Pressing Matters Sweet Riesling “R139” 2020 375ml (6 Bottles) Coal River Valley, Tasmania

$242.00 GST Included

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A delicious dessert wine with a clean finish. Lovely with fruit based desserts or soft cheeses. (375mL) “This has almost twice the residual sugar level of R69, but doesn’t taste twice as sweet.

Our sweet wine, also known as “sticky” and identified as R139 in our range, offers a well-balanced taste, with the residual sugar lifted by the fantastic acidity that characterizes our terroir driven rieslings.

Counterintuitively, I wonder whether this wine needs more acidity for its sweetness to reach full voice. Pretty gorgeous stuff.” James Halliday, Australian Wine Companion, 01 August 2019

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“Greg Melick has turned his attention to grapegrowing and winemaking, planting 2.9ha of riesling at his vineyard in the Coal River Valley. It is a perfect north- facing slope, and the Mosel- style Rieslings are sweeping all before them. His multi- clone 4.2ha pinot noir block is also striking gold”. – JAMES HALLIDAY

Pressing Matters was also awarded the ‘Most Successful Tasmanian Exhibitor’ at the recent Royal Hobart Wine Show with the current release Pinot Noir earning a Gold.

Located 7km from the town of Richmond – one of Tasmania’s and Australia’s most picturesque and historical towns – the vineyards of Pressing Matters are producing world-class wines in the fertile and lush Coal River Valley.

The Coal River Valley was part of the territory of the Oyster Bay or Mumirimina Indigenous people and became one of the earliest areas used by the first British settlers outside Hobart with Richmond established in the 1820s.

Embraced for its river systems and nutritious soils, the first British settlers used the Valley as a mixture of grazing, pastureland and crop growing.

Fast forward to 2024. The primary land usage is for vineyards that produce very high quality, slow-maturing, cool-weather grapes and while the area is still celebrated for its peaty, rich soils, there is a rare slither of limestone in the Valley upon which Pressing Matters vineyards sit. This limestone adds finesse, minerality and structure to the wines. Overall, the Coal River Valley is responsible for about 13% of Tasmania’s wine production.

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