Aussie wine soars at Chinese Roadshow

Aussie wine soars at Chinese Roadshow

Wine Australia’s China Roadshow 2015 on 22–29 May saw more than 50 Australian wineries and brands in partnership with 35 exhibitors engage directly with influential decision makers in the Chinese trade. Passing through Xi’an, Dalian, Nanjing and Guangzhou, the event showcased more than 300 wines from numerous regions to influential wine trade and media in the country. Willa Yang, Wine Australia regional manager, said the China Roadshow was critical in supporting Australian wine in China.

The Duck’s new Puddlers

LAST September, 240 people around Australia received a surprise gift of a $100 bottle of Shiraz in a handsome red gum presentation box, with a note informing them that they were “Puddlers”. The $30,000 exercise was the brainwave of David Anderson of Wild Duck Creek Wines at Heathcote, 120 kilometres north-north-west of Melbourne. The gift bottle of Wild Duck Creek 2012 Shiraz Reserve was David’s way of thanking people who had been buying his wines for the past 10 to 23 years.

Riverland: More wine tax chatter

Riverland: Recent media coverage has helped to establish this particular tax issue as a serious concern for our regional economy and community, not merely wine grape growers and winemakers. National newspapers are keeping the issue alive with various editorial and opinion articles. Up until now the term volumetric tax has been used. In recent days this has been replaced by the term ‘flat tax’ rated at $2.20 per litre or approximately $1.65 per bottle.

An underground wine cellar in Tasmania is for sale, for $3 million

On the mainland, $3 million can buy you a fair bit – a six-bedroom home in Manly, or even Port Melbourne penthouse. However if neither of those ideas takes your fancy, you could also spend that money on a wine cellar in Tasmania. The clifftop property is a 20-minute drive from Hobart, and includes 8 hectares of land, a 300-square-metre shed, and the most unusual wine cellar in Australia. The wine cellar is housed in a tunnel that is a staggering nine stories deep. Like something out of a Bond film, it took mining experts six-and-a-half months to build.

Three top South African wines from new generation of ‘fusion winemakers’

These are exciting times for South African wines as a new generation of winemakers come of age, according to Siobhan Thompson, chief executive of trade organisation Wines of South Africa. Master of wine Jancis Robinson agrees, describing what’s happening to the industry there as “feeling like a teen coming-of age movie. In the classroom of wine regions, it’s the kid who sits alone at lunch, wears weird clothes, but is still strangely confident, and manages to answer the teacher’s questions with aplomb.”

Bottle or box? Texas Tech student wins grant to study wine packaging

A Texas Tech University doctoral student won a $10,000 grant to study how millennials respond to the way in which wines are packaged. Nicholas Johnston, who is starting his final year in the hospitality administration graduate program in the Department of Hospitality and Retail Management, has studied consumer behaviour for years, most recently in a research setting but for several years before that as a bartender.

Beer makes wine in volcanic hills

Sean Beer has a unique name for a winemaker and operates in a unique location, Rotorua in New Zealand. The Volcanic Hills Winery run by Beer is the only winery in the Rotorua district, a Mecca for tourism in the country. “We’re still a pretty small winery but we source grapes from the oldest vines in New Zealand and crush around 60 tonnes,” said Beer. “I’ve worked in wineries where the crush was 300 thousand tonnes, so we do things differently,” Beer said.

Peter Yealands denies that Marlborough wine company is sold or on market

Marlborough entrepreneur Peter Yealands has again denied reports his wine company is being readied for sale. The Marlborough region is said to be awash with rumours that Yealands is about to sign – or has already done so – a deal worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The ‘market talk’ comes just months after he hit back at a report in the Sydney-based newspaper The Australian claiming German investment bank Deutsche Bank had been drafted in to sell “Yealands Estate”.

A barrel of possibilities

IT may just be one of the best kept secrets in the Australian wine industry; an innovation in the barrel fermentation of handcrafted Shiraz taking place right here in the North East. But word is getting out quickly about Star Lane Winery’s 2012 Elements Shiraz, uniquely aged in recycled Australian red gum barrels, and there’s already plenty of interest from growing wine markets in Japan and China for the boutique offering.

Trio of Australian Wineries Use Bumper Crop for Kindness

One man’s extra Shiraz is another man’s treasure. The Canberra district of Australia’s wine regions are experience an amazing harvest this year, and with some wineries harvesting more grapes than they can handle, one team of winemakers has decided to sell the wine made from extra grapes and donate the proceeds to Companion House, an Australian non-profit which provides assistance to refugees.

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