Davo wrote:n4sir wrote:
1998 Chris Ringland (Three Rivers) Shiraz - the first of the 'Parkerised' wines, quickly followed by Noon & WDC. A whole new export avenue opened to the USA for smaller producers on the back of these first reviews, and a new major influence on local winemaking styles was taking form...
Cheers,
Ian
Greenock Creek RR 1995 (" this is one of the greatest Shiraz I have ever tasted" RP) 1996 & 1998 all 100 Parker Points
Three Rivers 1995 (99 points) 1996 and 1998 both 100 points
I think you have to identify the Industry change, then the wine, and the decide if the wine (or maker) really did something that caused the change.
Not just list a series of very good wines. Did a winery in a new region change the whole industry or simply establish a new region ... picky I know.
As a non-Aussie interested in reds -
O'Shea (McWilliams) and Preece (Seepelt) for promoting great wine-making and blending => winemaking tradition
Grange (for showing Oz can make world-class wine) => nuff said
Greenock Creek or Torbreck (for opening up RPs eyes) => trendsetter
Koonunga Hill and Jacobs Creek (for amazing value-for-money and spearheading the export charge) => predates Yellowtail
Grosset for pushing screwcap as the standard for whites and many reds. => the Portugese cork-screwers hate you.
Henschke will be seen as the first proven great single-site Terroir-driven wines for HOG and Edelstone I think. Regionality and sub-regionality are but an interim step in the search for great single-vineyard sites? I'm sure others will argue older sites but again, looking from afar I see Henschke as the torch-bearer here ...
I tried to find something about the Hunter, maybe Bin 3110/00 but I can't see what it proved. That Hunter makes the odd great wine ... yes ... but didn't change anything. Lakes Folly, the original boutique winery ... maybe ...
Cheers -- Jay
“There are no standards of taste in wine. Each mans own taste is the standard, and a majority vote cannot decide for him or in any slightest degree affect the supremacy of his own standard". Mark Twain.