What's new, how does this wine advance Australian wine one iota?
I'm with Smithy on this, he's off doing his own thing, making decent volumes, and in his own inimitable style, and at good prices. He is perhaps the next Max Schubert of Durif, who knows? Australia needs a couple of hundred of Smithy's pushing the envelope because that way, ten or twenty are going to do something really interesting. Torbreck The Laird is to me conceptually tedious no matter how good the wine, unless it is redefining or pushing boundaries other than price.
To celebrate this wine is to to stick your head in the sand (toilet?) and worship at the altar of where Australian wine marketing at a macro level has lost it - not enough new concepts, just reworking the same overpriced, over-extracted, over-ripe wines. Mollydookerdom (is that a word?) beckons, and in the eyes of the rest of the wine-savvy world NZ is what's really pushing the new-world boundaries these days. I speak from afar ...
Listen, I may be wrong: if this wine exists in 20 years with a make of 10,000 cases and selling for more than Grange, I was wrong and you can all log into Auswine 2030 forum's 3D reality chat room and mock me in my dotage.
![Twisted Evil :twisted:](./images/smilies/icon_twisted.gif)