Header

Showing posts with label Schild Estate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Schild Estate. Show all posts

Monday, 1 June 2015

Schild Estate launches their Limited Release Shiraz Prämie 2013 at the LWF 2015



The London Wine Fair 2015 played host to plenty of launches and releases, but the grand UK unveiling of Schild Estates Limited Release Shiraz, the new Prämie 2013, elbowed all the competition out of the way. Our ears were burning when the LWF name dropped Schild as one to watch this year, inviting trade professionals to experience ‘lightning caught in a bottle’.


Friday, 30 January 2015

ADT2015: Australia Day Trade tasting


We enjoyed another successful tasting with Wines of Australia this year. Our 10x wines from The Mornington Peninsula were marvelled over by press and trade alike, and the 2012 Estate Pinot Noir was a huge hit at Restaurant Australia - a carefully curated menu by Roger Jones from the Harrow at Little Bedwyn. The Pinot was paired with Seared venison with a puy lentils stew. Delicious!

Schild Estate meanwhile dazzled with its plethora of medals bedecking the Estate Shiraz, and with the individual stories linked to each bottle. Read more about them here.

Here's a summary of the day in pictures. 
Thanks for all who came by. We look forward to tasting with you again soon!

Tuesday, 20 January 2015

Bancroft news from Down Under: Australia Day bottled

In the lead up to next weeks' Australia day tasting and a day of celebration for all our antipodean cousins, here's a round up of latest news from our four prestigious producers:

Ten Minutes by Tractor, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria
Still considered one of the top Estates on the Peninsula, Ten Minutes by Tractor is an emblem of quality in terms of cooler climate, quality Pinot Noir and Chardonnay that comes out of Oz. Ten Minutes by Tractor will be featured as part of Roger Jones' from the Harrow at Little Bedwyn mini-feasts as part of Restaurant Australia, with the 10x Pinot Noir 2012 being matched to fillets of seared venison and puy lentils. We challenge you not to fall in love. Anthony Rose did recently in his review of the 10x in The Independent: 'This is a voluptuously savoury Aussie pinot noir from Victoria's Mornington Peninsula'


Friday, 27 June 2014

IWC 2014 medals roll in: two Golds for Schild Estate and Bancroft's other producers

Yesterday Bancroft took part in the IWC Taste of Gold tasting at Lindley Hall in Victoria to present two of our Gold Medal winning wines from Schild Estate and two Silvers from Cederberg.

To a room full of trade and then consumers we were delighted with lots of comments and positive feedback from all who tasted. Co-chairmen Tim Atkin and Oz Clarke included both producers on their Wine Walks later in the evening.

Chief Winemaker Scott Hazeldine from Schild Estate said:

“It’s fantastic to be judged amongst the world’s best and come out shining”

“The International Wine Competition is one of the icon wine shows each year, the stiff competition makes it even harder to stand out so these awards make us very proud”

Congratulations to Schild Estate on their well-deserved Golds, and to Cederberg and the rest of our wineries on their awards too. The full list is here below:

Thursday, 12 June 2014

Bancroft Wines at The London Wine Fair: three days in words and pictures

It was one of the busiest week's of the wine trade last week but the Bancroft team worked it with reputable enthusiasm alongside 12 of our esteemed producers who flew in from around the globe to present their wines to the trade.


A great show - cheers!

Monday, 28 April 2014

Schild stories: what lies behind the wines

Picture courtesy of The Drinks Business
I've always maintained that one of the reasons I love to work in wine is because of its window on the world into different countries, cultures and customs. Each one unusual, everyone different. What never fails to blow me away are the stories and the people connected to each bottle - no matter whether they're the ones you're enjoying the wine with in the moment, or the people who've helped to make it.

Case in hand, a couple of weeks ago I got to meet Judy Watson, née Schild, from the eponymous Schild Estate, one of Bancroft Wines Australian wineries, set deep in the heart of the Barossa. I got to know her most during this visit - her first ever to London, at a media lunch organised at Fulham's Harwood Arms. It was a great opportunity to chat and get to know the person behind the wine, but also the stories that continue to make them. Cleverly, these are documented through the wines new and improved, award-winning labels.

Judy talks about the heritage of the winery that as a member of the family's third generation she is very much still a part of. Judy's grandparents Ben and Alma Schild first moved to the Barossa Valley from Lameroo in the Murray Mallee in 1952. This fateful moment is documented on the merlot bottle - showing the clapped out old car that Ben Schild drove Alma and his 8 children to their new home in the Barossa’s Rowland Flat. The car still remains where he parked it to this day. 

In 1956 Ben Schild died suddenly and Ed, being the youngest of eight children and the only son to be living at home, stayed to run the family property at the age of 16. The new label on the Shiraz pays homage to his hard work since then, depicting his real hands working the soil on which his vines grow. "Weathering highs and lows, Ed Schild worked to grow a down to earth family business of vignerons." In happy harmony, the wine is from the Barossa floor, from the foothills where the family first laid their own roots - it has an elegance and finesse that is rich with juicy, ripe fruit, a lick of liquorice and on the finish, some well integrated spice.

The first vineyard that the family purchased is located up the top of Steingarten Road, near Rowland Flat, where the original homestead is still situated.

Michael Schild is pictured on the label for the Cabernet Sauvignon - as the winery's chief viticulturalist he has followed in his father’s footsteps after coming home from school to help him prune, shift soaker hoses and pick grapes. "I was about 15 when I left school to follow this vineyard interest a little further. Once we bought a grape harvester, the work really began… it was then that dad started to buy more vineyards….and so on it went. Later I met my wife and we have three little darlings, whom are all keen to follow in dad's interests… they had no choice, they grew up in the vineyard like me."  Michael's love for fishing is depicted on the bottle of Riesling - citing a feed of yabbies as the perfect partner. We taste this later in the office - it has citrus and lime wax on the nose, a cool climate riesling, "just 6 miles short of the Eden Valley". It's cool and crisp and wholly drinkable. It makes me reminisce about my choice of wine on rare night's off from nightshifts when I worked vintage in Australia's Riverina.



Judy is the eldest daughter of Ed, current owner and is known as the mother hen – the label of the Unwooded Chardonnay was designed with her in mind. This wine is soft and buttery but is still refined. It speaks with apples and limes on the palate and is almost lime green in colour. Judy represents the third generation of the family to work and own the vinyeard - a strong message to anyone making commercial wine, and one that is echoed on the label of the GMS.


The GMS - Grenache Mourvedre Syrah is made from 100 year old vines with grapes that are hand-picked. This winery crushes 1000 tonnes a vintage, so it is by no means enormous. What speaks from the bottle then is this history and attention to detail in getting the best out of the fruit available. Set slightly at altitude the vines here are in a cooler climate with a lower yield. It sees no oak and shows elements of white pepper. It is fruity, well-made and has a touch of black pepper spice. Of the range it is my clear favourite. The three hands here show each of the generations that make up the winery's greater personality today.


The Semillon Sauvignon Blanc shows an image of an old car seat in the shed - this was where the vintage crew ended their day. Inside they reclined on old car seats, drinking ice cold hock, lime and lemonade. A nice inside, fly-on-the-wall type image to add into the overall scene we can now imagine much more without having been there ourselves... This is the window I'm talking about. 




At lunch, the last wine we taste is the flagship wine from Schild - the much revered Moorooroo - a wine that comes from ancient vines -165 years old. This irreplaceable vineyard was planted by Johan and William Jacob in 1847, just eleven years after the foundation of South Australia and at one point, nearly ceased to be. In 1984 at the height of over supply of Shiraz grapes the government was paying people to rip up their shiraz vines. Schild at that point had 16 rows in the Moorooroo vineyard. 12 of them were ripped out but at the last four rows the tractor broke down, leaving them there, untouched. These four rows are the ones that still produce the Moorooroo today - a very special wine indeed. Judy mentions that sometimes people ask if you can still make good wine from old vines - to which she gives this analogy. "You ask my 19 year old son what his take on life is and he'll give you one answer. You ask a person closer to 99 years of age and they'll give you a completely different answer." there's no denying that age and experiences enriches a person and their own stories, the same, she says goes for the vines.



When we meet Judy today not only do we learn about each other's stories, we hear other people's from around the table (naked bungee jumping is just one that comes into conversation - for which I will never forget the golden, rich and ripe Alma Schild Chardonnay that got us talking about this), but at the same time create more of our own. It is here at the Harwood Arms that Judy tries her first Scotch Egg (and what a fine venison-clad one it was!) concreting this as a specific moment in time - another new experience in and amongst some very pleasant wine, great value company and equally dazzling conversation. But then that's what wine is all about - right?!

Friday, 31 January 2014

Bancroft Wines at Australia Day Tasting

Yesterday Team Bancroft set up camp at Lindley Hall in London for the Annual Australia Day Tasting. In the company of over 1000 different wines we were accompanied by bottles of our own from Australia's family-run Schild Estate in the Barossa Valley and Martin Spedding presenting his wines as guest of honour from the Mornington Peninsula's iconic Ten Minutes by Tractor.