Winemaker Notes
Professional Ratings
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Robert Parker's Wine Advocate
Sourced from Greenock, the 2016 Golden Semillon is a sweet wine concentrated by cutting the vine canes and letting the fruit partially desiccate on the vines. It offers crystalline-pure pineapple and passion fruit flavors with no evidence of botrytis. There's ample weight and unctuousness on the palate and a dry, chalk note on the finish that helps balance out the 130 grams per liter of residual sugar.
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Wine Enthusiast
Radiant gold in color, it’s hard to miss the varietal character in this opulent dessert wine. Fragrances of waxy lemon, dried tarragon, honey and damp hay waft out of the glass while the mouthfeel is creamy and rich, sliced with acidity that cuts through the sweetness. Not an overly complex sweetie, but an enjoyable one nonetheless.
Apart from the classics, we find many regional gems of different styles.
Late harvest wines are probably the easiest to understand. Grapes are picked so late that the sugars build up and residual sugar remains after the fermentation process. Ice wine, a style founded in Germany and there referred to as eiswein, is an extreme late harvest wine, produced from grapes frozen on the vine, and pressed while still frozen, resulting in a higher concentration of sugar. It is becoming a specialty of Canada as well, where it takes on the English name of ice wine.
Vin Santo, literally “holy wine,” is a Tuscan sweet wine made from drying the local white grapes Trebbiano Toscano and Malvasia in the winery and not pressing until somewhere between November and March.
Rutherglen is an historic wine region in northeast Victoria, Australia, famous for its fortified Topaque and Muscat with complex tawny characteristics.
Historically and presently the most important wine-producing region of Australia, the Barossa Valley is set in the Barossa zone of South Australia, where more than half of the country’s wine is made. Because the climate is very hot and dry, vineyard managers work diligently to ensure grapes reach the perfect levels of phenolic ripeness.
The intense heat is ideal for plush, bold reds, particularly Shiraz on its own or Rhône Blends. Often Shiraz and Cabernet partner up for plump and powerful reds.
While much less prevalent, light-skinned varieties such as Riesling, Viognier or Semillon produce vibrant Barossa Valley whites.
Most of Australia’s largest wine producers are based here and Shiraz plantings date back as far as the 1850s or before. Many of them are dry farmed and bush trained, still offering less than one ton per acre of inky, intense, purple juice.