Lindemans Bin 5734 Vintage Port 1980
Lindemans-Bin-5734-Vintage-Port-1980

Lindemans Bin 5734 Vintage Port 1980

Sale price$195.00
Barossa Valley, South Australia, Australia

Style: Fortified

Varieties: Unknown (mix of local varieties)

Closure: Cork

⦿‎ ‎ 2 in stock
Usually ready in 2-4 days

Lindemans Bin 5734 Vintage Port 1980

Camberwell

, usually ready in 2-4 days

Burke Road
Camberwell VIC 3124
Australia

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Producer: Lindemans

Country: Australia

Region: Barossa Valley

Vintage: 1980

Critic Score: 96

Alcohol: 19.0%

Size: 750 ml

Drink by: 2035


"I've tried a number of these bottles over the last 30 years and have loved everyone. Rich and luxurious and sweet in the traditional Australian style. Spicy, blackberry, chocolate and plum pudding aromas, the generous palate following suit. Long, long finish. Wonderful."  Nick Munday

Expert reviews

"I've tried a number of these bottles over the last 30 years and have loved everyone. Rich and luxurious and sweet in the traditional Australian style. Spicy, blackberry, chocolate and plum pudding aromas, the generous palate following suit. Long, long finish. Wonderful."  Nick Munday, Canterbury Wines - 96 points

About the winery

Lindemans Winery in the Hunter Valley

Lindemans Hunter Valley Winery and Vineyards

Lindemans was founded in 1843 by Dr Henry John Lindeman who planted its first vines on his 816-acre property 'Cawarra' on the Upper Paterson River in the Hunter Valley wine region. The business flourished and nine years later, Lindeman established a head office, and storage and bottling facilities in Sydney.

Fast forward over a century and Lindeman's winemaker Karl Stockhausen crafted many sublime Hunter semillons (labelled Hunter River Riesling) in the mid-1950s to late-1960s, together with some great Hunter shiraz (labelled Hunter River Burgundy). The 1965 Lindemans Hunter River Burgundy Bin 3100 and 1965 Lindemans Hunter River Burgundy 3110 were iconic wines that generated a cult following in subsequent decades.

While Lindemans was established in the Hunter Valley, it was an early pioneer of cross-regional sourcing. Under the direction of Ray Kidd, one of Australia's great and largely unsung wine men, who ran Lindemans from 1962 to 1986, Lindemans expanded into the Barossa Valley, Coonawarra, Padthaway, Clare Valley and Corowa. Ray bought Leo Buring in 1962 and Rouge Homme in 1965, purchased the century-old Nursery vineyard (the oldest planting in Coonawarra) in 1965 and planted the Limestone Ridge and St Georges vineyards in 1967 and 1969 respectively. Lindemans produce their famous Trio of benchmark Coonawarra wines - St George Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon, Limestone Ridge Vineyard Shiraz Cabernet and Pyrus Cabernet blend - from these three vineyards.

Lindemans most successful wine was the infamous Ben Ean Moselle which was aimed at the lower end of the market and produced in enormous quantities to compete with Orlando's Barossa Pearl. It financed much of Lindemans' growth in the 1970s and reached its peak in 1979 when it accounted for more than 20% of Australia's bottled white wine sales. Ben Ean was the creation of Ray Kidd while he was Lindemans' cellar and vineyard manager in the late 1950s and was originally produced from Hunter Semillon with some Verdelho. Kidd correctly predicted that the hugely successful fruity carbonated sweet Pearl wines would lead drinkers to demand still table wines with the same features.

In 2005, the Lindemans brand and assets, which had been previously owned by Foster's and Southcorp, were acquired by Treasury Wine Estates. The Coonawarra Trio continue to be a compelling expression of wine borne of the famed terra rossa soil, but sadly various factors including time, fashion and complacency have worked against their reputation. The globalisation of the brand name has also not helped, as they seem to get lost in such a commercially focused portfolio.