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Meerlust Estate Red, Stellenbosch 2021
Red Wine from South Africa - Coastal Region
In the first full vintage under cellarmaster Wim Truter, this is a hugely impressive 'second wine', showing the purity and structure that characterises his approach. A blend of 36% cabernet franc, 25% merlot, 25% cabernet sauvignon, and 14% petit verdot, the crisp cassis and redcurrant fruit is complemented by baking-spice complexity, a mineral core, fine grippy tannins and lift on the finish. An outstanding wine that has capacity to age. Drink from 2026 to 2035. 14%
Price:
£16.50
Bottle
(£22.00/litre)
Price:
£99.00
Case of 6
(£22.00/litre)
In Stock
Code: SA21771
Wine characteristics
- Red Wine
- Full-bodied
- Cabernet Merlot
- 75cl
- Now to 2035
- 14% Alcohol
- oak used but not v. noticeable
- Cork, diam
- 618 g (Empty bottle weight)
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Meerlust Estate
When the Myburgh family first purchased the Meerlust Estate in 1756, they could not possibly have predicted that the family would still be making some of the country’s most prestigious wine there hundreds of years on (making it by far the longest family-run wine estate in the Cape), or that later generations would transform the landscape of South African wine production altogether. In fact, their estate has also been immortalised in art, painted by one of South Africa’s most renowned artists, and in 1987 was declared a national monument.
It was actually a previous German owner who gave the estate its name. Meerlust means a yen for the sea, whether a vague longing from afar or a positive delight in being in, on or near it. A romantic poet might call it Sea Fever. At just 5km from False Bay, the estate’s proximity to the ocean plays a huge part in its wine production: the ocean breezes and evening mists keep vineyard temperatures regulated during the hot, dry summers.
Drought-resistant clay and granite soils provide further natural assistance, but during the drier spells drip-irrigation is also used, causing the vines to dig deeper into the soils and resulting in grapes with higher individual character. The brilliant vineyard location and careful management encourage the grapes to ripen slowly, giving them greater complexity.
Until the 1960s, Meerlust participated in traditional South African viticulture, and therefore only grew grapes for sweet white wines. Not only did...