf life to around two years’.

That’s normal bottle-conditioned ale. But what are we to make of a cache uncovered at Burton-on-Trent, England, by Worthington White Shield Brewery recently?

Reports say that ales dating back to 1869 proved potable, albeit tasting more like aged fortified wines than beer.

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

A new seal for Penfolds Grange

When will Australia’s most prestigious wine, Penfolds Grange, adopt the screw cap? It won’t, winemaker Peter Gago told me in Adelaide a few weeks ago. So are we doomed to throwing away the odd, corked $500 bottle forever? Not at all, says Peter.

But we’ll have to wait a little while for his solution. It’s radical and, arguably, made possible by screw cap’s commercial and technical success over the past decade.

The screw cap’s ready adoption broke the cork monopoly. In turn — albeit reluctantly and slowly — sections of the cork industry addressed the systemic, destructive problems of oxidation and cork-taint.

But the by the time Diam (a highly-effective, high-tech composite cork) arrived, masses of drinkers had abandoned the corkscrew forever and other innovative seals had arrived.

In Australia, for example, an Adelaide company developed and released the plastic, pull out Zork plug, while in Worms, Germany, Alcoa commenced manufacture of the elegant, glass Vino-Lok.

In developing the Vino-Lok, Alcoa surely looked to challenge rival aluminium giant, Alcan, owner, through its French subsidiary, Pechiney, of Stelvin, the original screw cap for wine.

And Stelvin is where the screw-cap revolution began. It fizzed for a while in the sixties and seventies, then faltered and faded in the eighties. But it simmered in winemakers’ minds before re-emerging in the late nineties.

The re-emergence in Australia rested on two forces – winemaker dissatisfaction with cork and the marvelous maturity, freshness and consistency of whites, mainly rieslings, that had survived from the short Stelvin boom of the sixties and seventies.

That white wine would not only keep but also mature well under screw cap for decades was proven. And winemakers both here and in New Zealand were aware of trials with reds in France a generation earlier.

Several Australian wineries – including Penfolds and Henschke — began testing the cellarability of reds under screw caps and other seals during the nineties.

Peter Gago says that Penfolds trials included Bin 389 Cabernet Shiraz 1996 and Bin 2 Mourvedre 1995. The results were – and continue to be — encouraging. What the trials show conclusively is that a top-notch red like Bin 389 matures exactly as you’d expect it to under a good cork – but without the loss caused by cork taint or oxidation.

It also shows that the seal survives intact for a decade.

A decade on from those trials, many of the top-end Penfolds reds have screw caps – including the recently released $150-a-bottle RWT Barossa Shiraz 2004. But as I’ve wondered before why, with the knowledge and confidence they had, did Penfolds not seize the leadership with screw caps? Instead they seemed to have opted for an equivocal, piecemeal rollout that hardly inspires confidence.

So, if screw cap is better for the other Penfolds reds, why not for Grange?

Well, says Peter Gago, ‘With Grange we’re talking about people cellaring it for thirty to fifty years. We’ve had trials for ten years, but we’ve got our fingers crossed that these wines will still be good in four or five decades. It’s the integrity of the seal, not ageing that’s of concern’.

He explains that while we know that screw cap seals keep white wines perfectly for thirty years, the chemistry of red wine is different and we simply don’t know for certain that the seal will last.

He recalls working with well-known sparkling-wine maker, Ed Carr, at the company’s Nuriootpa sparkling cellars. They observed that crown seals on sparkling red wines often deteriorated where those for sparkling whites didn’t.

Whether or not modern screw caps with their tin coated sealing wads will deteriorate in contact with red wine for fifty years is simply not known. We do know that some corks make the distance and some don’t.

We also know that top Bordeaux Chateau re-cork their museum stock every couple of decades. And Penfolds itself offers free re-corking clinics for customers with reds over fifteen years of age.

So, it might be argued that if screw cap is better than cork for the medium term, why not make the change and offer re-capping clinics? There’d probably be a lot less Grange lost than there is under cork.
But Gago believes the solution for Grange has to better than that, and that ‘it’s an engineering thing, and will be worth the wait’.

And we shouldn’t have to wait too many years for the Gago solution: glass-to-glass. He cites examples of industries containing gas with glass or ceramic valves.

Glass to glass, he says, is the ideal seal as there’s nothing to corrode – no perishable material like cork, the tin-coated wad in screw caps or the silicon ring of Vino-Lok.

He says the company engaged an engineer to develop the idea and already has a prototype – a glass disc held in place with a spring-loaded clamp. Once perfected, says Peter, it can be deployed rapidly.
As long as the mechanism creates the perfect seal – and that can be readily tested – wine maturation trials won’t be necessary. ‘We don’t need any air getting in. There’s enough in there’, says Peter, pointing to the neck of the 2002 Grange.

What’s in all this for the drinker? Well, better seals mean better wine. Winemakers and packaging engineers are at last closing what has been the weakest link in the quality control chain. Bring on the innovations, I say, and throw away the corkscrew.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Beer review — Little Creatures & Matilda Bay

Little Creatures Rogers’ Beer 330ml — about $16 a six pack
This mid-strength brew (3.8 per cent alcohol) — named after its creators, Rogers Bailey and Bussell – leads and finishes with the distinctive and amazingly refreshing Little Creatures’ Oregon hops. Behind the hops, though, lies a silk smooth maltiness with a subtle roasted character.

Matilda Bay Alpha Pale Ale 330ml 6 pack $22
Brad Rogers brews this deep amber, small-batch, American style pale ale at Matilda Bay’s Garage Brewery, Dandenong. Its in-your-face hoppy aroma and astonishing bitterness counter the beer’s opulent, sweetish maltiness. This is a brewer’s brew, released on tap and in bottle in discrete batches after prolonged tank conditioning

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007

Keeping the skunk out of beer

Skunky beer? That’s how some describe the smell of a light-struck brew – that garlicky, devil-fart smell hovering over sun-drenched beer gardens. It’s not pleasant.

It seems that when light strikes beer, it triggers a reaction in hop-derived iso-alpha acids and amino acids to form mercaptans – a particularly smelly family of sulphur compounds found in everything from decaying vegetable matter to skunk secretions.

Clearly, mercaptan has no place in beer. The trouble is, though, that for aesthetic reasons, much of the beer sold today comes in clear or green glass bottles. And these offer far less light protection than brown glass or the perfectly dark inside of a keg.

If they could, brewers might use nothing but kegs and brown glass. But that’s not on. So many now employ modified hop extracts – proprietary products like ‘tetrahop gold’ — that provide light resistance and, in so doing, keep the skunk out of our beer.

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

The Penfolds succession (and why you should buy at auction, not retail)

Of the notable genius displayed in Australia’s long winemaking history – from Ray Beckwith’s profound scientific insights to the crafting of sublime, long-lived reds by legends like Maurice O’Shea, Colin Preece and Jack Kilgour – the achievements of Grange creator, Max Schubert, soar.

What Max put in place — that O’Shea, Preece, Kilgour and others did not — was a powerful succession structure that guaranteed continuity of the wines he created.

Max became production manager at Penfolds Magill cellars in 1948, made the first Grange in 1951 and ‘retired’ in 1973. But until his death in 1994 he maintained an office at Magill and remained a mentor to Don Ditter and John Duval — his successors from 1973 and 1986 respectively.

Don had worked alongside Max from 1950 until his retirement in 1986. And John Duval worked closely with both Ditter and Schubert prior to taking the reins from Don.

Fortunately the winemaking culture survived the abrupt departure of Duval in 2002 – a consequence of the disastrous Rosemount takeover – with the appointment of Peter Gago, Duval’s experienced offsider, as leader of a well-seasoned winemaking team.

This continuity over a period of more than fifty years means that the Penfolds reds we drink today still bear the Schubert thumbprint of powerful fruit flavours, robust structure and age-worthiness.

The Australian winemaking scene today is unrecognisable from the fortified-driven era in which Max learned his skills. But even among the amazing diversity now available — and amid increasing cries for elegance — Penfolds sturdy reds just about always deliver, especially after a few years’ bottle age.

The Granges, Bin 389s, Bin 28s and so on that we enjoy today, are in many ways different from the ones that Max made. Fruit sourcing has changed over the years as Australian vineyards expanded – especially during the explosive nineties.

And several new labels have appeared, partly as a response to increasing fruit diversity, partly in response to perceived demand and partly through winemaker innovation.

But the deeply layered, complex style is still perceivably Max’s – even in the more elegant styles like Magill Estate Shiraz (for which he hand wrote the first specification in August 1982, nineteen years after retiring), RWT Barossa Valley Shiraz and Bin 128 Coonawarra Shiraz. In each case fruit sourcing ensures elegant flavour and structure, but not at the expense of depth and complexity.

For all of these reasons, the annual release of the Penfolds blue chips presents an opportunity to buy some of Australia’s greatest wines in mint condition.

Those buying as an investment, however, are likely to be disappointed. If you don’t believe this, go to langtons.com.au and compare auction prices for older vintages against retail prices for current vintages. You may be surprised.

Older vintages generally sell at a substantial discount to the new release. This alone might discourage prospective investors. And for drinkers it means that if you want to enjoy Grange in its golden age – 15 to 20 years in my experience – auction is the place to go.

For example, as collectors forked out around $500 a bottle for the new and superb 2002 recently, auction goers collected the equally venerable 1996 and 1991 for just $427 and $405 respectively, or so-called ‘lesser’ vintages like 1989 for $349, 1992 for $279 or 1994 for $266. These prices include the fifteen per cent buyer’s premium and GST paid to the auctioneer.

Auction prices suggest that if you bought Grange at retail price before its mid-nineties internationalisation, you may have been on the money as an investor in the mid and late nineties – but would have seen little, none or negative movement in real terms since.

Langton’s records show a clear pattern of higher prices for the big-reputation vintages. The legendary 1990, for instance, recently sold at a nett $719, more than double the $319 fetched by the 1989 vintage. And 1986, another great vintage, fetched $577 while the 1985 attracted just $254.

What this suggests to me is that if you buy the best vintages as an investment, you may lose less money than if you buy the lesser ones. Or, from a more positive, drinking pleasure perspective, let someone else do the investing and cellaring, then buy up the mature gems at auction.

An important caveat is to check the provenance of wine with the auctioneer prior to bidding. Good cellaring is everything.

From a wine-quality perspective, the recent Penfolds premium releases, including Grange 2002, are exciting by any measure. I recently tasted these with winemaker Peter Gago and even discussed the likely end of cork as a seal for Australia’s flagship red. The Gago solution is unique. Read about it here next week.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2007