
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|
|
SUBSCRIBE TO WINEPROS ARCHIVE AND VISITVINEYARDS.COM - IT'S FREE Access to the entire Winepros Archive is free. Read tasting notes and wine reviews from 1990-2006 vintages, articles by many of the world's leading wine authors, wine region summaries, and lots more.
To access Winepros Archive, simply subscribe to our free monthly newsletter above. When you have completed your subscription, simply enter your username and password under the SUBSCRIBER LOGIN.
Your free subscription includes VisitVineyards.com As a free bonus, new and existing Winepros subscribers also become subscribers to VisitVineyards.com, the guide to wine travel in Australia.
All new information after 2006 is on VisitVineyards.com. Get free access to up-to-date listings for vineyards and restaurants (now over 4000), wine and food articles, tasting notes, winemaker interviews, and great wine and food touring itineraries across Australian wine regions. You can also win wine, books, travel, hampers and more in our monthly subscriber competitions.
To access this updated information, simply use your Winepros username and password to login on the RHS at VisitVineyards.com Get even more from your wine travels Do you visit wine regions? Then become a Member of VisitVineyards.com and take advantage of a great range of exclusive offers and experiences from wine and food producers around Australia. It's the passport to wine travel that no wine lover should be without.
Find out about VisitVineyards.com Memberhip here.
|
|

|
|
|
Regional Overview
Visiting Australia? Discover our main wine states and regions
Australian wine regions
Australia is a large country - Margaret River is further from the Hunter Valley than Jerez in Spain is from Tokaji in Hungary - so, despite the distinctive national approach to wine, Australian wines are not all the same. The wines of Margaret River and of the Hunter Valley differ as much as sherry and tokay do. The three most important wine-producing states are South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales. As well as bulk production, they each have specific premium wine regions.
Read more about the wine regions of Australia here.
|
|

|
|
|
 |
|
 |
 |
Print this Wine Review |
Home : Allanmere Durham Chardonnay |
 |
WINE PROFILE ARCHIVE |
 |
| Allanmere Durham Chardonnay 1994 |  |
Winery: Allanmere
Region: Lower Hunter Valley
Varietal: Chardonnay
Best Drinking: 1996 to 1997
Best Vintages: '86, '87, '91, '93, '94
Drink with: Smoked chicken
|
 |
Winepros' Notes |
 |
Wine background
Allanmere has no vineyards of its own, but has long-term grower contracts in the Hunter Valley, and has always been able to source chardonnay (and other grapes) of high quality. Geoff Broadfield's skill, together with the abundant use of oak, produces a wine of great opulence. |  |
| James Halliday Feb 01 1996 Rating: 91 out of 100 | Medium yellow-green; altogether a superior wine, with an unexpectedly elegant and sophisticated bouquet of melon and fig fruit woven through with good oak. There is more of the same on the palate, with melon and fig fruit flavours evident first, and then quite pronounced barrel-ferment oak coming through on the finish. Should age well. |
 |
Other Vintages Reviewed
1993
|
 |
|
|