2018 Giant Steps Ocarina Chardonnay

2018 Giant Steps Ocarina Chardonnay

RRP: $60.00 per bottle $59.99 per single bottle
4 payments of $15.00 with More info
Taste Guarantee
Love it or your money back*
Free Delivery
On orders
over $300*
RRP: $60.00 per bottle $59.99 per single bottle
Bottles
4 payments of $15.00 with More info
Taste Guarantee
Love it or your money back*
Free Delivery
On orders Over $300*

Expert Reviews

95 Points - Mike Bennie - The Wine FrontProduced in ceramic eggs. Fruit is sourced from three vineyards under the care of Giant Steps. More imagination and execution from Steve Flamsteed and team, a near indefatigable force. This wine hangs out in egg from harvest to after winter, then is pretty much decanted into bottle with nothing added aside a splash of sulphur.Textural white of high interest and compelling drinkability – light chalkiness, faint stoney characters meshed to green apple, ripe citrus and white chocolate notes. So much going on. The wine slips over the palate with ease, finds some good concentration of flavour, delivers inherent freshness. Dials up the chardonnay fruit character yet holds such essential purity then, again, that texture is such a charm and so unique. A wonderful expression. I'm in.'
91 Points - Huon HookeLight straw colour with a complex, smoky, oatmealy bouquet - cashew nuts and almonds, very fine and taut and restrained. Irresistibly complex bouquet, but fresh as well. Lovely wine, with a long, warming finish.'

Tech stuff

13.5
Yarra Valley
2018
Cork
Cellar to 2025
750ml

Light

Full

How was it made?

Good winter rains left the ground with good subsoil moisture resources. Canopies were large and healthy and the fruit set was extraordinarily successful. We did a "green" fruit thin back to one bunch per shoot and the vine/fruit balance was perhaps the best we have seen in years. After a warm January, the flavours and skin ripeness came on very quickly. Even though days were warm, nights were cool. We picked very early to maintain fresh natural acidity and the Chardonnay bunches were turgid and pristine.

Handpicked in the morning and whole bunch pressed without additions. Transferred without settling (with full solids) to 650L ceramic egg vessels.Indigenous fermentation. After fermentation was completed, the eggs were topped and sealed for winter. No malolactic fermentation. No fining, no filtration. Bottled by gravity.

Who made it?

Giant Steps is an independent winery in Healesville, Victoria, owned by Phil Sexton. Phil first made his name in establishing some noted micro-breweries, such as Little Creatures, and later established Devil’s Lair in Margaret River. First released in 2001, Giant Steps focuses exclusively on the distinctive expression of single vineyard sites in the Yarra Valley. Grapes are drawn from estate and leased vineyards, as well as a selection of long-term contracted vineyards. Giant Steps wines are produced fastidiously in the vineyard and vinified with minimal intervention so that each is a faithful expression of site, vintage and culture. Giant Steps focuses on restrained Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and cool climate Cabernet/Merlot blends. These single vineyard wines are sourced from five different vineyards throughout the Yarra, so each is a fingerprint of location and site personality. The name Giant Steps comes in part from Phil’s love for jazz and John Coltrane’s album of that same name, and in part due the Giant Step Phil took in relocating with his family from Margaret River to the Yarra Valley. Giant Steps wines are always exclusively single vineyard Yarra Valley wines. They are hand made in small batches using gravity flow principles. Production of the Giant Steps wines is very limited with some vineyards producing as little as 200 cases each vintage – some wines are not produced each year if vintage conditions do not allow. These wines are often hard to find in retail outlets as they are mainly sold through the cellar door and through selected restaurants.

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People often ask me what is my favorite wine… My answer, the next one! Sometimes I want a wine to be complex, sometimes I want my wine to be simple but I always want it to be delicious. Let me take you on a journey with a selection of the last wines that have made me stop, think and made me go back for more.

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