best red wine from new zealand

Winemaking is still fairly new to New Zealand. Yet after only a couple decades, Kiwi winemakers are already producing wines that are consistently lauded by international experts. In 2002, American wine guru Robert Parker declared a Felton Road 1997 Pinot Noir as one of the top 3 wines in a blind tasting of Burgundy reds. (And this from a man who has been a vocal critic of New Zealand wines…) In April 2003, Wine Spectator rated central Otago as one of the top 5 most exciting New World wine regions. And now the up-and-coming Hawke’s Bay Shiraz is rivaling even the best Australian Shirazes. So what on earth is going on here? Otago is one of the four major wine-producing areas in the country (along with the Marlborough, Hawke’s Bay and Auckland regions). Many experts attribute the oenological successes of Otago wines to the extreme temperatures experienced by the region. (Strangely, they argue that the frigid winters and blistering summers are actually beneficial to winemaking…)

Select at least one filter to refine your wine search Latest Wine Tasting ResultsSearch for award-winning wines from the Air New Zealand Wine Awards. You may search by keyword, award type, variety, region, vintage, price and award year (or a combination thereof) using the controls on this page. The search covers awards since 2005.If you prefer, you may browse the award-winning wines by wine style or variety.You can also view a one page guide that provides an overview of the meaning of the medals Tasting notes are courtesy of Sam Kim, Wine-Orbit.
best dc wine barsThe Trophy Awards: These are awarded to the top wine in each variety.
best wine tours in long islandOnce the gold medals have been decided for each variety judges hold a taste-off comparing all of the gold medal wines to decide the ultimate category winner.
best red wine to pair with salmon

Trophies are awarded for Champion Wine of the Show, Reserve Wine of Show (replacing Sustainable Wine trophy in 2012), Best Open White Wine, Best Open Red Wine, Best Exhibition White or Sparkling Wine and Best Exhibition Red Wine as well as the 13 individual variety trophies.To be awarded the Champion Wine of the Show, Best Open White Wine, Best Open Red wine or one of the 13 varietal trophies each winery must have at least 250 cases of the wine entered available for sale at the time of the award announcement.
best wine bar central londonTo enter the Exhibition category a winery must have a minimum of 50 cases of wine available for sale at the time of the award announcement.
best large bottle of wineA wine wins a medal when it reaches the medal standard, determined by the score it receives from the panels of judges.
best wine lovers books

Each wine is marked out of twenty based on the following system: Elite gold medal: Outstanding quality (19 and above out of 20 points) Gold medal: Excellent quality (18.5 – 18.99 out of 20 points) Silver medal: Very good quality (17–18.49 out of 20 points) Bronze medal: Good quality (15.5 –16.99 out of 20 points)Each wine entered is tasted ‘blind’, that is, it is recognizable to judges only by a unique code it has been given rather than by name or label. Wines are tasted in classes and sub-classes so that judges taste similar wines at the same time. The wines are tasted and judged by senior judges and associate(s). The wine is then discussed at the end of the scoring and in some cases re-assessed by the panel leader and/or the Chair of Judges. The wine is given a score and this is entered into the system under its unique code. Associates’ scores are not counted in the final judging but their comments are welcomed in discussion. Judging dates for the 2016 Air New Zealand Wine Awards are 17-19 October.To be considered for the Open category, a wine must have more than 2,500 cases available for sale when the awards are announced in November of the judging year.

The Limited category is for wines with a minimum of 250 cases. The Exhibition category is for wines with a minimum of 50 cases available. Entries in the Open, Limited and Exhibition Classes are eligible for medals and the Reserve Wine of the Show trophy. Wines entered in the Open and Limited categories are eligible for the varietal/style trophies and the Champion Wine of the Show. Wines entered in the Exhibition Category are eligible for the Exhibition trophies. If you have difficulty obtaining any of the wines, please contact the winery directly.Wineries are asked to supply a recommended retail price for all wines entered into the awards. Prices do vary between various retail outlets, cellar door sales and direct marketing offers and therefore can not be guaranteed. All prices quoted are in New Zealand dollars.BEST WHITE WINE BUY OF THE YEAR Starborough Family Estate Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc 2015 A five-star wine at a three-star price, this is benchmark stuff, hard to resist in its youth.

Highly aromatic, it is mouthfilling, with fresh, penetrating melon, lime and slight capsicum flavours, showing very impressive delicacy and vibrancy, and a dry, lasting finish. Yet this impressive wine is widely available at $20 and when sold on promotion at $16.99 it’s an absolute steal. When I first tasted this wine in September, I jotted down: ‘Awatere Valley style – with style’. In fact, it was estate-grown in three vineyards, of which two are located in the Awatere Valley, but the third lies over the hills, closer to Blenheim, in the Wairau Valley. From the start, this classy wine has attracted high awards. At the International Aromatic Wine Competition 2015, held in Christchurch, it won a gold medal. Raymond Chan, the Wellington-based wine writer and consultant, also rated it 19/20, enthusing about the ‘intricacy and completeness of its aromatics’, plus its ‘rich flavours of passionfruit, gooseberries, tropical fruits, herbs and limes’, that ‘fill the palate with layers of interest’.

The quality of the latest release is no fluke – almost all the vintages I’ve tasted since 2008 have deserved a four-star rating or higher. The 2014 vintage won gold medals at the Air New Zealand Wine Awards, Royal Easter Show Wine Awards and the Bragato Wine Awards, where it also scooped the trophy for champion Sauvignon Blanc. Named after a sheep run founded in the Awatere Valley in 1849, Starborough Wines is owned by Bill and Lynette Jones and their sons, Andrew and James. The Jones family has farmed in Marlborough since 1865. James manages the company’s vineyards and marketing, while the wines are made by David Clouston, who also grew up in the region and has his own highly regarded label, Two Rivers of Marlborough. The Best Buy White Wine of the Year is a lovely marriage of the ripe tropical-fruit flavours of Sauvignon Blanc grapes grown in the Wairau Valley, and the more herbaceous, minerally notes achieved in the slightly cooler Awatere Valley. Half of the grapes were estate-grown at O’Dwyers Farm Vineyard, at Rapaura, in the heart of the Wairau Valley;

the rest were sourced from the company’s two sites, Long Lane and Starborough Terrace, in the Awatere Valley. Cool-fermented in stainless steel tanks and aged briefly on its light yeast lees, Starborough Family Estate Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc 2015 was bottled early and was crafted to be enjoyed young, while it is aromatic, vibrant and tangy. Enjoy it this summer, as an irresistible, bargain-priced partner to poultry, salads and seafood. BEST RED WINE BUY OF THE YEAR Church Road McDonald Series Hawke’s Bay Merlot 2013 Powerful, lush and overflowing with ripe plum, spice, coffee and dark chocolate flavours, this bargain-priced red is an exciting and memorable mouthful. It has already won several major accolades, but it’s widely available and if you shop around, you’ll find it at less than $25. I first tasted and reviewed it in July, for Winestate’s annual tasting of Hawke’s Bay wines: ‘Dark, fragrant, powerful wine with dense, ripe, plummy, spicy flavours, a hint of coffee, and lovely softness and richness.

Praised by all judges, this is a five-star red at a four-star price.’ Since then, it has scooped a gold medal at the New Zealand International Wine Show 2015, where it also won two trophies – champion Merlot and champion New Zealand Bordeaux Red Wine (a category that includes Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Malbec and Petit Verdot, together with blends of these traditional Bordeaux varieties). Dish magazine, noting how frequently Hawke’s Bay is dubbed ‘Merlot country’, also voted it top wine in its Merlot tasting, ahead of prestigious labels at far higher prices. Chris Scott, senior winemaker at Church Road, believes the exceptionally dry, but not blazingly hot, growing season in 2013 gave ‘the vintage of a lifetime. You could not have got more perfect growing weather than that.’ Most top producers picked their ‘best-ever’ Merlot. The grapes for the McDonald Series Merlot were mostly hand-harvested, from vines cultivated in low-vigour gravel soils.

The juice was fermented in French oak cuves (vats) and 70-year-old concrete fermenters, and then the wine was barrel-matured for the unusually long period of 21 months. The success of the 2013 vintage is no surprise. The wine wasn’t made after the small, cold 2012 harvest, but the 2011 vintage won a gold medal and trophy at the Air New Zealand Wine Awards, and the trophies for Best Merlot and Best Commercial Red Wine of the Show at the Hawke’s Bay A & P Bayleys Wine Awards. Church Road recommends cellaring the 2013 vintage for up to five years, but this deliciously rich, ripe, smooth red could flourish for a lot longer. Enjoy it with hearty red meat dishes. Tom McDonald, the legendary Hawke’s Bay winemaker – after whom the consistently outstanding McDonald Series is named – would have loved it. Esk Valley Hawke’s Bay Chardonnay 2014 (, $20) Peter Yealands Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc 2015 (, $16) Vidal Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc 2015 (, $16) Summerhouse Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc 2015 (, $19)