A lemon coloured wine with rounded citric aromas including tangerine and lime, there is also a touch of apricot and spiceiness. On the palate there is a slight prickle on the tongue but the overpowering initial feeling is of freshness, green apple, grapefruit pith and a slight hint of greenness from a pea shoot nuance, this is a fresh, zesty wine which despite 7 years age - is youthful, clean and ready to age for some time to come.
Overall the wine is fresh, clean and full of fruit as it opens in the mouth but also has an extra complexity, the texture alone is waxy and delicious, at 7 years old - it tastes youthful and has much time and pleasure to give! Enjoy - available from Sainsburys under their 'Taste the Difference' own label range at an amazingly low cost of £9.99 and also from Majestic at £9.99 if you buy 2.
How the wine was made :-All grapes for this wine were handpicked. They were de-stemmed at the winery, crushed, the must chilled and the juice drained. After 48 hours to allow settling, the clear juice was racked off and warmed to allow fermention - which was slow and cool to help retain the exceptional fruit flavour of this vintage.
The Wine maker is Phil Ryan - we thankyou Phil!
The Hunter Valley is Australia’s oldest producing wine region, with vines first planted in the 1820’s and is approximately two hours drive north of Sydney and to the northwest of Newcastle. It is based on the catchment of the Hunter Valley River & includes the Upper & Lower Hunter areas.
The Hunter Valley is warm / hot. However,
temperature, within broad limits, has nothing to do with quality, but affects
only the style. In addition to hot days, the Hunter Valley has relatively warm
nights when the physiological processes that ripen fruit can continue. The days
are also quite humid, reducing moisture stress and allowing the leaves to keep
their pores open longer during hot weather. This allows photosynthesis and
growth to continue when, in drier air, it would not. The Lower Hunter Valley
around Pokolbin is a little wetter than Broke Fordwich and the Upper Hunter
Valley but is closer to the coast and benefits more from cooling sea breezes.
Soils : There
are three main soil types in the Hunter Valley. The first is the red clay loam
that appears on the hilltops and slopes. Red soils are well-drained and provide
a good medium for vines; these are where the best Shiraz is grown. On
some slopes you’ll also find chocolate brown podsols which are also good for
red wines. You’ll find the third major soil type on the flats along the creek
beds where grey sandy loams overlie white or yellow clays. Casuarinas are a
good indicator for these soils and this is where whites grow best - mostly
Semillon and Chardonnay. In the Upper Hunter Valley, these soils tend to
be a little deeper and grade into black loams.
Hunter
Valley Semillon: Is considered to be a world benchmark wine, it is the
stellar white variety in the region. Semillon is at its delicate best when
picked early to make a wine of ten to 11.5% alcohol and almost invariably has
ripe flavours at low sugar concentrations. This is the style of wine that best
responds to bottle age, during which it develops outstanding lemon curd and
toasty complexity and becomes barely recognisable from its demure beginning.
Most companies release their Semillons when only a few months old when they are
crisp and lively with a light body and fresh, lemony and grassy fruit. A few
keep some wines for bottle-maturation and release after five years or more when
they have deepened in colour, become rounder and softer in the mouth and
developed the most brilliantly complex flavours of vanilla and buttered toast.
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