$30; 14% alcohol; screw cap; 80 points
06 November 2014
INKWELL RORSCHACH BLOTS ROCK
Inkwell Blonde on
Blonde McLaren Vale Viognier 2014
$25; 12.9% alcohol;
screw cap; 91 points
It seems that a few Australian winemakers have reached a
new level of appreciation of Viognier, which had fallen from favour and almost entirely disappeared
from its home in France by the time the quirky Peter Wall decided it would become
Yalumba's top white nearly thirty years ago. Now, with wines like the sublime
Castagna Ingénue 2013, we see an enlightened change of gear. Here's another
example: heady with a sort of royal oiliness that reminds me of avocado, but
with balancing, paler flesh, with aromas and flavours like a salad of
carambola, cherimoya and sapodilla. Such wines are moving the variety from a
Chardonnay alternative made pretty much to be like an ordinary Chardonnay canned
with thicker syrup by a different mob to a true alternative in the sense of
radical departure. I know it's the wrong album, but you really "don't need
a weatherman to know which way the wind blows." To pause a mo on His
Bobness's Blonde on Blonde, sooner or
later one of us must know that while this wine is no idiot wind it's clearly
blowing from somewhere else. It has that subtle confident oiliness that
caresses and soothes the mouth rather than rinsing or bleaching it, but it
never begins to paint and coat it to the point of sealing it from the weather.
Rather, its fatty acid unction is calming and satisfying, and provokes no
urgent hunger, a famishing quality I usually like in wine. So what does it make
me wanna do, other than snooze? It makes me put it back in the fridge and begin
the careful construction of a red pork curry. Which is a contradiction, but who
cares? I'm glad that Dudley Brown came from California to settle on California Road, by our sparkling Gulf, to get on with this here business. He's a welcome blot on our landscape.
Dudley and Dr Irina Santiago-Brown's wedding day ... the bridal waltz, in fact ... see that ironstone in front of the stage? That used to be Pirramimma sandstone until so much ferruginous water washed through it that it pretty well turned to iron ... I think it gives rusty galvo shed in summer aromas and soft tannins ... photos Philip White
Inkwell
I & I McLaren Vale Shiraz 2012
$30; 14.5% alcohol;
screw cap; 93++ points
Maybe it's the vineyard's proximity to the Gulf St
Vincent (patron of viticulturers) that has soothed this wine to a more mellow
state than the mighty 2012s made in regions further from such calming Mediterranean humidity; perhaps it's Dudley
Brown's increasing wisdom as grower and maker who understands his geology. I
reckon it's both. Whatever. This is a rich dense syrup of prune and pickled
morello cherries with a drying topnote that's as much soft-and-pithy Ditters dried
apple as the chalky clay and ferruginous sandstone of the site. In the Vales,
sandstone often seems to impart more morello and rusty shed, while the rare
bits of chalky calcrete give tighter, less humourous, Coonawarra-like tannins. But
that's the bouquet. In the mouth the wine is more typical twelve. It's long and
intense and bone dry with the sort of fine tannin that will carry it for the
year or two it will take for its lovely fruit juice to properly swell and cushion
those perfectly natural grapeskin and pip preservative phenolics. Right now,
I'd love the opportunity to have it with numerous spoonsful of ripe Stilton.
Which is how my mate Max Schubert preferred to take a younger Grange.
Inkwell
Perfect Day McLaren Vale Shiraz 2012
$40; 14.6% alcohol;
screw cap; 94+++ points
A touch more new French oak in the barrel selection and
a dab of the Calabrian Primitivo has given this wine more smug carbon darkness
right from the start. It has everything the I & I projects, but in a more
authoritative and monumental form. Like the stony faces of Easter Island or the
Sphynx, it's gonna take a long time for its countenance to weather and fall.
There's intensely compressed and ultra-smooth fruit in the bouquet, but that's
only the beginning. Think of melting iron in a limeburner's kiln and you're
beginning to get close. Take a schlück and the gums and cheeks wince hungrily,
reaching for the dribbling pink steak and a stack of field mushrooms in butter
and lemon, with a reduction of this wine, barely-ground black peppercorns and
cream, all over the top. This is not for vegan diets. But it is a ravishing
thing. While it's dedicated to Lou Reed and named after one of his most childishly
hopeful songs, I reckon that at this baby stage it's a lot more Metal Machine
Music on vinyl. It's the sort of wine I'd prefer to drink in quadrophonic
headphones. Clunk. Hiss. Schlurp. Chew. Choof. Chill with a grin.
Instead of just the dribble of Primitivo that's in
the Perfect Day, this mutha's on fifteen per cent. It seems to give the Shiraz
a neat set of black fingernails and its twenty-hole Docs a layer of Parade
Gloss. The wine is silky smooth with an illusion of sweetness, and as it comes
from the sandstone bit of the patch it's all black gean cherries with barely a
hint of the tight Coonawarra-like tannin the calcrete in the Ngaltinga clays impart.
Which you pronounce like gnat, with an L. So we have here a swift, slick, highly-polished
punk who's so clean and sophisticated (in the original sense of the word) that
you wonder why it's not perched at the bar in a little black cocktail dress and
matching patent Manolo Bila double-strap copies with the kneefucker heels. Polish
them nails.
Inkwell
Infidels McLaren Vale Primitivo 2013
$30; 14% alcohol; screw cap; 80 points
$30; 14% alcohol; screw cap; 80 points
This wine looks like it just stepped out of a Tom
Waits song. You know the skinny white street preacher with the string tie and
dirty collar who hits the goonbag port, turns black from gutter grime and puts
on about twenty stone. On the first sniff - "scuse me while I, well ...
I'm gonna sniff you ... you know, like for the diabetes" - it's hard to
tell whether he's gonna shrink back to a beanpole when he swaps over to the meths
and his liver disappears and he up and dies in a jangly shiver, or whether he's
gonna see the light of God's grace, get back on the water and repossess his
former angular countenance on the better side of the apex so he can splatter the
pedestrians with a little more hot gospel. That might seem confusing to the
unreached zinners, zinfidels and primitivos in the Star Wars Blah down the lane at the Land of Promise Hotel, but they're all cut from the same grape, which
for want of a grasp of the Aramaic we'll call Zinfandel. Lost souls might not
be aware that Zin, which is a lot more appropriate a name than Prim, coz it's
just not, is an ornery Calabrian grape which a bloke never knows when to pick on
account of it having big ripe red berries like balloons full of sugar and sweet
arterial blood sitting in the same bunch as little bitter green bastards like
lentils and some lost at various illogical milestones along the way. Butchew
know what? I sniff it again and it's come over all polite and contrite and
while it remains on the dark side it seems to wind back to the days when the
poor soul's addiction to the Devil's Brew was only beginning and you could still
see his bones and he could go about forty minutes on the Beasts of Revelations
without raising a sweat. And now dammit he's stolen a cornflower blue 59 Caddy
and turned into a door-to-door perfume salesman with slick-back hair. Time to
lock up your wife. Honey, take the kids inside.
Whitey the preacher by Stacey Pothoven-Vice
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4 comments:
I feared falling back into a committable state if I read all that.
8/10? High points for Zin, coming from you Whiteman?
what can Zin do that Colorino doesn't more easily?
yo nuts whitey
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