Penfolds Bin 28 Kalimna Shiraz 2018
Penfolds-Bin-28-Kalimna-Shiraz-2018

Penfolds Bin 28 Kalimna Shiraz 2018

Sale price$49.95
Barossa Valley, McLaren Vale & Others, South Australia, Australia

Style: Red Wine

Variety: Shiraz

Closure: Screwcap

⦿‎ ‎ More than 36 in stock
Usually ready in 2-4 days

Penfolds Bin 28 Kalimna Shiraz 2018

Camberwell

, usually ready in 2-4 days

Burke Road
Camberwell VIC 3124
Australia

Minimum order bottles
Maximum order bottles
Order in lots of

Producer: Penfolds

Country: Australia

Region: Multi Regional SA

Vintage: 2018

Critic Score: 95

Alcohol: 14.5%

Size: 750 ml

Drink by: 2040


Unashamedly rich and heady. Compellingly concentrated and intense - Ned Goodwin MW

Penfolds Bin 28 Kalimna Shiraz is the archetypal warm climate Australian shiraz - ripe, robust and generously flavoured. First made in 1959, Bin 28 is named after the famous Barossa Valley Kalimna vineyard purchased by Penfolds in 1945 and from which the wine was originally sourced. Today, Kalimna Bin 28 is a multi-region, multi-vineyard blend, with the Barossa Valley always well represented.

"The palate has impressively layered flavors that run the same broad spectrum as seen on the nose and the tannins are so well groomed and run very, very long. Holds fruit flavor deep. Will age very well for 15-plus years."  Nick Stock

The 2018 Bin 28 Kalimna was sourced from vineyards in the Barossa Valley, McLaren Vale, Padthaway, Wrattonbully, Fleurieu, Robe, Mt Lofty Ranges, Adelaide Hills and Langhorne Creek. The wine was matured for 12 months in American oak hogsheads.

"Deep crimson. Intense dark plum, mulberry and raspberry aromas with roasted almond and vanilla notes with hints of cinnamon spice. Medium bodied and fleshy with dark plum, mulberry and raspberry fruits, underlying chocolaty notes and attractive mid-palate viscosity, fine-supple textures and integrated acidity. Finishes firm and tight. Elemental with plentiful red and black fruits and persistent tannins. Best to keep for a few years to settle. Drink 2023 to 2040.

Vintage Conditions: South Australia's viticultural regions experienced relatively dry conditions, and near long-term winter/spring temperatures during vine dormancy and at the beginning of the growing season. After a racing start, a short spell of cooler weather in early November slowed down grapevine development. Warm and sunny weather prevailed throughout most of spring, providing optimal conditions for flowering and fruit-set. Summer was warm, Barossa Valley experienced 22 days of temperature greater than 35°C while McLaren Vale experienced 17 days of temperature greater than 35°C – with a maximum of 42.1°C on January 18th. Padthaway, Robe and Wrattonbully also had a warm, dry growing season by regional standards. Late flowering and the delayed onset of veraison throughout the south-east slowed harvest by a few weeks. The warm and dry weather carried into autumn, setting up an Indian summer with favourable conditions for ripening grapes."  Penfolds

Expert reviews

"A famous wine from the Penfolds stable at the relatively budget priced end. This is a blend of lots of South Australian regions and really shows the Penfolds winemaking DNA from the first engagement on the nose through to the generous opulent palate. It's all matured in seasoned American oak for 12 months and such concentrated fruit needs that oak treatment. The creamy vanillin oak marries neatly with the fruit. A wine for the cellar and one of the best of these in recent years."  Ray Jordan, The West Australian – 95 points

"Deep crimson. Intense dark cherry, blackberry, graphite tarry aromas with mocha espresso notes. Dense blackberry pastille, dark cherry fruits, plentiful, vigorous fine muscular/ chalky tannins and mocha dark chocolate notes. Finishes brambly firm and long. An assertive Bin 28 with plenty of richness, volume and torque but should settle down with a few years of bottle age. One to keep for a while."  Andrew Caillard MW - 94 points

"An historic site of old vine material melded to American oak. A paean to a traditional Australian approach that remains a paradigm of inspiration. Glossy opaque. Black cherry, plum, charcuterie, baking spice, anise, black olive and a curl of creamy coconut-vanillin. Unashamedly rich and heady, in the vein of fine examples of yore. This wine has an attractive build, growing in stature with each sip and a bit of air. Expansive, palate-staining and dutifully long. Compellingly concentrated and intense."  Ned Goodwin MW – 94 points

"A strong vintage for warmer-climate shiraz and this wine is certainly reaping the benefits. The nose has such eclectic fruit aromas that run a full spectrum, from the lighter spiced red-fruit aromas to red plums, through blue fruit to darker blackberries and plums. The palate has impressively layered flavors that run the same broad spectrum as seen on the nose and the tannins are so well groomed and run very, very long. Holds fruit flavor deep. Will age very well for 15-plus years."  Nick Stock, JamesSuckling.com – 94 points

"I am a long-term fan of this wine. While it had a 'quiet period' for a few years it bounced back several years ago when finer quality fruit was sent its way to restore its reputation and reward its fans. It always seems such a hard-working wine, making effort on the nose and palate to entertain, but it doesn't need to summon up extra effort in 2018 because this is a fabulous success. In addition to the lush, open, generous fruit there is another factor which I greatly admire. On the finish, there is a savoury, adroit, mineral-soaked element which adds gravitas to the whole experience. Bin 28 acolytes will miss this, as they will be gulping down the expressive fruit at speed, but if they slow down, there is a finish, seemingly stolen from a more serious wine, which is bolted onto the end of this well-meaning creation. There is precision here – I have never written this about Bin 28 – and it is not borne of muscle or intensity but it is crafted to give just that bit more élan to proceedings, and it works."  Matthew Jukes - 18/20 points

"While named for a Barossa vineyard/locale, the 2018 Bin 28 Kalimna Shiraz, like other recent vintages, is blended from various South Australian GIs. With its rich, dark-berried fruit accented with vanilla, it does a more-than-credible job re-creating that northern Barossan idiom. It's full-bodied, concentrated and plush without going over the top, finishing long and velvety. While it may not have single-vineyard snob appeal, it's a delicious wine for drinking over the next decade and a relative value."  Joe Czerwinski, Wine Advocate - 93 points

"Led confidently by the Barossa and McLaren Vale, this is a classic South Australian shiraz, brimming with supple black and red berry fruits and bountiful milk chocolate and coconut American oak. Peter Gago considers this warm and dry vintage 'terrific' for Bin 28. It's given birth to a succulent and glossy style, braced with Penfolds classic firm, fine tannins, built exactingly to the Kalimna recipe – yet for me lacking the lift, purity are stamina of the most alluring seasons."  Tyson Stelzer - 92 points

"The first Kalimna Shiraz (in '58) was entirely from the Kalimna Vineyard, but the ensuing decades have turned Kalimna into a trademarked gallop around 9 SA regions, the wine matured in used American hogsheads. If you want a friendly labrador wine, this is it."  James Halliday, Halliday Wine Companion - 92 points

"Deep, dark red/purple colour, with a smoky, toasty-charred oaky bouquet, with underlying blackberry and dark plum fruits. Traces of star anise and graphite, the finish lingering with drying tarry tannins. Fleshy and deep, a wine with potential to reveal more in time. A stylish wine with stuffing as well as elegance. (Barossa Valley, McLaren Vale, Padthaway, Wrattonbully & five other regions)."  Huon Hooke, The Real Review - 92 points

"Lots of texture here. It's creamy and smooth, all vanilla, dark chocolate and cloves, with blackberry and plum-like fruit as the conveyor. It sits on the warm side of medium weight and while its style is clear so too is its balance. They know what they're doing at Penfolds. Tannin is firm but well placed and length is decent. This ticks all the boxes and is reliably good."  Campbell Mattinson, The Wine Front - 92 points 

Wine region map of South Australia

South Australia

South Australian is responsible for more than half the production of all Australian wine. It is home to more than 900 wineries across 18 wine regions. The regions are Adelaide Hills, Adelaide Plains, Barossa Valley, Clare Valley, Coonawarra, Currency Creek, Eden Valley, Kangaroo Island, Langhorne Creek, McLaren Vale, Mount Benson, Mount Gambier, Padthaway, Riverland, Robe, Southern Fleurieu, Southern Flinders Ranges and Wrattonbully.

Many of the well-known names in the South Australian wine industry established their first vineyards in the late 1830s and early 1840s. The first vines in McLaren Vale were planted at Reynella in 1839 and Penfold's established Magill Estate on the outskirts of Adelaide in 1844.

South Australia has a vast diversity in geography and climate which allows the State to be able to produce a range of grape varieties - from cool climate Riesling in the Clare and Eden Vallies to the big, full bodied Shiraz wines of the Barossa Valley and McLaren Vale. Two of Australia's best-known wines, Penfolds Grange and Henschke Hill of Grace, are produced here. There is much to discover in South Australia for the wine lover.