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“One of the highlights of my drinking year.”
— Max Allen, Wine Writer
“The future of wine in Australia.”
— Broadsheet
“The cutting edge of Australian wine.”
— The Australian

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Deep Dive

  • Australia’s Best Chenin Blanc

    Three years after our inaugural Deep Dive into chenin blanc, it’s an apt time to again cast our eyes across the Australian chenin blanc landscape. With a new wave of Australian producers dedicated to elevating the grape, a Deep Dive was called for, so we gathered as many bottlings as we could find and enlisted the help of eight of this country’s finest palates to check in to see just where Australian chenin blanc is at.

  • Tasmania’s Best Riesling

    Tasmania is ideal territory for cool-climate viticulture: a combination of relatively modest temperatures and abundant sunshine allow for ripe fruit flavours with thrilling natural acidity. It’s no surprise that sparkling wine was pursued there, but it’s also been seen as hallowed ground for aromatic whites, chief amongst them being riesling. And it was riesling that got the modern Tasmanian wine industry rolling with a modest crop in the early 1960s on a promontory in the Derwent River in suburban Hobart. Fast forward to today, and while riesling hasn’t exploded in volume like pinot noir and chardonnay, there are exciting expressions coming from passionate makers across the island state. So much so that we thought it was time to Deep Dive into this category once more …

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Latest

  • How to Help the Growers and Makers Impacted by the 2026 Bushfire Season

    The risk of bushfire is never far from the minds of those who live in rural and regional Australia, and our wine growers and makers are no exception. Wine is an agricultural product that is especially vulnerable to bushfire – whether those impacts are direct, such as the loss of vineyards in a blaze, or less direct, such as grapes that have been affected by smoke taint. While the current bushfire season has thus far been far less dramatic than the wide-scale destruction that was caused across the country during the ‘unprecedented’ 2019–2020 bushfire season, fires in Central Victoria have already impacted the livelihoods of dozens of winemakers this year – and we are not yet out of the woods. In this article we’ve detailed the major fires that have impacted Australia’s winemakers thus far in 2026 – including information about the producers affected and the best ways to support them.

  • When Disaster Strikes

    Winemaking and wine growing is an inherently risky business – expensive to get started, and subject to the vagaries of the international wine market and the whims of consumers. Beyond that baseline level of risk, though, there are also freak events, accidents, and other disasters that can strike at any stage in the winemaking process – and that have the possibility of derailing promising winemaking careers. We talk to winemakers Bridget Mac of Werkstatt and Bryan Martin of Ravensworth to discover how these devastating experiences can also offer opportunities for growth and the development of resilience.

  • Vale Peter Fraser

    We are heartbroken to hear that Peter Fraser, winemaker and general manager at Yangarra and Hickinbotham, passed away yesterday at the age of 51. This is an incredibly tragic day for Peter’s family and friends, for the teams at Yangarra and Hickinbotham and the Jackson Family Wines group, and for the McLaren Vale and broader Australian wine community. Our thoughts and condolences are with Peter’s family and friends, the teams at Yangarra and Hickinbotham, and the Jackson Family Wines group in this difficult time.

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“If we went back 10 years, the relationship between sugar and acidity would be a lot more obvious – all over the shop. There’d be sugar here, acid there, and things would not be anywhere near as in balance as a lot of the wines we saw today.”

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