Hewitson Private Cellar Tempranillo 2006 Saturday, Dec 22 2007
Tasting Notes and Australia and Variety and Red and tempranillo et al and Adelaide Super Zone

For almost a decade now Hewitson has worked with a very small vineyard of Tempranillo at Basham’s Beach, located 30km south of McLaren Vale at the southern end of the Mount Lofty Ranges within the Adelaide Super Zone. Situated on the edge of the Fleurieu Peninsula with its strong maritime influence, the Basham’s Beach vineyard has ideal climate and soils for growing this variety. Yet, to make a great wine takes time and persistence and so it was that 2006 provided us with the conditions to do just that.
I’d debate that Tempranillo generally likes a maritime climate as it seems to do best in Rioja and Ribera del Duero which, to the best of my knowledge, are both continental and fairly high altitude. No matter though, because the proof is in the pudding, and this particular pudding is outstanding. I also might add that I really like the quirky retro label that (to my mind at least) respectfully does a tip of the hat to the great Australian wines of yore.
This offers up a deep pool of lush berry fruit, licorice, chocolate, spice and tobacco that is so seductive you can’t but help but find yourself slipping under. On the palate full bodied with saturating sweet dark berry, cherry, chocolate, cola, dried herb and licorice flavours and superb mid-palate richness with an ample spread of plush velveteen tannins and a smooth creamy texture. Very long and satisfying. It’s a spectacular wine and almost irresistible. I miss it already.
Rated : 95 PointsTasted : Dec07
Alcohol : 14.5%
Price : $69
Closure : Screwcap
Drink : 2008 - 2018+
Source : Winery Sample
Visit winery website
Print this article
eMail this article
14 Responses to “Hewitson Private Cellar Tempranillo 2006”
December 23rd, 2007 at 5:20 pm
Really that good? As good as RODA and Alion?
December 23rd, 2007 at 6:44 pm
Ha, that must be a different numeric scale, this scored more than any of those except the ad hoc “El Blendo” http://www.winorama.com.au/tasting-notes/bodegas-roda-y-alion-el-blendo-mv/
December 23rd, 2007 at 7:12 pm
Anthony said :
Different but the texture is equally good. Fruit is riper and sweeter in the Hewitson as you would expect. I’d love to drink any of those wines.
GW
December 23rd, 2007 at 7:15 pm
RB said :
From me same score as 2001 Alion (95) and the 2001 RODA also gets 95 from me (I have not reviewed it here though but had several times). Not opened any 03 Roda or Alion as yet.
GW
December 24th, 2007 at 6:46 am
Sounds bloody good. I’ll have to track some down.
On the climate thing, I think they are getting at hot days/cool nights that you can get in a maritime climate. This is claimed to be a big factor in the success of Rioja and Ribera del Duero.
About the only region in Aus that has anything like the conditions in Spain would be Beechworth, its about the same hight and temp range as Ribera del Duero. Although the avg temp and rainfall are much higher.
December 24th, 2007 at 8:19 am
Maybe Senor Kinzbrunner should pull his cabernet and plant tempranillo?
December 24th, 2007 at 9:10 am
Well he has planted Nebbiolo which will be interesting.
December 24th, 2007 at 12:49 pm
I believe he is importing four fog machines to replicate Piedmont also.
December 24th, 2007 at 1:04 pm
Let me know if he imports some Italian women
December 24th, 2007 at 4:58 pm
> Well he has planted Nebbiolo which will be interesting.
only if he doesn’t throw as much oak as is chucked at the Chardonnay and Shiraz…
December 30th, 2007 at 5:57 pm
Hot days and cool nights are indeed good for tempranillo. As is a bit of vine age, getting the crop loads right (it overcrops easily), controlling vigour, picking before the acid goes away, and then not over-extracting (which lifts up those citrus skin characters that a lot of young Australian tempranillo still shows). Cascabel’s plantings of tempranillo and graciano on the edge of McLaren Vale have done well. I agree with Shaggy that Beechworth could be good for tempranillo, but disagree that it is the only region close to Ribera. Too much to post here, but some of the elevations, diurnal shift, heat summations and rainfall data for the Canberra region are quite close to Ribera (and to some parts of Rioja). I’d also keep an eye on Tumbarumba and the higher parts of Victoria for tempranillo fruit like Rioja Alta. My suspicion is that some of the really shining Australian tempranillo will end up being blended wines, either from different tempranillo vineyards in different regions, or using another blending variety (such as shiraz, graciano, carignan etc) for acid and spine.
December 31st, 2007 at 3:12 pm
I agree on Canberra, in addition it has already shown it can do good things with Tempranillo. Agree on blending as well.
My preference is actually for a home grown style, say temp/shiraz blends in a similar style to shiraz/cab. I don’t think we will get anywhere trying to recreate wines from Rioja or Ribera del Deuro. Sure give them a nod in your growing and winemaking, but it shouldn’t have to taste/smell/feel exactly the same.
May 4th, 2008 at 2:55 am
Had one of these tonight and not that excited. Stank and tasted of Bickford’s Kola Beer mixed with sarsparilla. Acres of fruit and good length but pretty candied and not that much structure backing up the initial assault. 89 points for me and a definite pass at this price point.
May 4th, 2008 at 8:24 am
Oh that’s no good then. FWIW it savouries up a good deal after being open for a day. It’s a young wine. You’d not drink many intense Rioja at such an early age (largely because the good ones are off course still in bottle and barrel). Maybe I should adjust the drinking window but I reckon it is fine now for hedonists and fruit sluts.
GW