Out Of The Bottle
With David Ellis

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Pinot Noir Bolts In Popularity Stakes
It
may come as a surprise, but the wine that’s currently out-pacing the
rest of the field in the local popularity stakes is Pinot Noir.
In
the past year alone sales of this varietal in Australia have rocketed
an astonishing twenty-nine per cent, and one label in particular that’s
helping lead the onslaught is Western Australia’s Capel Vale Debut
Pinot Noir whose sales have recorded a 45-per cent growth rate in just
twelve months.
In truth it’s probably not surprising as Capel
Vale have long believed you have to match the variety to the vineyard,
and with their Pinot Noir have concentrated on planting in the
Pemberton Region in the State’s lower south-west; with its
predominantly overcast weather, this region’s shaping up to become one
of the great Pinot Noir regions of the Southern Hemisphere.
The
just-released Debut 2007 is a fresh, fruit-driven wine with
characteristic black cherry, raspberry and spicy flavours that’s
excellent buying at $17.95.
Take a bottle along to your
favourite BYO Chinese restaurant and enjoy with Peking Duck, or share
it at home with a good old-fashioned lamb roast.
One For Lunch
Murray
and Daphne Brown were amongst the pioneers of grape-growing and
winemaking in New Zealand’s Marlborough Region 30-years ago, and in
2002 pioneered again with the first grape plantings in Marlborough’s
Blind River area that was better known then as sheep country.
Their
gamble paid off handsomely and a 2008 Sauvignon Blanc they’ve just
released under their Cable Station label is a ripper of a drop with
mouth-filling melon and passionfruit flavours and nice hints of citrus
and herbaceousness.
Pay $18.95 and savour the flavours of this one with pan-fried Atlantic salmon cutlets and a tossed salad.
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