d'Arenberg 'The Dead Arm' McLaren Vale Shiraz 2019 is no longer available
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d'Arenberg 'The Dead Arm' McLaren Vale Shiraz 2019
This is unashamedly full-bodied, powerful and classically Australian shiraz, from what was a hot and dry vintage for McLaren Vale. The nose is plush and inviting, with peppery character, plenty of black fruit, and notes of iron and earth that continues to the palate where a little spice comes into the mix. Full, ripe tannins provide punchy structure to this generous red. The majority comes from vines which are 50 to 60 years old, but with some vines up to 120 years old. The Dead Arm takes its name from a vine disease which, until the vine ultimately dies, causes less fruit growth but a much higher concentration of flavour. Drink from 2026 to 2039. 14.3%
is no longer available
Code: AU26751
Wine characteristics
- Red Wine
- Full-bodied
- Syrah/Shiraz
- 75cl
- 2026 to 2039
- 14.5% Alcohol
- bouquet/flavour marked by oak
- Screwcap
- Vegetarian
- Vegan
d'Arenberg
d’Arenberg is undoubtedly one of the most significant wineries in Australia’s McLaren Vale today. It was started in 1912 by Joseph Osborn, a teetotaller, who purchased 25 hectares of land and began selling fruit to local wineries. In 1928, the property’s own cellars were completed and red and fortified wines were made here in increasing quantities to supply the expanding European markets.
The name d’Arenberg came to prominence in 1959 when Joseph’s grandson Francis d’Arenberg Osborn, universally known as ‘d’Arry’, took over the running of the business and christened it in honour of his mother’s family name. The wines themselves started gaining cult status amongst judges and amateurs alike. By the 1970s the d’Arenberg range had gained a significant national and international profile and its wines had become extremely fashionable.
In 1984, d’Arry’s charismatic son Chester d’Arenberg Osborn, having graduated and spent time exploring European estates, took over the reins as chief winemaker and viticulturalist. Passionate about the family business from his youth, the inimitable Chester soon set about reintroducing traditional practices to capture the small-batch character of his wines. The old-fashioned basket press, for example, allows oxygen into the vinification process, softening and rounding out flavours and contributing much of the innate character that sets the wines apart. At the same time, Chester has moved the brand into the 21st century and now presides over an...