“Sod the wine, I want to suck on the writing. This man White is an instinctive writer, bloody rare to find one who actually pulls it off, as in still gets a meaning across with concision. Sharp arbitrage of speed and risk, closest thing I can think of to Cicero’s ‘motus continuum animi.’

Probably takes a drink or two to connect like that: he literally paints his senses on the page.”


DBC Pierre (Vernon God Little, Ludmila’s Broken English, Lights Out In Wonderland ... Winner: Booker prize; Whitbread prize; Bollinger Wodehouse Everyman prize; James Joyce Award from the Literary & Historical Society of University College Dublin)


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23 November 2016

PANNELL IN KELLY/KAURNA COUNTRY

After 27 years learning to fly, Steve Pannell lands on his feet, back where McLaren Vale began
by PHILIP WHITE

Since Stephen Pannell graduated from Roseworthy in 1989, he has made wine at Seppelt, Andrew Garrett, Wirra Wirra, and Knappstein. He usually heads north between Australian vintages. He's made wine at numerous great houses in Bordeaux and Burgundy. He loves working in Barolo in Italy and has done three vintages in Spain. He worked at Hardy's Tintara from 1995 to 2003, becoming Hardy's chief red wine maker before leaving to begin his S. C. Pannell line with his wife and partner, the former prosecuting lawyer Fiona Lindquist.

He made the first of these S. C. Pannells at Warren Randall's Tinlins on McLaren Flat until Fiona and him bought the Tapestry winery and vineyards from Rob Gerard a few years back. Since then, he has won the McLaren Vale Bushing King crown twice - 2015 and '16, both with audacious reds containing the Portuguese vintage port variety Touriga nacional. Oh yes, he'd also won the Bushing previously in 2011. Not to mention the Jimmy Watson Trophy. Twice. But that was years back.

The Bushing crown goes to the best red wine in the annual McLaren Vale wine show. While contentious, the Big Jim, still Australia's most envied gong, goes to the best one-year-old red in the Royal Melbourne Wine Show.

None of those Touriga-based or influenced reds are anything like vintage port, by the way. They're more along the lines of what we used to call "drinking wine." Since then, they've been through what the trade called the "bistro wine" and "brasserie wine" phases and seem now free of fad nomenclature to be back to honest, easy, entertaining, hunger-provoking things you can just sit back and drink.

They will, as he says, help the dinner table conversation but never dominate it.

I like that. In fact, a vast proportion of the most talkative winetards, hipstercrites, chefwits and skronky presstitutes from this wine column/blogging racket flounder when they hit S. C. Pannell.

I mean they'll rave about him with lugubrious weasel words, but I reckon those types just don't really get it. Like they'll sit there playing their mouth, scouring their plonkous vocab for words that glorify much more expensive standards from much futher away while their thirstier, less loquacious company ploughs into the next bottle of something from Pannell's funky second line.

Since he hoisted his name on that old Tapestry winery on Oliver's Road in The Vales, Pannell's been making exquisite wine from Shiraz (of course), Touriga nacional, Tempranillo, Cabernet sauvignon, Nero d'Avolo, Aglianico, Mataro, Nebbiolo (best one in Australia forthcoming), Barbera, Montepulciano, Gewurztraminer, Pinot grigio ... you name anything distinctive or noble or brave, it'll be in there somewhere, often in an unusual but always intelligently-constructed blend.

He's now planning the importation and establishment of varieties unknown here, which he's found in Greece, and more recently, Croatia. Stuff he thinks will work in Shiraz-choked McLaren Vale. Or the adjoining Adelaide Hills. Which is not to suggest he's forgotten where this all started: he showed me, for example, a barrel sample of the most distinguished and individualistic Shiraz I can remember drinking anywhere. From Echunga.

That's where John Hagen planted one of the first vineyards in the state: his 1845 "hock" was probably the first wine to be exported from South Australia. It went to the table of Queen Victoria, just to prove the new colony was indeed a worthy extension of her empire.

Intelligence is in everything Pannell does. Not just intelligence gathered, but intrinsic brightness. Like DNA. He's one of the very few winemakers in the country I would include in my privately-nominated oenological/gastronomic Mensa.

Like great departed wine heros I've known, and loved, personally - think Grange god Max Schubert and the genius Dr Ray Beckwith from Penfolds - Pannell seems bouyed as much as driven by his innate, unwavering faith in his own curiosity. That powers his tireless engine. Endless, persistent, feverish questioning. The pursuit of more. Of further.

But you know what? It's not that rare vinous IQ that really sets him apart. What sets Pannell apart, and to extreme effect, is that intellectual rigour seasoned with is his very simple, pure passion.

On the other hand, he's a bit like, say Andrés Segovia, but a Segovia who, having played brilliant concert-hall classical and flamenco guitar for one lifetime, suddenly sheds a million ornate, hard-learned and rehearsed trills and arpeggios and counterpoints to switch to good old twelve bar blues and starts again.

With about 95 per cent fewer tricks and flourishes. Fewer dots. Back to three chords.

This is what confounds those pretenders and winey blatherskiters.

The wines Pannell regards as his best never seem to win a gong.

Like, I really enjoy schlücking away at his latest Bushing winner, but he has much more brilliance in his arsenal.

"That's just a bit of fun that winner," he says when I ask him of such stuff. "My Shirazes get nothing. And like check the stunning Grenache wines now coming out of this district. They're brilliant wines. But no straight Grenache has ever won the Bushing. Wine shows are all fashion and politics  ... 

"My new Grenache is always far too tightly-wound for them to get it. Like, I know what happens judging shows. You listen to the chairman's urging to go for new things with elegance and balance and whatever, you know, approachability, intensity, elegance, whatever it is they want, but you always seem to end up going for the gloopy-doopy."

Which his Touriga Cabernet Mataro 2015 blend, the current Bushing Trophy holder, most certainly is not. It's a dry, almost dusty, bistro-buster. A veranda wine. One can imagine the chairman of judges instructing his or her teams of gun tasters to look for things out of the ordinary and approachable and fun, which in this case they have tried to do, but in so doing missed the beauty of more subtle and carefully-poised wonders elsewhere in the arsenal.

Pannell's a whizzer in the blending bullring, with all those exotic wonders, often co-fermented, but his heart is in our history.

Looking east over the Upper Tintara gullies from Rick Allert's hilltop vineyard. The new S. C. Pannell property is hidden in a nest down there in the scrub ... this is Kaurna country ... those original inhabitants must have had a rich life before the white mob invaded ... behind the camera to the west lies the old Seaview property of Edwards & Chaffey, overlooking the Gulf St Vincent, patron of  wine and vinegar makers, vine-dressers, lost things and schoolgirls ... all photos by Philip White

Which is why he's bought land just over the rise from the revered vineyards the late Bob Hardy owned and nurtured at the oldest winery site in the McLaren Vale embayment at Bob's home at what is called Upper Tintara, pushed in against the wild Hardy's scrub off Whiting's Road to the north-east of the McLaren Vale township.

It's in a nest, that new purchase: a precious hollow hidden over the hills to the east of Seaview/Rosemount and Kays. Very few know it's in there. It carries remnants of the old vineyards Dr A. C. Kelly sold to Thomas Hardy in 1876, bits of old buildings and the remnants of an orchard with long-forgotten strains of quince, pear and even a mulberry tree I recognised immediately as the same type as the famous one on Kangaroo Island - the first European tree planted in the colony. I recognised its shape and leaf, having grown up playing in another one surviving in Kanmantoo since the miners there propagated a cutting taken from that same original KI pioneer a century-and-a-half ago.

"You're spot on Whitey," he said. "That's from a cutting from that same tree."

Whew.

The messy geology of Upper Tintara assists my theory that the McLaren Vale winemakers' insistence on dividing their district into sub-regions is premature - so far, it's a Quixotian tilt at some impossible marketing delusion. Not really related, but fascinating: halfway up Pannell's scraggy hill, the clays hold standing water like this, long after any real rain, while the creek below is as dry as a chip.
  

Pannell is ruthlessly renovating and customising the old vines, repairing the damage done by thirty years of mindless industrialisation and brutal mechanical/petrochemical management during the years of economic rationalisation that eventually brought Hardy's undone and helped lose its penultimate owner, the USA-based Constellation Wines, a cool $1.6 billion over a few short years.

Pannell's planting heaps of Touriga in there now, and bits and pieces of many of those exotic names listed. This last wet winter, he spent seven weeks in there alone in the rain, pruning the old ones. Thinking.

Which brings us back to the twelve bar blues. What this remarkable man is committed to, above all else, beyond all that experimentation, is to re-establish the sort of winemaking that same rank industrialisation and lazy fall to turbocharged alcoholic gloop removed from the Australian wineglass in the last twenty years.

"I'm picking everything now at thirteen or thirteen-and-a-half per cent," he says cheerfully.

"That's all the alcohol I need. It's all anybody needs, if they think about it. They've all forgotten. Or they never knew. And every year my profits go into these really big oak vats. It's like buying a few new cars or a new wooden boat each year. The ratio of exposed wood to wine volume is diminished. This cuts out the sap and caramel and soot everybody seems to like getting from new small French barrels - toasted oak.

"That's not an Australian flavour.

"And you know what Whitey," he continued with a chuckle, cutting me an exquisite sample of red from the vat, "eventually I'll no longer have to buy a truckload of new barriques every year. These big beauties will outlast my kids. Initially they're more expensive per litre than new conventional barrels, but once I have enough of them that's it. Forever, as far as my life goes.

"I'm using them to make nearly all my straight varieties and blends, but most significantly Shiraz and Cabernet blends like I found in the Hardy's cellars when I started there. Beautiful, elegant Australian wines ... and guess what? Nobody understands them."

I certainly do. It's what I've written about, begging for, over the last two decades. Comrades, enjoy the new wave of "drinking wines" from S. C. Pannell while you prepare to learn our forgotten past.

"I'm not making wine for export," he said. "I'm making wines for Australia. I want to get us back to our own reality."

Polish a glass, put some John Lee Hooker in the speakers, take a seat, strap yourself in and watch this space. 

Welcome to the S. C. Pannell time machine.

Sky hatch open: requesting permission to land: looking west over the Gulf St Vincent from the veranda of the S. C. Pannell winery on Oliver's Road, McLaren Vale, South Australia

2 comments:

Hads said...

Love the insight Whitey, future generations will appreciate Steve Pannell as the past dined on Schubert. When his passion and commitment collaberates, the end result is a tonsil entwinement of finesse.

Hads said...

Great words Whitey, future generations will revere Steve Pannell as the past immortalised Schubert.