Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Mt Jagged Southern Fleurieu Reserve Chardonnay 2007


"Looking for Mick"


I may have misread the name of this winery, as when I fired up the wine mobile and headed south in search of it I had a rolling stones tune running through my head and was thinking of Mick Jagger.
 
Since moving to McLaren Vale we haven’t done much of the tourist trails so one weekend we decided to head down to Victor harbour to do some whale watching. Half way there we came round a bend and saw the sign for Mt Jagged winery. Ohhhh, Mt Jagged, not Mick Jagger....right, back to the story. Heading up a hill, (yes it's more of a hill than a mountain), and round a bend at a hundred clicks meant we had to turn around and come back but it was worth it. We discovered a beautiful little cellar door that looks out across paddocks and a pond with distant views of the hills meandering down the Fleurieu peninsula towards Victor Harbour. This is a small scale family wine business and everything is small batch.

One of the wines we walked away with was this single vineyard Chardonnay. Only 200 dozen are made of this wine, with fruit coming from their highest block where vines grow on free draining dolomite soil. The slightly higher elevation of these vineyards gives the wines a cool climate feel and they have used new and old French oak and left the wine on lees for 10 months.

The result is a very crisp European style of wine with yeast sourdough aromas and flavours, with characters of cashew, grapefruit, cumquat and mandarin. The oak is evident but not over powering and the crisp acidity makes this a versatile wine which goes well with both winter and summer style dishes.

Mt Jagged have used a really heavy premium burgundy bottle for this wine that has such weight that more than once I tried to refill my glass only to find it was empty

Have this wine with mushroom risotto or Crab. I was hungry so I had both. Two thumbs, (crab claws), up.

Current vintage is 2007. Price is $36.00 from Cellar Door

Drink now or cellar for up to five years.

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Moving to McLaren Vale - ”First things first” with Primo Joseph Moda Amarone 1995



After a hiatus from the Liquid Dining blog, we have packed up house, car and dogs and moved south to McLaren Vale in mid 2010. We brought with us a bit of wine, some of it with some age on it, and much of it from Mclaren vale. So it seems we took wine away from its birth place, aged it, and then brought it back home again. How’s that for a carbon footprint?

It is now 2013.  We have been here for three years and a bit!  How time flies!  The Liquid Dining business is finally taking its first step, and I dug out my notes on the wines we’ve consumed over the last three years.

So, let the journey start again.

Rewind to 2011, a Saturday night dinner in July.  After a year, we started to settle down and found ourselves some good friends (yes, it is that hard when you are over 40, working hard in your new job and trying to make friends without the help of having kids!  The dogs didn’t make friends either!).  To celebrate our first year, we decided to open one of the older McLaren Vale wines, as we would be consuming it while being a couple of minutes from the vineyard it came from.

We dug and rummaged through our collection of vino that had boomeranged between McLaren Vale and Sydney, and then back again. All of a sudden I felt like Indiana Jones gazing at the Ark of the Covenant. Behold a magnum of Joseph Moda Amarone Cabernet Merlot from the 1995 vintage. I dusted it off with a stroke of my hand and then wondered whether the dust was McLaren Vale’s or Sydney’s. Was it worth calling a CSI team to investigate? I also wondered whether I had reduced its dining table allure by removing the said dust. Then I wondered how long I had been wondering, and how long before our dinner guests would arrive. After all you can’t open a magnum without dinner guests…unless you’re really thirsty.

I stood it upright, and checked the clock. Three hours before the guests arrived. I grabbed my duck decanter and a corkscrew and cut off the wax seal. I checked the clock again. Two hours and fifty eight minutes before the guests arrived, no time to dilly dally….then I wondered about the origin of the expression dilly dally….oh no, only two hours and fifty seven minutes before the guests arrive!

The wine sat, (well actually it stood), upon the dining table freshly denuded of dust, and glistening like Indiana’s amulet used to locate the well of souls in which resided the Ark of the Covenant. Woops, only two hours before the guests arrive. I inserted the cork screw, hmmm, soft but feeling somewhat intact. I began to remove the cork and wondered what Joe Grilli had been thinking the day this wine was bottled. Did he wonder whether some boy from Sydney would carry his wine far away only to return it like the prodigal son now fully aged and grown into a man, (wine man)? Did Joe hope this would happen?  Did he care? Arrgh only one hour and fifty nine minutes before the guests arrive.

The cork smelt good, in fact it smelt sexy! I decanted the wine and listened, just like Beethoven might have listed to the lingering timbre of the last note played after completing his first symphony. No he wouldn’t have, he was deaf! Only one hour and fifty two minutes before the guests arrive!

The guests were late…..

When they arrived we all began to kneel around the dining table like the altar to Joseph that it had now become. We poured the wine and inhaled deeply the aroma of pure joy.

There were prunes and chocolate mixed with some dusty oak characters and a funky depth that can only be described as the passing of time. What was I doing in 1995, I wondered, what was I wearing?  It didn’t matter.  There was wine to drink. I put the glass to my lips like Indiana’s grail, and my tongue was kissed by angels.

An explosion of flavours abounded; chocolate, prunes, vanilla, cedar, briar, rhubarb and nutmeg. The bottle development offered a plethora of secondary flavours including tea leaf, coffee, camphor and tobacco. There was a smokiness coming from the toasted oak and nuances of flavour that would only emanate from the wood panelling in an old world gentleman’s club. The kind of club Indiana Jones would have visited when not seeking religious artefacts like the one we were drinking.

The fruit for this wine came from two regions. The Cabernet Sauvignon, which is 90% of the blend, comes from McLaren Vale, and the 10% Merlot is from Coonawarra.

Now the Amarone method is an Italian pioneered method of air-drying grapes in racks or baskets. This method concentrates juice through evaporation and in turn concentrates the flavours of stewed fruit. Very yummy indeed, and very costly.  Joe Grilli reduces his grape yields so as to concentrate fruit flavour to begin with. To then double concentrate it via the Amarone method is a very generous offering especially for the price. The current release for this wine is a 2011 vintage. The 750 ml bottle sells for $75, and the magnum $195. Bring some good friends to help drink it.

We know this is not a casual Tuesday night bottle of wine at this price, but then again aren’t Tuesday nights precious too? 

This wine will keep for 15-20 years from vintage.

What to have it with? Stewed oxtail or venison and someone you love. No dust required.