…All it needs is time…
Once the surprisingly sweet toasty oak integrates here this is going to be superb. It’s easily the biggest boned Tapa Pinot yet, but that weight and volume enhances the appeal. The flesh and swagger underneath
Author: Andrew Graham
Source: Australian Wine Review
Date: Aug 2014
…All it needs is time…
Once the surprisingly sweet toasty oak integrates here this is going to be superb. It’s easily the biggest boned Tapa Pinot yet, but that weight and volume enhances the appeal. The flesh and swagger underneath
Author: James Halliday
Source: Australian Wine Companion 2015
Date: Jul 2014
…Arguably the best Tapanappa Pinot Noir to date. The bouquet is complex, with a light touch of oak. The fruit takes in both berries and plums, and the silky palate is as well balanced and focused as it is long.
Author: Jancis Robinson
Source: JancisRobinson.com
Date: Jul 2014
A trio of reviews from Jancis Robinson
…Tapanappa, Whalebone Vineyard 2009 Wrattonbully, 16.5+
“Mid blackish ruby. Firm and meaty on the nose. Actually it does not taste dominated by Cabernet. Subtle and appetising. Still with tannins in evidence but very
Author: Wine Anorak
Source: Jamie Goode
Date: Jul 2014
…I have been quite a fan of Brian Croser’s Tapanappa wines, since being introduced to them when I visited him back in 2005. Making fine wine is a long-term project, especially when you are planting new vineyards. It takes the
Author:
Source: Gourmet Traveller WINE
Date: Jan 2014
…This pinot noir has a lot of gravitas with a deep colour and spicy bouquet. It’s slightly oak dominant at first with black cherry emerging in time. It’s dense and persistent with satisfying flavour, backed by a spine of tannins.
Author: Tony Love
Source: The Advertiser
Date: Dec 2013
…A single vineyard pinot that is now showing glorious vintage sympathies, here everything ripe, spicy and dark fruited from a warm year, its balance and poise mesmerising.
Author: Chris Shanahan
Source: Canberra Times
Date: Nov 2013
…In 2003 Brian Croser planted three Dijon clones of pinot noir at about 350 metres altitude on the southern Fleurieu Peninsula. Elevation and proximity to the cold Southern Ocean give Croser’s Foggy Hill site a unique microclimate, dramatically cooler than
Author: Alan Hunter
Source: Brisbane Courier
Date: Nov 2013
…From the Fleurieu Peninsula, this is the most savoury and dense of the trio, loaded with aromas of forest floor and smoky fire embers with rhubarb and dark cherry fruit freshened up by a tart, cranberry-like acidity.
93 points
Author: Peter Chapman
Source: APN News Papers
Date: Sep 2013
“Just love winemaker Brian Croser and here is yet another winner from him. Best Aussie pinot I have tasted for a long while, worth the extra dollars.”
Rating: 97/100…
Author: Gary Walsh
Source: The Wine Front
Date: Sep 2013
…“Pretty strict and sappy, with peppery stalky bits, raspberry verging on framboise (liqueur), mint chocolate and cedar. Light to medium bodied, strawberry and raspberry, clarity of acidity is attractive and shape is excellent. Stalky notes on the nose are a
Author: Jeremy Pringle
Source: Wine WIll Eat Itself
Date: Sep 2013
…Quite fascinating to watch the relatively young Foggy Hill Vineyard reveal its identity via Pinot Noir. There’s already a distinct flavour profile and it’s no shrinking violet. Despite that I reckon it does taste varietal and it is one of
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