Description
Based in the tiny village of Angaston in South Australia, Yalumba is the country’s oldest family-owned winery. Samuel Smith left his home in Dorset and sailed to Adelaide, where he settled and planted his first vines in 1849. Expanding his holdings after finding fortune in the goldfields of New South Wales and Victoria, he released his first wines in the 1850s and began to pick up accolades in local wine shows.
Samuel’s grandson, the horticulturist Fred Caley Smith, set sail seeking adventures in North America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East, all the time promoting Yalumba wines. He returned with an almost unrivalled knowledge that set his family on a trajectory to become one of Australia’s leading wine producers and fruit growers. The winery has passed through five generations of Smiths and now resides with Chairman of the Board Robert Hill-Smith (cousin of Michael Hill Smith MW of Shaw+Smith), who takes inspiration from Antinori, Dujac, Faiveley, Pol Roger and many more. He sums up the ethos of Yalumba when he says: “it’s about sustaining excellence and having some fun.”
Boasting the phenomenal talents of winemaker Louisa Rose, its own onsite cooperage and holdings in Barossa, Eden Valley, Coonawarra, Wrattonbully and all over South Australia, Yalumba is a five-star winery according to James Halliday and has “always been a serious player”. Robert Parker concurs saying that this “renowned Barossa icon” offers “high quality from the bottom to the top of the product line”, and writing for Jancis Robinson’s Purple Pages Richard Hemming MW notes that their “wines are built to last.”
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