Red Wine
New Zealand's
red trend - red wine development
Wines & Vines, August,
2001 by Susan
Low
Try this fun game next time you're
feeling bored: ask your friends
to name a famous New Zealander.
Silence and raised eyebrows? Then
ask them to name a famous New Zealand
wine. Chances are that they'll
answer quite readily "Cloudy
Bay." When it first hit the
streets, New Zealand Sauvignon
blanc--and Cloudy Bay in particular--made
the wine-drinking world sit up
and take notice. All that exuberant,
full-throttle fruit and aroma couldn't
pass without comment--and it didn't.
Yet a few years on, New Zealand
producers were getting jittery.
They suspected that Sauvignon blanc
would be a here-today, gone-tomorrow
trend. For people in the wine business,
where long-term planning is crucial,
to be the equivalent of a one-hit
wonder is bad news. So, like good
businesspeople, they began to diversify--into
red wines. Yes, it's true that
Chardonnay remains the most widely-planted
and widely-produced varietal in
New Zealand, but, let's face it,
Chardonnay is yesterday's news.
That New Zealand could make decent
reds, however, was news of the
more gripping "man bites dog" variety.
New Zealand's first efforts with
red wines were often disappointing,
with unripe, green vegetal flavors
and thin, weedy fruit, but viticulturists
have been moving the game on very
quickly. If this article had been
written a mere five or six years
ago, it would have been pretty
short. Not any more.
Last year, production of Sauvignon
blanc in New Zealand decreased
by almost 25%. Although it is still
the second-most harvested variety
(after Chardonnay) it looks like
its popularity is on the wane.
Chardonnay production increased
by almost 33% in 2000, closely
followed by Pinot noir, which saw
a 30% rise in production year on
year.
The idea that Cabernet Sauvignon
and Merlot could meet with any
success at all in New Zealand came
as a surprise to many. The received
wisdom was that New Zealand was
too cold, too marginal, for any
red varieties apart from (possibly)
Pinot noir to be successful. Yet
that theory has been proved wrong
in a number of big international
wine tastings, such as the International
Wine Challenge, held each year
in London.
That's not to say that all New
Zealand reds are good; many are
not, particularly those from cool
or rainy vintages.
Cabernet Sauvignon is Tricky
Cabernet Sauvignon has proved a
particularly tricky variety to
grow. According to Tony Prichard,
senior winemaker at Montana's McDonald
winery in Hawke's Bay, "We
had everything wrong. The sites
were too vigorous, they weren't
the right clones, the rootstock
was the highest-vigor one you could
get--it was recommended by some
German guy. In France they'd laugh
their pants off if you told them
you had that rootstock."
Grant Edmonds, who makes some of
the most generous, silky-textured
reds from Bordeaux varieties at
Sileni winery in Hawke's Bay, believes
that Cabernet Sauvignon remains
a difficult variety to grow in
New Zealand. "Both Merlot
and Cabernet franc ripen consistently
well, even in cooler years, and
rarely show that herbaceous methoxypyrazine
edge so common with Cabernet Sauvignon," he
says. You can understand why plantings
of Merlot are on the increase,
and why Cabernet Sauvignon is being
treated with caution.
In addition to viticultural issues,
another question has been paramount
in recent years: what varieties
to plant where? New Zealand is
a big place. If you were to pick
the country up and plonk it down
alongside the West Coast of the
United States, it would stretch
all the way from the heart of the
Willamette Valley in the north
to the Mexican border in the south.
Steve Smith MW, wine and viticulture
director of Craggy Range Vineyards
in Hawke's Bay, says, "There
is no way that any region can do
both Pinot noir and the Bordeaux
reds well, and up until the last
few years the industry had been
doing just that." Given the
country's former reliance on white
varieties (particularly the often
insipid Muller-Thurgau), winemakers
have had to learn practically from
scratch about red varieties.
Generally speaking, that now means
Bordeaux (and Rhone) varieties
in the warmer, northern part of
the country and Pinot noir in the
cooler, southern part. Smith says, "It's
very right in my book to see every
region from Martin-borough south
concentrating on Pinot noir, leaving
Hawke's Bay and parts of Auckland
to concentrate on the red Bordeaux
varieties (and Syrah)."
Hawke's Bay is without a doubt
one of the best regions in New
Zealand to grow Bordeaux varieties
and Syrah. Producers to watch out
for in this area include Alpha
Domus, Brookfields Vineyards, Esk
Valley, Church Road Winery (owned
by Montana), Craggy Range Vineyards,
Kim Crawford Wines, Matariki, CJ
Pask, Redmetal Vineyards, Sileni,
Te Mata, Trinity Hill and Vidal.
Another important region for reds
is in the far north of the North
Island, near Auckland. According
to Bob Campbell MW, one of the
country's most reliable palates
and trend-spotters, "Matakana
(one hour north of Auckland) is
home to the much-hyped Antipodean
(New Zealand's most expensive wine)
and Providence wines, plus a number
of other newer wineries. That area,
like Waiheke Island, is capable
of making very good, even outstanding,
reds."
The Trend Toward Terroir
In keeping with a better understanding
of regionality, winemakers are
now beginning to look carefully
at the idea of terroir. The most
obvious example of this trend is
the launch in January 2001 of the
new Gimblett Gravels Wine-growing
District, a sub-region of Hawke's
Bay. The Gravels is a 1,975-acre
stony area, defined by the gravely
soils that were laid down by the
ancient riverbed of the now-defunct
Ngaruroro River. Abou 80% of the
land planted is given over to red
varieties, with Merlot having the
most acreage, followed by Cabernet
Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Syrah, Malbec,
Cabernet franc and Sauvignon blanc.
Thirty-four wineries (that's most
of the wineries in the Hawke's
Bay area) count themselves as part
of the Gimblett Gravels Group.
So, what's so special about the
Gimblett Gravels? According to
Smith, the district is up to 3[degrees]C
warmer during the day in the summer
and the fall, compared with most
other areas in Hawke's Bay. Nighttime
temperatures here are also warmer,
as the stones heat up during the
day and radiate the heat back onto
the vines at night. Smith says
that during the growing season,
soil temperatures a foot below
the soil surface can be 5[degrees]C
warmer than elsewhere in Hawke's
Bay, which helps encourage earlier,
fuller ripening.
It should come as no surprise that
not everyone working in Hawke's
Bay is convinced that the Gimblett
Gravels is the best thing since
the Hula Hoop. Edmonds is one person
in the industry who has decided
not to jump on the Gravels bandwagon.
Why? "We did consider buying
land in that area at one time,
but given the variability of the
soils and the excessively free-draining
nature of some parts of the area,
we decided against it," he
says.
Edmonds also believes that the
launc of the Gravels is potentially
divisive for the Hawke's Bay region
as a whole. "Given our tiny
production volumes and the lack
of consumer (and trade) awareness
of Hawke's Bay, I firmly believe
that we should be marketing the
region as a whole, well before
we splinter off small groups," he
says. "I think it is a little
premature, to say the least, for
the development of specified areas
in such a young industry. We are
still experimenting with varietal
possibilities, let alone differences
in clones, rootstocks, planting
densities, trellising, etc."
The Pinot Noir Story
The Gimblett Gravels, with its
PR campaign and trademarked logo,
is just one of the stories in New
Zealand that's currently getting
a lot of hype. The other is New
Zealand Pinot noir. In the space
of just a few short years, New
Zealand Pinot noir has gone from
being a virtual unknown to occupying
top spot on the "most wanted" list.
Names like Felton Road, Mount Difficulty
and Chard Farm are now spoken about
in hushed, reverential whispers,
and their fans are increasingly
willing to pay lots of money for
them.
Pinot noir is now the most widely
planted red grape in New Zealand,
and the third-most widely planted
variety after Chardonnay and Sauvignon
blanc. The New Zealand Wine Institute
estimates that by 2003, plantings
of Pinot noir will have increased
by an astounding 85%. In the past,
Martinborough, on the southern
tip of the North Island, has been
regarded as the best place to grow
this tricky variety. Many in the
business, like Gordon Russell of
Esk Valley, who works magic with
his Merlot/Malbec/Cabernet Franc
blend, The Terraces, believe that
it still is. "The region's
old vines and experienced winemakers,
for me, make he best Pinot noir
in New Zealand," he says.
Marlborough, on the northern tip
of South Island, is more famous
for its garden-fresh, exotically
perfumed Sauvignon blancs, but
it can also turn out top-class
Pinot noir. Grove Mill, Isabel
Estate and Seresin all make vibrant
Marlborough Pinots noir. Jeff Sinnott,
the talented young winemaker at
Isabel Estate, says, "Marlborough
obviously has huge potential to
produce volumes of good and maybe
great Pinot (noir)."
But without a doubt, the region
that is causing the most excitement
for Pinot noir fans is Otago, in
the south-central part of South
Island. According to statistics
compiled by Bob Campbell, by 2004,
plantings of Pinot in Otago are
predicted to increase from 1,000
tons a year (2001) to 2,100 tons
a year (2004) in a short space
of time. The other varieties grown
here--Chardonnay, Pinot gris and
Riesling--are predicted to grow,
too, but only by very small amounts.
Currently, Pinot noir accounts
for just over 50% of the total
tonnage in Otago.
Like many in the business, Sinnott
believes that "surely the
current darling of the New Zealand
Pinot scene must be Central Otago.
Established producers such as Gibbston
Valley, Chard Farm and William
Hill are being joined by the likes
of Felton Road and Mount Difficulty
in establishing Otago as one of
the most exciting new regions for
Pinot noir in the world," he
says. "Combine a rapid influx
of predominantly overseas capital
with a buoyant winemaking community
and you have a recipe for success
reminiscent of the Oregon 'Gold
Rush' of the 1980s."
The parallel with 1980s Oregon
may be an apt one. Oregon's cool,
rainy, marginal climate means that
the Pinot noir made there doesn't
always live up to the hype that
surrounded those exciting first
years. Are Pinot noirs from Otago--or,
for that matter, all of New Zealand--heading
for the same scenario? During the
course of a recent tasting of 1999
and 2000 Pinot noirs from throughout
the country, my excitement and
anticipation were soon ameliorated
by a creeping sense of disappointment.
Too many of the wines were too
thin, too weedy, too tart to be
genuinely appealing. I found the
silky texture and rounded complexity
of fruit flavors that I was looking
for too rarely.
But perhaps I'm being harsh. Pinot,
as we all know, is a pig of a grape
to grow. According to Nigel Greening,
the British wine lover who bought
the highly regarded Felton Road
winery in Central Otago in September
2000, "The greatest challenges
for anybody who is moving into
Pinot is that Pinot is not like
any other variety," he says. "It
is really highly strung, unstable,
capricious. You can't build a formula
and then replicate it. You can't
relax. You can't take short cuts."
Add to that inherent fickleness
the youth of many of the vines,
the relative inexperience with
the variety, the newness of some
regions (like Canterbury and Otago)
and, of course, New Zealand's equally
fickle weather, and it's obvious
that Pinot's hit rate won't always
be high. But nonetheless, some
of these wines carry some pretty
hefty price tags. Felton Road Block
3 Pinot noir 1999 sells in New
Zealand for NZ$48 (US$20); the
most expensive Pinot made in the
country is Martinborough Vineyard's
Reserve Pinot noir--the 1998 sells
for just under NZ$100 (US$42).
A Difficult Question
Are they worth it? That's a difficult
question to answer. In a good vintage,
from the best producers, yes. In
less good vintages, usually not.
New World wine producing countries
love to draw parallels between
themselves and French regions like
Bordeaux, Burgundy or the Rhone.
Such comparisons are often irrelevant,
but comparing New Zealand Pinot
noir to red Burgundy is not a pointless
exercise. Vintages are very important
here, for example: If you want
the good stuff, you'll have to
expect to pay for it. And, also
like Burgundy, drinking New Zealand
Pinot noir can be a wonderfully
exciting experience--or a huge
letdown. Whether Pinot will ever
gain the stature internationally
of those first exuberant Sauvignon
blancs remains to be seen, but
I sense that the Burgundians are
getting just a little bit nervous.
Web links
To find out more about the Gimblett
Gravels Winegrowing District, visit
the Web site gimblettgravels.com.
Bob Campbell MW's independent site
is a good way to keep in touch
with the New Zealand wine scene:
bobcampbellmw.com.
(Susan Low covers the international
wine scene from London.)
U.S. Market Important For New Zealand
The United States is an increasingly
important market for New Zealand.
Traditionally, the United Kingdom
has been--and remains--New Zealand's
major export market, followed by
the U.S. The UK currently accounts
for 55% of New Zealand's total
exports; the U.S. accounts for
13%.
But while the value of the UK market
increased by 24% in 2000, the value
of the U.S. market soared in value
by 85%. Savvy New Zealanders are
recognizing that the U.S. market
is one that is willing to pay for
quality wine (unlike the rather
more parsimonious British market,
where price is the most important
factor).
Gordon Russell, winemaker at Esk
Valley in Hawke's Bay, says, "The
U.S. market is becoming increasingly
important as other traditional
markets reach saturation level.
We are new to the U.S. and have
a novelty value we used to enjoy
in the UK. Prices paid by U.S.
consumers are also very favorable....We
need to reach top end buyers globally.
A lot of these live in the U.S." Evert
Nijzink of Alpha Domus agrees: "The
U.S. market recognizes quality
and is prepared to pay for it," he
says.
But there are cautious notes being
sounded, too. Producers in New
Zealand believe that the U.S. market
lacks the loyalty of the UK. Nijzink
says, "it is a rather fickle
market, and it is crucial to have
a good relationship with your importers
and distributors to have a safe
future."
Grant Edmonds, winemaker at Sileni,
believes that the U.S. "has
the potential to become New Zealand's
main export market," although
he too believes it is "perhaps
less loyal than the UK." On
a more positive note, Edmonds believes
that the U.S. is "rapidly
becoming more sophisticated in
its tastes," making it a good
market for New Zealand's premium
wines.
Another plus is the relatively
low price of the top New Zealand
wines. Although New Zealand is
a natural "premium" player
(economies of scale mean that New
Zealand will never be able to compete
with other countries on volume),
prices of even the top wines seem
reasonable compared to equivalent
U.S. wines. A New Zealand Screaming
Eagle is still a long way off,
although prices for the top-end
wines will certainly continue to
rise.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Hiaring Company
COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group
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