Friday, November 17, 2023
HomePastaSouthern Tasmania – Stefan's Gourmand Weblog

Southern Tasmania – Stefan’s Gourmand Weblog


On the ultimate day of the wine tour, we visited two wineries in Southern Tassie. The primary one was Pooley Wines.

This household enterprise was began in 1985. They’ve their very own vineyard and two vineyards, other than producing wine from bought fruit. The primary vineyards is Cooinda Vale, which produces delicate elegant wines.

The second is Butcher’s Hill (photograph above), which is positioned instantly behind the cellar door and produces extra highly effective wines as a result of heavy clay with iron. It has 6 hectares of vines with Chardonnay, Pinot, Pinot Grigio, and Riesling.

The white wines we tasted at Pooley’s have been:

  • Matilda Glowing 2020 (bought fruit from Northern Tassie, 52% Pinot Noir, 41% Chardonnay, 7% Pinot Meunier, second fermentation within the bottle, aged 2.5 years on the lees): inexperienced apple, contemporary, mushy mousse.
  • Pinot Grigio 2023 (aged 4-5 months on the lees): pear, straightforward to drink.
  • Riesling 2023: apple, mellow acidity.
  • Cooinda Vale Riesling 2023: apple, crisp, construction.
  • Butcher’s Hill Riesling 2023: restrained aroma, creamy, and racy acidity.
  • Gewurztraminer 2023: though the winemakers received the inspiration to make this wine from Italy, it’s the truth is not like a Gewurztraminer from Alto Adige, however extra like one from Germany with 4 grams of residual sugar, excessive acidity, and fewer aromatic than Gewurz from Alto Adige.
  • Cooinda Vale Chardonnay 2022 (8 months in French barriques (35% new), 40% malolactic): oak, citrus, contemporary, balanced.

The pink wines (and one candy wine) we tasted have been:

  • Pinot Noir 2022 (11 months in French oak (10% new), 10% entire bunch, fruit from personal vineyards and bought fruit): spicy, pink fruit, velvety texture.
  • Cooinda Vale Pinot Noir 2022 (11 months in French oak (35% new), 20% entire bunch): pink fruit, oak, spicy, construction, ripe tannins.
  • Jack Denis Pooley Pinot Noir 2022 (chosen fruit from Cooinda Vale, 11 months in French oak barriques (50% new), 20% entire bunch): restrained nostril, wants time within the bottle, full bodied, stunning tannins and stability.
  • Butcher’s Hill Cane Minimize Riesling 2022 (late harvest, produced by slicing the provision of water to the grapes and thus letting the grapes dry out earlier than harvesting them, no botrytis, pressed 3 times, moistening the grapes with the juice that got here out, 143 grams per litre residual sugar, 9% alcohol): restrained nostril, trace of petrol, candy & bitter.

We began our go to to Derwent Property with a lunch on the property’s restaurant. The meals was good, though the chef put sugar into virtually all the things. It included oysters, blue eye travalla (an area fish just like cod), octopus, and croquettes. The Derwent Chardonnay and Pinot Noir paired nicely with the meals.

The vineyards are on the Derwent river and the view from the property on the river was very good. Derwent produces about 144,000 bottles per 12 months.

We tasted these wines at Derwent Property:

  • Glowing 2019 (50% Chardonnay, 50% Pinot Noir, from a special cooler winery, second fermentation within the bottle and aged 3.5 years on the lees): apple, creamy mousse, barely candy end.
  • Riesling 2021: petrol, construction, off-dry.
  • Sauvignon Blanc 2023 (50% fermented in new oak barriques for 7 days, then transferred to tank; in tank sluggish ferment at 10C/50F): tropical fruit, construction, vibrant, off-dry.
  • Pinot Gris 2023 (24 hours pores and skin contact, fermented 1/3 in fast & heat in oak barrels and a couple of/3 sluggish & cool in stainless-steel): looks like a rosé, construction, off-dry.
  • Chardonnay 2021 (1 12 months in French oak (25% new), 100% malolactic): tropical fruit, vanilla.
  • Calcaire Chardonnay 2019 (from limestone soil, yield diminished 50% by inexperienced harvest, 1 12 months in French oak (50% new and 50% 1-year previous), 100% malolactic, unfiltered): vibrant fruit, balanced, crisp, elegant.
  • Lime Kiln Pinot 2021 (10% new oak, 15% entire bunch): contemporary, ripe tannins, mushy texture.
  • Pinot Noir 2020 (15% entire bunch, aged 1 12 months in French oak (25%) new, aged 2 years in bottle, every block and every clone fermented seperately to get extra layers of taste, unfiltered): spicy, stunning construction.
  • Calcaire Pinot Noir 2021 (15% entire bunch, 50% new oak, 50% 1-year previous oak): spicy, stunning physique.
  • Late Harvest Riesling 2022 (late harvest with out botrytis, 60 grams residual sugar): candy & bitter, not creamy.
  • Cane Minimize Riesling 2019 (late harvest, produced by slicing the provision of water to the grapes and thus letting the grapes dry out earlier than harvesting them, no botrytis, 140 grams residual sugar): petrol, creamy, very candy.

John Schuts was the final winemaker of this journey to be inaugurated into the Confrérie de Trancheurs de Fromage Hollandais.

We took a bit detour on our approach again to Hobart to look at the attractive views from the Rosny Hill Lookout.

Our bus driver in Tassie was Mark, who entertained us together with his jokes and attention-grabbing historic details about Tasmania (“all the things on Tasmania is constructed by convicts”).

Our farewell dinner was at Aloft Restaurant in Hobart, with a phenomenal view of the harbor. We had the chef’s meinu with beverage match.

The appetizers got here in two units of three. The primary one consisted of wallaby tartare with sichuan pepper on a crispy tapioca cracker…

…oysters with home mignonette…

…and grasp inventory lamp dumpling witjh a black French dressing, and was paired with a Bellebonne Glowing Rosé 2020 from Pipers River, Tasmania.

The second set comprised crispy chilli eggplant…

…kingfish sashimi with buttermilk and anise…

…and a scallop with nasturtium leaf nam jim jaew. This was paired with a Willie Smiths ‘Pet Nat’ Cider 2023 from the Huon Valley, Tasmania. In each units the flavour depth was fairly completely different between the three appetizers, which made the pairing with the wine work higher with some appetizers than with others.

The following course was blue eye travalla with crispy pores and skin on a macademia puree with lemon, and grilled broccolini (referred to as brassica in Australia). The macademia puree was fairly salty however the entire dish labored nice collectively as a mixture of flavors and textures. It was paired with a Stoney Rise Savignin 2023 from the Tamar Valley, Tasmania, which was an awesome pairing. The Savignin was by no means like Savignin from the Jura (which may be excessive acidity and/or in an oxidized model) however was full bodied with sufficient fruit depth to deal with the daring flavors of the dish. The most effective dish and wine pairing of the menu.

Subsequent was Koji pork with spring pea, curd, a horseradish sauce, and thinly sliced zucchini. The horseradish sauce was fairly piquant, however the dish did work nicely with the Sonnen ‘A lot Purple’ Pinot Noir 2022 from Derwent Valley. Tasmania. For this wine was 5% Riesling cofermented with the Riesling, which had given the wine some fragrant and acidic elevate. The wine was higher with the dish than with out it.

The dessert was spiced apple with buttermilk icecream and salted caramel, paired with a Mio Glowing Sake from Hyogo, Japan. This sake was barely candy (12.6 grams residual sugar, 5% alcohol) and a bit easy, however did work nicely as a pairing.

These have been all of the wines of the pairing, plus a Stefano Lubiana Grande Classic 2011 glowing from Tasmania that we had as an aperitif (50% Chardonnay, 50% Pinot Noir, second fermentation within the bottle, aged 10 years on the lees).

This farewell dinner concluded our 13-day wine tour in Australia, through which we visited 26 wineries in 4 states, tasting over 400 wines. Because of Cees van Casteren MW we visited the very best wineries within the wine areas we visited, and so the wines we tasted will not be reflective of the Australian wines you could encounter within the grocery store. Most have been smaller producers that don’t even export — in Tasmania even promoting the wine in Australia exterior of Tasmania is taken into account ‘export’ (and 70% of the wine produced in Tassie stays there). However this tour has actually broadened my view of Australian wine. I’m personally not a fan of many of the Rieslings (with some exceptions), however we’ve tasted some nice Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, and Shiraz from cooler areas in Australia that may actually compete with the very best of the world. The wine world has traits. The development in Australia was huge daring fruity wines, and now at some producers the development appears to have reversed to worth acidity maybe a bit greater than it must be. In spite of everything, stability is among the most essential elements of wine high quality. Fortunately that development appears to be much less in Tasmania, which is a small however shortly rising and really promising wine area (other than having a phenomenal panorama and nice meals). I’ve considered what I believed was the spotlight of this tour, and I can’t resolve as there have been too many highlights and mentioning one wouldn’t be honest to the others. Maybe the principle spotlight was the nice group that we had on this tour and our nice tour guides Cees and Ruud.

Thanks for studying when you’ve made it this far. I’m ending up with a weekend in Adelaide visiting mates that will or could not result in some restaurant opinions. After that it will likely be again to the common stuff of sous vide and different recipes. There may also be few dishes from this journey for which I’ll develop my very own recipes, and naturally I’ll share these on the weblog.



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