Penfolds Bin 407 Cabernet Sauvignon 2017
Style: Red Wine
Variety: Cabernet Sauvignon
Closure: Screwcap
Penfolds Bin 407 Cabernet Sauvignon 2017
Camberwell
Burke Road
Camberwell VIC 3124
Australia
Producer: Penfolds
Country: Australia
Region: Multi Regional SA
Vintage: 2017
Critic Score: 96
Alcohol: 14.5%
Size: 750 ml
Drink by: 2040
Launched with the 1990 vintage in 1993, Bin 407 was developed in response to the increasing availability of high quality Cabernet Sauvignon fruit. Inspired by Bin 707, Bin 407 offers varietal definition and approachability, yet still with structure and depth of flavour. Textbook Cabernet Sauvignon, the varietally expressive Bin 407 highlights the rewards of Penfolds multi-region, multi-vineyard blending, with a core of ripe fruit supported by sensitive use of French and American oak.
"Bin 407 almost always wins me over. The lavender, the bay leaves, the blackcurrant, the sweep of smoky oak, the tannin sprinkled with dust. This is a wine of scaffolding as much as it is of flavour; it's light-ish in cabernet terms but for me it's presented more or less exactly as it should be. i.e. it's built to evolve in the bottle." Campbell Mattinson
The 2017 Bin 407 Cabernet Sauvignon was sourced from vineyards in Padthaway, McLaren Vale, Barossa Valley, Coonawarra and Wrattonbully. The wine was matured for 12 months In French (18% new) and American (14% new) oak hogsheads.
"Medium-deep crimson. Roasted coffee, blackcurrant pastille, herb garden and slight minty aromas. Concentrated pure blackcurrant and roasted coffee flavours, fine plentiful al dente tannins with leafy complexity. Finishes gravelly/sappy with persistent dark fruits. Attractive richness and density. Drink 2025 to 2045.
Vintage Conditions: The growing regions across South Australia experienced a cool and wet winter and spring. Several longstanding rainfall records were broken across South Australia, with little need for supplementary irrigation until well into summer. Spring was typically windy in the warmer climate districts, especially in October, which created some challenges with fruit set. Despite cooler spring temperatures, the breezy weather helped ward off any danger from frost in Wrattonbully and Coonawarra. The prevailing cool conditions slowed the growing season with flowering and veraison both delayed, in select regions it was two weeks longer than average. There were no summer heatwaves, with only a handful of days recorded above 40 degrees. Warmer weather in March was welcomed, allowing grapes to finish ripening with great colour and varietal flavour. Vintage in the cooler southern districts was not completed until early May." Penfolds
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.