Craggy Range - Gimblett Gravels - Syrah

89 Points RP
Craggy Range - Gimblett Gravels - Syrah - 2016 - 75cl - Onshore Cellars

Craggy Range - Gimblett Gravels - Syrah

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Taille
Prix régulier 148,00 lei
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Notes de dégustation

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Plus d'informations

Provenance
Type
Appellation
Producteur
Technique
Cépages
ABV
13%
Service
16° - 18° C
Caractéristiques
PepperyVioletPerfumedMedium alcoholMedium-bodiedMedium acidity

L'histoire de la bouteille

Craggy Range

Craggy Range

Craggy Range est un domaine viticole néo-zélandais opérant sur plusieurs sites dans les plus importantes régions viticoles du pays, avec des participations importantes à Martinborough en Wairarapa et...

Craggy Range est un domaine viticole néo-zélandais opérant sur plusieurs sites dans les plus importantes régions viticoles du pays, avec des participations importantes à Martinborough en Wairarapa et à Hawke's Bay sur l'Île du Nord. Le domaine se concentre sur les expressions de vignoble unique provenant de sites soigneusement sélectionnés, notamment la célèbre sous-région Gimblett Gravels de Hawke's Bay, connue pour ses sols rocheux uniques qui retiennent la chaleur.

Martinborough s'est établi comme l'une des régions Pinot Noir les plus respectées de Nouvelle-Zélande, bien que la région produise également d'excellents Chardonnay et Sauvignon Blanc. Hawke's Bay, en particulier le district Gimblett Gravels, représente le territoire premier de Nouvelle-Zélande pour les vins rouges, où les sols graveleux bien drainés et le microclimat chaud favorisent les cépages bordelais et le Syrah. Ces terroirs contrastés permettent aux producteurs de travailler avec des cépages de climat frais et de climat chaud.

La gamme actuelle démontre cette diversité régionale, allant du Te Muna Sauvignon Blanc et du Kidnappers Chardonnay aux coupes rouges de Gimblett Gravels, dont Sophia, un assemblage de style bordelais de Merlot, Cabernet Franc et Cabernet Sauvignon, et Le Sol, un Syrah de vignoble unique. Les désignations de vignoble reflètent l'engagement du domaine envers les expressions spécifiques au terroir de ces régions viticoles distinctes de Nouvelle-Zélande.

Craggy Range
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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Gimblett Gravels

Gimblett Gravels

Gimblett Gravels is a sub-region of Hawkes Bay in New Zealand's North Island, located in the Heretaunga Plains near Hastings. The area takes its name from the distinctive...

Gimblett Gravels is a sub-region of Hawkes Bay in New Zealand's North Island, located in the Heretaunga Plains near Hastings. The area takes its name from the distinctive stony riverbed soils that define its landscape, deposited by the Ngaruroro River over thousands of years. It was formally recognized as a distinct viticultural zone in the 1990s, emerging as producers identified the site's potential for premium winemaking.

The appellation's defining characteristic is its free-draining gravel soils overlaying deeper clay and silt layers. These gravels absorb and radiate heat, creating warm conditions that favor full-ripening of red grape varieties. Gimblett Gravels experiences a warm, temperate climate with adequate rainfall, and the soil structure naturally limits vine vigor, concentrating flavors in smaller yields. The region has become particularly known for Bordeaux varieties—Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, and Cabernet Franc—alongside Syrah, all of which thrive in these conditions.

Wines from Gimblett Gravels typically display ripe, structured red fruit character with good aging potential. The gravelly terroir imparts a mineral quality and contributes to wines with firm tannin profiles and complexity. Merlot-based blends from the region tend toward fuller body with plum and dark cherry notes, while Syrah often shows peppery spice and darker berry characteristics. The combination of warm ripening conditions and well-drained soils generally results in wines with good concentration and balance rather than excessive alcohol or overripeness.

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