Houghton C.W. Ferguson Cabernet Malbec 2020
Style: Red Wine
Closure: Screwcap
Houghton C.W. Ferguson Cabernet Malbec 2020
Camberwell
Burke Road
Camberwell VIC 3124
Australia
Producer: Houghton
Country: Australia
Region: Great Southern
Vintage: 2020
Critic Score: 98
Alcohol: 14.0%
Size: 750 ml
Drink by: 2045
Houghton, founded in 1836, is one of Australia's oldest operating wineries and Western Australia’s second oldest producer. Fruit for the exceptional C.W. Ferguson Cabernet Malbec is sourced from the Justin Vineyard in the Frankland River sub-region of Great Southern - the vineyard that also supplies fruit for the flagship Jack Mann Cabernet Sauvignon. The wine is named in honour of Charles William Ferguson, who ran the company from 1875-1920. It was Charles who employed George Mann, father of legendary Houghton Winemaker Jack Mann.
"A blend of Cabernet and Malbec from Frankland is hard to ignore. They are simply perfect bedfellows with the power and strength of the Cabernet complemented by the fruity mid palate tannins of Malbec. Lots of dark chocolate and blackcurrant fruit characters. It’s an elegant and almost restrained wine showing excellent fruit and oak integration. The thread of chalky tannins and fine oak holds it through to a long focused finish." Ray Jordan
"Dark red with a youthful and luminous scarlet hue. The full flavoured palate has an imposing presence displaying complex bramble fruit, dark chocolate and a firm, but fine tannin structure. A wine of great length and flavour, complex, and perfectly balanced ensuring a long future with years of life ahead.
The fruit was hand-picked, sorted and destemmed into small open-top fermenters. The fermentation was carried out with indigenous yeasts and lasted for a period of eight to ten days. The resulting wine was then gently pressed off skins to tank, and completed malolactic fermentation in French oak barriques. Following 16 months maturation the wine was blended and bottled showing distinctive regional dark fruits and spice characters." Houghton
Expert reviews
"From the plainly named Justin vineyard. A mellow, medium- to fuller-weight expression rippling with choc-raspberry, forest berry coulis, clove, dark chocolate, mint and eucalyptus. All nicely played, balanced and even. A potent flow on the palate, so inky and rich, and a chewy corset of silty, crushed rock tannins. It's a bold strike of cab malbec but finds judicious balance and a sense of vibrancy. It speaks fluently of quality fruit and the finesse of winemaking. Drink: 2026-2040." Panel Decision, Halliday Wine Companion - 98 points and Best Cabernet Sauvignon & Family Wine of 2024 and Special Value Wine ★
"A blend of Cabernet and Malbec from Frankland is hard to ignore. They are simply perfect bedfellows with the power and strength of the Cabernet complemented by the fruity mid palate tannins of Malbec. Lots of dark chocolate and blackcurrant fruit characters. It’s an elegant and almost restrained wine showing excellent fruit and oak integration. The thread of chalky tannins and fine oak holds it through to a long focused finish. Drink by: 2023-2041." Ray Jordan, Wine Pilot - 95 points
"The 2020 C W Ferguson Cabernet Malbec is brilliant. Polished tannins protect a core of glistening fruit, with notes of cassis, ironstone, iodine, raspberry, licorice and brine. This is dark and statuesque but sleek and powerful, too. It is very good! Excellent. Drink: 2023 - 2045." Erin Larkin, Wine Advocate - 95 points
Awards
Cabernet Sauvignon & Family Wine of the Year - Halliday Wine Companion Awards 2024
Special Value Wine – Halliday Wine Companion ★
Jack Mann
Jack Mann is the finest Cabernet produced by Houghton. It is named after legendary winemaker Jack Mann, who presided over the winemaking for 51 consecutive vintages at Houghton. A pioneer deserves to be remembered for taking bold risks to achieve extraordinary outcomes. Jack Mann typified this from the moment he joined the fledgling Houghton winery in Western Australia in 1922.
Mann’s legacy through 51 years as head winemaker at Houghton, until his retirement in 1974, was profound. Having been instrumental in introducing new winemaking techniques and original wine styles, Mann succeeded in making the winery world-famous.
Jack took over the mantle of Chief Winemaker from his father in 1930. Seven years later, he experimented with a wine using entirely Chenin Blanc grapes. The wine won 'Best Dry White Table Wine' trophy at the 1937 Royal Melbourne Wine Show. One judge likened it to "the great white Burgundies of France" and the company labelled it Houghton White Burgundy.
Jack Mann was 31 when he made the White Burgundy and became the winery's driving force with 51 consecutive vintages at the helm. It became the biggest selling white wine nationally and during this period over half the grapes crushed in Western Australia went into Houghton White Burgundy.
His achievements were honoured in 1994, when Houghton named its icon red wine, made from Cabernet Sauvignon, in honour of Jack Mann. Fruit is sourced exclusively from a small patch of 46-year-old vines on the Justin Vineyard in the Frankland River sub-region of Great Southern. The vines were planted in 1971 and are descendants of the mysterious original Houghton clone selected by Mann himself. Located on ancient granite gravels and enjoying a mild climate, these vines produce fruit of rare quality.
"When you drink the Houghton Jack Mann reds, sourced solely from Western Australia’s Great Southern region, you taste significant fruit power matched to a dusty, stretching, stalker-like length. It’s a great tribute to the bloke who was Jack Mann. He used to travel from the Swan Valley to Great Southern to play cricket, and between sending down leg-cutters he’d salivate at the wine potential of the place.
He spent 51 consecutive years as winemaker at Houghton’s home base in the Swan Valley, and in the process he put his state on the winemaking map – to the enduring benefit of the wine-loving world. He also had a saying: 'The greatest grape is the noble cabernet. Cabernet sauvignon is the only grape that would be tolerated in heaven.'" Campbell Mattinson
Frankland River
The Great Southern wine region of Western Australia is the most ancient, most isolated and largest wine region in the world. The region is up to 2.8 billion years old and covers over 1.7 million hectares, a whopping 200 kilometres from east to west and 100km from north to south. Since the Nyittiny – creation times – our First Nations people of the Wagyl Kaip region have shared and cared for this Great Southern country.
Great Southern time is a place of dramatic contrasts - striking tall timber forests, swathes of rich agricultural land, imposing mountain ranges, dramatic peaks and ancient rivers. Due to its vast size and spread, it features not only different terroirs but climates that vary from the Mediterranean through to the maritime, resulting in unique wines that reflect their natural surroundings. From this diversity a wine region of international significance and reputation has emerged – the pristine Great Southern wine region.
The region is divided into five distinct sub-regions, each producing wine styles that reflect their unique terroir. The sub-regions are Porongurup, Frankland River, Mount Barker, Denmark and Albany - refer to the map below.
Frankland River sub-region
Frankland River wine, one of Western Australia’s best-kept secrets, is located approximately 360 kilometers south of Perth and lies 80 kilometers inland from the coast. Home to rolling hills, rich farming land and natural forest abounding with native wildflowers, it is named after the river which bisects it and the town at its center. Frankland River is the highest of the Great Southern sub-regions, with most vineyards sitting between 150 to 300 meters above sea level. With 1,600 hectares of vines planted, it is also the most prolific of the five sub-regions.
Frankland River is home to some of the oldest vines in Western Australia, with the first modern-day vineyards planted in 1967 on a property owned by the Roche family of Perth. This vineyard is now owned by Houghton and supplies them with some ultra-premium grapes. Three years later, in 1971, Merv and Judy Lange began planting vines on their Alkoomi property.
Today, there are six wineries located in the sub-region – Frankland Estate, Alkoomi, Swinney, Ferngrove, Lange Estate and Three Elms. In addition, many of Western Australia's iconic wineries source fruit from the area for their wines. Frankland River is home to plantings of all the traditional Australian grape varieties, however, it is internationally best recognised for producing premium cool climate Shiraz and Riesling. Is one of the State’s most successful wine producing regions and its impressive wine show success is testament to the quality of its vineyards and wines.
Frankland River has a true Mediterranean climate, with cool nights and warm days with long sunlight hours. Despite being 80 km inland, a moderating sea breeze from the Southern Ocean finds its way into the region and is a significant boon to local vineyards. In Albany, the equivalent wind is known as the 'Albany Doctor', after the more famous 'Fremantle Doctor' which cools the baked vineyards of the Swan District near Perth. The sea breeze, together with the elevation of the vineyards, create a long, slow ripening season that give the wines intensity of fruit, finesse, freshness and longevity.
Frankland River's soils and topography consist of significant alluvial features. Ironstone-based gravel soils derived from granitic outcrops line the river valleys and rolling hills. These rich, red ironstone gravels often impart a unique flavour to the wines.
Frankland River is one of the five sub-regions of Great Southern
About the winery
Houghton is one of Australia's oldest operating wineries and Western Australia’s second oldest producer. In 1836, only four years after the fledgling town of Perth was established, three British Army officers purchased a prime piece of land in the Swan Valley and established Houghton.
Thomas Yule had retired from the Army to settle in Perth and convinced mates Ninian Lowis and Richmond Houghton to join him in an investment in the Swan Valley. In deference to Houghton's seniority as a Lieutenant Colonel they named their property Houghton - but interestingly Houghton himself never visited Australia, and although Lowis called into Fremantle on his way to the eastern colonies, he too never bothered visiting his Swan Valley investment.
Yule established fruit orchards and planted grapes for making into raisins, and also made his own wine for regular dinner parties. However, he fell on personal hard times in the mid-1850s and sold his interest in Houghton to his partners, who in turn sold out in 1859 to the Colonial Surgeon, Dr John Ferguson.
The highly-regarded Ferguson, a Scot who reputedly was the first person in Australia to use anaesthetic, had a scientific interest in winemaking and in his first year at Houghton used Yule's grapes and winemaking equipment to produce the property's first commercial wine. The wines sold well in Perth, prompting John to buy an adjoining property and appoint his son Charles to manage the property. By 1866, the Fergusons had 6ha under vines.
Charles Ferguson took over the full company reins in 1875. Interestingly, he developed a business relationship with a winemaker in South Australia named Thomas Hardy who had founded Thomas Hardy & Sons, and who acquired some of Charles' raisins. Little would Charles have foreseen that 83 years later, Thomas Hardy & Sons would become the owners of his Houghton property.
By the early 1900s Houghton wines were so successful that in 1920 Charles turned the property over to his own sons John and Donald, with George Mann as chief winemaker. George Mann in turn trained his son Jack as a winemaker, the son inheriting the Chief Winemaker mantle from his father in 1930. Seven years later, Jack Mann experimented with a wine using entirely Chenin Blanc grapes, the wine winning 'Best Dry White Table Wine' trophy at the 1937 Royal Melbourne Wine Show. One judge likened it to "the great white Burgundies of France" and the company labelled it Houghton White Burgundy.
Jack Mann was 31 when he made the White Burgundy and became the winery's driving force with 51 consecutive vintages at the helm. It became the biggest selling white wine nationally and during this period over half the grapes crushed in Western Australia went into Houghton White Burgundy. In 2006, the wine was relabelled Houghton White Classic to comply with international regulations.
Houghton was bought by the Emu Wine Company in 1950, saw its 1-millionth bottle of White Burgundy produced in 1972, and in 1976 the Emu Wine Company was in turn acquired by Thomas Hardy & Sons. In 2011, Accolade Wines acquired Houghton after several corporate mergers and acquisitions.
Houghton gradually eased itself out of its original home, the Swan Valley, and has not produced Swan Valley table wines for many years. It expanded into the South West and Great Southern regions and established a winery at Nannup in the Blackwood Valley in 2003. Houghton's portfolio now features a range of high-quality wines from Frankland River, Mount Barker, Pemberton and Margaret River. The winery operates four of Western Australia's largest vineyards at Pemberton (92ha), Mount Barker (74ha), Frankland River (89ha) and Moondah Brook (145ha) which is located some 88km north of Perth in the foothills of the Darling Ranges in the Swan District region.
In 2019, much to the horror of many in the Australian wine industry, Accolade decided to sell the historic Houghton winery and cellar door in the Swan Valley. Houghton moved its entire wine production to its base in Nannup ending a winemaking era that began in the Swan Valley almost 200 years ago. The move was strategic as Nannup is halfway between Margaret River and Frankland River, the two areas from which Houghton sources most of its grapes. Houghton's new cellar door is located in the Margaret River, which they share with Brookland Valley (also owned by Accolade).
Remarkably in its 188 year history, Houghton Wines has had just fourteen Senior Winemakers. Courtney Treacher was appointed to the position in 2020, replacing Ross Pamment who worked for Houghton for 21 years, the last 10 as Senior Winemaker. Continuity is assured as Courtney worked with Pamment for 17 years. Courtney says the brand’s enviable reputation in the winemaking industry is firmly rooted in Western Australia’s regional nuances. "For over 185 years Houghton has been producing wines that are unique expressions of Western Australia’s idyllic landscape."
Western Australia
Western Australia is home to more than 400 wineries across nine vast and extraordinary wine regions which are almost entirely concentrated in the south-west and great southern land divisions of the State. The regions are Blackwood Valley, Geographe, Great Southern, Peel, Pemberton, Manjimup, Margaret River and Swan District.
The oldest region is the Swan Valley, the best known both nationally and internationally is Margaret River and the largest is Great Southern. The Great Southern region is further divided into the five subregions of Albany, Denmark, Frankland River, Mount Barker and Porongurup.
The history of wine production in Western Australia dates back to 1840 with the establishment of Sandalford in the Swan Valley region. The recognition of the fine wine possibilities started to be realised after the establishment of the Margaret River Region in 1967, which has become renowned for its high quality Chardonnay and Cabernet Sauvignon. The other regions produce a diverse range of regionally distinct wines, from stunning Rieslings and evocative Shiraz, to a range of unique Cabernet Sauvignon blends.