This is a carousel with zoom. Use the thumbnails to navigate, or jump to a slide. Use the zoom button to zoom into a image.

Ata Rangi Martinborough Pinot Noir 2021

Red Wine from New Zealand - Martinborough
0 star rating 0 Reviews
Ata Rangi sits firmly amongst the very finest examples of pinot noir anywhere in the world, consistently delivering wines of finesse, power and longevity. The 2021 vintage is no exception. It was a brilliant season in Martinborough, with a long, dry summer and cool nights ensuring perfect ripeness, vibrant acidity, and fine, structured tannins. The resulting wine is textbook Ata Rangi—beautifully aromatic, poised, and deeply expressive. The nose is pure and complex, with lifted notes of dark cherry, cranberry, and violets, underpinned by spice, damp earth, and a hint of fine cedar from well-integrated oak. The palate is seamless yet structured, balancing silky red fruits, savoury umami tones, and a graphite-like minerality. Tannins are refined but persistent, giving this wine both immediate appeal and decades of potential. Ata Rangi remains one of the Southern Hemisphere’s truly great Pinot Noirs, and with the stellar 2021 vintage, this is a wine that demands a place in any serious collection.
Price: £65.00 Bottle (£86.67/litre)
Price: £390.00 Case of 6 (£86.67/litre)
In Stock
Code: NZ15911

Wine characteristics

  • Red Wine
  • Medium-bodied
  • Pinot Noir
  • 75cl
  • Now to 2033
  • 14% Alcohol
  • oak used but not v. noticeable
  • Screwcap

Bestselling wines

Ata Rangi

Ata Rangi is Maori for ‘dawn sky’ or, more aptly in this case, ‘new beginnings’ and the wine estate bearing its name is the foundation of Clive Paton.

Clive was a bit of a pioneer here in Martinborough, selling a herd of cows to buy his first parcel of land for vines in 1980 when they were almost unheard of in the area.

He says that playing rugby and regularly skinning his knees on the stony soil told him that the ground would be good for vines, a view confirmed by a 1978 report claiming that Martinborough had a microclimate similar to Burgundy.

He was soon joined in the ‘gamble’ by his sister Ali who bought five hectares next door. At first it was tough going and he persevered with the help of family and friends but in 1986 Clive’s pinot noir won his first gold medal and things began to look up.

These days Ata Rangi is regarded as one of New Zealand’s finest producers, famed for its pinot noirs grown on the free-draining gravels that abound here.

There is a strong emphasis on sustainable viticulture here. No artificial herbicides or pesticides are used and Clive has initiated or joined several ecological projects on the estae and in the general area. The vineyards themselves are divided into 80 different parcels, all picked separately so that each is harvested as the fruit ripens but trying to avoid overripeness, before coming together in the winery and being vinified together in batches depending on the age of the vines. Bunches can be destemmed, left whole or partially...
Ata Rangi is Maori for ‘dawn sky’ or, more aptly in this case, ‘new beginnings’ and the wine estate bearing its name is the foundation of Clive Paton.

Clive was a bit of a pioneer here in Martinborough, selling a herd of cows to buy his first parcel of land for vines in 1980 when they were almost unheard of in the area.

He says that playing rugby and regularly skinning his knees on the stony soil told him that the ground would be good for vines, a view confirmed by a 1978 report claiming that Martinborough had a microclimate similar to Burgundy.

He was soon joined in the ‘gamble’ by his sister Ali who bought five hectares next door. At first it was tough going and he persevered with the help of family and friends but in 1986 Clive’s pinot noir won his first gold medal and things began to look up.

These days Ata Rangi is regarded as one of New Zealand’s finest producers, famed for its pinot noirs grown on the free-draining gravels that abound here.

There is a strong emphasis on sustainable viticulture here. No artificial herbicides or pesticides are used and Clive has initiated or joined several ecological projects on the estae and in the general area. The vineyards themselves are divided into 80 different parcels, all picked separately so that each is harvested as the fruit ripens but trying to avoid overripeness, before coming together in the winery and being vinified together in batches depending on the age of the vines. Bunches can be destemmed, left whole or partially destemmed subject to the vintage conditions prevailing in any given year.

Intervention is minimal throughout with no enzymes used to help the indigenous yeasts that ferment the must and a judicious 35% or so of new oak is used for the eponymous Ata Rangi cuvée.
Read more

2021 vintage reviews
2020 vintage reviews
2019 vintage reviews
Back to top