Out Of The Bottle
With David Ellis Deakin Estate Merlot & 2009 Windy Peak Pinot GrigioYou
could be excused for thinking that a Merlot that sells for just $10 a
bottle would be the product of some almost factory-like set-up, stored
for a few weeks in tanks akin to an oil refinery, and then dumped on
bottle-shop shelves just a month or so after the fruit came off the
vine.
But a just-released Deakin Estate Merlot is from the 2008
vintage so it’s had a couple of good years aging, and is in fact the
handiwork of a winemaker who treats fruit for his wines with an almost
personal, and certainly no factory-like, respect.
“I do like to
think red wines have personality,” says Dr Phil Spillman. “In the case
of our Merlot the vines seek a life of comfort, just hanging from the
wire and not much interested in anything requiring effort.
“But
with encouragement, Merlot is nothing short of charming, with a refined
personality that needs to be matched only with the highest quality
French oak,” he says of his 2008, that’s 82 per cent Murray Darling and
13 per cent Coonawarra Merlot fruit, with a 5 per cent dash of Murray
Darling Petit Verdot.
The result is a wine with lovely rich
preserved-plum flavours and fine silky tannins; it’s hard to believe
its just $10, so get some friends around to share a bottle or three
with a meal of pepper crusted lamb cutlets and roast vegies.
One For LunchIf
you are like the majority of us who enjoy white wines young and fresh,
De Bortoli’s delightful 2009 Windy Peak label Pinot Grigio is all about
taking it off the shelf, taking it home and taking off the cap.
Made
from fully-ripened fruit from the family vineyards in Victoria’s King
Valleys, this wine’s got nice varietal grassy and herbal fruit
flavours, pleasant aromas of honey and hay, and is just $14 a bottle. A
favourite in Italy amongst white wine drinkers, Pinot Grigio is ideal
with light pastas or shellfish.
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