“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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16 March 2018

Mr MICK: MODERN LOW-SPEND CLARE

 
Don't say I never recommend Cabernet Merlot mixtures ...
by PHILIP WHITE


I dunno how close it was to the end of the 'seventies when one blistering summer day I crept into the dark cool at Stanley Wine Co. at Clare to find there suppin' red in the gloom Mick Knappstein and Brian Barry. They already looked like old men through my brash peepers. It was real slow and quiet. 

Stanley Leasingham Cabernet Malbec had spent a decade securing its place as a respected modern dry red of Ferrari V6 quality. One can't ever taste those wines fresh again, like the condition at which point they were bottled and sold, but it's tempting to try to redraw their memory through their place in history. Those new-style, leaner, cleaner Mick and Tim Knappstein reds must have worn more sappy oak than common nowdays, but I still recall them seen to be elegant, intense, polished delights for the table. Like you'd never turn a glass of that stuff down. 

In more than a doffing of the hat to the venerable Mick Knappstein, Tony and Lita Brady invited him to be the guest speaker at the centenary of that special high temple of Cabernet sauvignon blended with Malbec, Wendouree, in 1995. His brief, very important speech was kindly recorded and shared by my colleague Tim White. Recalling former winemaker there, Roly Birks, then deceased, Mick said he "was a very honest winemaker, in as much as you knew what he did. You’d see on the head of his vats ... so many buckets of Mataro, many buckets of Shiraz, or even Malbec. He blended his wines at the crusher ... It always had at the head of the vats what the additions were. If the grapes were very ripe it would say how much water went in. Now you know, not many winemakers would do that... He was honest!"

Merlot is a much more recent addition to the Clare blenders' bench. This early-ripening red, also of Bordeaux, was allegedly named by the French for the Merle, the black bird which devours the Merlot first at vintage. Preferring the more traditional varieties, I was derisive of Merlot's intrusion into Clare during the Hardy's and Fosters invasions of twenty years back. 

Time to see what's happened. A bottle of Mr. Mick by Tim Adams Clare Valley Cabernet Merlot 2014 ($17; 14% alcohol; screw cap) is commonly available at Hungry Dan's for at least $2 short of this maker's recommended retail. A bottle of it stood glowering on my desk until I realised I'd got well below the label in no time at all. Like it's a snaky, shiny, sinister whip of a thing whose genetics presage its pierced punk countenance. 

Four years of age is a damn good start. No brash American oak is another delight - there's still a braw sappy chin on it, but this is all old French. Intensely olivine Clare fruit is another bull's eye. Long velvety juniper-style tannins are the Cyclops one in the middle. 

Like the best of the leanest, longest-sighted, stoic reds of Clare this is one you drink standing or sitting up straight. It's the lean dry air opposite of the soulful squish of the higher maritime humidity of McLaren Vale. 

It's probably a bit sweeter than the best of the region's Cabernet Malbec blends too but hey, some rock has harmonies. 

Greek food please. Haloumi, kalamata, fetta, greens. Loukaniko. Or Calabrian coast ... go further for the best spaghetti vongole ... like in season, the cockles off that beach as served straight up in the broth at Goolwa's Cafe Bombora away down three or four hours south of Clare where those billion-year-old ranges finally dive into the Great Southern Ocean.

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