Stefano Lubiana La Roccia Pinot Noir 2022
Stefano Lubiana La Roccia Pinot Noir 2022

Stefano Lubiana La Roccia Pinot Noir 2022

Sale price$120.00
Derwent Valley, Tasmania, Australia

Style: Red Wine

Variety: Pinot Noir

Closure: Screwcap

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Stefano Lubiana La Roccia Pinot Noir 2022

Camberwell

, usually ready in 2-4 days

Burke Road
Camberwell VIC 3124
Australia

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Producer: Stefano Lubiana

Country: Australia

Region: Tasmania

Vintage: 2022

Critic Score: 99

Alcohol: 13.5%

Size: 750 ml

Drink by: 2036


A nearly perfect and complete Australian pinot noir. Brilliant - James Suckling

James Suckling Australian Wine of the Year 2024

Steve Lubiana is a fifth-generation winemaker who set up shop in Tasmania's Derwent Valley in 1990. The 28 hectare Stefano Lubiana Vineyard, planted mainly with the two great Burgundian varieties of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay, has been Certified organic and biodynamic since 2013. Fruit for the La Roccia Pinot Noir comes off a single block named after the large limestone rock shelf in the middle of the block (La Roccia means 'rock' in Italian).

"Our Australian Wine of the Year for 2024, the Stefano Lubiana La Roccia Pinot Noir 2022, is testament to the consistency and quality emerging from the southern island state of Tasmania and epitomizes the future of Australian pinot noir. This sophisticated, pure and complete wine shows poise and structure, with a wholesome roundness and aromatic lift that exemplifies what is possible from Australia's premier cool-climate wine region. The palate is medium-bodied with tightly wound acidity and finely integrated tannins, giving notes of blackberries, potpourri, violets and chalk. Exceptionally well constructed, with a savory edge from 100% whole-cluster fermentation. A nearly perfect and complete Australian pinot noir. Brilliant."  James Suckling

"We have spent the last 35 years working on identifying specialised sites on our Granton Estate for the development of iconic Pinot Noir. Our Single Block Pinot Noir range has been selected for their specific terrior, the soil type that truly express the uniqueness of each Pinot Noir. La Roccia, or the 'rock' in Italian, is a nod to the main geological feature of this block; a large limestone rock shelf in the middle of the block. Our La Roccia consistently produces wines with the greatest structure and tannin."  Stefano Lubiana

Expert reviews

"Our Australian Wine of the Year for 2024, the Stefano Lubiana La Roccia Pinot Noir 2022, is testament to the consistency and quality emerging from the southern island state of Tasmania and epitomizes the future of Australian pinot noir. This sophisticated, pure and complete wine shows poise and structure, with a wholesome roundness and aromatic lift that exemplifies what is possible from Australia's premier cool-climate wine region.

Sophisticated and pure, with lifted aromas of dark cherries, forest floor, wild raspberries, dried herbs and orange peel. The palate is medium-bodied with tightly wound acidity and finely integrated tannins, giving notes of blackberries, potpourri, violets and chalk. Exceptionally well constructed, with a savory edge from 100% whole-cluster fermentation. A nearly perfect and complete Australian pinot noir. Brilliant. Drink or hold.James Suckling, JamesSuckling.com - 99 points and Australian Wine of the Year 2024

"A shower of fine, mouth-coating, millefeuille tannins, which cloak and enmesh the fruit, lending gravitas. With time and air, it reveals glimpses of a seam of red cherry/cherrystone, blackcurrant, and blueberry fruit, yet to be mined. Chalky, mineral acidity maintains the flow. Classy oak polishes to a fine sheen. Impressive structure from a hillside block on deep red clay marl over clay, with limestone bedrock. Embryonic."  The World of Fine Wine - 96 points

Awards

James Suckling Australian Wine of the Year 2024

Steve Lubiana

Steve Lubiana and son Marco in the winery

Steve Lubiana and son Marco in the winery

It is over 30 years since Steve Lubiana set up shop in the Derwent Valley, only a short drive from Hobart, with the Stefano Lubiana Vineyard now occupying just over 28 hectares. Certified biodynamic for nearly a decade, it was Tasmania’s first vineyard to achieve accreditation and was the island state’s only one until very recently. Pinot noir and chardonnay take centre stage, but there are also aromatic whites, syrah and small plots of malvasia and blaufränkisch planted. The wines veer from those classically styled, including several single block bottlings, to ones of a natural bent raised in amphora, while the original motivation for the move south – sparkling wine – sees six individual expressions, including a vintage that slumbers for a decade on lees.

Steve Lubiana is a fifth-generation winemaker, growing up in South Australia’s Riverland where his father was a winemaker, and where Lubiana cut his teeth. "In 1955 my parents started a winery my father took over from his father in the Riverland in SA making bulk wine. I didn’t want to make bulk wine, I wanted to do premium wine… especially sparkling. I looked around Australia and it was obvious that Tasmania was the best place to grow grapes to make sparkling wine."

A move to Tasmania in 1990 saw him and his wife, Monique, plant vines in 1991 in Granton, Derwent Valley. "I found this piece of land, chose the site for its soil, for a frost-free location, dry, autumn conditions, disease free site but warm, some continentality, but not too much," says Lubiana. "I was keen on the poor soils to control vigour, especially in cool climate."

A strong focus on the Apple Isle’s key grapes – pinot noir and chardonnay – was the prime motivation, but over the years there has been considerable diversification. The site had new plantings added in 2010 and ’19, with some vines also grafted over the years. The current composition is pinot noir, chardonnay, pinot gris, riesling, sauvignon blanc, syrah, merlot, malbec, malvasia and blaufränkisch across 28.3 hectares of vines. Most of the vineyard is planted at a density of 4,500 vines per hectare, which is still dense by Australian standards, but there is also a close-planted 1.3-hectare block at 11,000 vines per hectare that was established in 2019.

"We’d taste the wine and think this may need more acidity, but we don’t go: 'Let's add tartaric to it'. We go back to the vineyard and find how we improve acidity; how do we get acidity in that wine… in the vineyard! 'This wine is a bit light in colour…' How do we make more colour in the vineyard? It’s not out of a packet… Need more tannin? Always going back to the vineyard to make the wine in the vineyard."

When Lubiana moved to Tasmania, he was already interested in biodynamics, having studied Rudolph Steiner’s seminal work, Agriculture, after early exposure to the principles. "I found a chart my grandfather had used, or even made… It was a rough hand-sketched chart of winemaking cycles in regard to the phases of the moon. As a child, that really interested me and I thought it was pretty unreal, then I saw a Four Corners thing in 1985/86… Alex Podolinsky talking on biodynamics, and it clicked with me; it made sense. I thought this is exactly right. So, I started using the principals of BD to grow my tomatoes in the backyard."

“For me, biodynamics is about commonsense, and having respect for the land and the farmer, and the product, and the consumer, and that way, everybody wins,” says Steve. Steve hired vineyard manager, Mark Hoey, to help him convert the vineyard over to biodynamic. Since converting to biodynamics, both Steve and Mark have noticed a significant difference in the look and feel of the vineyard. "The vineyard is much greener and healthier, rather than being brown and dusty and dry," says Steve. "The soils are so much more fertile, there’s more humus and it has better water holding capacity, better porosity, which is definitely a sign that the soil is healthier." 

Full certification came in 2013 – becoming Tasmania’s first official biodynamic vineyard – and he has never looked back. "We have been alone in the world of certified biodynamics for many years now," says Lubiana. "Though recently a northern vineyard, Marion’s, has gained certification. Not many vineyards have the passion or drive to execute or strive for full certification. The reason being it’s time consuming, expensive and mostly unrecognised."

In accordance with biodynamic principles, no synthetic chemicals are used in the vineyard or winery. The classic preparations for nurturing soil and vines are used, and planting, pruning, harvesting etc. are conducted in tune with the lunar calendar. "Our philosophy is a choice," says Lubiana. "We’ve decided to be certified biodynamic because it protects the soil, creatures, vines, employees, customers and us, the owners, from harmful chemicals. A win all the way around."

The benefits of biodynamics also extend well beyond that, says Lubiana. "The soils are deeper and more fertile with increased biodiversity. And they also trap more carbon. The vines are tougher, more resilient, and are better able to resist negative climatic conditions. The grapes have thicker skins, which make them more disease resistant and creates more flavour, and there is better balance and increased age-ability of the wines. This year, we are one of the only disease-free vineyards in Australia: exceptionally clean fruit, with only using soft chemicals – so there’s the proof."

Lubiana estimates that they spend more than ten times more money on the vineyard than they do in the winery, noting that it is usually empty and quiet. "You don’t have to spend much time in the winery when you have good fruit, as there is little to remediate. All the grapes are hand-picked and hand sorted, every single bunch… Sometimes we can sit back with arms folded when hand sorting and watch it go past… as all the fruit is good, we’ve done everything right in the vineyard."

That classic mantra of wine being made in the vineyard is taken very seriously at Stefano Lubiana, with additions replaced with a tweaking of processes amongst the vines. "We’d taste the wine and think this may need more acidity, but we don’t go: ‘Let’s add tartaric to it’. We go back to the vineyard and find how we improve acidity; how do we get acidity in that wine… in the vineyard! ‘This wine is a bit light in colour…’ How do we make more colour in the vineyard? It’s not out of a packet… Need more tannin? Always going back to the vineyard to make the wine in the vineyard."

Like with many organic and biodynamic vineyards, weeds present the biggest ongoing challenge for Lubiana, and the strategy is manual and mechanical. "We use machinery to blade the soil as well as other machinery to interrupt weed growth," he says. "In the last couple of years, we’ve been planting clovers under the vines to outcompete weeds. This trial seems to be working. We have also increased our flock of sheep to eat down more grass over winter, and we still do hand weeding in problematic areas. We try to weed when we can in the barren phase of the moon; the idea is to prevent seed germination. We can’t wait for weed robots to come onto the market!"

The midrow cover crops are made up of a diverse range of species to encourage beneficial insects, while four beehives are placed strategically on the property. "We encourage soil fungi with the use of biochar and compost with zero synthetic fungicides," says Lubiana. "We rotate sheep on the property to eat grass rather than mowing. The winery is solar powered which provides solar energy to the vineyard during the day. We are also starting to notice the vines require less irrigation. Although it is a very dry growing area, this is due to improved water holding capacity from our practices."

Treated pine posts have not been used since 2010, with new plantings and any replacements now made of steel. Winery wastewater is treated and reused, while all grape waste and marc (the matter left over after fermentation) is composted and spread across the vineyard. The estate’s restaurant, Osteria Vista, is supplied by their own vegetable gardens, along with other produce grown or reared onsite, with food waste composted or fed to the chickens. Most packaging waste is recycled, including plastic pallet wrap, while inhouse packaging is all recycled/recyclable and/or biodegradable, with Biogone pallet wrap, tape and pallet toppers used. The supplementary grid power is mitigated by 100 hectares of native vegetation on the property.

And while climate change has not largely had the negative effects in the cool of Tasmania, rather hitting warmer mainland sites more heavily, Lubiana believes that biodynamics plays a crucial role in moderating any potential issues. "We think biodynamics offers a buffer because it encourages deep root systems and builds carbon in the soil that acts like a blanket, keeping the soil cool in summer and warming it up with the air it holds over winter," he says.

"The vines are more resilient… with the heat, on hot days they bounce back… rain events… with waterlogging, they seem to handle that. There are patches of the vineyard that should be suffering but they appear to be kicking on. Natural resilience, it’s not a number like five times more resilient, but there is an increase, and it is significant… Natural grape acid is in abundance, and we detect no change in precision or transparency in the finished wines. We have no complaints."

That precision of expression is something that Lubiana notes has only increased with biodynamics, and that it has likely been the biggest change since conversion. "In our wines, we see obvious varietal characters, transparency between layers of fruit flavour, balanced natural acid and superior elegance on the finish," he says. "No quick, harsh stop. A soft gentle ending to each mouthful! In other words. Our wine makes itself. Rarely is an adjustment required and because we slow wine-make, filtering is more or less done by gravity."

The above text was taken from articles on Steve Lubiano that appeared in Young Gun of Wine and The Wine Idealist

About the winery

Steve and Monique Lubiana in their Stefano Lubiana vineyard

Steve and Monique Lubiana in their Stefano Lubiana vineyard

In 1990 Steve and Monique Lubiana moved from the inland of Australia to the banks of the Derwent River in the south of Tasmania to pursue Steve’s dream of making high-quality sparkling wine. They planted their first vines in 1991 and new plantings were added in 2010 and 2019. The Stefano Lubiana Vineyard is now just over 28 hectares in size. Pinot Noir and Chardonnay take centre stage, but there are also small plantings of Pinot Gris, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc, Syrah, Merlot, Malbec, Malvasia and Blaufränkisch. 

Steve Lubiana is a fifth-generation winemaker, growing up in South Australia’s Riverland where his father was a winemaker. Steve then studied winemaking at Roseworthy College, near Adelaide, and began to seek out places he could grow cool climate grapes, and make premium sparkling wine. "I wanted to grow cool climate grapes, so I looked around South Australia, up in the Adelaide Hills and Eden Valley and then over to Margaret River before arriving in Tasmania, on my honeymoon," explains Steve. "I then spent a year looking around Tasmania, and found this property just outside of Hobart. We moved here in 1990 and started growing grapes."

Steve was at the forefront of Australian winegrowers who pushed boundaries with viticulture and winemaking techniques. Stefano Lubiana has been cultivating the vines using biodynamic methods since 2010 and the vineyard was the first in Tasmania to be certified biodynamic. The vineyard was also certified Biodynamic in 2013.

"Our much sought-after wines are the result of a passionate unrelenting quest for perfection. This passion, along with free thinking and attention to detail allows us to create wines which reflect this vision. Our focus on traditional and environmentally sensitive principals has only strengthened our desire to create wines that have a unique and distinctive character, with free-flowing elegance and quality.

With our innovative use of barrels, whole-bunch fermentation and wild yeasts, we hand craft a distinctive range of wines. With most of our 26ha estate planted to the two great Burgundian varieties of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay, it’s no secret that with meticulous vineyard craftsmanship and sympathetic and thoughtful winemaking, our wines have earned a reputation as some of the most revered and desirable in Australia.

Indeed, the fact that our Pinot Noirs have won Best Biodynamic Wine in the World at the prestigious London International Wine Challenge on three separate occasions is testament to the special site of which we're the lucky caretakers, and the expressions of purity that we're able to offer from Tasmania to family tables around the world."  Steve Lubiana

Wine region map of Tasmania

Tasmania

Tasmania is a small island located below mainland Australia. It produces less than 1% of Australia’s wine but enjoys a global reputation as a leading producer of premium cool climate wines. It is prized for its top-class sparkling wine, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay and Riesling.

Tasmania is home to more than 230 wineries across 7 wine regions*. The reigions Coal River Valley, East Coast, Pipers River and Tamar Valley produce around 90% of Tasmania's wine, while the other three regions Derwent Valley, Huon Valley and North West produce the remaining 10%. * Please note these 7 wine areas are considered here to be subregions of Tasmania to aid site navigation.

Tasmania is the coldest wine State in Australia. Its climate is temperate, with a distinct maritime influence from the Tasman Sea to the east, Bass Strait to the north and the Indian Ocean to the west. Summer days are temperate while winter sees some of the coldest temperatures in Australia. It's unique climate and soils combine to create ideal growing conditions for cool-climate grape varieties.