Type: Red Wine
Country: South Africa
Region: Western Cape
Code: AVON340
A rich, complex and enticing organic red made from a blend of six varieties, the Jonty's Ducks wines are named after Avondale's team of natural pest controllers - their flock of ducks!

Avondale Wine

Avondale are groundbreaking producers of wine with their biodynamic approach and premium wines admired globally. Early archives outline their 160-hectare farm was one of the first wine growing regions in Paarl in the 1700’s. In recent times, the Grieve family purchased the property and thus Avondale was born in 1997.

Jonathan, their youngest son was head of operations for their first Vintage in 1999, 1 year before a catastrophic fire in 2000 that devasted the area. This did not deter Jonathan who used this as an opportunity to transform how they worked. He aimed to create a harmonious ecosystem – sculpting the land and its natural systems in a liberated and sustainable w...

On the nose there is lots of blackcurrant and liquorice, with a hint of dark chocolate and ground coffee. The wine has an explosion of creamy red fruits on the palate and well integrated, elegant tannins to support it.
Try with a warming, rustic casserole of confit duck with haricot beans.
Each of the 6 grape varieties (Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot, Petit Verdot, Syrah and Malbec) is grown on separate 1 hectare blocks dotted around the farm, with each block planted on a particular soil type. The grapes are picked at optimim ripening, which sometimes requires each block to be picked over several days. The grapes are fermented on skins for around 30 days in separate tanks, allowing soft and even extraction of colour, tannins and acidity. No enzymes, softeners or additives are used as Avondale practice slow wine-making, and around 1/2 the normal sulphur is used throught the wine-making process. After fermenting the wines are blended and then bottled, before further ageing prior to release.

Jancisrobinson.com, June 2024, 15.5 points: "Nice red fruit – plums and strawberries."

More from the same