Giaconda to join La Place de Bordeaux
The big news here at Giaconda this year is on an International level – after many years of having been told we should receive more International exposure and recognition, we have been approached by agents for La Place de Bordeaux (an association of French Négociants) to distribute Giaconda wines Internationally.
Giaconda will now be marketed Internationally (except Australia and New Zealand) by Établissements Jean-Pierre Moueix (JP Moueix). JP Moueix are one of the most prestigious négociants worldwide and own several prestigious Châteaux including La Fleur-Pétrus. For many years they were also part owners and managers of Château Pétrus. This is a real coup for Giaconda being a very important decision for JP Moueix who have never had a non-french wine label in their portfolio (excluding their own winery Dominus in Napa Valley California). It will certainly elevate Giaconda to another level on the world stage!
On top of this our 2021 Estate Vineyard Chardonnay has recently gained a perfect 100 points rating by the Robert Parker Wine Advocate. As reviewed by Erin Larkin, this is the first Australian white table wine to ever receive this rating. Erin comments “This is an unbelievable wine that will only grow in stature over the coming years.” Read more >
I do understand and appreciate that Giaconda has many loyal and longstanding Australian supporters. As such, the domestic quantity and availability of our wines will not change substantially, except for an inevitable price rise this year. The new arrangement with JP Moueix is simply a consolidation of our existing export allocations.
Many of you will be aware, we missed the 2020 vintage due to the summer bushfires. Since then we have experienced several mild vintages which has resulted in excellent quality, however our vineyard yields have been well below average. Unfortunately this vintage follows the same pattern with even lower yields and this has caused us to cancel the 2022 En Primeur pre-orders for the time being.
Later this year we will be releasing the 2022 Nantua Chardonnay, an exceptional wine made from a blend of Warner Vineyard and Estate Vineyard fruit. We will send an email reminder to our mailing list once this is available to order (mid September). The chardonnay will be accompanied by an excellent release of Nantua Shiraz and Nantua Roussanne with more information to be revealed at the time of release.
This brings me to the subject of Shiraz and Roussanne. For the 2021 and 2022 vintages our shiraz is a blend of Estate Vineyard plus Warner Vineyard fruit made in a combination of small oak barrels, large Boti cask and Amphorae. This is a very rich and complex wine, certainly among the best ever produced here at Giaconda. The other exciting news will be the return of Giaconda Roussanne, formerly named 'Aeolia'. This fruit is now grown at our Estate Vineyard and the first release will be from 2022 (to be offered during the April release next year).
I am continuing our experiments with Terracotta Amphora for fermentation and we are beginning to see great results from the extended maceration. This tends to bring much more complexity and depth from the long maceration. The result with our 2019 Nebbiolo (current release) is truly spectacular! This wine was made in Amphora for the first year and then matured in older French barrels. The resulting wine is in a very traditional Barolo style so please be sure to decant and give it plenty of air! The ultimate aim for this wine is to use an equal blend of Amphora and large traditional Boti casks. Future releases of this wine will certainly be exciting.
View wine offer and read the tasting notes >
Sincerely,
Rick Kinzbrunner
Back to the future for Giaconda's Pinot Noir
30 April 2015A decade or so ago Rick Kinzbrunner was dismayed at the quality of the pinot noir he was producing from his Giaconda vineyard near Beechworth. So dismayed that this figurehead of the Beechworth wine industry actually made several pinots between 2008 and 2012 in which Yarra Valley fruit from the Toolangi Vineyard (for whom he makes its Reserve Chardonnay) was the dominant fraction. This despite the still memorable qualities of estate-grown pinot noir vintages such as 1989, 1991 and 1992, not to mention the first-ever Giaconda wine I tasted, the 1988. I remember this wine as if I tasted it an hour ago. I was with my father, who was equally seduced, and I was immediately convinced Kinzbrunner was a genius.
I’ve just had rather a profound flashback to that very moment, 25 years or so ago. Why? I ripped the top from the 2013 Giaconda Pinot Noir, a wine that is again 100% estate-grown but which is taken from relatively recent plantings at a significantly higher – and therefore cooler – location at the Giaconda site. Here’s a truly stellar pinot noir, but one that talks its site as much as its variety. Having followed the 1989 very closely – and this is the vintage the 2013 most resembles – I speak with genuine confidence that this wine will age superbly, for the long term. It will become more complex and ethereal – which it is already to an extent – and will become firstly more powerful and then more delicate. It will remain elegant and savoury, will retain its effortless natural balance and freshness, and will please many a Burgundian collector, not just because it will age into something more Burgundian than many a Burgundy.
If you have the chance to taste this wine, do so. It has an Old Worldliness and a reserve that takes my breath away. For me it ticks the most important boxes: it’s about the place, the vintage and the maker. And most importantly, no other maker in the world could have created it. I hope Kinzbrunner is as satisfied as I am with his latest creation.
Jeremy Oliver
https://www.jeremyoliver.com