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The Australian winemaking industry is grateful to Leontine O'Shea, instrumental in the establishment of Mount Pleasant wines, she sent her son Maurice to France for an education in viticulture right at the outbreak of World War I, gifting him his first Hunter Valley vineyard in 1921. Mount Pleasant are now custodians of some grand old sites, a canon of small, elite blocks of vine that yield a precious range of icon wines, which represent peerless value and readily disappear before release of the following vintage... The legacy of grand old hunter valley vineyards»
Lured to Australia by Alfred Deakin in 1887, the Chaffey Brothers were American irrigation engineers who took up a challenge to develop the dust bowls ofRenmark and Mildura into fruit growing wonderlands. They left our nation an extraordinary legacy and their progeny continue to make good wine. Several generations later, the Chaffey Bros are focused on the fruit of some grand old Barossa and Eden Valley sites. Chosen harvests of extraordinary grapes are the ticket for admission into the exclusive club of Chaffey vineyards. Shiraz is made in several different styles and there's a penchant for obscure white varietals in the Mosel River way. They make wine according to the art of the Parfumier, nothing is bottled unless it represents a profound experience in.. A splendour of salient sites»
Legendary Penfold winemaker John Duval began his apprenticeship in 1974 under the tutelage of the late great Max Schubert. Duval's family had been supplying Penfolds with fruit and root stock for generations, many of South Australia's most prestigious vineyards were sown with cuttings from Duval's family property. Duval was awarded International Wine & Spirit Competition Winemaker of Year and twice London International Red Winemaker of Year. He now focuses on releasing painfully limited editions, assembled from precious parcels of elite Barossa vine, hand crafted by one of the world's most accomplished and peer respected winemakers... Ancient barossa hamlet vines»

Bindi Composition Chardonnay 2010 CONFIRM 2010 VINTAGE

Bindi Composition Chardonnay 2010 - Buy
Chardonnay Macedon Victoria
Sourced from vines planted in 1988 to quartz alluvial and volcanic soils on the lower slopes of Bindi. A beautifully fine and flavoursome wine, Composition can characterized by its fragrant notes of orange blossom, nectarine stone, spice and subtle nuttiness over a vibrant, tight and lengthy palate highlighted by clean acidity, wonderful texture and superb length. The site is special, increasingly low impact, organic outcomes are implemented, production varies from 300 to 600 dozen each vintage.
Composition Chardonnay is grown to a 1½ hectare plot. Fastidious small vineyard management regimes are employed, hand pruning, frequent passes, at least ten for each vine, vertical shoot positioned canopies and hand harvesting. Composition is fermented in a selection of new and seasoned French oak barrels, some are inoculated with cultured yeast, others are vinified without any addition of yeasts. The fermented wine is lees stirred every week over winter and treated to a quarter of malolactic conversion. The wine is racked around eight months after vintage and returned to barrel for a further three months before bottling. Composition spends just under eleven months in barrel, ten on sedimentery lees.
Light straw gold colour. The nose is fine and quite complex, floral and gently spiced with a delicious mealy, pulp mineral Chardonnay fragrance. An intense, mineral wine fully ripe but lean, taught and intense with savory, creamy elements. The fruit complexities range through white peaches and nectarine, lemons, grapefruit and nashi pear. The palate is fresh and intense, walking the line of mouth filling textures combined with delicacy and finesse.
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Bindi
Bindi are one of Australia's most exciting new wineries. Critical acclaim is overwhelming, production is tiny and demand always outstrips supply

It's all about the environment and care for the land. The Bindi property is situated 50 kilometers northwest of Melbourne in the Macedon Ranges. Originally purchased in the 1950s as part of the larger grazing farm Bundaleer, Bindi is a 170 hectare farm of which 6 hectares are planted to Chardonnay and Pinot Noir. Fifteen hectares are dedicated to managed plantation eucalypts for high grade furniture timber whilst the remainder of the land is maintained as remnant bush land and important indigenous grasslands. The Bindi vineyard is the fundamental focus of endeavors. The vineyard and winemaking philosophy seeks balance and purity in the expression of each individual vineyard site and this philosophy is applied to farming and conservation across the entire property, the preservation of natural harmony.

Bindi

Vineyard elevation is 500 meters above sea level and soils are predominantly shattered quartz over siltstone clays with some eroded volcanic top soil over clay. Generally unfertile, yields are a scant 1½ to 2 tonnes per acre (3.5 to 5.0 tonnes per hectare). Increasingly low impact, organic outcomes are being trialed and implemented. There are two hectares of Chardonnay, planted in 1988, and four of Pinot Noir, planted in 1988 and 1992. The younger Pinot Noir Block K was established in 2001 and is currently being trained to come of age as a super elite vineyard.

The winemaking incorporates a high percentage of natural indigenous yeasts, gently worked ferments, delicate pressing, long lees ageing in the finest oak and a minimal racking. The wines are unfined and restricted filtration regimes are followed. The yields, harvest date and vinification techniques are deliberately aimed at producing a wine of regional authenticity in a style highlighting fragrance and vitality, harmony and finesse.

The environment, free draining quartzy soils, cool climate and north-facing hill are all reasons the Bindi have done so well. It's the site and environment that produces such exceptional wine. Exclusively French oak barrels are used to make pinot noir, chardonnay and a sparkling wine that is matured in the bottle for up to eight years, a wine high on production cost and relatively low on price, made purely for the fun and indulgence.

Bindi

Everyone involved has a hand on the entire winemaking process, from pruning to picking, crushing and racking, labelling and packaging. Fastidious small vineyard management regimes are employed, hand pruning, frequent passes, at least ten for each vine, vertical shoot positioned canopies and hand harvesting. Emphasis is on a whollistic and natural approach to making good wine.

The vineyard is the focus but the aim is to maintain balance and harmony between viticulture and wild remnant bush lands. Bindi are unique in that they do not use systemic applications to eradicate pests. Winemaking is an equal partner to preservation of the natural environment. The vines are surrounded by wild grass which has no commercial use. But it's indigenous grass and it's rare, one of the few places in Victoria where it's still intact. It is part of the environment that Bindi aims to preserve. For all of Bindi's 170 hectares, only six are planted to vines. The environmental credentials may have no direct influence on Bindi's critical acclaim, which is judged purely on wine. But it is one of the reasons for the estate's success. The vines exist in a natural, harmonious environment, and that is why the vineyard is viable in the long term.

The quartz riddled, gently north sloping three acre Original Vineyard produces very fine, spicy, fragrant wine that has high natural acidity and develops beautifully. Block Five is a half hectare on a sheltered, north facing, and very quartz riddled site. It is a wonderful natural vineyard exposition. Pinot Noir from here is always darker in fruit expression and immediately more spicy and earthy than the Original Vineyard. It is less immediately perfumed and has more tannin and fruit power. At the upper end of the Chardonnay plantings, where the quartz incidence in the soil is the greatest, the fruit has extra complexity, finesse and intensity. A half hectare site, exceptional wine comes from this soil.

Bindi