Exhibitors at this year's show: 
Tintilla Estate
Piggs Peake Winery 
PooleÂ’s Rock Wines 
Zilzie Wines 
Red Hill Estate 
Bimbadgen Estate 
Seifried Wines 
Symphony Hill 
Cardinham Estate 
Schild Estate Wines 
Burton Premium Wines 
Kevin Sobels Wines 
Toorak Wines 
JC Watson Wines 
Peacock Hill Vineyard 
Mistletoe Wines 
Rimfire Vineyard & Winery 
Sirromet Wines 
Watershed Premium Wines 
Beresford Wines 
Step Road Winery 
Palandri Wines 
Mt Nathan Winery 
Neagles Rock Vineyards 
Arlewood Estate 
Rochford Wines 
Ravens Croft Wines 
Macquariedale Wines 
Blue Pyrenees Estate 
Tamborine Estate Wines 
Cassegrain Wines 
Elderton Wines 
Clairault 
Plunkett Wines 
Tulloch Wines 
Canungra Valley Vineyards 
Hungerford Hill Wines 
Tumberumba 
Angoves Wines 
Shingleback Wines 
Brookland Valley Wines 
Houghton Wines 
Krinklewood Wines 
Robert Channon Wines 
Bay of Fires 
Yarra Burn Vineyard 
Grove Estate Wines 
Ocean View Estate 
McWiliams Wines 
Lambert Vineyards 
Ten Minutes by Tractor 
Casella Wines 
Gowrie Mountain Estate 
Pankhurst Wines 
Pendarves Estate 
Eldredge Wines 
Leasingham Wines
Starvedog Lane 
Tintara Wines 
Sir James Sparkling Wines 
Byrne & Smith 
Stuart Range Estate Wines 
Glastonbury Estate 
South Burnett & Sunshine Coast Hinterland QLD 
Madew Wines
Frances-Cole 
Hentley Farm 
Moorilla Estate Wines 
Maddens Lane 
Yarra Valley VIC 
Tyrrells Wines 
Rufus Stone 
3 Witches Wines 
Lillypilly Estate Wines 
Caffe Ducale 
Ballast Stone Wines 
Deep Woods Estate 
Frog Rock Wines 
Blackwood Wines 
Blackwood Valley WA 
Tim Adams Wines 
Symphonia Wines 
Logan Wines 
Heritage Wines
There are a lot of names here I haven't heard of and some I'm not even sure are wine related. Anyway, I'm seeking advice on any particular companies I should make a beeline for, besides the obvious few like Leasingham, Elderton, Tintara ...
I'll be in the midst of it all a week from now and it'd be nice to cut down the crap I have to work through.
TIA,
						
			
									
													2005 Brisbane Wine Festival
2005 Brisbane Wine Festival
Max
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Avant d’être bon, un vin doit être vrai
			
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Avant d’être bon, un vin doit être vrai
- Andrew Jordan
- Posts: 792
- Joined: Wed May 05, 2004 11:53 am
- Location: Sydney
Ballast Stone
Heritage
Schild
Cardinham
Arlewood
Neagle's Rock
Clairault
Brookland Valley
Houghton
Robert Channon for Verdelho?!
10XTractor for Pinot
Starvedog Lane
Madew for aromatic whites
Moorilla
Deep Woods
Tim Adams
Tyrrell's
Lillypilly for the stickies
Kieran
						
			
									
													Heritage
Schild
Cardinham
Arlewood
Neagle's Rock
Clairault
Brookland Valley
Houghton
Robert Channon for Verdelho?!
10XTractor for Pinot
Starvedog Lane
Madew for aromatic whites
Moorilla
Deep Woods
Tim Adams
Tyrrell's
Lillypilly for the stickies
Kieran
"In the wine of life, some of us are destined to be cork sniffers." - Dilbert
			
						Having just returned from a fortnight holiday in Oz, I thought I'd better post my exceptionally brief impressions from the show. As noted in the RNA thread, we were handed plastic cups with string tied to them as we entered the show, as opposed to your standard issue ISO tasting glass. What a start. In any case, the folks and I quickly talked to an equally disgruntled patron who informed us that we could obtain glasses from some of the exhibitors, with whom we promptly traded plastic for glass.
The Friday afternoon session was quieter than I expected and also the first of the show, so no dramas with wine availability. The three hours flew by and following my usual rule of 'swallow good, spit bad' it was a good thing I wasn't in there much longer.
My major gripe was the fact that there was no '02 Bin 56 to try, which apparently won a gold medal. Most disappointing. There was also a lot of variation between vintages printed in the tasting booklet and what was actually on display for tasting. This didn't seem intentional though.
Anyway, these are the exhibitors I wrote about on the day:
Zilzie - Tried their '04 Chardonnay and '04 Pinot Gris which I thought were both great value at $11. The '03 Estate Shiraz was passable.
Cardinham - Ran to their table after utilising stealth evasive maneouvres to escape the clutches of the ushering security staff at the end of the session. Only had time to try their '03 Stradbrooke Shiraz, but needless to say I was very impressed. Giddiup at $17/bottle.
Neagle Rock - A little underwhelmed with their wines, given the five star winery rating from JH. I thought the '04 Riesling was good, along with the '03 Sangiovese which was interesting but neither wine impressed. The '03 Shiraz was passable.
Rochford - Their '01 Yarra Valley Pinot Noir (not '02 as printed in booklet) was passable. However, big upgrade in quality with their '02 Macedon Ranges Pinot Noir which is one of the better Aussie Pinots I've tasted yet. Great value at $35/bottle.
Elderton - Not fussed on the '03 Shiraz at all. The '02 is exponentially better (grab some if you still can). The '02 Cab Sauv had a fantastic palate and finish but smelt a little dumb on the nose. Will try this again soon, believe it to be a good wine.
Robert Channon - A little underwelmed here as well. The '04 Verdelho and '03 Chardonnay were both good, but I wouldn't buy any at $21/bottle.
Bay of Fires - Today is the day for Tasmanian Riesling. I loved their '04 Bay of Fires Riesling and will try and source some ($23/bottle). The Tigress '02 Pinot Noir paled in comparison (especially given the Pinots I'd already had on the day).
Yarra Burn - The '03 Pinot Gris and '02 Shiraz Viognier were both good, honest, sub $20 wines. The '01 Cab Sauv was not so honest, or modest asking $20+.
Ten Minutes by Tractor - Spoke with Tim who was the exhibitor for the day and is also the marketing manager based from the winery in Vic. Easily the best exhibitor experience on the day - was truly a joy talking to this guy. I learned that the yields are impossibly small from each Pinot Noir vineyard - I can't remember the exact figure but only around 100 cases of their Reserve Pinot Noir were made to my knowledge. Their little microclimate their in the Mornington Peninsula is apparently 4 degrees cooler than neighbouring winery sites which is also interesting, in terms of the outcome of the resulting wines. The '02 Reserve Pinot Noir won a gold medal at the show and was a very good wine, but I think it needs a couple years in the cellar. I actually found the standard '02 10X Pinot Noir ($28 as opposed to $42 for the Reserve) a better drink now proposition and a sensational wine. Look out for these guys (didn't have time to try their whites).
Leasingham - A little jaded that the '02 Bin 56 was MIA. I thought the '02 Bin 61 had a wonderful, youthful, intense nose but was a little flat across the palate (yet a decent finish). Will try this again under a more controlled environment. The '01 Bastion Shiraz/Cab was on tasting (not '03 as printed - clearing old stock perhaps???) and as this label always does, it represented very good value at $12/bottle (and cheaper elsewhere I'm sure). No Classic Clare unfortunately.
Starvedog - Tried their '01 Shiraz and '03 Shiraz Viognier. Disappointed with both - average wines.
Tintara - The '02 Premium Grenache was passable ($35, yech) and the '01 Premium Shiraz was good, but definitely not $40 good.
Moorilla - Nice Tasmanian winery with a pleasant exhibitor. I wasn't particularly fond of their White Label '03 Pinot Noir or '02 Cabernet Sauvignon ($35 and $29 respectively - '03 Cab won gold, but '02 was on tasting?). However, the '02 White Label Riesling was very good (easily $25 worth) and the '02 White Label Chardonnay was interesting to try, not undergoing any malo treatment.
Maddens Lane - Tried their '03 Pinot Noir and '03 Shiraz Viognier. I don't believe I swallowed these.
Heritage Wines - The 2000 Cab Malbec was nice (not '01 as printed) - I'm quite partial to this blend recipe - and the '01 Cab Sauv was okay (not '03 as printed) with the '03 Shiraz possessing a great palate and finish but was a little mute on the nose. Still, reasonable quaffing wines under the $20 mark.
Tim Adams - Wasn't impressed with their '04 Clare Valley Riesling and the '02 Fergus Grenache had the misfortune to represent my only 'cross and skull marks' of the day. The '02 Shiraz wasn't bad. Not a good showing from Mr Adams.
Symphonia - Their '04 Pinot Grigio and '01 'La Solista' Tempranillo (don't you hate it when they pronounce the 'l' in Tempranillo...) were passable, but the '03 Las Triadas (or was it Quintus? My notes aren't so good...) had a tick in every box. Great qpr at $21/bottle.
Well, that covers everything. Went out for Italian with the family afterwards and had a La Signora (beautiful) and a Bocca de Lupo (below average). We had a few other wines too but I forget what they were... 
 
Now, who's going to organise the petition for next year's show - "Plastic is not Fantastic"...
Cheers,
						
			
									
													The Friday afternoon session was quieter than I expected and also the first of the show, so no dramas with wine availability. The three hours flew by and following my usual rule of 'swallow good, spit bad' it was a good thing I wasn't in there much longer.
My major gripe was the fact that there was no '02 Bin 56 to try, which apparently won a gold medal. Most disappointing. There was also a lot of variation between vintages printed in the tasting booklet and what was actually on display for tasting. This didn't seem intentional though.
Anyway, these are the exhibitors I wrote about on the day:
Zilzie - Tried their '04 Chardonnay and '04 Pinot Gris which I thought were both great value at $11. The '03 Estate Shiraz was passable.
Cardinham - Ran to their table after utilising stealth evasive maneouvres to escape the clutches of the ushering security staff at the end of the session. Only had time to try their '03 Stradbrooke Shiraz, but needless to say I was very impressed. Giddiup at $17/bottle.
Neagle Rock - A little underwhelmed with their wines, given the five star winery rating from JH. I thought the '04 Riesling was good, along with the '03 Sangiovese which was interesting but neither wine impressed. The '03 Shiraz was passable.
Rochford - Their '01 Yarra Valley Pinot Noir (not '02 as printed in booklet) was passable. However, big upgrade in quality with their '02 Macedon Ranges Pinot Noir which is one of the better Aussie Pinots I've tasted yet. Great value at $35/bottle.
Elderton - Not fussed on the '03 Shiraz at all. The '02 is exponentially better (grab some if you still can). The '02 Cab Sauv had a fantastic palate and finish but smelt a little dumb on the nose. Will try this again soon, believe it to be a good wine.
Robert Channon - A little underwelmed here as well. The '04 Verdelho and '03 Chardonnay were both good, but I wouldn't buy any at $21/bottle.
Bay of Fires - Today is the day for Tasmanian Riesling. I loved their '04 Bay of Fires Riesling and will try and source some ($23/bottle). The Tigress '02 Pinot Noir paled in comparison (especially given the Pinots I'd already had on the day).
Yarra Burn - The '03 Pinot Gris and '02 Shiraz Viognier were both good, honest, sub $20 wines. The '01 Cab Sauv was not so honest, or modest asking $20+.
Ten Minutes by Tractor - Spoke with Tim who was the exhibitor for the day and is also the marketing manager based from the winery in Vic. Easily the best exhibitor experience on the day - was truly a joy talking to this guy. I learned that the yields are impossibly small from each Pinot Noir vineyard - I can't remember the exact figure but only around 100 cases of their Reserve Pinot Noir were made to my knowledge. Their little microclimate their in the Mornington Peninsula is apparently 4 degrees cooler than neighbouring winery sites which is also interesting, in terms of the outcome of the resulting wines. The '02 Reserve Pinot Noir won a gold medal at the show and was a very good wine, but I think it needs a couple years in the cellar. I actually found the standard '02 10X Pinot Noir ($28 as opposed to $42 for the Reserve) a better drink now proposition and a sensational wine. Look out for these guys (didn't have time to try their whites).
Leasingham - A little jaded that the '02 Bin 56 was MIA. I thought the '02 Bin 61 had a wonderful, youthful, intense nose but was a little flat across the palate (yet a decent finish). Will try this again under a more controlled environment. The '01 Bastion Shiraz/Cab was on tasting (not '03 as printed - clearing old stock perhaps???) and as this label always does, it represented very good value at $12/bottle (and cheaper elsewhere I'm sure). No Classic Clare unfortunately.
Starvedog - Tried their '01 Shiraz and '03 Shiraz Viognier. Disappointed with both - average wines.
Tintara - The '02 Premium Grenache was passable ($35, yech) and the '01 Premium Shiraz was good, but definitely not $40 good.
Moorilla - Nice Tasmanian winery with a pleasant exhibitor. I wasn't particularly fond of their White Label '03 Pinot Noir or '02 Cabernet Sauvignon ($35 and $29 respectively - '03 Cab won gold, but '02 was on tasting?). However, the '02 White Label Riesling was very good (easily $25 worth) and the '02 White Label Chardonnay was interesting to try, not undergoing any malo treatment.
Maddens Lane - Tried their '03 Pinot Noir and '03 Shiraz Viognier. I don't believe I swallowed these.
Heritage Wines - The 2000 Cab Malbec was nice (not '01 as printed) - I'm quite partial to this blend recipe - and the '01 Cab Sauv was okay (not '03 as printed) with the '03 Shiraz possessing a great palate and finish but was a little mute on the nose. Still, reasonable quaffing wines under the $20 mark.
Tim Adams - Wasn't impressed with their '04 Clare Valley Riesling and the '02 Fergus Grenache had the misfortune to represent my only 'cross and skull marks' of the day. The '02 Shiraz wasn't bad. Not a good showing from Mr Adams.
Symphonia - Their '04 Pinot Grigio and '01 'La Solista' Tempranillo (don't you hate it when they pronounce the 'l' in Tempranillo...) were passable, but the '03 Las Triadas (or was it Quintus? My notes aren't so good...) had a tick in every box. Great qpr at $21/bottle.
Well, that covers everything. Went out for Italian with the family afterwards and had a La Signora (beautiful) and a Bocca de Lupo (below average). We had a few other wines too but I forget what they were...
 
 
Now, who's going to organise the petition for next year's show - "Plastic is not Fantastic"...
Cheers,
Max
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Avant d’être bon, un vin doit être vrai
			
						-----
Avant d’être bon, un vin doit être vrai
mphatic,
No, unfortunately I wasn't able to attend any masterclasses. I had to rush off the following day, in preparation for a date with some sexy beasts on the Saturday night - '97 Luce, '00 Command and '01 Le Sol, amongst others. The folks have both visited the winery and spoke highly of their wines, indicating that the current Pinot Noir is not one of their better ones.
Cheers,
						
			
									
													No, unfortunately I wasn't able to attend any masterclasses. I had to rush off the following day, in preparation for a date with some sexy beasts on the Saturday night - '97 Luce, '00 Command and '01 Le Sol, amongst others. The folks have both visited the winery and spoke highly of their wines, indicating that the current Pinot Noir is not one of their better ones.
Cheers,
Max
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Avant d’être bon, un vin doit être vrai
			
						-----
Avant d’être bon, un vin doit être vrai
 
								

