2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

The place on the web to chat about wine, Australian wines, or any other wines for that matter
Post Reply
Broughy
Posts: 178
Joined: Thu Nov 18, 2004 4:27 pm
Location: Hobart

2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by Broughy »

Has anyone tried these recently?
Rave reviews on release. I have found the Chalambar unapproachable to date on release this was a big dense wine and quite tannic and a little bitter; still seems disjointed. Tried a 04 St Peter's the other night and this was not up to the St Peter's standard. Again quite tannic and seemed a bit thin for fruit. maybe time will bring them around but usually 10 years is a good cellaring period for these

User avatar
Duncan Disorderly
Posts: 227
Joined: Mon May 06, 2013 9:20 pm
Location: Canberra

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by Duncan Disorderly »

I had a bottle of the '04 Chalambar in March and it was superb, drinking beautifully over two nights. Then had another bottle in May and it was OK, but still very subdued and nowhere near as good as the first bottle even after a 12+ hour decant. Both wines were under screw cap, bought at roughly the same time and stored under the same conditions.

Coincidentally I have had a similar experience with two bottles of the '02 I bought at auction recently. Both were lovely, but one required a much longer decant than the other one to really shine.

Can't help you on the St Peter's sorry.

dlo
Posts: 860
Joined: Sun Nov 20, 2005 6:11 pm
Location: Canberra

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by dlo »

Broughy,

Tried a 2004 St Peter's last Sunday. No shortage of fruit, but in a way, I think I can identify with your sense of underachievement for the marque and the (supposedly excellent) vintage. I thought the wine smooth, well balanced, nothing out of place, especially no adverse tannins - if anything, it lacked just a bit of wow factor. I would rate it about 88 points and pretty much a drink now - 2018 proposition. The wine came out of a 1st Choice temperature controlled storage area where it's been for some considerable time. It was on "special' for $50.
Cheers,

David

User avatar
Waiters Friend
Posts: 2861
Joined: Mon May 02, 2005 4:09 am
Location: Perth WA

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by Waiters Friend »

Oh ye of little faith.

Trust in the Gods of Seppelts. Both the St Peters and the Chalambar are wine of ditinction, in most vintages. 2004 is still coming around for both wines.

Be patient.

Allan
Wine, women and song. Ideally, you can experience all three at once.

Mahmoud Ali
Posts: 2960
Joined: Fri Aug 25, 2006 9:00 pm
Location: Edmonton, Canada

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by Mahmoud Ali »

Waiters Friend wrote:Oh ye of little faith......................Be patient.


Alan is right, the main problem is drinking the wines too young. I still have a bottle of the '98 Chalambar.

Interesting to hear about bottle variation in a screw capped wine. I thought that wasn't supposed to happen.

Mahmoud.

Broughy
Posts: 178
Joined: Thu Nov 18, 2004 4:27 pm
Location: Hobart

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by Broughy »

Thanks for the replies...
agree perhaps underwhelmed was my response. spolit with some excellent prior vintages 00 & 01, 02 looking good too. perhaps they are a bit bigger style than those that have gone before and thus need a little more time

User avatar
Wizz
Posts: 1444
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 6:57 am
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Contact:

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by Wizz »

I'm with DLo here. I've tried a few St Peters back to 1998 over the last year, including 2004, and wasnt wowed by any of them. Nice enough bottled aged shiraz, but no wow factor for me in any of them. I was disappointed every time based on the promise these showed in their youth, before Seppelt started being made by accountants (from about 2004),

cheers

Andrew

User avatar
Michael McNally
Posts: 2089
Joined: Thu Sep 08, 2005 3:06 pm
Location: Brisbane

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by Michael McNally »

I recently tried the 2006 Sliverband, 2006 Chalambar and 2006 Victoria Shiraz and while the higher-priced two were clearly 'bigger' wines, the best of the three at least for interest and flavour (as opposed to power) was the lowest label.

Cheers

Michael
Bonum Vinum Laetificat Cor Hominis

dlo
Posts: 860
Joined: Sun Nov 20, 2005 6:11 pm
Location: Canberra

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by dlo »

Broughy wrote:Thanks for the replies...
agree perhaps underwhelmed was my response. spolit with some excellent prior vintages 00 & 01, 02 looking good too. perhaps they are a bit bigger style than those that have gone before and thus need a little more time


I've got a few 98, 02 and 04 St. Peter's ..... don't like where the '98 has gone (porty/alcoholic) ..... was much better as a younger wine when the gorgeous blackberry and licorice fruit masked the alcohol ...... the '98 Reserve, which just about everyone bags to the outhouse for being overoaked, is, IMHumbleO, now the better of these 2 Seppelt Great Western's. The '02 reminds me a little of the '98 as a younger wine .... I like it .... regular low 'nineties achiever, although, as much as I like it, I like the price it gets at auction better! (sometimes $80-100) I managed to pick up a six pack of this from a deceased estate for not much more than, all up, $200 late last year. The '04 is mostly excellent, too, but the last bottle seemed a little underwhelming compared to previous bottles. But it was from First Choice and not my cellar, so I'm unsure as to its provenance.
Cheers,

David

Broughy
Posts: 178
Joined: Thu Nov 18, 2004 4:27 pm
Location: Hobart

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by Broughy »

2002 Seppelt St Peter's this is under cork and thought I would try one on ethe back of this thread. Very dense blueberry palate, amazing nose of blueberries. absolutely fresh, clear pristine fruit, nice ripe supportive tannins. excellent wine. mouth filling, well rounded, fruit and long long palate, not that this normally affects me. Still relatively youthfull but why wait longer. This wine is gorgeous in this style 96 points

Broughy
Posts: 178
Joined: Thu Nov 18, 2004 4:27 pm
Location: Hobart

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by Broughy »

Re above post...I didn't mean this to sound like a rebuttal....which it does. what I was trying to convey is that this a very good wine in the style and for this Marque.

Mike Hawkins
Posts: 2774
Joined: Fri Aug 29, 2003 9:39 am

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by Mike Hawkins »

Nothing wrong with a polite rebuttal Broughy. It makes the forum a more interesting place !

Cheers

Mike

coh
Posts: 16
Joined: Wed Oct 10, 2012 6:42 pm

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by coh »

Hi guys,
fairly new to this forum and only just saw this topic. I recently bought a dozen of the chalambar from a colleague who is getting rid of his whole cellar. Anyway, I grabbed them for $15/bottle which I thought was the bargain of the century. Unfortunately he didn't have any more. I have only had the 1 but it was superb. Drinking well. As I picked it up from his house and out of his cellar, I was fortunate to see how it had been cellared and it was cellared in perfect conditions.

Anyway, just thought I would add in my thoughts.
Have a great night.

ps: sitting here writing this drinking a 2009 Rockford cab sauv (rifle range)....wow, this is a great wine already.

Coh

User avatar
Michael McNally
Posts: 2089
Joined: Thu Sep 08, 2005 3:06 pm
Location: Brisbane

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by Michael McNally »

Welcome to the forum Coh!

Enjoy the Rockford.

Cheers

Michael
Bonum Vinum Laetificat Cor Hominis

rooman
Posts: 1664
Joined: Tue Apr 08, 2008 1:36 pm
Location: Sydney

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by rooman »

David

Interesting comments on the '98. Personally I adore the stuff but as I increasingly find with some of the older wines I am drinking nowadays, it needs to come out of the cellar the day before drinking, stood up right and the cork needs to be pulled mid morning with no decant. I have also had one or two straight from the wine fridge (which is the half way home between the offsite location and the dining room table - temp around 18c) and these wines tend to be quite shut down. I have also drunk a couple recently head to head with older Clonakilla and they definitely hold their own IMO.

Mark

dlo
Posts: 860
Joined: Sun Nov 20, 2005 6:11 pm
Location: Canberra

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by dlo »

rooman wrote:David

Interesting comments on the '98. Personally I adore the stuff but as I increasingly find with some of the older wines I am drinking nowadays, it needs to come out of the cellar the day before drinking, stood up right and the cork needs to be pulled mid morning with no decant. I have also had one or two straight from the wine fridge (which is the half way home between the offsite location and the dining room table - temp around 18c) and these wines tend to be quite shut down. I have also drunk a couple recently head to head with older Clonakilla and they definitely hold their own IMO.

Mark


Thanks Mark,

I need to grab a bottle each of the '98's and try them as you suggest .....
Cheers,

David

Broughy
Posts: 178
Joined: Thu Nov 18, 2004 4:27 pm
Location: Hobart

Re: 2004 Seppelt St Peter's & Chalambar

Post by Broughy »

opened another 2004 Chalambar narrowed my concerns down to:
1.Very acidic and lacks balance.
2.Doesn't have the generosity of fruit of prior vintages

Post Reply