- Red Wine
- Cabernet Blend
- 2015 Terre a Terre Crayeres Reserve
2015 Terre a Terre Crayeres Reserve
PE
Patrick Eckel
Updated
Winery
Terre a Terre
Vintage
2015
Grape Variety
Caberet Blend
Region
- Wrattonbully
Alcohol (%)
14
Purchase Price ($)
110
Closure
Cork
Source
Sample
The wine is a blend of Cabernet 60% , 20% Shiraz and 20% Cabernet Franc that is aged in 75% new oak for 6 months prior to 15 months in 5 year old demi muids prior to bottling and ageing in bottle for a further 18 months.
I think the pricing is slowly catching up to the status of this wine. If I was to back a future Australian Icon this would be it. There is an incredibly talented winemaker (Xavier Bizot), and a region (Wrattonbully) but in particular a vineyard (Crayeres) that is just coming into its own.
Mulberry and blackberry fruit slip seamlessly into a web of dark chocolate, violets and cigar box spice on the nose.There is a generous graphite laden backbone of tannin that is savoury and underwrites the wines future development whilst maintaining an elegance of fuller black fruits that are accentuated with fresh earth; the impact of quality French oak provides a sheath of richness across the mid palate.
The finish layers dark fruits against sweeter oak inputs and bitter dark chocolate, a wine worth every dollar and is sure to reward patience.
I think the pricing is slowly catching up to the status of this wine. If I was to back a future Australian Icon this would be it. There is an incredibly talented winemaker (Xavier Bizot), and a region (Wrattonbully) but in particular a vineyard (Crayeres) that is just coming into its own.
Mulberry and blackberry fruit slip seamlessly into a web of dark chocolate, violets and cigar box spice on the nose.There is a generous graphite laden backbone of tannin that is savoury and underwrites the wines future development whilst maintaining an elegance of fuller black fruits that are accentuated with fresh earth; the impact of quality French oak provides a sheath of richness across the mid palate.
The finish layers dark fruits against sweeter oak inputs and bitter dark chocolate, a wine worth every dollar and is sure to reward patience.