Saturday, August 27, 2022

Cloudburst Tasting

 When you have a perfect vineyard site, very small production, and a strong desire to make outstanding wine, you have a good head start. I have described the background of Cloudburst in previous posts. I only mention here that the vineyard is densely planted and bio-dynamically farmed. The focus here is on a rare tasting of a number of these wines.

It started with Chardonnay. First up, the 2020 Cloudburst Chardonnay. I taste Meyer lemon, white peach and wood spice from the very noticeable new French oak. The wine is very clean and fresh, with acidity in good balance. This is typical Chardonnay fruit. All very nice, but not a lot of character (93/+ points). The 2017 is similar. It is a bit more lemon focussed, with the oak even more pronounced (93/+ points). It gets more interesting with the 2014 Chardonnay. This is a more opulent wine with more fruit focus: pineapple, apricot, a bit of lemon. This wine starts to show a bit of age (95/++ points). The wines are closed with screw cap, as opposed to the reds. I ask myself, with the attention to detail, maybe a cork closure would serve these wines better (see Giaconda), as the maturing is very slow.

The labels have golden lettering, only Cloudburst on the front

Now we move to the reds, Malbec first. The 2018 Malbec is quite fruity, but with a lot of energy. Black cherry and plum deliver flavours which are very pure, and the finish is silky and medium to long (95++ points). But this wine is overshadowed by the 2017 Malbec. This is a more complex wine with more savoury notes, such as mushroom, and a very long finish. This wine came close to the wine of the night and was loved by all (96/+++ points). 

The labels are hard to read, and even harder to photograph

The first Cabernet Sauvignon (they include a small Malbec percentage) is the 2019. Red- and blackcurrant deliver a satisfying mouthfeel. There are savoury flavours as well. The tannins are fine and the finish seems to expand (94/++ points). The 2017 Cabernet Sauvignon is a darker expression. Blackcurrant and mulberry flavours are balanced by beautifully fine grained, silky and lacey tannins. The finish is very long (97/+++). This was the wine of the night. Finally, the 2015 Cabernet Sauvignon. This is a bigger and more developed wine. Blackcurrant and mulberry flavours are soft, and a little sweet. Meat and charcoal flavours add complexity, but the finish is only medium (95/++). 

The most interesting aspect of the tasting was that not one wine was a disappointment. It is another question if you need to shell out $250/bottle to have this kind of quality experience. 




Monday, August 22, 2022

Dominio de Es La Mata

 The valley of Atauta is one of the most astonishing little wine regions in the world. It is an isolated area about 100km east of the main area of Ribera del Duero. What you see is a few deserted stone houses, fallen into disrepair, and tens, if not hundreds of family cellars, some as much as 500 years old. Here, simple presses were used, then the wine was stored in the underground cask cellar. 


This practice has disappeared now, but what has remained are maybe 100 small vineyards, mostly less than 1ha in size. Viticulturalist Bertrand Sourdais came to this area in 1999, co-founded Dominio de Atauta, and aggregated the fruit, much from vines more than 100 years old. He left in 2010 and formed a number of new wineries based in Soria, not far from there.

The fruit for the flagship winery, Dominio de Es, still comes from Atauta. The wines are rare, but I got my hand on a 2019 Dominio de Es La Mata.


This is a single vineyard wine from a 0.33ha plot. The soil is sand and calcareous rock over clay, altitude over 900 meters. You already notice on the nose, this is a big wine for Tempranillo, although only 13.8% alc. The yield was only 1t/acre in this year. The wine is concentrated, with blackberry and mulberry flavours dominant. French Oak is quite noticeable. It is still an elegant wine, but a bit blocky, with dry tannins.

The highlight is on the front palate, not the back, with a medium to long finish. The wine is clearly too young to drink and is likely to improve with time.

Score for now: 93/+




Friday, August 19, 2022

Aurora Vineyard Syrah

 Wine from the Aurora Vineyard in the subregion of Bendigo, Central Otago is not generally available to the public, as most of the fruit is subcontracted to another winery. However, I thought I review the 2010 Aurora The Legacy Syrah here, as it is a curious mix between warmer and cooler climate Shiraz.


This wine is quite dark fruited and concentrated, but at the same time peppery and with good acidity, and in this showing the cooler climate of Central Otago as well as the plentiful sunshine. The tannins are a little coarse before the wine finishes medium to long.

I noticed the fruit was picked on September 11, but there is nothing dramatic about this wine. It is nicely done, but a bit middle of the road.

Score: 92/+


Sunday, August 14, 2022

Why There's More Than One Way Writing About Wine

I found the following article by wine writer Tamlyn Currin in the Financial Times interesting. While her writing seems quite extreme, I agree that describing 7 different fruits as flavour components (some of which you would never have tasted) is quite unhelpful. Here it goes: 

In the space of a couple of weeks, the JancisRobinson.com editorial inbox received three emails on the subject of tasting notes. One reader wrote, “Whilst I’m certainly not questioning her palate, Tamlyn has to be taking the mickey out of us with some of her tasting notes in the champagne article.” He was particularly offended by the way I described a wine’s acidity by its shape, which I perceived as four-cornered, developing into an arrow of piercing triangularity on the finish. One reader, a Switzerland-based Master of Wine, wrote: “I just wanted to say that I think your tasting notes are superb! You are my favourite tasting note writer of the past two years — great imagination and descriptions!”. The third email read, “Just a comment and pet peeve. Why do the reviewers seem to need to put every fruit in their descriptions?” Tasting notes are as controversial as scoring systems within the wine world. But while the arguments for and against scoring are well worn, the conflict around the language we use to describe wine is more of a war by stealth. People love to take pot shots at the way other people write. I’ve watched this happen for years, not only in wine-related forums and across dinner tables, but also in books and articles written by professionals. Many of these criticisms are undisguised attacks against fellow wine writers, always from a position of contemptuous superiority. Entire books have been written and courses designed to teach us how to communicate what we taste. The format is almost always rigid, prescriptive and pedantic. It comes with a tacit understanding that there is a right and a wrong way to do things. Descriptions should conform to broadly accepted groups of fruit, flowers, spices and herbs, with a few other reference points such as chocolate, bread, nuts or smoke “allowed” on occasion. It’s useful, especially for novices, and brings discipline to business communications. But scientific research has shown over and over that wine tasting is a uniquely ­individual experience, based on a myriad of complex cultural, anatomical and psychological factors. The simple truth, which many wine experts prefer to ignore, is that there is no such thing as pure objectivity when it comes to reviewing wine. By extension, there is no such thing as a right or wrong way to write about it. My first lesson in metaphor came from Jancis, who told me more than 15 years ago that it is more important to describe the shape of the wine in your mouth than to list flavours. Back when I was tasked with transcribing tasting notes from her hieroglyphic shorthand, I found myself typing up a tasting note for a 1976 Mosel. It read: “Piano teacher”. I knew exactly what she meant. I had a piano teacher growing up. She was 75 and parchment thin, very strict, always disapproving. I didn’t practise my scales, and my fingers were rapped with a ruler on a regular basis. The house smelt of potpourri and mustiness. Jancis had added a note clarifying that the term was “my shorthand for a smell of macerated raisins and very slightly musty velours” but it wasn’t necessary. “Piano teacher” said it all. Some of the wine writing that sticks with me the most is that which leans on metaphor. In Reading Between the Wines, the importer and writer Terry Theise describes the variety Scheurebe as “Riesling just after it read the Karma Sutra”. After reading that, you will never taste a Scheurebe again without a naughty smile flitting across your face. Back when I transcribed Jancis’s tasting notes, I found myself typing one for a 1976 Mosel. It read: ‘Piano teacher’. I knew exactly what she meant In The Wine Dine Dictionary, Victoria Moore, in describing Sangiovese, writes, “Where Merlot is smooth, as if it’s been smoothed in and grouted up, Sangiovese has texture, like the crenelations of the battlements found all over Tuscany.” If you’ve ever had a glass of Tuscan Merlot and Tuscan Sangiovese side by side, you will know exactly what she means. Andrew Jefford writes of Barbaresco that “you taste drama and dust and bitterness as the wine turns to liquid rags in your mouth, and sails off with an angry asperity”. When writing about 2010 Mas del Serral made by Pepe Raventós, he tells the reader to see “a scene as intricately constructed as a watch”. “This sparkling wine,” he writes, “is the cloister of Santo Domingo de Silos: a honeycomb of light, chased about by dragons, centaurs and mermaids imagined by lost stone carvers.” That’s quite a metaphor. Master of wine Nick Jackson wrote a groundbreaking book based on his experience learning to identify wine blind, not through the tried-and-tested matrices of BLIC — balance, length, intensity, complexity — but through the perceived shape of the wine in the mouth based on acidity. It was both revelatory and liberating for me, who tastes in a multisensory, multidimensional sphere, to finally come across someone who identified Albariño as cuboid and Chardonnay as cylindrical. It was Mary Hesse who argued that metaphor is more than decorative, that it has “cognitive implications whose nature is a proper subject of philosophic discussion”. I have a vested interest in agreeing with her. The way I write about wine is sometimes so extremely metaphorical that my editors protest. A tasting note I wrote for a Roussillon reads: “Put your old leather boots on — the ones that feel like second skin, that you’ve loved for years. Pick up that hip flask filled with damson wine. There’s a punnet of ripe cherries on the kitchen table — put them in your backpack. Slam the back door behind you, grab the strong hand of the person you love most, stride out into the cold winter wind feeling the rough stones of the dirt track below your feet and start walking towards that rugged peak etched against a wide sky. Smell the scent of dry winter garrigue, feel the burn of muscle and your heart pounding as you begin to climb, the earth falling away beneath you. Get to the top, find a rock, turn your face into the cut of the wind, open that hip flask, bite into a cherry, feel the juice running down your chin, and laugh. That is this wine.” I know. There are no cherries in winter. But imagine how it would feel if there were. From time immemorial, humans have sat around their (real and metaphorical) fires and told stories. These may have been about gods, ancestors and spirits, but the actuality was not what mattered. The spirit of them was intended to resonate with the spirit of the listener. We allow diversity of literary styles, of music, of art. Why not the way we describe a wine? Diversity underpins the resilience of a thing. It gives everyone a voice and opens up a closed system of communication. I appreciate that not everyone is comfortable with getting their tasting notes in metaphorical form. By the same token, not everyone relates to a wine described by its detectable volatile compounds, acidity levels and measurable dry density. As with jazz, pop, classical and folk, everyone can find the style they are most comfortable with. Perhaps I don’t write about wines in the way my fellow wine writers do, but with our different voices, we can reach more people. The world is big enough for us all.

Friday, August 12, 2022

A Very Special Grange Tasting

 While all the talk is about the new 2018 Grange, I had a rare opportunity to taste four back vintages side by side.

1990 was the first year when 'Hermitage' was dropped from the label

We tasted from old to new. The first wine was the 1985 Grange Hermitage. From a cooler vintage, this wine was originally not as highly regarded as 1982, 1983 or 1986. However, it shone on this night. After 37 years, it started to drink like a first growth Bordeaux, Max Schubert's dream. This medium bodied wine (12.8% alc) showed its age with fruit flavours almost gone. Instead beautiful savoury flavours like tobacco and dry herbs delivered intensity and persistence. The structure was holding up strong (95 points).

The second wine, the 1990 Grange, was the star of the night. It was still fresh and generous with its famous incredibly layered flavours of dark cherries, blackberry, and plum. The American oak is beautifully integrated. Fine tannins give the wine perfect balance. Wine Spectator got it right, when it declared this wine best in the world in 1995 (98 points).  

An interesting counterpoint was the super ripe 1998 Grange. It is highly regarded, but I found it too rich. I tasted sweet confectionary. The wine was almost port like (91 points).

The final wine was the 2013 Grange. Can you believe you have to conclude this wine, at 9 years, is too early to drink? This is a mighty wine, extremely complex, combining black and blue fruits with earthy and meaty aromas as well as chocolate. There is an ultimate elegance in this wine and an extremely long finish (96 points).

All four wines had a typical Grange character - hard to capture in the abstract. But it also demonstrated that vintages matter, even in as majestic a wine as Grange.


Wednesday, August 10, 2022

Kusuda Pinot Noir

 I have followed this tiny producer for many years and written up a number of his Pinot Noirs. He is still on top of his game.


The 2016 Kusuda Pinot Noir has flavours of strawberry, red cherry and a bit of mushroom. The main feature of this light to medium-bodied wine is how delicate the wine is while still persistent on the palate. It has phenolic ripeness and some lifted aromatics. I wish there would have been slightly higher acidity to drive the wine a bit more, but this is a minor quabble.

Score: 96/+++




Monday, August 8, 2022

Premium Cabernets Comparison

 This is a brief review of some Australian premium Cabernets.


The star of this comparison tasting was the highly acclaimed 2020 Cullen Diana Madeline. It is a Cabernet Sauvignon Merlot blend. This was the most elegant wine, red fruited, with some tannin bite at the same time, and a beautiful finish. This is a world class wine (97 points).

The one closest in style to it was the 2019 Grosset Gaia. It had a similar feel, but was a bit broader in the mouth, less detailed, again with firm tannins (94 points).

The other wine from Margaret River was quite different. It was the top of the range 2018 Vasse Felix Tom Cullity Cabernet Malbec. It showed darker fruit, with mulberry flavours. The Malbec influence is strong. This is a bigger wine, quite fruity (93 points).  

An impressive wine was the 2017 Hickinbotham Clarendon Trueman Cabernet Sauvignon. It comes from the Northern, hillier part of McLaren Vale. This is a smooth wine, ripe, but balanced, with a silky mouthfeel and a medium to long finish (95 points).

I was less impressed with the 2016 Yalumba Menzies Cabernet Sauvignon. The redcurrant flavours are big and ripe. Christmas pudding or mud cake deliver quite a fat mouthfeel (92 points). 

There was also a New Zealand wine, the Merlot dominant 2019 Craggy Range Gimblett Gravels Te Kahu. This is quite a soft wine, but it lacked sufficient mouthfeel (91 points).


Thursday, August 4, 2022

The Penfolds 2022 Collection

 I remarked in my last Penfolds post about the subtle changes in the wines, which boils down to increased accessibility at young age. The other major shift is the positioning as a global luxury brand: one day its handbags, but today it's the launch of the Penfolds 2022 Collection. 


This is done as an event, not a serious wine tasting.



Having said this, the comparison from entry level wines from three different continents was interesting and quite instructive. The 2019 FWT 585 from Bordeaux is a blend of Cabernet (53%), Merlot (34%), and Petit Verdot (13%). FWT stands for French winemaking trial, of course. 585 is more interesting. It is the amount of dollars claimed by Max Schubert on return from his trip to Bordeaux - sounds little, but it was the early 50s. The wine has been matured in French and American oak. How did they smuggle American oak to Bordeaux? Anyway, the wine is medium bodied and impresses with its structure. Thyme and lavender on the nose, redcurrant and cranberry on the palate. It is early days and will be interesting to drink in a few years (94 points).

This was teamed up with the 2020 Bin 28 Shiraz, Penfold's workhorse. This wine is dark and warm: think blackberry, chocolate, mud cake, plum pudding - dependable, but a bit tough from the 2020 drought year (92 points).

The entry level California wine, the 2018 Bin 600 Cabernet/Shiraz includes fruit from Napa Valley, Sonoma and Paso Robles. The blackcurrant fruit flavours are ripe, and the boysenberry points to Napa Cabernet. There is also considerable vanilla from the 40% new oak. A concern is the lack of acidity in this wine (90 points).

The exciting aspect of this tasting was the fact that the wines truly spoke of their country of origin.

One more comment on ratings. Critics rated these wines and others from the collection much higher. It needs to be understood that there is a close relationship between the 'famous' critics and Penfolds. Here you get a truly independent view. I hope to be able to assess the premium wines in a little while. 




Wednesday, August 3, 2022

Jasper Hill Emily's Paddock

 Many years ago, I drank some 20 year old Emily's Paddock, which was terrific with its very special leathery and savoury characteristics. Yesterday, I drank a much younger wine, the 2017 Jasper Hill Emily's Paddock.


Emily's Paddock is the higher priced of the two Shirazes, but this is not meant to be a reflection of quality, but rather that there is more volume of the Georgia's Paddock.

This Emily's Paddock is a big, full-bodied wine - and it is nothing like the wines I remember. There is a lot more primary flavours here, not surprising, really. Shiraz Cabernet Franc is an unusual blend, and as both varieties contribute strongly, it is an unusual experience in the glass. The Shiraz contributes blackberry and some sweetness, and the Cabernet Franc redcurrant, raspberry and very pronounced peppery spice. I do not think the integration is as good as it could have been. Oak flavours are also quite noticeable. The finish is very long and a little hot.

Score: 93/0


Monday, August 1, 2022

Skillogalee Riesling


The 2021 Skillogalee Riesling is a typical Riesling from the Clare Valley. It is fresh on the palate with lime flavours and some red apple. This is quite a rounded wine. It seems there is a little residual sweetness, which is quite appealing. Having said this, the wine finishes dry.

Score: 90/++