Feb 22, 2010: The Taste Revolution: A new crop of
Mediterranean varieties are changing Australian wine
By Max Allen
Wine & Spirits Magazine
Thirty glasses of red wine are lined up on the table in
front of me. As I slowly taste my way through them, I write
notes and scores on a judging sheet attached to a clipboard.
At tables around me other judges are studiously sniffing,
swirling, scribbling, spitting. It looks like any other wine
competition. But it's not. The Australian Alternative
Varieties Wine Show is different. Very different.
The 30 glasses on the table don't contain shiraz or
cabernet or merlot. They contain red wines made from touriga,
aglianico, tannat, negroamaro, saperavi—a remarkably diverse
array of grapes and flavors and tastes. Earlier in the day I
judged a sensational class of nebbiolos. Another panel of
judges worked their way through more than 50 tempranillos
and a dozen vermentinos. And the class of "other whites"
boasted—among others—a few petit mansengs, a schonberger and
Australia's first examples of grüner veltliner and friulano.
Now ten years old, the AAVWS is held each year in Mildura,
in the heart of Australia's inland, irrigated commercial
winegrowing district, and I've been involved with the show
since the beginning (as chief judge for the last five
years). In that time, I've seen the interest in alternative
grape varieties grow from a curiosity, a fringe activity, to
a serious part of Australia's ongoing viticultural
development.
Back in 1999, most of the wine producers growing and
making alternative grapes were either pioneers with
small-scale productions—people like Kathleen Quealy and
Kevin McCarthy, playing with pinot grigio on the Mornington
Peninsula—or larger wineries like Yalumba, dabbling in
viognier. This year, the AAVWS was inundated with 600
entries, including some with production runs in the tens of
thousands of cases from large producers such as Foster's,
McGuigan and Yellow Tail.
While the number of different grape varieties grown
commercially in Australian vineyards has grown from 75 to
150 in the last ten years, these alternative grapes
collectively make up a very small proportion of the national
crush. The top ten so-called classic varieties—chardonnay,
shiraz, cabernet et al.—still account for over 90 percent of
Australia's annual wine production.
'But some of the newcomers are spreading rapidly, already
moving from niche players to household names: With close to
7,500 acres of vines in the ground and 30,000 tonnes of
grapes picked each vintage, pinot gris, for
example—virtually unknown in Australia in 1999—is now the
fifth most widely planted white grape in the country, after
chardonnay, semillon, sauvignon blanc and riesling.
There are now 250 Australian wineries growing and making
tempranillo (I think this will eventually become Australia's
second most important red grape after shiraz); another 250
producing sangiovese and no fewer than 500 making viognier
(or blending a little viognier with their shiraz). The
hugely popular, globally distributed Jacob's Creek Classic
and Sparkling ranges now feature, respectively, a
tempranillo and two sparkling moscatos—Mediterranean wine
styles seldom seen in 1999—and senior winemakers like Glenn
James from Foster's have come out in loud support of
southern Italian white grapes like fiano and vermentino.
So, why the steady growth of alternative varieties over
the last decade?
Louisa Rose is chief winemaker for Yalumba and chair of
the AAVWS. She says that interest in new varieties is a
natural evolution in Australian wine, and she points out
that some of the country's most popular varieties were once
considered exotic alternatives. "It's important to
remember," she says, "that in the 1960s there were very few
chardonnay vines in Australia. Even in 1980, it was being
lumped in with the 'other whites' in official statistics.
Now look at it."
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Winemaker Stephen Pannell, winner of the
Best Wine trophy at this year's AAVWS for his utterly
beguiling 2007 Adelaide Hills Nebbiolo, believes that
Australia is emerging from a "Francophile period"—a time
when Burgundy and Bordeaux were held up as the ultimate
expressions of fine wine—into a new era. Producers now
embrace and emulate a greater diversity of European wine
styles.
"For years, past generations of Australian winemakers
were seduced by the French and lulled into the false idea
that we live in a country whose climate is like France,"
says Pannell. "We were totally obsessed with so-called
classic French varieties; we planted them in the most
inappropriate places and convinced ourselves that the wines
were pretty good. And we struggled with the fact that other
countries with climates much more similar to ours could grow
and make wine as well."
Now, though, with a whole new generation of winemakers
like Pannell having traveled to Italy, Spain and Provence
for vintage —rather than Burgundy, Bordeaux or Champagne, as
their fathers did—and with a whole new generation of
restaurateurs and sommeliers embracing new-wave
Mediterranean food and wine, there is a surge of enthusiasm
in less classic grape varieties.
Significantly, in the last three or four years, there has
also been a surge of interest in alternative
varieties—particularly those from the hot, dry southern
Mediterranean regions—among large-scale commercial grape
growers because of the changing climate, both physical and
economic.
Since the early 2000s, the wine industry has been
hammered by a continuing drought, a string of heat
wave-shriveled vintages, bushfires, water restrictions (all
manifestations of climate change), dwindling exports, the
global financial crisis and a chronic oversupply of grapes.
Many growers have been forced to take a long, hard look at
the sustainability of their vineyards—and that has led them
to explore other options, including planting more sensible
(i.e., heat- and drought-tolerant) varieties.
Meanwhile, in old, established winegrowing regions such
as the Barossa Valley, the small remaining plantings of red
grapes such as mataro, carignan and cinsault, long
considered second-rate varieties, are now sought-after both
for their savory flavors and their suitability to hot, dry
growing conditions. And in Rutherglen, in northeast
Victoria, winemakers have realized that their old durif and
marsanne vines are holding up very well in the changing
climate.
Each year at the AAVWS I am allowed to award a trophy—the
Chairman's Wine to Watch—to an exhibit that particularly
excites me, that sums up the boldness, newness and
adventurous spirit of what's happening with emerging grapes
in Australia. This year I gave the gong to two wines,
because they not only made me dance a little jig of joy when
I tasted them, but they also point to a very bright—and very
diverse—future for Australian wine.
The white was a greco di tufo—a variety from southern
Italy's Campania region—grown by brand new winery Beach Road
in South Australia's warm and increasingly dry Langhorne
Creek region. Made in the hot 2009 vintage without any
additions other than a little sulphur at bottling, it's a
magnificently textural, bone-dry white with an oily richness
balanced by a mineral finish. About as far from a pristine,
fruity, clean, fresh Aussie riesling as it's possible to
get.
The red was from d'Arenberg in McLaren Vale: The 2007
Cenosilicaphobic Cat, a brilliantly savory, unremittingly
tannic yet impressively complex and plush-at-the-core blend
of the Umbrian grape sagrantino (from very young vines) and
a splash of the southern French grape cinsault (from very
old vines). Just a stunningly original idea, to put these
two grapes together—and surely the first time it's ever been
done, anywhere in the world.
These would be the perfect bottles to open the next time
you hear anyone accuse Australian wine of being boring
Max Allen/Wine & Spirits Magazine

Προσθήκη:
22/2/2010
Τελευταία Ανανέωση:
22/2/2010
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