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09 May 2014
VINTAGE 2014 ONE OF EXTREMES
Bad flowering, too hot, too wet
Then some sanity in the finish
by PHILIP WHITE
If the frisson of wine industry business is any
indicator, it appears that vintage 2014 is over.
Winemakers hands are returning to their original colour;
marketers are remembering to deliver promotional samples again, and all the
post vintage vendageurs' parties are done and dealt. Even the seaside of
McLaren Vale is losing its annual influx of itinerant car park residents.
These seem to have been promptly replaced by busy armies
of food-and-wine hacks here for Tasting Australia, who bother to trawl a wine
region or two on their way out, and swarms of merchants, like the mob Tim
Wildman MW brought to Russell's for pizza on Sunday night: his James Busby Wine
Tours group contained some dead serious front-row sommeliers from China's
biggest five stars as well as a smattering of key Brits. They seemed to have
had their minds blown by the intricacies and hidden wonders of our wine
culture, and to a person declared that they'd be back.
After the strangely drawn-out period of flowering, which
took six weeks instead of the one, viniculturers across south-eastern Australia
were handed a rough-riders' lesson in weather extremes. Drought, flood, bushfire, heatwave: Hughie threw
the lot at 'em.
Among other records of extreme, be reminded:
Sydney had its driest summer in twenty-seven years. Canberra
experienced 20 days of at least 35°C. Melbourne experienced its hottest
ever 24 hour period (average 35.5°C). Adelaide had a record of 11
days of 42°C or more, and even seemed to relish the fact that for one day
at least, it was officially the hottest city in the world. Perth had its second
hottest summer on record.
The flowering was tricky because that long slow procedure
left growers with uneven bunches, so hen-and-chicken was rife, with hard little
lentil-sized berries hanging in the bunches with fat, extremely ripe ones which
split when the rain came, leaving sugary juice exposed to the air to attract
moulds, bugs and birdies.
Like when do you pick that mess? What do you spray on it?
Angel dust?
But then the weather settled into a calm period of cool,
breezy, frequently moist days, and those who hadn't simply lost everything in
the extreme opening to summer found themselves hypnotised as they watched those
bitter green pellets edge toward ripening.
Some, indeed, did ripen.
One thing seems prominent in the shake-down. Rarely has
the writer seen the gap between smart and lazy viticulture produce wines of
such extremes of quality. For results, like quality wine, like profits,
vineyards run smart, with vigilance, far outshone those run by mindless
industrial repetition this year. Whether the clever vine gardeners ran their
superior vineyards using the moon; whether they used appropriately-applied
standard petrochem preps or mumbo-jumbo; however they did it some did very well
indeed.
Those who grew some sound fruit then had the choice of
polishing their quality through careful bunch selection, whether by hand or
machine. New harvesting machine technology delivers a better-looking bin of
grapes; those with mechanical sorting tables even managed to remove individual
raisins, and all the hidden slip-skin and split-skin berries from hand-picked
bunches that looked fit for a fruiterer's window in the first place.
That's a huge advance, this new capacity to sort bunches
and indeed individual berries. That mess above is typical of the detritus a sorting machine can remove from the best-looking bunches. Most wineries have no capacity to remove berries like these: we end up drinking them. A good sorter can give you caviar like this:
What's in the wineries? Some parcels of rare wonder, and
a lot, too much, that reflects that tricky, indeed horrid, start to the summer.
It varies widely from cellar to cellar and region to region, but so far, 2014
looks like offering some true beauty and a lot of bullshit. It's a vintage to
stick with your tried and true supplier - stick with the winemaker you trust.
So what's new? Those tumbling records of heat and dry and
wet seem like old hat, but believe me, they're new. It'll take more than stoic
bluff to keep a handle on that stuff.
See all those huge vineyards - wrong variety/wrong geology - bulldozed
into heaps all the way from McLaren Vale to Willunga? That's new. See the
continuing concentration of ordinary booze in the Woolworths bins? That's hardly
new, but somebody's gonna have to think up a new way of handling it if many of
the small to medium sized strugglers are to survive.
Then, just maybe, perhaps the nature of the beast is such
that they're not meant to survive.
When I started writing about wine over three decades
back, I had a box of index cards on my desk: one card for each winery in
Australia. About 260 of them. Very loosely, those thirty-plus vintages have
added a zero to that number. Some years, the winery boom saw a new license being
issued every 72 hours.
What's new is that this surge has finally stopped. The
last financial year is the first one in all that time when the year finished
with the same number of wineries it started with. So the growth has slowed. As
Australia's a gross oversupplier of winegrapes, maybe the next bit will see the number
actually shrink as the duopoly continues its hungry, determined rampage.
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2 comments:
A grape sorting machine? That can't be natural!
@whiteswine awesome photos, specially the grape caviar shot, and great read... cheers.
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