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Rediscovering Australia
If you're like me, I expect you go through inexplicable phases in your wine-tasting choices. As hard as I try to spread my wine interests around the world in order to experience as many grape varieties and wine regions and styles as I can, those traditional favorites - red wines, mostly, from Italy and France, California and maybe Argentina - keep turning up on my table.
A crisp, elegant invitation that arrived just the other day, sent up from Down Under by my good friend Warren Mason, prompted me to realize how long it had been since I've reported on some good Australian wines. The invitation, announcing the 2006 awards presentation and banquet for the Sydney International Wine Competition, was a kind gesture but not really practical for me with the banquet just a week or two off. But the Australian wine part? That was easy. When I think about wine in the context of "Old World" versus "New World" styles, I tend to think of Australian wine as being distinctly New World, perhaps even more so than the wines of California, typically defined by fruit-forward, mouth-filling and often strongly alcoholic characteristics, often showing a distinct presence of oak. Of course, Australia turns out a lot of wine, not all of it alike, and all generalizations are dubious - even this one. In selecting a red and a white for today's tasting, I steered clear of Barossa Valley Shiraz, stereotypically the most blockbusterish and one-dimensional of Australian wines, in favor of a red from the lovely McLaren Vale (on the other side of Adelaide from the Barossa) that softens the Shiraz with a measure of Sangiovese; and for the white went to Western Australia, a region that's building a reputation for wines of relative elegance. The results? They both still seemed essentially "Australian" to me, but there's nothing wrong with that. Thanks, Warren, for the reminder. I wish I could jet over to Sydney for the banquet. For those of you who are closer to the land Down Under, the Competition's 2006 Awards Presentation Banquet is a memorable wine-lover's event, well worth the toll. A dress-up event calling for black-tie or lounge suit, it's Saturday, Feb. 25, 2006, in the Grand Ballroom of the Shangri-La Sydney Hotel, 176 Cumberland Street at The Rocks. Price per person is AUD$200, or AUD$1,900 for a table for 10. Events will include a Premier Tasting of the Competition's Blue-Gold Award Winners for 2006, followed by apéritifs and a five-course banquet with courses chosen to complement the three top wines in each of the Competition's five Style Categories.
It has been my great pleasure to judge the Sydney International Wine Competition twice, and I regret that a scheduling conflict forced me to miss a turn this past year. I look forward to getting back over in the future. Meanwhile, if you're within range of Sydney this month, the banquet would be well worth attending. For more details and booking information, you'll find information and a form at
And no matter where in the world you reside, if you love wine and food, you should visit the Sydney International Wine Competition site often. In my mind, it's the world's best wine judging because it rates all its wines in compatible style categories and judges the winners not only on their own merits but also on actual tastings with food, each wine accompanied by appropriate dishes made to match. The Website includes extensive tasting notes from judges past and present (you'll even still find some of my comments there), as well as lots of recipes for Jacquie Mason's outstanding dishes. Highly recommended for your wine Internet bookmarks:
TALK ABOUT WINE ONLINE: If you prefer to comment privately, feel free to send me E-mail at wine@wineloverspage.com. I'll respond personally to the extent that time and volume permit.
PRINT OUT TODAY'S ARTICLE ![]() This is a blend of 55 percent of the Italian variety Sangiovese (perhaps best known as the leading grape in Chianti) with 45 percent of the Australian Shiraz (Syrah), grown in the lovely McLaren Vale wine region not far south of Adelaide. It's dark garnet in color with a reddish-violet edge. Pleasant wild-cherry aromas lead into fresh and bright red-fruit flavor with a whiff of spice and a distinctly oaky edge, with crisp acidity to provide structure. I don't think I would mistake it for Chianti in a blind tasting, with its New World fruit-forward character, mouth-filling texture and perceptible oak. But it shows its Italian ancestry in its inviting, quaffable flavor and food-friendly acidity. U.S. importer: Robert Whale Selections Ltd., Washington, D.C. (Feb. 11, 2006) FOOD MATCH: It paired very nicely with an Italian-style dinner of polpettine (veal mini-meatballs) over spaghetti with a "pink" sauce of fresh tomatoes and a bit of cream. VALUE: The mid-teens seem a fair range for this inviting table wine. WHEN TO DRINK: Not made for long-term cellaring, but I see no reason why it wouldn't keep for several years on the wine rack.
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FIND THIS WINE ONLINE: ![]() Although it appears at a glance to be the same blend as White Bordeaux, this Australian white reverses the usual proportions with a predominance of Semillon (75 percent) over Sauvignon Blanc (25 percent). The transparent straw-color wine bears little resemblance to a French wine, either, with its fruit-forward frapefruit and mango aromas, which carry over intact on the palate, juicy and snappy tropical fruit nicely shaped by crisp acidity, with a prickly petillance that tickles the tongue. U.S. importer: Robert Whale Selections Ltd., Washington, D.C. (Feb. 12, 2006) FOOD MATCH: It worked well enough to wash down pork chops, but its fruit flavors are so intense that it tends to dominate the fare; maybe be best suited as a quenching summer aperitif. VALUE: Certainly reasonable at this price in today's marketplace. WHEN TO DRINK: Best drunk up over the coming year while all that exuberant fruit and prickly carbonation remains young and fresh.
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FIND THIS WINE ONLINE: ![]() The California Wine Club's International Selections Sample The California Wine Club's International Selections and receive 50 percent off your first month! The California Wine Club's International Selections highlights limited quantity wines from countries like France, Spain, Italy and South Africa ... to name a few! Selections are imported directly by CWC, ship every other month and feature wines not found anywhere else in the U.S. Each shipment averages $50-$70 and includes:
This month’s shipment is from Nugan Estates in New South Wales, Australia, and features the 2002 Saviors Rock Cabernet Sauvignon and the 2003 Saviors Rock Chardonnay. This Cab is all about earth, spice, raspberry, blackberry, currant and cherry. With figs on the nose and biscuit and butterscotch on the palate, the Chardonnay is delightful.
Join today and receive this month's Australian shipment for just $38.50, that’s a 50 percent savings. Call 1-800-777-4443 or visit This week on WineLoversPage.com Some highlights of recent articles on WineLoversPage.com that I hope you'll enjoy:
WebWineMan: Shiraz-a-ma-Taz
Bucko's Wine Reports: Midwinter 2006 Releases
Hot topics in our WineLovers' Community Top 10 wines for your Valentine Last Week's Wine Advisor Index The Wine Advisor's daily edition is usually distributed on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays (and, for those who subscribe, the FoodLetter on Thursdays). Here's the index to last week's columns:
Compare, contrast, taste, enjoy (Feb. 10, 2006)
Value favorite: Muscadet (Feb. 8, 2006)
$100 Valentine (Feb. 6, 2006)
Complete 30 Second Wine Advisor archive:
Wine Advisor FoodLetter: Star anise (Feb. 9, 2006)
Wine Advisor Foodletter archive:
SUBSCRIBE: Administrivia To subscribe or unsubscribe from The 30 Second Wine Advisor, change your E-mail address, or for any other administrative matters, please use the individualized hotlink found at the end of your E-mail edition. If this is not practical, contact me by E-mail at wine@wineloverspage.com, including the exact E-mail address that you used when you subscribed, so I can find your record. We do not use our E-mail list for any other purpose and will never give or sell your name or E-mail address to anyone. I welcome feedback, suggestions, and ideas for future columns. To contact me, please send E-mail to wine@wineloverspage.com All the wine-tasting reports posted here are consumer-oriented. In order to maintain objectivity and avoid conflicts of interest, I purchase all the wines I rate at my own expense in retail stores and accept no samples, gifts or other gratuities from the wine industry.
Monday, Feb. 13, 2006
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