A Taste of Australian
Wine 'Rieslings'
by Gavin Trott
Riesling is the grape most associated with Germany,
where the best examples of it are stunning, world class wines.
Here in Australia we are probably the only other country to
give this fabulous grape the care and attention it deserves.
Indeed, for many years it was the most popular Australian
white wine, only recently succumbing to the world wide fashion
trend of Chardonnay. To me it still produces more good wines,
and perhaps more to the point, less bad wines, than Chardonnay.
The wine is made to capture the essence of the
grape, no oak, few wine maker's tricks, just grape to wine.
After picking, the grapes are crushed then generally removed
from the skins either immediately, or after a brief period,
while the rest of the task is to control the speed of fermentation
and keep the oxygen away from those fragile flavours. The
wine will ferment in stainless steel containers, chilled to
control the fermentation speed, and under an inert gas blanket.
When finished the wine will be stored for a short period then
bottled to keep those primal fruit flavours. In fact, we have
been drinking the 1996 Rieslings now for some months, and
very good indeed they are.
Best Regions
In Australia Rieslings are grown in many regions, but only
in 3 or 4 areas are the best wines produced. The regions to
watch out for are, in my order of preference only, Clare/Watervale,
Eden Valley, Great Southern, Western Australia and pockets
of the Adelaide Hills and Tasmania. Good wines are produced
elsewhere, but not with consistency or reliability.
Young Riesling will smell of freshly crushed
grape, lime, citrus, tropical fruit and floral smells. A friend
of mine once described a Riesling as smelling like 'orange
blossom dipped in lime juice”, flowery language, but
that is what the wine smelled like.
They tend to have firm acid finishes, the Clare
region typically producing steely or flinty finishes with
tropical overtones in the young wines. They taste of fruits,
limes, lemons, and passionfruit, often with floral and even
mineral edges to them, are long and zingy on the finish, and
are the perfect accompaniment to a range of sea food.
Aged Rieslings
Rieslings that taste so fresh and exuberant when young age
surprisingly and remarkably well. As the years go by the primary
fruit fades to be replaced by toast, honey, nuts and 'kerosene',
that traditional yet hard to describe smell of good older
Rieslings. In fact, it is often a difficult choice, drink
young or cellar.
Many go through closed periods between youth
and maturity, so personally I like to drink them young and
fresh, or after 5 years, but they can become slightly awkward
at about 1 to 4 years of age.
Food Matching
These wines are absolutely designed for seafood, especially
freshly grilled fish. It also goes really well with lobster
as long as you avoid heavy sauces, just the delicious lobster
flesh, and the zesty limes and citrus of the wine, a match
made in heaven.
Another worthwhile fact is that now is the time
to try these wines. The currently available 2002 vintage is
the best of the previous 10 or more years, most are still
available, and almost all of them great wine bargains at $Aud20
or less pb (That’s about $US12 or less per bottle).
Current Tasting Notes
2002 Hewitson Eden Valley Riesling - In a stelvin
closure, well done Dean! Another spanking good 2002 Riesling,
but this one is from Eden Valley. This is all class, very
pale colour with a very varietal nose of lemon, with almost
pea like hints, plus tropical fruits and floral edged limes.
The palate too is all class, powerful but tight fruits, limes
lemons and grapefruit, along with hints of spice on a long
and crisp finish with some lovely natural acid. Yum, and will
cellar!
2002 Tin Shed Wines Wild Bunch Riesling - Wow,
what a way to make Riesling, whole bunch pressing, use wild
yeasts, this is not playing it safe, but what a great result,
delicious Eden Valley Riesling! "hand picked from old
Eden Valley vineyards, and made the old-fashioned way with
whole bunch pressing and a wild yeast ferment without chemicals,
this amazing Riesling's a fair-dinkum blast from the past.
... Tight pear and lime, with that beautiful mineral base
tone of the best vintage in yonks, its a work of wonder."
2002 Petaluma Riesling - "Brian Croser (wine maker) has
no doubts about the 2002 Riesling vintage: “It was the
perfect riesling year,” he says. “Fruit quality
was superb. Acid was wonderfully high. Flavour was excellent
– it was a great, great riesling vintage.” His
own riesling release is one of the first off the ranks, and
the verdict is: it’s intense. Intensely grapey, intensely
minerally, intensely lemony/powdery, with an acid structure
that seems both obvious and soft – there’s clearly
lots of acid here, but it has an Alsatian super-softness to
it. The result of all this is that, unusually, it’s
not overly attractive young – but should cellar magnificently.
Gavin is the manager of the Australian Wine Centre
(a large collection of affordable, rare and cult Australian
wines) and hosts the very popular Auswine Forum (An online
discussion forum about Australian wine) . You may reprint
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