Graeme Gee
Graeme Gee
From today's Sydney Morning Herald:
The move to screwcaps at the venerable Hunter Valley winery Mc Williams Mount Pleasant has had unforeseen side-effects. Mount Pleasants most famous product, Elizabeth Semillon, is five years old on release and, like other wineries that sell aged Hunter Semillon, Mount Pleasant routinely ran the five year old bottles past bright lights to see which ones had darkened in colour, in order to eliminate oxidised or prematurely aged bottles. Between 10 per cent and 20 per cent of every vintage was thrown out. Now, with screwcaps, each bottle matures at much the same rate and the variations are no longer seen...
Now Elizabeth has moved to a screwcap with the 2004 vintage, McWilliams suddenly has to sell more...
I've had the 2004, and it's a lovely drink. A thundering 10.5%, and developing nicely. Won't be a long ager but for the next 5 years ought to provide terrific drinking. Available around the traps for A$10-12.
cheers,
Graeme
The move to screwcaps at the venerable Hunter Valley winery Mc Williams Mount Pleasant has had unforeseen side-effects. Mount Pleasants most famous product, Elizabeth Semillon, is five years old on release and, like other wineries that sell aged Hunter Semillon, Mount Pleasant routinely ran the five year old bottles past bright lights to see which ones had darkened in colour, in order to eliminate oxidised or prematurely aged bottles. Between 10 per cent and 20 per cent of every vintage was thrown out. Now, with screwcaps, each bottle matures at much the same rate and the variations are no longer seen...
Now Elizabeth has moved to a screwcap with the 2004 vintage, McWilliams suddenly has to sell more...
I've had the 2004, and it's a lovely drink. A thundering 10.5%, and developing nicely. Won't be a long ager but for the next 5 years ought to provide terrific drinking. Available around the traps for A$10-12.
cheers,
Graeme