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Vintage across Australia

The saying every vintage is different is indeed correct. Regions to have wrapped up vintage by the end of February will be the Hunter Valley, the South Burnett, the Darling Downs (except for the latter two there will be summer pruned shiraz harvested next June), the Riverina and that would have to include the Murray Darling as well.

As Darry Osborne said-in his 80 years of experiences in McLaren Vale vintage has only commenced in January three times, two on the 31st, and in 2007 on the 30th. The earliest ever probably. The Hunter Valley as well as the South Burnett did start early, around the end of the first week of January. So what constitutes an early vintage-the date of the start or the date of the wrap-up. The earliest vintage in the Hunter Valley was actually 1981, not 2007, when the wrap-up was mid-February.

I think the wrap-up is highly dependent on summer rainfall during vintage. Heavy rain just draws out the process because harvesting comes to a halt for a week or so. This year in the South Burnett there was drought, and despite two rain events, on January 26 (fittingly) and February 13, vintage was barely interrupted.

By early February the Granite Belt was harvesting pinot noir and chardonnay sparkling base, and Canberra was taking sauvignon blanc. As that goes it sounds like the start of vintage in cooler areas is barrelling forward, not out of control but global warming driven.

South Burnett Update – 27 January 2007

Maximum Daily Temperature watch: temperatures have risen this week Friday 26 January 2007 (calibrate your knowledge of South Burnett vineyards!): Moffatdale 32 oC, Jimbour 35 oC, Pokolbin 32 oC, Ballandean 34oC (very unusual), Stirling-Adelaide Hills 23 oC, Mildura 38 oC, Gingin 43oC (Swan WA).

Vintage elsewhere: McLaren Vale has started on sauvignon blanc and chardonnay next week (rain has caused splitting-note South Australia does have rain during vintage). The Hunter Valley are three weeks into harvesting as is Mildura (rain also last week raised the threat of fruit rots).

South Burnett Vintage-2007

The 2007 vintage conditions continue as a dream run in the South Burnett briefly described by journalist and regular writer about news in Queensland vineyards Des Houghton in the Courier Mail p15 January 20-21.

It is a dry year, about two weeks earlier than average (not a hot year, just an earlier break to the season late last August).

The day temperatures rise barely over 30 oC and the night temperatures drop nicely to 17-20 oC (even down to 12.4 oC last night).

Warm nights seem to be symptomatic of the previous two vintages 2005 and 2006 which produced too many day temperatures over the 30oC level and night temperatures 22-24 oC which deplete grape acidity.

The South Burnett vineyards have had no frost, no snow, no sleet, no twisters, no repeated hail storms, no 40 oC days, but some touches of light hail this 2007 vintage.

Maximum Daily Temperature watch Saturday 20 January 2007 (calibrate your knowledge of South Burnett vineyards!): Moffatdale 31 oC, Jimbour 34 oC, Pokolbin 39 oC, Ballandean 26oC, Stirling-Adelaide Hills 20 oC, Mildura 26 oC (raining at present, 37 oC previous day), Gingin 29oC (Swan WA).

Most wine regions receive rain during part of their vintage-this is not confined to coastal Queensland-the cool areas of Western Australia were deluged during the 2006 vintage, including Margaret River-and consequently many WA cabernets are very poor-some vineyards were not even harvested!

The South Burnett is a quasi-continental region, 350-600 metres elevation west of the Great Dividing Range (in a natural rain shadow) which receives partly-prevailing eastern off shore breezes after 3:00 pm or so (some will know of the blowy Freemantle doctor!), which is the same late afternoon cooling effect during the summer ripening period.

Tuscany-wine region, a cucina and a pleasant place

The 2007 vintage took me to Tuscany, and provided an opportunity to fit into a countryside lodging for two weeks, and apart from wine activities, absorb some local culture.

THE SCENE-Toscana in the local language is a large region of which there is a large proportion of hilly, forested, wild country which we would call bush. It was the pheasant season-there were plenty of the birds around as well as shotguns discharging. Most of the activity was weekend based, and quite widespread.

Hiring a car is fundamental to visit sites, and allow more time than usual to reach destinations due to the slow speeds (expect continual narrow winding roads) and defective signage until you become practiced at second guessing what the directions mean.

A GPS is a good option, particularly on motorways as it is normal for the way across major roads to take more than one circular routes crossed by successive roundabouts before the correct destination is obvious. This instrument takes you across the right part of the roundabout and on to the right motorway section but can occasionally be confused with directions too.

Italian regional tourism is not like Australian information centres where you might find information about an entire state or a contiguous road system. The local ‘i” only focuses on the town, the sector or the region, and questions about outlying or other areas will be met with consternation.

If you are the healthy outdoor type it is particularly difficult to locate walking or exercise paths of any significance unless you take a guided tour where the terrain (often through private property) is arranged prior. Of the one national park I discovered, the Cinque Terre was well signed, yet this is a hyper-tourist site. No doubt there will be others and maybe Google is the one best way of finding more information.

We settled for the 3 km looping walk around the accommodation’s farm, Il Castagno, www.ilcastagno.net , a thousand hectare mixed property (sunflower, lucerne, sangiovese, villas) in the tiny town of Il Castagno (sole business is the local ristorante/pizzeria) ten kilometres east of San Gimignano (the small hill town saturated with tourists daily).

Finding good and satisfying places to eat and enjoy Italian culture is fun, also a challenge until you adjust to the time scale. That is the lunch closure: shops of all kinds including supermarkets will close from 12:30-1:00 and re-open at 4:00 save the tourist towns which rely on a high volume of business at that time of the day, and no other.

The catch is if you are having a lazy time, then late morning departures for visits run you out of time for shopping, even provisioning or if you are driving on Tuscan roads for an hour, expect it to take longer, even more so at night when a restaurant will be difficult to locate.

Two food guides were invaluable: Lonely Planet and Osterie & Locande D’Italiaor A guide to traditional places to eat and stay in Italy, published by Slow Food and well worth the English version sold by Amazon-www.slowfood.com. Slow Food is a Piedmontese-origin organisation upholding traditional cuisine and food supply values, particularly to confront the fast food conglomerates who have enhanced the decline of Western health through poor diet.

Macdonalds have a sparing presence in Italy as the majority of Italians shun this example of lifestyle and prefer to support their local markets and alimentaria. Even supermercados are confined to the industrial section of the towns and cities so as to not clutter the skyline of the older architecture.

If the Italian habit of the lunchtime closedown were to be trimmed then the access of the junk food retailers would increase due to the convenience factor whereas daily local shopping for fresh meal ingredients stimulates the diversity of home style cooking. Or attendance at the eating house next door for lunch maintains the local economy instead of spooning the junk profits to a US listed company.

Our cooking supplies were often bought daily from town square markets (centro) which rotated around the local towns-a fish monger (Italian trout), heaps of squid, octopus and cuttlefish, prepared on the spot, or the butcher, basic cuts through to wild boar ribs and monster rib eyes for carnivores, spit roasting free range chooks also crammed with other roasts. There were terrific vegetables such as flavoursome zucchinis, flower on, local white truffles, and seasonal fruit, crunchy pears and pedestrian imported Cavendish bananas-every culture eats bananas!

Wines-we tasted widely in restaurants and visited some cellar doors-many vineyards advertise along the roadside. The list:

Falchini Vernaccia di San Gimignano 2006 Vigna a Solatio, 12%, E10, very pale, fresh lemon, mouth sweet, austere, high acid, phenolic palate. 87 Poggioalloro Vernaccia di San Gimignano 2006, 12.5%, E10, clean dry white, bitter crunch fits the food. 86 Antinori Vermentino 2005, Tenuta Guado al Tasso, Bolgheri, 12.5%, E15, great aromatics, grown near the sea, lemon, crunchy tannins, very good. 90 Buondonno Chianti Classico 2005 made by Gabrielle Buondonno in Castellina-in-Chianti, Casavecchia alla Riazza, organic wine, 13%, E18 (Da Bado restaurant Volterra). A basic wine list without vintages-arise from the table to read the detail on the bottles standing up around the restaurant; no English, wine simple, fresh, basic clean Chianti. 88 Sono Montenidoli Chianti Colli Senesi 2004, 14.5%, big rich thing, sangiovese and canaiolo, hefty oak, E16 90 Nipozzano Chianti Rufina Riserva 2004, Frescobaldi, 13%, very good, all sangiovese, aromatic, restrained oak, varietal, powdery tannins E22, 90 Producer visits: Santa Cristina; near Il Castagno, also accommodation (13 apartments), restaurant, www.santacristina.fi.it; 350-400m elevation, Solaria 2006, vino da tavola, trebbiano, 85 E3.30, 13%; Hanemone 2005, IGT,trebbiano, chardonnay, moscato, unwooded, jesty, smart, 87 E6.00, 12.5%; Decimamusa 2005, IGT, oak aged sauvignon blanc, very oaky, 86E11.00, 13%; Gemmula Chianti Classico 2004 (all red-sangiovese, canaiolo, malvasia nero, colorino), good Chianti, almond-cherry fruit, soft, 87 E5.20, 13%; Fontallorso 2004, IGT, all sangiovese, six months new oak, pushed up on ripeness, does well, 89 E7.00, 13.5%, also own extra virgin olive oil, Gambassino from correggiola, moraiola and leccino varieties.

Pietralta; near Il Castagno, German-owned selling mainly to the German market, establishing new varieties like lagrein and more ancient Tuscan ones which are confidential; Chianti Classico 2004, good wine, varietal expression very good, restrained oak, 87 E 5.90, 12.5%, uses 2% new Jupilles, 18,000 bottles which is the majority of production, Chianti Riserva 2004, smart yet woody, 90% sangiovese, 10% merlot, 2600 bottles, 89E8.50,13%; Brinato IGT, 2005, smart wine, merlot dominant, leafy merlot, sangiovese, lagrein, 1500 bottles, 89 E10, 13.5%; Brinato 2004 IGT, very classy, mocha, 90 E 12, 13.5%; Solivagas 2004 IGT, cabernet, syrah, merlot, touch bretty, one year in new barrels, shows it, 89 E15 13.5%, www.pietralta.it.

Banfi Vintners; www.castellobanfi.com 850 hectares in Montalcino; Serena Sauvignon Blanc 2006, no herbal, classy oak use, crunchy texture with the typical racy acidity, fresh, 88 12.5%; San Angelo Pinot Grigio 2006, pale green, heaps of cool ferment nose character, new worldish in aromatics, grown at 300 m, fresh and zippy, great finish and flavour, 89 12%;Fontanelle Chardonnay 2005, pale green, nutty, peachy, complexity with oak but restrained, understated but very varietal; medium texture, fine, fresh and minerally, smart, 91 13%; Colvecchio Syrah 2004 IGT, great colour, really good spice, licorice, nutty oak, big and rich, really well made, quite a stunner 92 13.5; Cum Laude 2004 Super Tuscan, cabernet, merlot, sangiovese, syrah, 30/30/25/15, serious oak, char, leafy cabernet, fruit sweet, very fine, very soft 92 13%; Summus 2000 Super Tuscan, sangiovese, syrah, cabernet, 40/40/20, lots of secondary characters from bottle age, tannins drying out, long flavours, mint very prevalent 88 13%; Excelsus 2000 Super Tuscan, cabernet merlot, 60/40, lots of terroir, cedar oak, volatile acidity pokes out, quite tannic but still fine 90 13%; Brunello di Montalcino 2002, said to be a difficult year which few estates released, not a deep colour, nose complex, aged, oak integrated, earth and mint, medium bodied, a good line of tannins, tannins powdery from oak, aging quite fast, 9013%; Poggio Alle Mura, Brunello di Montalcino 2000, a serious wine, lots of oak though and volatility, soft and alluring, very delicious, velvet texture 94 13.5%; Poggio all’Oro Brunello di Montalcino Riserva 1995, great complexity, brass, nuts, terroir, still varietal, very rounded palate, lots of secondary flavours, tons of juicy, drying tannin, smart 95 13.5%; Florus Muscat Late Harvest 2004; golden green, raisined grapes left on the vine to 16 Be, oak aged for a year, delicious, concentrated, non-botrytis sticky 90 16%; Salsa Etrusca (12 year old) vinegar, aged sequentially in oak, chestnut, cherry, ash and mulberry barrels of reducing sizes-60, 50, 40, 30, 25 litre 6.9 % acidity, made from trebbiano and muscat, a sweeter style to balsamico due to the process; Olivo Extra Vergine di Oliva 2006, from leccino, olivastra di Montalcino, moraiolo and ascolana tenera, exceptional oil.

Carpineto; www.carpineto.com in Dudda; Vernaccia di San Gimignano 2006, neutral, spice, high acid, tight 87 12.5%, E 5.70; Dogajolo 2006 IGT, sangiovese, canaiolo, 85/15, always a reliable red, fruit filled, good chewy texture 88 13% E 5.00; Chianti Castaldo 2005, lots of new oak, sangiovese, canaiolo, 90/10, lots of flavour, fuller bodied 87 E 4.80 13%;Chianti Classico 2003 Riserva, lots of mint, earthiness, almondy oak, varietal, 100% sangiovese, drying tannin 89 E12.00, 13%; Brunello di Montalcino 2001, mature nose, complex, drying tannins, yet lost of lasting flavours, mature fruit, oak totally integrated 91 E 27.00, 13%; Farnito Vin Santo 1986, orange, brown, gold, an oxidatively matured sweet white, rancio from barrel age, complex, old oak, nutty, trebbiano, malvasia, 60/40 90 E 24.00, 15%; three olive oils, Sillano from Florence, Delle Simbarde from Vino Nobile di Montepulciano and Il Picciolo in Grossetto.

 

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