It
is the single most successful red wine on the Australian show circuit;
the winner of no fewer than four Jimmy Watson trophies for best young
red at the Royal Melbourne Wine Show and a total of 64 trophies and
298 gold medals to date.
The
Wolf Blass Black Label red blend, first made in 1973 and an instant
success, celebrates its 40th
vintage next year. Once available for just a few dollars it now
retails for $130 a bottle and is seen as an Australian benchmark.
“To
have that kind of consistent success over 40 years is quite
remarkable,” says Chris Hatcher, the winemaker tasked with carrying
on the legacy of Blass and his winemaking sidekick John Glaetzer, who
won the Watson trophy in 1974, 75, 76 and again in 1999. “There are
not that many wines that can claim that kind of consistency over four
or more decades.”
The Wolf Blass winemaking team with the maestro |
The
current release is the 2010, which didn't win the Jimmy
Watson but has picked up its own swag of trophies and gold medals. As
always, the blend changes from year to year (some years there is some
malbec in the mix). This was a 51 percent cabernet and 49 percent
shiraz blend from the Barossa, Langhorne Creek and McLaren Vale.
If
you are looking to buy one as a Christmas present be warned the 2010
is already in short supply. The 2011, from an inferior vintage, was
sold only at cellar door and the 2012 will not be released until
March next year.
The 2010 is one
of the very best Black Labels from an outstanding vintage
and would make an excellent Christmas present for anyone with a wine
cellar.
It is unashamedly a big wine, voluptuous even, with
delicious sweet fruit and great structure. It weighs in at 15 percent
alcohol and the 60 percent plus new French oak has been sucked up
into an impressive end product.
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