Archives for the ‘General’ Category

Sample South Burnett: Qld food pairing

The Wine and Food in the Park festival in the peanut capital of Kingaroy was a hoot.

The bands were loud: as you do, with mixes of country, blues and rock, not much too modern yet entertaining the crowd.

They kicked back with their portable chairs and other comforts; drinking either South Burnett wine or that black Queensland spirit which does not always make locals proud.

Meanwhile in the PCA tent (Peanut Company of Australia) were lots of discussions about South Burnett wine.

Local chef Sheree Strauss who rattles pans at Kingaroy Caterers, and does a terrific job at scouting up local produce (a locovore with similar to convictions to mine) matched flavours with a series of wine varietals grown in the region.

Arriving by mid-afternoon this writer discovered the Sample South Burnett food and wine pairing sessions sold out. Hooray, lots of yummy bits and crisp cold wine to pour too.

Wines were ordered from light texture to full texture and flavours paired with a little bit of deft foodie thinking.

Nina Temperton of Bellbird Vineyards

Bellbird VineyardsVerdelho 2010 (+++1/2) USD 13, 13.8%, has glorious peanut-leaf green colour, pale, then an effusion of verdelho fruitiness, nice lean palate, dry, cleansing acid. Vineyard site is the Coolabunia red soil uplands 14 km from Kingaroy.

The flavour pair was Kingaroy Cheese factory’s cow feta made spreadable with some plain yoghurt and mascarpone; nice dairy flavours which kept a degree of neutrality to stimulate the mouth with this demure white wine.

Tipperary Estate Verdelho Semillon 2010 (+++), USD16, 13.6%, is mint green, attractive mix of verdelho aromatics of tropical fruits plus waxiness of semillon; a good blend, left with about 12 grams of sugar, much bigger wine than the Bellbird; more extract then tight finish. From Moffatdale, 15 km south-east of Murgon.

As a wine with more dimensions the rice paper rolls containing steamed peanuts, marinated chicken dice and aromatic herbs stood up to the wine, cleansing the palate and reflecting on the versatility of peanuts in Asian-influenced flavours.

Maryanne Pidcock & Peter Eaton of Captain’s Paddock

Captain’s Paddock Unwooded Chardonnay 2009 (++++), USD 20, 12.4%, is intense lemon-skin colour, reeks of white peach (the signature aroma for the variety in this region) and great bottle characters; then moving to medium weight mouth texture, elegant acidity and creamy-soft finish, a real delight. Single vineyard 8km north of Kingaroy.

The matching flavour was quite simple, sliced poached Bendele organic duck breast (farm near Kilkivan); subtle seasoning in the fat layer, then hyped a little when dipped in a drizzle of balsamic which lifted the duck flavour up to reach the chardonnay richness. Acidity enlivens fatty mouthfuls!

Crane WinesViognier 2010 (+++1/2), USD 18, 14%, has the ginger aromas of this grape from warm regions, then a monster palate of grape texture, full body this one though composed. Winery 10 km north –east of Kingaroy, grapes from a Nanango grower.

The match was simple and elegant-Kingaroy Cheese’s Triple Cream Brie; aged not to its fullest; crisp white mould skin which pumped up the viognier’s texture, ample butterfat to be slippery like viognier (around 65% fat).

Clovely Estate Left Field Barbera 2008 (+++), USD 20, 13.5%, is a wonderful rendition of the new crops of Mediterranean varietals with restrained texture weight, savoury fruits and a finish softened to the point of obvious acidity. A bright wine. Vineyard 13 km south-east of Murgon.

Carrying on the food friendliness of this variety (it has very little tannin/dryness), a couple of slices of local chorizo showed slight chilli heat, balancing such a soft wine; giving out all the beef flavours yet holding wine savouriness.

Moffatdale Ridge Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 (++++), USD 18, 14%, is rich red, already opening up with mint and oak cedar, then has good medium body with the usual level of drying cabernet tannin. Vineyard at Moffatdale, 10km south-east of Murgon.

The match: Kinbombi Beef grass-fed rib fillet, cooked pink, sliced thinly and doused in green peppercorn sauce. Wine without trapped sauce was unctuous, wine with the peppercorn taste influence ruined the match. Hot sauce flavours fight with high tannin wines like cabernet. Be careful.

Kingsley Grove Hilltop Shiraz 2005 (+++), USD 20, 15.5%, now deep garnet, lots of coconut American oak then a full-bodied impression, biggest red of the tasting showing just how massive this variety can be when fully ripened. Vineyard is 13 km south-west of Kingaroy.

The score for this match was shiraz 2; Barkers Creek Pork 0; as delicately-roasted white pork, layered with fat flavours is overloaded by this shiraz. That flavour inundation is reversed very well by a second mouthful with Kingaroy Kitchen pawpaw chutney; a high spice attack of cinnamon and clove tones down the wine and the additional acidity from vinegar softens up the big oak dry finish.

Even more enlightening was my retiring stay at Taabinga Homestead afterwards, 18 km from Kingaroy; built in 1846 and still beautifully preserved. My digs were a cottage in the complex, oh so comfortable and equally enjoyable was Colin Marshall’s country-style breakfast in the original kitchen building.

You really need the whole day to absorb Taabinga: the clipped gardens, ancient trees and shrubs (growing well from soaking rains), history all around, outhouses, music, fine accommodation and leisurely entertainment.

Taabinga Homestead built 1846

Next year if you live on the Darling Downs or the South Burnett: try the wines at Wine & Food in the Park. I can recommend some new drinks.

Brown Brothers: Patricias excite; Prosecco, Durif, Grigio

Ross and Katherine Brown from Milawa dropped by this week: they were showing their signature wines – Patricia – around Brisbane town.

Katherine & Ross Brown – Brown Brothers

Also Brown Brothers’ new Prosecco 2010 is awesome. That’s the prosecco grape; origin Veneto Italy and now grown increasingly in the King Valley, and no doubt elsewhere in high county Victoria.

The Italians have stamped this wine up with a DOCG in their country, and any maker outside the delineated region must describe the wine as glera, the ancient name for the prosecco grape.

But in Australia it’s good old prosecco. Italian Prosecco DOCG is coming into Australia in increasing quantities, and is very good.

Both strands of wine are made by tank fermentation or Charmat. That’s the process which makes unpretentious bubbly wine.

Brown Brothers Limited Release Prosecco 2010 (USD 20); 11%, +++1/2, is uncomplicated but this varietal has a habit of igniting the nose with pleasantries; what you smell is soft yet distinct pear/varietal prosecco grape, little yeast, then an equally pleasing mouthful, fizz, little sweetness, clean mouth, pleasant swallow. Great.

Brown Brothers Limited Release Pinot Grigio 2010 (USD30), 14%, ++++, is the most serious attempt on this grape which I have seen from Browns. It smells worked (had portions of chardonnay-types of manipulation during fermentation, probably some going through old barrels and such complexing tools). Powerful nose, lots of pear fruit, clean, fruity, long flavoured and very trite finish.

Brown Brothers Patricia Chardonnay 2008 (USD 40), 13.5%, +++1/2, is the first chardonnay to make the Patricia standard (top in the company) for five years. It’s green (young), has a nose full of interest (nutty fruit, sweet-smelling barrel ferment), and a lovely taste; that’s mixed fruit flavours, then minerality and a long time after, a touch of dryness from barrel use.

It’s a long wine to age a long time, made from Yarra Valley and Whitlands; all Victorian grapes.

Ross Brown quipped “this style is in the space where we want to be” meaning he has one of those modern Australian chardonnays which some English critics are now saying are well set to rival the whites of Burgundy. With their screw caps Browns bottles will certainly last longer.

Brown Brothers Patricia Cabernet Sauvignon 2006 (UDS 56), 14.5%, ++++1/2, is dense; it’s going to be a deep drink, it smells of cedar and mint, then black fruits, it’s tannins are soothing but not dumbed down, it’s sufficiently rich to make me salivate. Grapes come from King Valley, Mornington, Pyrenees and Beechworth.

Brown Brothers Limited Release Durif 2009 (USD 20), 14%, +++1/2, has real attitude, its dark and brooding, grown in Heathcote (cooler spot than traditional Rutherglen examples), has flavours of blackberry pips, a lovely dimension on swallowing, ripe, soft and engaging.

Ross Brown spoke about his company’s purchases of the assets of Gunns in Tasmania with strong assurance that the USD 33 million investment will return dividends.

The first immediate payoff has been the replacement of lost pinot noir and chardonnay grapes from Whitlands due to hail damage.

Ross spoke of the cycles in Australian wine supply: red in the 70s, white in the 80s; generally the span of the cycle is 15 years, sometimes closer to 10; chardonnay went 15 years from the 90s, sauvignon blanc is 12 years in and working hard to destroy itself.

He predicts that red wine consumption is on an upswing, with pinot noir showing a 24% growth pattern from a slim 5% market share.

If it does move upwards as a category, the 45% of the Gunns purchase which is pinot should be a boon for the Brown family.

www.brownbrothers.com.au

 

Penley in Coonawarra: Great Oz reds, best soil

Coonawarra dirt-terra rossa

Penley Estate in Coonawarra, South Australia is the red soil-terra rossa property of Kym Tolley: a long time inhabitant of the modern scene since 1988.

During that time, particularly during the 90s when Margaret River reds rose to the almighty, the pulse of Coonawarra quality was often judged by myself on the quality of several wines – one was Penley Estate Reserve Cabernet.

Coonawarra, like Margaret River, is all about cabernet sauvignon, or blended with some of its siblings (franc, merlot and petit verdot, the latter now starting to have some re-vitalisation in its native homeland of Bordeaux).

Penley farms 110 hectares which should provide over 30,000 cases on a normal season, though such a climate called “normal” no longer exists.

The region has received 141 mm during the first two months of 2011 whereas the average rainfall is 44 mm during this period. Rain just ups the disease pressure.

Penley’s main product is the standard reds, being a conservative selection, 2008, a year which gave the South Australians a hiding with elevated and accelerated ripeness with continuous days of 40C or more.

Coonawarra missed these high February temperatures but was the beneficiary of very warm, and early ripening which pushed the red varieties to monumental alcohol levels of 15%, and sometimes a little more.

These Penley reds do not show the baked characters likely to be struck with comparable Barossa or McLarenvale varietals. But they have concentration.

Penley Estate Phoenix Cabernet Sauvignon 2008 (USD 18-23); 15%; 90, has great colour and great nose, reeking of ripe blackcurrants and sweet oak (some must be American); its plump and plush and sweet-fruited despite having that long linear drying palate that cabernet has. It’s good.

Penley Estate Hyland Shiraz 2008 (USD 18-23); 15%; 89, is another plush wine, looks good, smells good-spice, ripe, jammy currants, hints of American oak sweetness just fill out the nose effects, the palate is juicy and soft, not drying but ample tannin. Gives a nice feel.

Penley Estate Gryphon Merlot 2008 (USD 18-23); 15%; 90, has the “merlot” colour, less density than its stable mates cabernet and merlot, a typical Australian thing, but its nose booms out load with ripe honeyed fruits-no leafiness just jam and rich fruitcake, then soft easy drinking, enough tannin to tell you the wine is Australian and not Californian or Bordeaux where grippiness prevails.

Penley Estate Condor Shiraz Cabernet 2008 (USD 18-23); 15%, 89, is a rich, spicy, style, no greenness, just brute strength and ripeness. It achieves the intention to have a filled palate from soft shiraz, but greater length from the cabernet as the tannin will persist, and that is rolled up with the oak aging process.

Nice wine. I mused that it should be cabernet shiraz though to follow the true tradition of this great Aussie two grape style.

Penley Estate Phoenix Cabernet Sauvignon 2009(USD 18-23); 14.5%, 92, looks terrific, less perfume than the 2008, fresh and lively vegetal/leaf/currant intensity, nice roundness which comes out as texture before the natural cabernet tannin kicks in, drying but juicy.

Owner Kym Tolley and winemaker Greg Foster

This wine is just released, as is another very successful line of Coonawarra cabernet, that of Leconfield 2009.

Penley Estate Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon 2006 (USD 44-55); 15%; 94, very contained wine, on the nose responding to longer aging before release in a positive manner, no jam just dust, cedar and the mature plum of cabernet (100%) mid-life. It’s interesting as it dries; long savoury tannin, less heat than expected for 15%, and pleasing as it disappears. Great year (9/10), great wine.

Penley Estate Chertsey 2006 (USD 44-55); 15%; 92; nice to see this wine diverge away from the cabernet stereotype and take on its own personality; spicy, cedary oak, very lifted and aromatic from the franc, powerful but plumped by the merlot, then drying like cabernet does.

Named after an English town, so far three vintage have been released. A great threesome yet the challenge is to use more franc and merlot yet keep the layers of tannin. I expect this will develop into an awesome wine, and it’s had a three years of aging so far as the start.

www.penley.com.au

 

Oz imported beer tales: Misleading brews, concerned drinkers

The rage has been going for some time now – that of Australian beer drinkers buying and ordering something that is not exactly what it appears to be.

There is a large Peroni advertising billboard exposure happening at present; just at the same time as the social media is saying the stuff being advertised is not the real thing, you know, brewed in Rome and shipped to Australia in bottles.

The beer being advertised is brewed by Pacific Beverages (which is Coca-Cola distributing, SABMiller doing the brewing expertise, although that looks to be unravelling) in Newcastle and sold as a substitute for Peroni across the Australian market.

Of course one can find the real Peroni as the owners do allow parallel imports – that is smaller concerns bring it into the country as imported packaged beer.

But it appears that Pacific Beverages do that too; my Peroni left over from a previous purchase says PRODUCT OF ITALY, Italian original, brewed and bottled in Italy, and imported to either Australia or New Zealand by Coke.

The real Peroni-find one?

When that ran out of stock, no doubt it ceased and was replaced by the local bottle.

The most interesting investigation (though lightweight by this author as a wine writer) was pricing.

I walked into my local restaurant last week, and the owner was most concerned about his beer list, and he had read the fine print on his listed imported beers only to find most were brewed in Australia.

It seems a socially-aware customer had pointed this out; and of course the extra rub was that restaurant charges a dollar extra for “imported” beers; clearly evidence where a little bit of deceptive conduct could be simmering along in the Australian beer industry at the moment.

The three offending beers; Stella Artois, Beck’s and Kronenbourg are all brewed in Australia, yet were listed as imported beers (import means take it from its historical place of production in its packaged, bottled form to the importing country).

So the restaurateur feels conned by his beer representatives and badly over-charged by the brewer for thinking he had imported product when he had mass produced recipe-driven beer from down the road.

I think he will have cause to review his beer supplies.

Then there is Beck’s brewery in Bremen, brewing in the port city since 1873, suggesting in its advertising on its official world-wide website that it’s beer is the “difference by choice”.

Dan Murphy’s (with the lowest liquor price guarantee) go on to say in their push for the good Beck’s hop drop that it is brewed under the German Purity Law of 1516, and other rubbish justifying this product, simply brewed locally by Lion Nathan.

This is a bit of a scam only because the advertising does not stay very truthful, and probably explains why the Millennial generation dismisses the big brewers drinks in preference for “boutique” brews with a sense of place, and authentic origin descriptions.

According to a release Lion Nathan makes Beck’s in Australia under a 10-year deal signed on June 25, 2004.

From reading the dialogue on the industry advice site www.beeradvice.com.au/51/becks, Beck’s have also been subjected to similar scrutiny in 2007.

The brewer response trotted out the tired line about the local “Beck’s” brew being fresher and ran down the bottled stock being heated in transit, and being three months old and not being in as good a condition as the “fresh brew”.

Well today’s young drinkers are not really brand supportive; if they wish to drink fresh beer then there is plenty of draft to be had; and as for beers faking their origin, then drinkers just move on to something more original that their mates find.

For a recent media tasting of imported versus locally-brewed same brand “European beers”-read Max Allen’s additional exposure of this caper: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/features/the-real-thing/story-e6frg8h6-1226006911607

If Max’s assertions are correct, that brewed in Oz European beer is more expensive than the individually-shipped European-made bottle, then the big brewer price gouging needs to be stopped. Customers can simply not buy it (if they become informed!)

And my restaurant friend needs to change his beer brands too, take the choice to the edge and give better value with a beer with the true story. There are heaps from Asia.

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