Mixed Emotions

Blended reds create quite a stir. When a little Hunter Valley estate launched a new blend this month, no one expected it to rouse such controversy. “You’ll confuse the message!” accused one critic. “People won’t understand the concept.” Lake’s Folly has bottled just two wines exclusively from its legendary little Hunter Valley vineyard for precisely […]

De Bortoli Producer Profile

An expansion into cool regions and a change of focus into the premium wine sector have revitalised Australia’s second-largest family-owned winery. Tyson Stelzer discovers the new De Bortoli. “Premiumisation” is the buzzword of modern Australian wine: out with the commodity wines of warm, broadacre inland zones, in with cool regions and premium wines. The De […]

Champagne Wine Drive

Drama underwrites the story of Champagne like no other region in the wine world. This place has always been a flashpoint of tension, from the defeat of Attila the Hun in the 5th century, the founding of the Knights Templar in the 12th, the planning of the crusades in the 13th, fighting the Russians in […]

Champagne and sparkling

Champagne labels Vintage and non-vintage Champagne’s tumultuous weather makes its harvest conditions some of the most erratic in the wine world. The region has developed its style to correct challenging vintages by blending wines from older vintages (‘reserve wines’) to create non-vintage (NV) blends. Vintage wines are created in smaller volumes and only in the […]

Cellaring

Philosophy Buy strategically Most wines don’t inherently improve in the cellar, so it’s more astute to choose every bottle purposefully for its potential to improve rather than haphazardly assembling a collection of wines that you happen to like. Broadly speaking, for Australian wines, I’ve had much greater success with cabernet sauvignon and shiraz and their […]

Cellar raid

Liquid assets or retirement stash, the cellar has its rewards. I’ve never seen a room of wine show judges stunned by the age of a wine, not because of its sheer maturity but its extreme youth. A barrel sample of fortified Seppeltsfield Para Vintage Tawny, harvested just five months earlier, silenced the room by its […]

Australia’s greatest wine scientist dies

Ray Beckwith, considered to be one of the founding fathers of Australian winemaking, died peacefully in the Barossa Valley on November 7 2012, aged 100. Beckwith will be remembered for his 1930s discovery of how to stabilise wine and protect it from spoilage, laying the foundations for modern winemaking. His work at Penfolds from 1935 […]

Keep the sparkle

From the coolest depths of Tasmania and upper reaches of the Adelaide Hills, to the alpine foothills of Victoria and New South Wales, Australia is privileged to a wealth of sources of refined sparkling wines. The secret to all great sparkling wine is the elegance and acidity infused by a cool climate. In a country […]

Shades of grey in a parallel universe

To buy or not to buy parallel imported champagne? It’s hard to go past the tantalising discounts offered on familiar champagne brands in recent years. A strong dollar and record Australian consumption coinciding with global decline have smoothed the waters for more champagne than ever to arrive on our shores – and not all via […]

Out of the box

Is the wine cask dead? The days of the goon bag may be numbered. Domestic sales of Australian casks are plummeting by six percent every year. Of the seven leading cask manufacturers I invited to be part of this feature, more than half responded that their priority is “premiumisation” so they’ve scratched casks completely. It […]