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2015

2015

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  • 2015 Apostrophe Stone’s Throw White, Larry CherubinoWhite Wine

    2015 Apostrophe Stone’s Throw White, Larry Cherubino

    £1695

    The Apostrophe wines are stylistic blends made from grapes grown in the Great Southern area of Western Australia.  Textural and delicious, this white is made with no oak.  A blend of Riesling, Gewürztraminer, Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc, growing up a Stone’s Throw away on the same vineyard.  Riesling’s cool lime and minerality meshes with Gewurztraminer’s exotic spice and rose water. The softly textured palate has a long, refreshing acidity supported by citrus notes and rose petal on the finish.

     

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  • 2015 Saar Riesling ‘Schiefer’ Trocken, Willems WillemsWhite Wine

    2015 Saar Riesling ‘Schiefer’ Trocken, Willems Willems

    £1850

    Smoky earthen notes of crushed stone and salt accent crisp pineapple and nectarine notes here. While dry and lean in style, a kiss of residual sugar accentuates its juicy, mouthwatering feel. Bristling lime and tangerine acidity leads a long, lip-smacking finish rimmed with salty minerals.

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  • 2015 The Dry Dam Riesling, d’ArenbergWhite Wine

    2015 The Dry Dam Riesling, d’Arenberg

    £2250

    The 2015 Dry Dam Riesling is named after a neighbouring farmers dam that year after year was either dry or didn’t hold water.

    Jasmine and orange blossom, along with lemon and lime characters leap from the glass. The sugar-acid balance from this fine vintage is impeccable. While both are present, they manage to meld together creating a mouth-watering yet supple sherbet character, which finishes dry and mineral, not cloying in the slightest.

    A pleasure to drink right now, this wine will evolve elegantly for many years to come.

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  • 2015 The Dry Dam Riesling, d’ArenbergWhite Wine

    2015 The Dry Dam Riesling, d’Arenberg

    £2350

    The Dry Dam Riesling 2020 has a delightfully lifted nose, loaded with lemons, limes, jasmine and Granny Smith. The palate displays a wonderful balance between acid and sweetness, giving that Dry Dam hallmark of sherbet-like character. Full of flavour yet pristine and refined. Drinks perfectly well young but promises to age well, developing toasty, marmalade notes for beyond a decade.

    The Name. : In 1992 d’Arenberg’s neighbours built a dam that remained empty, as it was a dry winter. The next year it rained but the dam was jinxed and didn’t hold water. A dry dam was bad news for d’Arenberg’s neighbouring farmers but promises good results for their old, dry-grown, low-yielding vines.

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  • 2015 Riesling, StargazerWhite Wine

    2015 Riesling, Stargazer

    £2950

    Stargazer pays tribute to Abel Tasman, who as an explorer and navigator, must have spent a fair amount of time gazing towards the heavens. Tasman, a Dutchman under the employ of the United East India Company was the first European to sight Tasmania (on 24 November 1642) and then the South Island of New Zealand, nineteen days later on 13 December.

    The Stargazer Riesling is quartz-green in colour. Crammed with vibrant Cox’s Orange apple and lemon pith notes on the nose, as well as lifted jasmine and crystallised ginger aromatics. The palate’s bright acidity and river stone flavours are balanced with gentle fruit sweetness and talc-like texture.

    The fruit for this Riesling was sourced from the Hanigan family in the Derwent Valley, twenty minutes north of Hobart. Overlooking the Derwent River, the riesling, an unknown clone, was planted in 1993 on its own roots on loam over limestone soils. It is cane pruned and trained to a vertical shoot positioned trellis, and shoot thinned in the spring.

    Handpicked and whole bunched pressed, only the pristine free-run juice was retained for this wine. The relatively cloudy juice was racked off solids and wild fermented over a period of six weeks before being arrested with a small amount of residual sugar. It spent six weeks on gross lees with weekly stirring to build texture prior to bottling in July.

     

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