Christmas Gift Ideas for the Wine Lovers

Please remember those people overseas, especially in the UK, who still have lorry driver shortages – and supply shortages! By the way, this has led to goods being moved by train [back to the future!]

Compact Swivel Cheese & Tapas Board
Compact Swivel Cheese & Tapas Board
Who knew drinks trolleys have made a comeback
Who knew drinks trolleys have made a comeback
Perhaps the perfect welcome mat
Perhaps the perfect welcome mat
Wine Glass Holder for bathe& shower
Wine Glass Holder for bath & shower

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The Crater Rim – Nov 2021

The Crater Rim & Lyn Timms of Lyns Consulting
The Crater Rim & Lyn Timms of Lyns Consulting

We had a well-attended evening for the wine and food match, with 41 people attending.

It was notable that the vineyard used compostable plates and utensils for the tasting, so our green miles are good! And this goes in with the vineyard’s practices of being vegan friendly and on their way to being organic certified. Great for the planet.

The wines we tried were:

  • 2020 Waipara Sauvignon Blanc
  • 2018 Waipara Sauvignon Blanc partnered with toast and Bruschetta
  • 2020 Waipara Pinot Gris partnered with Indian dahl
  • 2020 Waipara Viognier
  • 2016 Waipara Riesling partnered with Beef Thai salad
  • 2020 Canterbury Pinot Noir partnered with Pulled Pork slider
  • 2019 Waipara Pinot Noir partnered with spicy lamb koftas with couscous
  • 2017 Waipara Pinot Noir
  • 2016 Dr Khols Waipara Riesling partnered with Banoffee pie

While it would have made the evening more interesting to have a bit more banter about the wine from the presenter, this was a very enjoyable evening and the members were fed well.

A special note of thanks to Nicola Fraher and friends for the food, as well as to our pourers Carolyn & Terry and our food servers Fiona and Evelyn. It really was a great effort by everyone involved.

And it was pleasing to see all that mahi result in significant wine orders on the night, coupled with requests for personally signed cookbooks.

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Let’s look out for each other

Your committee is looking at the conditions we may have to operate under in relation to the use of WCC facilities under COVID19 mandates.

At the moment, the wearing of masks when entering and exiting the Johnsonville Community Centre, plus the distance we have to be settled at, etc is all in play and we’ve adapted well, thank you.

With the new Traffic Light System coming into play on December 3rd, it may become mandatory that in order to get into any public facilities in the near future, it will require the display of your vaccination pass so please ensure you have one with you.

It is certainly the expectation of your committee that members will be double vaxed for our events. But as always, please if you are feeling unwell, do not attend any of your Club’s meetings, thank you.

Your committee

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Club’s Christmas dinner

Saturday 11th December is your Cellar Club’s Christmas dinner at Juniper Gin Bar & Restaurant, 142 Featherston Street, Wellington.

Arrive at 7 pm for seating at 7.30 pm.

Thank you for returning your meal choices to Wayne. He is planning to email all dinner attendees with their meal choices to check that he has your choices correct. This will also give you a chance to pick out a wine to bring with you to match your food choices. His email will also be providing details of your table seating and the Covid requirements for the venue under the new traffic light system.

Juniper Gin Bar & Restaurant
Juniper Gin Bar & Restaurant

Given there are some members attending the dinner for the first time, it is perhaps an opportune time to mention how our dinners operate.

  • You are asked to arrive as close to 7 pm as practical. Please don’t turn up early as it can cause confusion at the venue.
  • When you arrive, you will be greeted with a complimentary glass of bubbles.
  • The meal is BYO wine, and your prepaid cost includes corkage. During the evening, it is customary to share your wine with your neighbours.
  • We are expecting to finish sometime between 9.30 pm and 10 pm, but this is a guideline only, in case you are arranging transport home. Please try and stay as flexible as possible.

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Experience New Zealand’s oldest vineyards and wineries

Jo Burzynska, NZ Herald | 28 Sep, 2021

Drink up NZ’s rich history with a trip to one of our venerable vineyards, writes Jo Burzynska.

Sauvignon Blanc has the wow factor in Marlborough. Photo / MarlboroughNZ
Sauvignon Blanc has the wow factor in Marlborough. Photo / MarlboroughNZ

On September 25, 1819, the Anglican missionary Reverend Samuel Marsden recorded planting the first grapevines in New Zealand in the grounds of the Stone Store, Kerikeri in the Bay of Islands. Sadly these never produced wine, allegedly being gobbled by local goats. Nevertheless, the promise that Marsden perceived for wine in Aotearoa has now been amply proven, and can be experienced alongside its history at vinous milestones that span the length of the country.

Bay of Islands – Vine Zero

Marsden Estate in Wiroa Road, Kerikeri. Photo / Supplied
Marsden Estate in Wiroa Road, Kerikeri. Photo / Supplied

Greater wine-growing success was achieved with the arrival of British wine enthusiast, James Busby to the Bay of Islands. He made New Zealand’s earliest recorded wine from vines planted in his grounds at Waitangi in 1833, described by French explorer Dumont d’Urville as “delicious”. While the wine industry followed more suitable climes and moved south, good wines still hail from this historic region. Head to Marsden Estate in Kerikeri, established 176 years after its namesake planted his vines. Select six wines to try at its cellar door, or grab a glass to savour in its subtropical – and goat-free – vineyard gardens or at its restaurant.

Gisborne – Organic Trailblazer

Millton, New Zealand's first biodynamic vineyard. Photo / Supplied
Millton, New Zealand’s first biodynamic vineyard. Photo / Supplied

Long before the New Zealand wine industry promoted its wines as the riches of a clean green land, James and Annie Millton were walking the talk. The couple established the country’s first organic and biodynamic wine estate in 1984 with the planting of their first vineyard near Manutuke where earlier settlers had planted grapevines in 1871. They now combine classic wines like their chardonnay with edgier examples in the skin-fermented whites of the Libiamo range influenced by the younger generation of Milltons. Sample these at their cellar door, set in beautifully landscaped grounds complete with olive grove.

Hawke’s Bay – Oldest Winery

Mission Estate Winery in Hawke's Bay. Photo / Mission Estate
Mission Estate Winery in Hawke’s Bay. Photo / Mission Estate

Christian orders helped spread the vine as well as their religion around the world, and it was Marist missionaries that transplanted vines from Bay of Islands to Hawke’s Bay, and in 1851 built the country’s oldest winery, Mission Estate. Its cellar door, housed in an imposing former seminary building, offers seated tastings that include insights into its history. Visitors can then wander through its underground cellar and extensive gardens that look out to sea, with an option to dine in its recently refurbished restaurant.

Wairarapa – Pinot’s First Place

Guests enjoying the sun at Ata Rangi vinyards, Martinborough. Photo / Pete Monk
Guests enjoying the sun at Ata Rangi vinyards, Martinborough. Photo / Pete Monk

New Zealand’s potential for Pinot Noir can be traced back to Wairarapa, where in the early 1880s Frenchwoman Marie Zelie Beetham and her husband William, planted the country’s first pinot vineyard near Masterton. Temperance put paid to that endeavour, but pinot noir grows once again at one of their vineyard sites, now Lansdowne Estate. Martinborough pioneers, such as Ata Rangi’s Clive Paton, then founded the modern pinot industry in 1980s. Ata Rangi continues to produce some of the country’s finest examples, which can be explored, along with its history, through intimate tastings held in their charming old winery cellar door.

Nelson – South Island Pioneers

The Neudorf Winery, Nelson. Photo / Supplied
The Neudorf Winery, Nelson. Photo / Supplied

In the early days of New Zealand wine, most vineyards were planted in the North Island as it was considered grapes couldn’t ripen further south. However, in the 1970s some brave souls started to plant vines on the mainland, including Tim and Judy Finn who founded Neudorf in Nelson when nobody knew what varieties might thrive there. Now they make some of the country’s top chardonnay and pinot noir.

These can be enjoyed at their cute cellar door overlooking their first Home Block vineyard, where picnic fare can also be selected from the “baby deli”.

Marlborough – Sauvignon Country Roots

Sauvignon Blanc has the wow factor in Marlborough. Photo / MarlboroughNZ
Sauvignon Blanc has the wow factor in Marlborough. Photo / MarlboroughNZ

Our flagship Marlborough sauvignon blanc is a fairly new phenomenon. Planted there in 1973, on what is now Brancott Estate Vineyard, it went on to wow the world when Hunter’s Sauvignon Blanc won the UK’s prestigious Sunday Times Vintage Festival in 1986. Hunter’s still excels at sauvignon, as well as sparkling wines, which are shared in its farmhouse tasting room set in tranquil native gardens. The next generation continues to innovate, with the experimental Offshoot range that includes a naturally sparkling sauvignon “pet-nat”. Marlborough’s earliest history can be encountered at Auntsfield Estate, the site of the region’s first commercial vineyard and winery founded by David Herd in the 1870s. Take in the historic sites, such as the restored 1873 rammed earth cellar, on a vineyard tour and taste the impressive wines made by the Cowley family who re-established vines on the property.

Canterbury – Humble Beginnings

Take a trip around New Zealand's oldest vineyards and wineries. Photo / Graeme Murray
Take a trip around New Zealand’s oldest vineyards and wineries. Photo / Graeme Murray

An important chapter of Canterbury’s contemporary wine history started three decades ago in a Christchurch garage. This belonged to neurologist Ivan Donaldson, whose winemaking hobby resulted in Pegasus Bay, which went on to become a flagship winery of the region. Knowledgeable staff at its Waipara cellar door can talk you through its exciting range of wines. These can also be partaken of in the winery’s fabulous gardens or inside by the fire as part of a picnic of local fare from the mini deli it launches in December.

Central Otago – Natural Succession

Looking down over its sloping vineyards to Lake Wanaka, the views from Rippon vineyard are iconic. Photo / David Wall
Looking down over its sloping vineyards to Lake Wanaka, the views from Rippon vineyard are iconic. Photo / David Wall

It’s rare for a family to spend over a century cultivating their land, never mind close to 40 years in the wine-growing industry in New Zealand – and even rarer in Central Otago, where the wine industry only took off in recent decades. However, Rippon has long and strong ties to their special land, now managed biodynamically by second-generation winegrower Nick Mills. The views from Rippon Hall, where its cellar door is situated, are iconic, looking down over its sloping vineyards to Lake Wānaka and the mountains. Rippon’s site-expressive wines are equally spectacular.

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The Crater Rim Waipara – Wine & food experience

Nicola Fraher – author
and nutritionist

The presenter is Lyn Timms of Lyns Consulting, assisted by Nicola Fraher, daughter of The Crater Rim owner. Nicola is the person preparing the food and wine matches for this evenings wine and food match – the food is appetiser-sized tasty morsels to pair with the wines.

The Crater Rim is a family-owned boutique winery situated in the rolling hills of Waipara, in the South Island. They grow, make and market limited quantities of terroir-specific wines produced from their own two vineyards and contracted sites in the Canterbury sub-regions of Waipara, Omihi and Banks Peninsula and Central Otago.

These sites have been carefully selected for their particular mix of varietal, topography, soil and microclimate – creating high quality, site-specific wines of individual character and drinkability. The Crater Rim manage their vineyards and work closely with each grower to ensure that vines are cropped low and managed sustainably, guaranteeing the best quality fruit possible from each vineyard site. The result is exceptional wines from exceptional regions.

Crater Rim recommended that their wines are enjoyed with a meal that
best brings out their flavours and have produced a book so that those
who drink their wines may have a range of options to do this.

With the growth of The Crater Rim’s success, it was only natural that Nicola Fraher, one of the daughters of The Crater Rim’s owner, saw an opportunity to combine her passion for food and wine by producing a book that not only told that story but brought the wines together with nutritious recipes that can be easily made and enjoyed. Nicola is a trained nutritionist with her own business; she also works in a marketing role for the family enterprise.

The food and wine matches for the evening:

  • Start with a tasting of From The Ashes Sauvignon Blanc
  • Tasting of Waipara Sauvignon Blanc matched with Tomato and Garlic Bruschetta
  • Tasting of Waipara Pinot Gris matched with Spicey Vegetable and Lentil Dahl
  • Tasting of Waipara Riesling matched with Thai Beef Salad
  • Tasting of From The Ashes Pinot Noir matched with Pulled Pork Sliders
  • Tasting of Waipara Pinot Noir matched with Spiced Beef Kofta on Tabbouleh
  • Tasting of Dr Kohls Late Harvest Riesling matched with Key Lime Pies

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Al Brown’s Tipping Point Project

Chef Al Brown and his winemaking friends launch Tipping Point, a wine brand that supports charities close to Brown’s heart and celebrates the regions.
Chef Al Brown and his winemaking friends launch Tipping Point, a wine brand that supports charities close to Brown’s heart and celebrates the regions.

If you want to follow something developing in New Zealand’s wine industry at the moment, go to the stuff.co.nz website and featured videos – Al Brown’s Tipping Point Project.

Al Brown – a well-known chef and entrepreneur has a new venture being developed with Rowan Dean of Constellation Wines, Gary Stewart, his graphic designer and Melanie Mark-Shadbolt who is the CE of Te Tira Whakamātaki Foundation [one of the charities that some profits will go towards]. They are developing a wine brand, without featuring Al’s face or name, that will bring
wine to the people.

Al’s visions for this venture are to bring wine down to earth, making the experience unstuffy and a more relaxed experience to encourage people to have a tipple and gain knowledge at their level. To take some of the exclusivity out of the experience, even drinking wine from a tumbler (as some restaurants already do) so more people are relaxed with choosing something they actually like to drink.

In the first video Al was touring through three of our wine regions: Hawkes Bay, Central Otago and Marlborough. Exciting stuff!

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COVID Rules for tastings

Please read the steps being taken by your committee so we can all comply with the current COVID Level 2 requirements for the evening:

  • Please remember to either scan the QR code on your phone or sign in – this Is a mandatory government requirement
  • Please remember that you are required to have a face covering on when you enter and exit the premises
  • The tables will be set up 1 metre apart – please do not move any tables
  • The number of people at each table will be reduced to 4 – please do not add more – you are required to sit 1 metre apart
  • Please bring your own glasses for the evening
  • The tastings will be served as per normal, but due to the regulations the pourers will need to be masked and gloved – please make this as pleasant as possible for them
  • NB: please if you are feeling unwell, do not attend, thank you

Your committee

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Butterworth Estate – Oct 2021

Nick Newitt, General Manager

Renowned sailors, the Butterworth Family (Brad & Warren), is the new custodian of Julicher vineyard, planted in the iconic soils of Te Muna. The J-Knot on every bottle, the strongest knot you can tie, is a tribute to their vineyard’s founder, Wim Julicher.

Wim Julicher originally planted the Te Muna vineyard as an Olive Grove, but the site’s unique aspect made it far too cold for the olive trees. Luckily, it creates the perfect amount of pressure for the divine struggle required to produce world-class Chardonnay and Pinot Noir.

The Butterworth Family has a viticultural heritage dating back to the founding days of the New Zealand wine industry – the original 1890’s vineyard property is still in the family today.

The wines for our evening are from their Te Muna (Butterworth formerly Julicher vineyard and Layline ranges:

  • 2020 Butterworth Layline Martinborough Pinot Gris
  • 2021 Butterworth Dry Riesling (pre-release tasting)
  • 2019 Butterworth Layline Sauvignon Blanc
  • 2020 Butterworth Te Muna Chardonnay
  • 2020 Butterworth Regatta Rosé
  • 2018 Butterworth Layline Pinot Noir
  • 2018 Butterworth Te Muna Pinot Noir

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Nelson’s Tohu Wines the toast of New Zealand

Nelson’s Tohu Wines are the toast of the New Zealand wine industry after taking out a coveted ‘Best in Show’ prize at the 2021 Decanter World Wine Awards.

Over the course of two weeks of rigorous wine-testing in London in June, Tohu’s Whenua Matua Chardonnay stood out from amongst the 18,000 wines judged, to win one of the 50 Best in Show accolades.

As the only New Zealand winery to receive a Best in Show award, it was a major achievement for Tohu – the world’s first Māori-owned winery.

French wines dominated the Best in Show category with 15 awards, along with nine from Spain and seven from Italy.

Decanter organisers said while New Zealand was more well-known for its Sauvignon Blanc, New Zealand Chardonnay had been quietly building its success in recent years. At the 2021 awards, Chardonnays from less-expected places like Canada and Germany also received Best in Show awards.

Tohu Wines’ 2018 Whenua Matua Chardonnay received one of the 50 Best in Show accolades at the 2021 Decanter World Wine Awards.
Tohu Wines’ 2018 Whenua Matua Chardonnay received one of the 50 Best in Show accolades at the 2021 Decanter World Wine Awards.

The Whenua Matua Chardonnay 2018 is a single-vineyard wine grown in the rich clay soils of the Upper Moutere region. The only other time a Nelson winery has won best in show for chardonnay was in 1992 when Neudorf Winery won for its 1991 Chardonnay, also grown in similar Moutere-clay soil.

Tohu winemaker Bruce Taylor said the Chardonnay was all about showcasing a single vineyard.

“Whenua Matua translates as ‘significant lands’ and the changing angles and orientations of the vineyard blocks lend themselves to the complexities of winemaking.

“The wine is selected from the very best barrels of our hand-picked, whole-bunch pressed 15-year-old Chardonnay vines.

“These single-vineyard wines hold great structure, exceptional varietal characteristics, texture and complexity.”

Owned by the Kono food and beverage company, Tohu Wines was established in 1998 and around 200,000 cases of wine are produced at its winery in the Awatere Valley.

Kono chief executive Rachel Taulelei says the company is immensely proud of winning the Decanter Best in Show award.

Tohu Wines also received a Gold Medal for its 2020 Sauvignon Blanc at the Decanter Awards.
Tohu Wines also received a Gold Medal for its 2020 Sauvignon Blanc at the Decanter Awards.

“The chardonnay is a special release for us and follows on from our 23-year celebration last year. Each wine in the Whenua series is an expression of the uniqueness of our tūranagawaewae, our standing place, and our connection to the land.

“To be acknowledged and singled out from thousands of wines in such a prestigious wine competition is confirmation that care for the land and its bounty is tōtika, a beautiful balance.”

Jul 15 2021 | Stuff.co.nz

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Note from Eurovintage Tasting – Aug 2021

An update for members who ordered wine from our August tasting – yes it does seem a while ago now – these are in hand. The Level 4 lockdown in Auckland has meant they could not be dispatched to us, but now Auckland is in level 3 we are working with Keith to organise distribution from the warehouse, and we hope deliveries will be next week.

Thanks for your patience. Cheers.

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