Chalmers Aglianico Col Fondo 2022 (12 Bottles) Heathcote, Victoria

$399.00 GST Included

AUSTRALIA WIDE SHIPPING INCLUDED

Delicious strawberry and cream flavours quickly turn savoury and dry. This is simultaneously fresh, fizzy, racy and well flavoured. There’s a fair amount of spicy, wheat funk to the aroma and plenty of clean but flamboyant flavour to the palate. Serious fun; fun serious. 93 points. Campbell Mattinson, Halliday Wine Companion May 2023

The Chalmers family imported the first Aglianico vines into Australia back in 2001, and produced a first Col Fondo wine in 2019. 100% Aglianico grown on the Chalmers vineyard. The soils are of basalt, shale, sandstone, dolerite, quartz and limestone at an elevation of 210-225m. The must was fermented with indigenous yeast in old barriques. The wine was tiraged after five months and is not disgorged, meaning that the lees remain in the bottle. This vegan-friendly was made with no additions apart from a pinch of sulphur.

In colour it is a bit like the Chalmers Rosato, the 2022 is more intense in colour purely due to vintage conditions. 2021 was picked early when physiological ripeness was achieve whereas 2022 was a lot cooler so hung out there for another 3-4 weeks. In turn the skins were a bit thicker, and a more intense colour was extracted during pressing.

When first cracked open, there’s definitely a healthy amount of reductive funky lees, when this blows off it shows all that lovely wild strawberry, rhubarb and pink grapefruit notes. The palate is all Aglianico, savoury, elegant persistent grippy texture, bright driving acid line and a bit like what the 2021 was showing last week at the trade days, that freeze dried raspberry crunch. Given what the 2022 vintage gave us, it certainly shows a slightly more serious aspect with still plenty of fun and joy to be had. – Chalmers Family

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About Chalmers Wines

When Chalmers began to make wines from the many new varieties they had imported, often they were making the very first example of these wines in Australia.  Coming from purely a viticultural perspective they were trying to understand if these grapes were suitable for growing unique and distinctive wine in their new home.

So rather than work with a winemaker whose approach is to craft and mould a great wine using all the tools and techniques at hand, they set out to work with a winemaker who would let the fruit speak for itself, without interfering too much in the process. The wine in bottle had to be an honest and transparent translation of the grapes, the season and the vineyard.

For this reason, from their first vintage in 2003 Chalmers worked with Kooyong winery whose then winemaker Sandro Mosele was a proponent of minimal intervention winemaking; now a somewhat overused industry buzz word but back then a rare but growing philosophy in Australia. Some of the Chalmers wines are still made at Kooyong while others are now being made by the Chalmers family themselves at their Merbein winery, either way the philosophy remains the same: Wild ferments, no acid additions wherever possible, no filtration or fining processes that aren’t necessary.

In the vineyard every care is taken to grow the grapes with the least environmental impact using organic nutrition and fungicide programs and non residual weed control. Grapes are all harvested by hand at the optimum balance ripeness and acidity as determined by flavour tasting. The hand picked fruit is refrigerated overnight before processing the next day.

The combination of unique characteristics from the varieties and sites with mindful, hands-off winemaking leads to authentic expressions which create the common thread across the diverse ranges of wine made by Chalmers.

CellarHand

CellarHand is a fine-wine importer and wholesale distributor, with a portfolio featuring some of the most sought-after estates of Germany, Austria, France and Italy, as well some of the greatest producers from Australia and New Zealand. Our ethos has always been to build a portfolio as you’d construct the perfect wine list. We work with small, family producers who express the best of their regions. The wines we sell are the wines we enjoy, and the people who make them are like family to us. They are wines that taste of where they come from, and though they’re steeped in history and stamped with the signature of their terroir, they’re more than ever relevant – and desirable – to the Australian diner of today.