Te Mata - Coleraine - Cabernet Merlot

94 RP Points
Te Mata - Coleraine - Cabernet Merlot - 2014 - 75cl - Onshore Cellars

Te Mata - Coleraine - Cabernet Merlot

Vintage
Size
Regular price €73.16
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Tasting Notes

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More information

Provenance
Type
Red
Country
Region
Producer
Technical
ABV
13.5%
Serving
16° - 18° C
Food Pairings
BeefLambGame BirdsCharcuterie and Cured MeatsHard CheesesChocolate
Key Characteristics
Black fruitHerbaceousSilkyLong finishMedium(+) alcoholMedium-bodied

Behind the bottle

Te Mata

Te Mata

Te Mata Estate is a winery located in Hawke's Bay on New Zealand's North Island. The estate produces red wines using classic Bordeaux grape varieties, focusing on blends...

Te Mata Estate is a winery located in Hawke's Bay on New Zealand's North Island. The estate produces red wines using classic Bordeaux grape varieties, focusing on blends that reflect the Mediterranean-style climate and diverse soils of the Hawke's Bay region.

Hawke's Bay is New Zealand's second-largest wine region and is particularly well-regarded for red wine production. The region benefits from warm, dry summers and a long growing season, with varied soil types including river gravels and limestone that provide excellent drainage. These conditions favor Bordeaux varieties like Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Cabernet Franc, which can achieve full ripeness while maintaining good structure.

Te Mata's Coleraine represents their flagship red blend, combining Cabernet Franc, Merlot, and Cabernet Sauvignon in the traditional Bordeaux style. This wine demonstrates the estate's approach to working with these international varieties in Hawke's Bay's terroir, creating structured reds that express both varietal character and regional identity.

Te Mata
Hawkes Bay

Hawkes Bay

Hawke's Bay is New Zealand's second-largest wine region, located on the east coast of the North Island. The region encompasses diverse topography from coastal plains to inland valleys,...

Hawke's Bay is New Zealand's second-largest wine region, located on the east coast of the North Island. The region encompasses diverse topography from coastal plains to inland valleys, with the Hawke's Bay itself providing a moderating maritime influence. Wine production here dates back to the 1850s, making it one of New Zealand's oldest viticultural areas, and today it accounts for approximately 20% of the country's total wine production.

The region benefits from a warm, dry climate with long sunshine hours and relatively low rainfall during the growing season. Soils vary considerably across the area, from fertile alluvial plains to free-draining gravels. The Gimblett Gravels district, formed by an old riverbed, is particularly notable for its stony, heat-retaining soils that provide excellent drainage. This subregion has gained recognition for producing some of New Zealand's most structured red wines, with the stones absorbing heat during the day and radiating it back to the vines at night.

Hawke's Bay is renowned for its Bordeaux-style red blends, primarily based on Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Cabernet Franc, which thrive in the region's warm conditions. Syrah has also found success here, producing wines with distinctive peppery characteristics. While red varieties dominate plantings, Chardonnay performs well in the region's climate, often producing full-bodied wines with good aging potential. The combination of diverse microclimates and soil types allows winemakers to craft wines with considerable complexity and regional character.

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