MARIBYRNONG & HOBSONS BAY
Home » Uncategorized » Pinot Noirs from the Apple Isle

Pinot Noirs from the Apple Isle

By Ben Thomas

When it comes to Australian pinot noir, three wine regions stand tall: the Yarra Valley, Mornington Peninsula and Tasmania.
With Mornington and the Yarra just up the road, we’re lucky their wines are so accessible. Tasmania, on the other hand, feels like the final frontier for pinot noir.

A quick browse of a wine list in Hobart or a shop in Launceston can feel like a walk through Aladdin’s cave for a pinot lover, with unknown wines at every turn.

At the moment there are about 160 wine producers in Tasmania, but only 60 or so send wines to the mainland. Demand for local wine in Tasmania is so strong that many producers don’t need to send the wines over Bass Strait. There’s the odd occasion when a pinot will make it onto a single Melbourne restaurant’s wine list because the sommelier is a friend of the winemaker or has helped out at the winery during the vintage harvest.

All the big wine companies want a pinot noir in their portfolio from the state that produces just 0.5 per cent of Australia’s wine. From big corporates such as Accolade Wines (Bay of Fires and Arras) and Treasury Wine Estates (Heemskerk and Abel’s Tempest) to family-owned producers such as Brown Brothers (Devil’s Corner) and Shaw + Smith (Tolpuddle), they all have a foot in the door.

Pinot noir is the state’s most widely planted grape, but there’s not all that much pinot to go around – just 5000 tonnes of pinot noir grapes were picked in 2013. A large proportion of that went into sparkling wine production.

To put this volume into perspective, there are wineries in the Barossa and Riverina that can process more than Tasmania’s annual pinot noir crop in a day. Despite all the interest from mainland producers, there hasn’t been a huge investment in wine infrastructure and many large producers ship grapes to the mainland to be processed at their wineries. Others ferment and crush their grapes on the island and ship the juice to their wineries to finish the maturation process.

So why does everyone want a piece of Tasmania’s pinot noir pie? Tasmania is considered a marginal climate for growing grapes and its cool days mean grapes take a long time to ripen. Extra time on the vines helps them develop deeper flavours while retaining acid levels.

Many Tasmanian wineries harvest their pinot into May, while most mainland pinot-producing regions have their wines fermented and tucked away for a rest in oak barrels by then. The further south you go, vineyards tend to be planted on sheltered or north-facing sites that give them enough sunlight to ripen. Still, it’s not guaranteed the grapes will ripen properly.

Tracking down Tassie pinot noir

You don’t need to visit Tasmania to track down its elusive pinot noir. Buy direct from the wineries or check out the Pinot Shop, run by Michele Round. Round regularly secures allocations of pinot from Tasmania’s smallest and most sought-after pinot noir producers. Based in Launceston, Pinot Shop has a range of mixed pinot cases and ships to the mainland for $14 a case.

Ben thomas travelled to Tasmania
as a guest of Heemskerk

Digital Editions


  • Clean up with new council app

    Clean up with new council app

    As councillors, we often hear from the community about getting the basics right, with waste and recycling a frequent topic of conversation. It’s exciting to…

More News

  • Eagles big scalp

    Eagles big scalp

    Yarraville pulled off its best win of the Victorian Sub-District Cricket Association east-west season on Saturday, knocking off Spotswood. The Eagles, who were on top for a lot of day…

  • Tubes of survival

    Tubes of survival

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532349 February 1-7 was Feeding Tube Awareness Week, which aims to increase the understanding of tube feeding. Jena Carr spoke with two women with…

  • Brasher makes debut

    Brasher makes debut

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 452928 Footscray’s Dylan Brasher was almost the hero for Victoria in his Sheffield Shield debut last week After piling on the runs at Victorian…

  • Braybrook ramps up for BMX fest

    Braybrook ramps up for BMX fest

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532725 Melbourne’s inner-west will take centre stage this weekend at the Braybrook BMX Festival, a three-day celebration of action sports, youth culture and community,…

  • Former Cash Converters operators penalised

    Former Cash Converters operators penalised

    The Fair Work Ombudsman (FWO) has secured a total of $112,985 in penalties against the former operators of three Cash Converters stores in Melbourne’s north and west. The Federal Circuit…

  • Maidstone church fire suspicious

    Maidstone church fire suspicious

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 207786 A fire at a Maidstone church early on Sunday morning is being treated as suspicious. Fire crews were called to the church on…

  • Events heat up the west

    Events heat up the west

    Summer is heating up across the west with a mix of music, culture and experiences for locals to enjoy. Love Westside has put together a guide for February and March,…

  • Who are these Australians?

    Who are these Australians?

    The iconic ‘Three Well-Known Australians’ has made its way to Melbourne’s west for a limited time. The work, painted by Martin Shaw in 1982, depicts three figures – a blue,…

  • From the archives

    From the archives

    Star Weekly looks back on the pages of our predecessors. 40 years ago 12 February, 1986 A $6000 Western Suburbs fishing club development in Williamstown could face a State Government…

  • Rams ready for finals

    Rams ready for finals

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532910 Newport Rams are fine tuning things ahead of finals in the Baseball Victoria summer league women’s premier 1 first competition. The Rams, who…