Is Pinot really like Riesling?
Something about staunch acid
with cherries and plums on top
by PHILIP WHITE
Just another shard of critical evidence in your
correspondent's insanity trial is his firm belief that the best Pinot noir, the
red grape of Champagne (where it makes white wine) and Burgundy (where it makes
the most sensuous, sensual and confounding reds) is actually more like Riesling
than red.
In the sense, like, of staunch bone dry Riesling with dollops of
plum, prune or maraschino and/or morello cherries, along with the
meagre-to-plush flesh such fruits provide.
Unfairly, the writer compared two of Victoria's leading
Pinot makers' most recent releases.
Unfair, because the Oakridge wines are a
year younger than the Kooyong wines. Fair, because both 2012 and 2013 were
warmer-than-average, and from these notes we can at least grapple with what
Victoria's most popular Pinot regions might produce if things stay warm, as it
seems they may.
I mean, if they can't do it, who can?
But through this three day tasting, two things lingered.
One, the author's predilection for reds from iron-rich ground was reinforced.
Two, his suspicion that Pinot with proper cool-to-coldish sources has natural
acid that most closely matches that of Riesling from the Clare or Eden Valleys.
Which, Tasmania notwithstanding, is as good as dry Riesling gets in Australia, if
not on Earth.
Another lovely thing is the reality that the older
Australia's best Pinot vineyards grow, and the more intense becomes the
knowledge of their makers, the closer we get to Burgundy. Which seemed
impossible just thirty years ago.
Of course we'll never get there - we can't because we're not there - but these wines make me think we'll get somewhere close, if a little off to one side. Or the other.
With smug colonial pride.
Fingers crossed about the climate change.
Oakridge 864 Guerin
Block 4 Yarra Valley Pinot Noir 2013
($75;
13.2% alcohol; screw cap; 93++ points)
Give it a day of air and you
begin to see the true frame of this wine lurch from the murk of the creamy and
jello baby fruit you met on first opening. It's picked up a real dusty nose-tickling
prickle to put a pointy end on that smoochy morello cherry juiciness, and it no
longer seems so simply plump. It's still got the puppy fat when you taste it,
but its unflinching acidity and thin dry tannins draw the finish out like
taffy. Along with those neat bitter cherries it leaves a nutty flavour: the classic
grilled cashews of many Burgundies, both red and white. Which must come from
exemplary Burgundian barrels, methinks. It seriously needs a few years. Or real
hearty field mushrooms in lots of butter and fresh pepper. Morels would be good
with some pork belly, but jeez they're expensive.
Oakridge Local
Vineyard Series Guerin Vineyard Yarra Valley Pinot Noir 2013
($36; 13.5% alcohol; screw cap; 92+ points)
As the money number fairly indicates, this is not quite the wine of the Block
4, although it's from the same general location in grey volcanic dirt at
Gladysdale. It has much of the morello of the 4, but in a more smoky
atmosphere, pushes a tea-smoked duck hallucination to centre stage in my
dribble sector. It's probably a bit more prickly than the other wine, and the aromatic
gap between its sinister black tea darkness and almost fleshy cherries is wider
and wilder. I love this. It reminds me of the wines shewn me by Jean-Pierre De
Smet, decades back when he first blew my mind with the tannic, uncompromising
Pinots he made at the Burgundy temple called Domaine De L'Arlot. Compared to
the Block 4 this is a more snaky, sinuous thing despite that brittle carbon
frame, and it's a more cheeky drink. Once again, it triggers pork yearnings as
much as your actual pekin duck. Slender, supple, savoury and bone dry! And now
it's giving music: more Coltrane with Monk than with Miles. Phew.
Oakridge Local
Vineyard Series Lusatia Park Vineyard Yarra Valley Pinot Noir 2013
($36; 13.1% alcohol; screw cap; 93+ points)
Red dirt usually means iron. I'm an iron man. In the terroirist sense, of course. Rather than those bitter black
cherries of the Guerin site, there are pretty raspberries here, fighting for
the topnote with all that acrid summer dust. Lusatia Park's at Woori Yallock,
and atop the soil change, this vineyard faces due north, bringing a tad more
bare-faced summer sunshine than the Guerin with its easterly twist. Not to
belittle it, this one has a touch of the squishy old raspberry fruit gels we
lived on from grades 1 to 7. But to taste it, the acids, phenolics and black
tea tin tannins are more forward than that simple fruit, leaving a rinsed but
entirely unsatisfied feeling of need. Can we squeeze the last cassoulet of the
season in here, please Mlle. Châtelaine? I need to consider whether the iron or
the aspect has the bigger influence here. I suspect it's the latter. I'll need
three bottles. Cancel all appointments.
Kooyong Haven
Mornington Peninsula Pinot Noir 2012
($75;
13.5% alcohol; screw cap; 93+ points)
The
Haven vineyard is sheltered. Shelter's good on a peninsula. In stark contrast
to the Yarra wines, this is all poached plums. With maybe a clove or two and a
big dollop of fresh whipped cream. Without being overwhelming in any way, it
smells rich, plush and gentle. Luxurious. A quilted and buttoned fresh leather
armchair. It has a little of the dust of its summer, but that fleshy fruit
rules for the first few sniffs, before the ground and wood smells arrive. After
that, it's more elegant than I'd expected in the actual drinking bit. Long and
lingering, tapered and dry with fine black tannin, it has yet to learn the
sensuality it will master in the next few years. Right now, I'd have it with a
chook casserole with lots of fresh tarragon and buttery kipflers.
Kooyong Meres
Mornington Peninsula Pinot noir 2012
($75;
13.5% alcohol; screw cap; 94+++ points)
Meres is exposed, so these vines
have a tougher time than the Haven lads next door. Yields are low; I expect
more intensity and less puppyfat. The first sniff does that, but it's more
fleshy than I'd expected. Still, a bit like Oakridge's LVS Guerin, not the
Block 4, the reach between the flesh and the dry dark tea tannins is wider. But
here, given different winemaking techniques and another year's age, those
polarities are smoothly assimilating. The wine has better form. She's all
locked in, and swelling. She knows exactly where she's going. I'll confuse you
by saying there's a whiff of feathers, like some of my favourite reds of
Italy's Piedmont, but there, I've said it anyway. It's a bit like getting off
the dusty backroad school bus in summer, and plunging into the kitchen for a
glass of water, to discover Mum's plucking chooks for dinner. Now try to forget
that. No more avian references. In the mouth, the wine is sassy and squirmy and
teasing, and more sinewy that I'd expected, even after a few days. It'll dance
a very naughty dance indeed in five or six years. If you must do it now, I'd go
for a cool Provence bean and pork stew with an artichoke. I think these tannins
are among the few red wine types which could handle the tricky grainy dryness
of artichoke. This is really lovely wine.
Kooyong Ferrous
Mornington Peninsula Pinot Noir 2012
($75;
13.5% alcohol; screw cap; 95++ points)
Ferrous? Ironman, see. This is right up my alley. The vineyard's riddled with
buckshot and grapeshot ironstone. To my hooter, the wine smells like iron in
the summer. That tight, slightly threatening hardness of a rusty galvo shed in
a drought. But then, in great relief, come the cherries, maraschino and
morello, and the raspberry. Holy shit. It's truly beautiful. If you could
magically conjure a crême caramel from those fruits, this'd be it. Once you
forget the iron, which most will not notice anyway, this is all fruit and creamy,
motherly comforts. It has Riesling-like acidity and very fine-grained
chalk-like tannins, but the freshest, most endearing and secure fruits fleshing
up those dry bones. Stunning.
A note on scores:
Over my week, my average score is in the mid-to-low seventies. If I tasted and noted most of the wine made in Australia, as I did in the horrible olden days, my average would be well below seventy; perhaps sub-sixty.
Once I get above ninety, things compress. It usually takes three or four dozen new releases to get anything above ninety. 94 is a rarity, but there's a glut of our best wines between that and 85.
The nether regions above are speckled with the odd La Tache or Krug. I have never awarded any wine more than 98.
Plus signs vaguely indicate wines which would score more if drunk when they grow up.
However gentle and supportive I get, my wine appraisal protocols result in a neat match to Keith Richards' evaluation of music.
97% bad. Three good.
.
2 comments:
Cracker writing Mr White. Made me smile while getting the juices pumping.
Cheers
Simon Grant
Thankyou Simon. They're lovely drinks.
Post a Comment