Graeme Gee
Graeme Gee
Back in 2000, when Clare Valley riesling makers were tiring of the shithouse performance of natural cork ruining so many of their wines, they vowed to defy retail history and what their marketers were telling them, and so 17 of them clubbed together to launch the 2000 vintage rieslings under screwcap (either partly or in whole).
There were two reasons for acting as a group, one strategic, and one practical. Strategically, they were demonstrating unity of approach, confidence in the seal, and making a statement about their wines and their ability to age.
Practically, the only place they could get the bottles was France. They needed to order minimum 250,000 bottles to guarantee manufacture/shipment, and no maker could justify that by themselves. No Australian glassmaker made a riesling bottle with a screwcap flange. It did mean that everyone's 2000 riesling came in the same brown bottle, but that's why you pay the big bucks to the label designers!
Fast forward 8 years. Rockford, the arch-reactionary Barossa winery, whose winery equipment was mostly salvaged from what other wineries threw out, and who seem to operate barely one generation ahead of horse-drawn equipment, are importing their riesling bottle.
Why?
Well, it's cork-sealed. And these days, Australian glass makers make riesling bottles ONLY with a screwcap top. You can't buy a cork-sealed riesling bottle from a local glass maker.
Who'd have foreseen that eight years ago?
cheers,
Graeme
There were two reasons for acting as a group, one strategic, and one practical. Strategically, they were demonstrating unity of approach, confidence in the seal, and making a statement about their wines and their ability to age.
Practically, the only place they could get the bottles was France. They needed to order minimum 250,000 bottles to guarantee manufacture/shipment, and no maker could justify that by themselves. No Australian glassmaker made a riesling bottle with a screwcap flange. It did mean that everyone's 2000 riesling came in the same brown bottle, but that's why you pay the big bucks to the label designers!
Fast forward 8 years. Rockford, the arch-reactionary Barossa winery, whose winery equipment was mostly salvaged from what other wineries threw out, and who seem to operate barely one generation ahead of horse-drawn equipment, are importing their riesling bottle.
Why?
Well, it's cork-sealed. And these days, Australian glass makers make riesling bottles ONLY with a screwcap top. You can't buy a cork-sealed riesling bottle from a local glass maker.
Who'd have foreseen that eight years ago?
cheers,
Graeme