| ex Vat | € 475,00 |
| in Vat | € 574,75 |
| Volume | 0,75l |
| Classification | Cru Classe |
| Type | Red |
| Producer | Penfolds |
| Vintage | 2020 |
| Country | Australia |
| Region | South Australia |
| Grape | Syrah/Shiraz |
| Alcohol % | 14.5% |
| Volume | 0,75 |
| Condition | Perfect |
| Label | Perfect |
| Drinkable | -2050 |
| Stock | 4 |
| Volume | 0,75 |
| Condition | In Original Carton |
| Label | Perfect |
| Drinkable | -2050 |
| Stock | 11 |
The 2020 growing season in South Australia was warm and dry, with drought significantly reducing yields. For Penfolds Grange, this means small, concentrated fruit, which is what Peter Gago was looking for when picking grapes in the Barossa, McLaren Vale, Clare Valley, Padthaway and Coonawarra valleys. 2020 Grange, dense and structured, this is not an early drinking wine. This vintage is more suited to long aging than early drinking. Best of Wines rates the 2020 as one of the most powerful among recent releases.
The 2020 Grange comprises 97% Shiraz and the balance Cabernet Sauvignon from McLaren Vale (48%), Barossa Valley (40%) and Clare Valley (12%), and it matured for 20 months in American oak hogsheads, 100% new. While the metric of regions changes each season and the proportion of Shiraz changes slightly, the élevage and style remain the same. Aromatically, the wine is black and savory, with crushed ant, black peppercorn, blueberry, blackberry and licorice/aniseed. In the mouth, the wine feels lighter than some other vintages on release. There is something like clarity and perhaps a little hole in the mid-palate—it sits like clarity or less density and also features as breathing space. A nice wine, it is lighter than the preceding 2019. Both vintages had their challenges, but this 2020 season has yielded an "easier" feeling wine.
Blackberry, blueberry, graphite and terra cotta aromas. Medium-bodied with clarity, focus and very fine tannins that are polished and caressing. One of the most refined and textural Granges I have had in a long time. The tannins are very resolved. This is mostly Barossa and McLaren Vale with some Claire Valley. 3% cabernet sauvignon. Very drinkable now, but will age beautifully.
Extremely dark, concentrated purplish crimson. Heady, rich, layered nose. Sweet start yet a dry, chewy finish. Very youthful. Wait! Almost painful to taste now.
This dense and brooding 2020 Shiraz Grange has all the elements for a long life with impressive levels of extract and tannins, but lacking the delicacy of a great vintage. It opens up with waves of tarry, licorice and cola aromas against a backdrop of firm, unyielding oak. Muscular, chalky tannins provide a strong frame to waves of blackberry flavor which build toward a drying finish. A couple more years in the cellar will bring all the pieces together before a two-decade drinking window.
The celebrated reputation of Grange places every new release under intense scrutiny, and this passes muster as sturdy and convincing, but without the stellar fireworks of 2019 or the instantaneous drink-now temptation of many from the past decade. Coming from the low-yielding 2020 vintage, a broad net was cast across McLaren Vale, Barossa and Clare to find the right mix of fruit parcels showing both concentration and complexity. With the modest addition of 3% Cabernet Sauvignon (noting that Penfolds did not release its elite Bin 707 and Bin 129 Cabernets from the 2020 vintage), this pulls tight focus on Shiraz’s primary allure – blackberry and black plum rinsed in rich mocha and dark chocolate, piqued by a dusting of cinnamon, pepper and vanilla. This is made to be cellared, and will tell a more exuberant story in another decade.
The first impression is one of overwhelming concentration. There are blackberry, dark plum and licorice notes, while aging in 100% new American oak barrels adds coconut, vanilla and toasted spices. On the palate, the Shiraz is muscular but not heavy. It has a savory, almost meaty depth due to mocha, black pepper and partial oak fermentation. The tannins are dense. This is a Grange that needs time. It should not be opened too soon.
The Grange 2020 blend includes:
Why add Cabernet to a wine known for its Shiraz? Cabernet thickens the structure and gives a graphite edge to ripe South Australian fruit. Shiraz adds intensity, plums, pepper and dark chocolate. Cabernet makes the lines more defined.
Drink between 2030 and 2055; the 2020 Grange has the tannin grip, acidity and concentration to age comfortably for 30 years or even longer; store lying down at a stable temperature of 12-14°C. Over time, the oak will integrate and savory leathery notes will emerge. Patience is required.
Penfolds is the best-known name in Australian winemaking, and for good reason: the grange. Dr. Christopher Rawson Penfold founded the McGill Estate near Adelaide in 1844, but the wines that made the maison world-class did not exist for another century. 1951, winemaker Max Schubert, a European He returned from Europe and, inspired by the Northern Rhone, made his first experimental Grange varietal. We believe it is still the benchmark for Australian Shiraz, and since 2002 Peter Gago has been the winemaker.
Most iconic wines are made from a single vineyard. Grange is the opposite. It is a blend of multiple regions, including Shiraz from Barossa Valley, McLaren Vale, Clare Valley, Padthaway, Coonawarra, and McGill Estate vineyards, with the final blend determined each year by which parcels of grapes are received. Why mix different regions? Barossa brings intensity and dark fruit from ancient ironstone and red-brown earth, McLaren Vale adds Mediterranean exuberance and structure from sandy loam on limestone, and Coonawarra brings a savory finish from terra rossa. Schubert's idea is consistency, not place.
The wine is aged in 100% new American oak barrels for about 19 months. American oak gives the vanilla, coconut, and dill notes that are part of the Grange's DNA. French oak would be more subdued. Boldness is needed. Equally important is to complete fermentation in barrel, the method pioneered by Max Schubert. This allows the oak and fruit to integrate early on, so that the oak is felt as part of the wine, rather than superimposed on top of it.
Grunge needs authentic protein and flavor. Some ideas:
Served at 17-18°C. Decant for at least 2 hours, longer if served young. The fat content is necessary to soften the tannins.
With track & trace code