Seppelt Drumborg Vineyard Pinot Noir 2020 (375ml)
Seppelt-Drumborg-Vineyard-Pinot-Noir-2020-375ml

Seppelt Drumborg Vineyard Pinot Noir 2020 (375ml)

Sale price$27.95
Henty, Victoria, Australia

Style: Red Wine

Variety: Pinot Noir

Closure: Screwcap

⦿‎ ‎ 9 in stock
Usually ready in 2-4 days

Seppelt Drumborg Vineyard Pinot Noir 2020 (375ml)

Camberwell

, usually ready in 2-4 days

Burke Road
Camberwell VIC 3124
Australia

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Producer: Seppelt

Country: Australia

Region: Henty

Vintage: 2020

Critic Score: 97

Alcohol: 12.5%

Size: 375 ml

Drink by: 2028


This is a ravishing wine, the bouquet expressive, the palate explosive, with a profusion of red and blue berries, rhubarb and spice - James Halliday

The Seppelt Drumborg Vineyard pinot noir is sourced exclusively from the prized Drumborg Vineyard in Victoria's Henty region, one of the southern-most vineyards in mainland Australia. The vines are 35 year old and subjected to icy winds from the Southern Ocean, resulting in a serious, complex pinot, often with satsuma plum and sour cherry flavours and a long, lingering aftertaste.

"Medium to full red/purple colour, with a very spicy bouquet incorporating some char-oak together with raspberry, red cherry and darker cherry. The wine is very intense on the tongue, rich and deep yet delicate and refined in its texture. Sweet strawberry, raspberry and pot-pourri flavours resonate long on the mid-palate and aftertaste. A thoroughly delightful pinot. The best yet from this maker, I feel."  Huon Hooke

"Seppelt Drumborg vineyard Pinot Noir is an expression of its unique site. Select parcels of Pinot Noir are chosen for intensity of flavour and structure. Traditional winemaking techniques are used, followed by maturation in French oak barrique.Seppelt

Expert reviews

"50/50% whole bunches/berries. Matured for 8 months in French puncheons and barriques (32% new). Deeper hue than the Pinot Meunier, with more purple. This is a ravishing wine, the bouquet expressive, the palate explosive, with a profusion of red and blue berries, rhubarb and spice, given texture and structure by savoury tannins and a nudge of oak. Drink by 2032."  James Halliday, Halliday Wine Companion - 97 points and Special Value Wine   

"Medium to full red/purple colour, with a very spicy bouquet incorporating some char-oak together with raspberry, red cherry and darker cherry. The wine is very intense on the tongue, rich and deep yet delicate and refined in its texture. Sweet strawberry, raspberry and pot-pourri flavours resonate long on the mid-palate and aftertaste. A thoroughly delightful pinot. The best yet from this maker, I feel. Drink: 2021–2032."  Huon Hooke, The Real Review - 95 points

"This is made from vineyards way down in the cool, to bloody cold, climes of Drumborg, a region that has proved ideal for pinot noir and other varieties. The aromas are quite savoury with cherry overtones adding a degree of fruit purity. The palate has a deal of power, but it is so seamless and smooth with wonderfully integrated tannins and a nice hit of oak with an effortless yet still urgent feel about the palate. The finish is dry and long. Ready to go now but extra time in bottle will certainly benefit it."  Ray Jordan, Wine Pilot – 93 points

Awards

Special Value Wine – Halliday Wine Companion  

Drumborg vineyard

Drumborg Vineyard

The Drumborg range of wines are sourced exclusively from the prized Drumborg Vineyard in Victoria's Henty region, one of Australia's leading cool climate regions and southern-most vineyard in mainland Australia. Riesling was the first variety planted at Drumborg in 1964 by Karl Seppelt. The vineyard is swept by icy winds from the Southern Ocean and produces wines that are renowned for their fruit purity, structure and intensity of flavor.

"The half-century-old vineyard has been described as remarkable, even mystical, regarding its capacity to produce wines of incredible beauty despite the rugged, challenging and sometimes precarious, nature of the climate.

Blustering winds from the southern Indian Ocean and long, wet winters are not what springs to mind when selecting new vineyard land. But that is precisely what was chosen by the Seppelts. Third-generation family member Karl Seppelt graduated from Roseworthy and began managing the vineyards at the family winery in South Australia. B Seppelt & Sons were well known for their fortified wines, however, the market of the day was changing and there was a new need for table wine grapes.

Fortunately, B Seppelt & Sons owned a winery at Great Western in Victoria, and a gently undulating 190ha land parcel was purchased in 1964 at Drumborg, 200km from the winery. It was cooler and had more rain than Great Western, and its southerly aspect exposed it to the full weight of the south-westerly weather fronts. There were, unsurprisingly, no other vineyards around. One suspects that the Great Western winery's focus on sparkling wines was a factor in choosing such a cool site. That said, the Seppelts were well before their time, embarking on cool-climate viticulture before it was fashionable.

Drumborg is now one of a handful of vineyards in the region known as Henty. There are many different varieties planted at the site, including chardonnay and pinot noir, though riesling was the first variety planted. The original clone is unknown though it is suspected to be GM198 imported from Geisenheim."  

Seppelt vineyard manager Larry Sadler, who has worked on the block for a quarter of a century, takes his custodianship of the vineyard very seriously. 'Tasting fruit through the full length of the ripening process is one of the great privileges of managing the Drumborg Vineyard. I taste the grapes from before the birds are interested – when the acid is eye-watering; through the waves of ripening, until the last of the golden-orange berries, left after harvest, have been cleaned from the vines.'

There have been only five vineyard managers since the 1960s, despite the multiple changes of ownership. Before Sadler, Allen McLean – a true storyteller – worked the block for more than 30 years. It's clear that the place gets into one's soul, even if it's whipped there by the wind.

There is a long list of winemakers who have been part of the Drumborg story but none more than Ian McKenzie. Emma Wood, Jo Marsh and Adam Carnaby have been among the recent custodians. Toni Paterson MW, Gourmet Traveller Wine

 

Drumborg Vineyard sign

About the winery

Seppelt Underground Cellars

Seppelt is one of Australia's most historic wine producers. Few Australian wineries have carved such a distinguished name for both still and sparkling wines. Not only is Seppelt a pioneer of white and red sparkling wine in Australia, but it also crafts some of the country's most collected table wines and has helped pave the way for cool climate styles in Australia.

Seppelt wines capture a diversity of Victorian terroirs. It sources fruit from vineyards situated in the cool Grampians, the Henty Hinterland, Heathcote and Bendigo. Each region offers parcels of unique character and distinctive regional typicity. The backbone of Seppelt's portfolio are the three iconic wines; St Peters Shiraz, Drumborg Riesling and the Show Sparkling Limited Release Shiraz, which is made only in exceptional years. 

The Seppelt Great Western winery traces its history back to 1865 when it was founded by Joseph Best – his brother also notably planted nearby. The vine material was sourced from St Peters Vineyard, which was the region's first vineyard planted just two years earlier in 1863. Best commissioned gold miners to dig the underground tunnels or drives that the winery is famous for. Those drives were expanded by Hans Irvine who purchased the estate after Best's sudden death in 1887 at the age of 57.

Irvine also expanded plantings and employed the ex-winemaker from Pommery, Charles Pierlot. At that time, some sparkling wine was being made locally, but it was Irvine's commitment that established the strong tradition in the region. That included what is often credited as the first Sparkling Burgundy, as it used to be called, made from red grapes, while sparkling whites were made from ondenc (once a common Bordeaux grape but now mainly grown in Gaillac), which has naturally high acidity.

By the early 1900s, there were over 1.6 kilometres of drives for cellaring and Great Western was Australia's largest wine producer. The operation was sold to Benno Seppelt in 1918, who added the family name and expanded the business further.

Fast forward to today and the winery is part of the Treasury Wine Estates portfolio, but the traditions are still very much alive. Winemaker Clare Dry, who spent 13 years crafting wines in South Australia, took over from Adam Carnaby from the 2021 vintage.

Wine region map of Victoria

Victoria

Victoria is home to more than 800 wineries across 21 wine regions. The regions are Alpine Valley, Beechworth, Bendigo, Geelong, Gippsland, Glenrowan, Goulburn Valley, Grampians, Heathcote, Henty, King Valley, Macedon Ranges, Mornington Peninsula, Murray Darling, Pyrenees, Rutherglen, Strathbogie Ranges, Sunbury, Swan Hill, Upper Goulburn and Yarra Valley.

Victoria's first vines were planted at Yering in the Yarra Valley in 1838. By 1868 over 3,000 acres had been planted in Victoria, establishing Victoria as the premier wine State of the day. Today, the original vineyards planted at Best's Wines are among the oldest and rarest pre-phylloxera plantings in the world.

Victoria's climate varies from hot and dry in the north to cool in the south and each wine region specialises in different varietals. For example, Rutherglen in the north is famous for its opulent Muscats and Topaque and bold reds, while the many cooler climate regions near Melbourne produce world class Chardonnay and pinot Noir. Victoria is truly a wine lover's playground.