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Samuel Smith migrated from Dorset England to Angaston in the colony of South Australia circa 1847, he took up work as a gardener with George Fife Angas, the virtual founder of the colony. In 1849, Smith bought thirty acres and planted vines by moonlight, the first ever vintages of Yalumba. One of his most enduring legacies were some unique clones of Shiraz, which were ultimately sown to the illustrious Mount Edelstone vineyard in 1912. Angas's great grandchild Ron Angas acquired cuttings from the Edelstone site and migrated the precious plantings to his pastures at Hutton Vale. The land remains in family hands, a graze for flocks of some highly fortunate.. The return of rootstock to garden of eden»
There are four tiny patches of vine at Scotchman's Hill, which have been mollycoddled by Robin Brockett, since the start of his tenure as chief winemaker in the 1980s. Excruciatingly limited after a strict pruning and rigorous sorting of fruit, they each yield a mere hundred cases of wine. Brockett has set aside the precious harvests of these superior blocks for his own label, a personal project to hand craft the finest of vintage, an exclusive range of the Bellarine's most elite single vineyard efforts. So besotted is Brockett by the spectacular quality of fruit from these four regal parcels, he has imported two 800 Litre Tuscan vinification Amphora from the.. Brockett begets the best of bellarine»
The mean gravelly soils and invigorating climes of Mount Barker of the Australian southwest, were identified during the 1960s by the world's leading viticulturalists, as a place uncannily similar to the great terroirs and clime of Bordeaux. The pioneering vines of Forest Hill were the first ever planted here, sired from rootstock of ancient Houghton clones, inaugurally vintaged by the illustrious Jack Mann in 1972. The Cabernet and Riesling of Forest Hill were promptly distinguished by multiple trophy victories and praised by gentleman James Halliday as the most remarkable wines to come out of the Australian west. Forest Hill have remained a source of the most.. Softly spoken wonders from the west»
Rolf Binder is one of the Barossa's quiet achieving superstars, recipient of the most conspicuous national accolades, Barossa Winemaker of Year and Best Small Producer, Best Barossa Shiraz Trophy and coveted listing in the illustrious Langtons Classification of Australian Wine. Binder's focus has always been on old vines fruit, in particular, the abstruse canon of early settler varietals which populated Barossa Valley during the 1840s. Wild bush vines Mataro, picked off patches at Tanunda along Langmeil Road, ancient growths of Grenache from Gomersal and Light Pass. Rolf's tour de force are eight superlative rows of Shiraz, established 1972 by the Binders.. Seven decades of tillage at tanunda»

Domaine Sauzet Etienne Sauzet Puligny Montrachet Champ Canet 2001 CONFIRM 2001 VINTAGE

Etienne Sauzet Puligny Montrachet Champ Canet 2001 - Buy
Chardonnay Montrachet France
From a single hectare of Chardonnay, planted to vines fifty years of age. Champ Canet is one of seventeen climats at Puligny Montrachet with the exceptional classification of a Premier Cru vineyard. It was in the very village of Puligny that Etienne Sauzet established himself as one of the most significant names in Burgundy. His vintages were remarkable for their purity of fruit and marvelous expression of soil. Today, the Chardonnays of Puligny Montrachet and Domaine Sauzet are amongst the most highly sought and revered wines in the world.
The quality of wine from Champ Canet is ultimately determined by microclimate and terroir. The soils can be very calcareous and quite pebbly, vines struggle to make their fruit as they grow long roots to forage for their water. Grapes are treated to a pneumatic press and cold settled at 10C to 12C for up to twenty four hours. The musts are vinified at 18C to 22C for three to six weeks in a selection of new and seasoned Troncais and Allier French oak barriques. The wines complete their malolactic and remain in barrel for eleven months through a course of battonage on gross lees before transfer to tank for a further term of six months on fine lees. The finished wine is bottled after a light fining and filtration.
Golden buttery hue. An attractive nose of orchard stonefruits, cocoa and cream, sweetly pungent dried florals and fragrant new oak characters. Generous and mouthfilling with expressions of hazelnut and dried citrus, a dense, fully fleshed palate exhibiting tensile minerality over a wonderful balancing act of developed old vine fruit characters and lithe apple acids. Elegant and poised with a lingering finish to notes of pith and almond, minerals and spice.
$50 Or Above White All Regions
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