Moss Wood 2016 Chardonnay

 

Wine Facts

Median Harvest:  26/02/2016
Bottled:  02/08/2017
Released:  20/08/2017
Yield:  6.32 t/ha
Median Harvest Ripeness:  12.6⁰ Baume
Alcohol: 13.5%

It is not news that the Margaret River Wine Region is internationally recognised as a premium producer of Cabernet Sauvignon and Chardonnay and Moss Wood is well known for its cabernet. However, our Pinot Noir often flies under the radar and it is not uncommon to hear customers remark they didn’t know we make it.

It’s ironic because we were very early adopters in Australia of pinot noir and chardonnay and their quality has been acclaimed throughout the years. Perhaps our efforts in promoting our Chardonnay and Pinot Noir haven’t been up to the mark.

Bill and Sandra Pannell were keen to grow the great grape varieties of France, certainly from Bordeaux but also from Burgundy. From the latter they planted Pinot Noir in 1973 and Chardonnay, as soon as cuttings became available in Western Australia, in 1976. Their first vintages were 1977 and 1980, respectively. The great red and white wines of Burgundy remain the reference point for us, although we are not trying to recreate the Cote D’Or in Wilyabrup. The wines are true to their sense of place.

Our point is, those who don’t know about Moss Wood Chardonnay and Moss Wood Pinot Noir are missing out on two of the dark horses in the Moss Wood stable.

Tasting Notes

Colour and condition: Light to medium straw hue, with green tints. Bright condition.

Nose: Lifted fruit aromas of peach, lime and quince with fragrant orange blossom notes. Behind this is a rich background of roasted nuts, caramel, cheese and soft oak, leaning towards cinnamon and toasty notes, almost toasted hot cross buns.

Palate: This brightness is also reflected on the palate where generous peach and grapefruit flavours mesh with crisp acidity, full body and a firm tannin to give great length and mouthfeel.

Moss Wood 2023 Chardonnay – Fergal Gleeson, Great Wine Blog

  The nose tells you that you are in for something complex and delicious. A lightning rod of refreshing acid runs through this wine robed in lime, grapefruit and textured tannins.  The Moss Wood house style is traditionally a rich and full bodied Wilyabrup Chardonnay. Perhaps it’s the cooler vintage but the 2023 has a…

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Moss Wood 2023 Chardonnay – Ray Jordan, Ray Jordan Wine

One of the best chardies yet from Moss Wood, and that’s saying something with the quality of wines over the years. The nose is an immediately captivating combo of lemon curd, quince and cashew with just a subtle lift of zest. The palate has a sprightly energy with a crisp chalky acidity sustaining and focussing…

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Moss Wood 2022 Chardonnay – Cassandra Charlick, Decanter

Creamy nougat, with a simmering, flinty minerality and lemon curd on the nose. There’s gentle yet opulent oak spice, a little char and pretty white florals lifting things up to craft an elegant and refined picture. In its youth the oak is still persistent, but time should nestle this further into a fruit core of…

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Moss Wood 2022 Chardonnay – Jane Faulkner – James Halliday, The Wine Companion

It falls into the big, rich and ripe camp. Bold flavours of dried pears and apricots with some apple compote dusted in warm spices and butter. Lashings of oak, cedary sweet and spicy, which is bolstering the palate even more. It’s a solid wine, and no doubt it has a fan base. August, 2024  

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Moss Wood 2021 Chardonnay – Jane Faulkner – James Halliday, The Wine Companion

Fans of bold, rich and ripe chardonnay will relish this wine. Off a cooler vintage, so thankfully there’s plenty of acidity here to offset those full flavours of ripe white peach, mango, and preserved lemon rind with loads of oak adding baking spices and woodsy characters. A hint of butterscotch, creamy nutty lees and the…

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Moss Wood 2022 Chardonnay – Erin Larkin, The Wine Advocate

The 2022 Chardonnay leads with a nose redolent of white chocolate praline, roasted/salted/crushed cashews, orange oil, vanilla pod and wafer. In the mouth, the phenolics serve to almost balance the opulent fruit; this is a huge, pillowy wine of substance and volume. It tastes the way custard cooking on the stove smells, warming, soft and…

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Moss Wood Ribbon Vale 2023 Chardonnay – Ray Jordan, Ray Jordan Wine

A recent addition to the Moss Wood portfolio showing the great strides that have been taken in managing the Ribbon Vale vineyard. This is probably the best release yet. It was a superb season and its shows in a wine of elegance and refinement, yet with layered complexity and sophistication. Nice lemon scents yield to…

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WA Wine Review 2024

Ray Jordan “Moss Wood is a family-owned wine company and a pioneer of the Margaret River region. Planted in 1969, Moss Wood is an important founding estate of Margaret River. Clare and Keith Mugford, as viticulturalists, winemakers and proprietors, have been tending the vineyard and making wine at Moss Wood since 1984 and 1979, respectively.…

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Moss Wood 2022 Chardonnay – Ray Jordan, Ray Jordan Wine

Another cracking good chardonnay from Moss Wood. The aroma is immediately engaging with a floral lemon scent and a slight vanilla bean essence. Subtle cut lime and pear edge into add some further complexity. The palate is a powerful statement with a deeply intense creamy stone fruit and edgy lemon rind combination working together. Gathers…

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Moss Wood 2022 Chardonnay – Fergal Gleeson, Great Wine Blog

The Moss Wood house style is rich and at the complex end of the Margaret River spectrum. Sourced from the historic Wilyabrup estate vineyard, there is no attempt to force a lean or mineral Chardonnay from the site. It’s full bodied but shapely.  Lime and nectarine fruit flavours, marmalade and roasted almonds are all on…

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Moss Wood 2022 Chardonnay – Angus Hughson, Wine Pilot.com

This intensely aromatic and bold 2022 Margaret River Chardonnay delivers powerful almond, nectarine peach skin fruit with a rich spicy French oak backbone. An impressive package follows with zesty acidity, rich compact fruit and taut oak providing immediate impact before more floral and citrus tones begin to emerge. Young and tight, it demands significant cellaring to…

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Moss Wood 2022 Chardonnay – Ned Goodwin, jamessuckling.com

This is a large-framed chardonnay, trying its best to burst from a mid-weighted corset of tension. The oak is lustrous, while the creamy core is generous, indelibly stamped with nougatine and toasted nuts, as one would expect from a more bumptious expression. Yet the tension remains. The belt of cedar across the mid-palate screams the…

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Moss Wood 2022 Chardonnay – Andrew Caillard, Wine Pilot.com – The Vintage Journal

Medium pale colour. Beautiful grapefruit, melon aromas with marzipan vanilla notes. Generous and creamy with ripe yellow fruits, melon, white apricot flavours, fine supple textures, superb marzipan vanilla oak notes and fresh long indelible acidity. Lovely viscosity and mineral length; the oak in perfect symmetry to the fruit. A lovely vintage. Drink now -2028 September,…

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Moss Wood 2022 Chardonnay – Ken Gargett, Wine Pilot.com

A vintage of contrasts but certainly yet another of the seemingly endless procession of superb years in Margaret River. The juice was clarified in stainless steel, seeded with an array of yeasts for a controlled ferment. Racking to oak, 228-litre French oak, 54% of which was new. Full malo, blending of all components and then…

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Moss Wood 2022 Chardonnay – Gary Walsh, The Wine Front

Gosh, this is a bold one. Dried pear and mango, mint and butterscotch pudding, biscuit spices, lime rind and cedar. It’s full of flavour, but has a very firm cut of grapefruity acidity through ripe white fruit, with grainy wood tannin adding a drying feel, and a toasty, zesty grapefruit and lime finish of solid…

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Vintage Notes

2016 Chardonnay Weather Data
Growing Season Ave Temperature – 20.1⁰C
Number of hours accrued between 18 and 28⁰C – 1039
Number of hours above 33⁰C – 26

Days Elapsed Between Flowering and Harvest 117 days

Well, folks, we start of the discussion of the 2016 Moss Wood Chardonnay by noting that Margaret River racked up another excellent growing season in 2015/16.  Rainfall in calendar year 2015 was a solid, if slightly low, 959mm.  During the growing season we received 257mm and 30mm of this fell during Chardonnay’s flowering period.  This wasn’t ideal and restricted yields somewhat but the nights weren’t cold and that certainly worked in our favour.

Overall, the temperatures were very reasonable, with the Chardonnay experiencing 1039 hours between 18⁰C and 28⁰C, plus some good warm days, two of which saw the mercury reach 39⁰C, giving a total of 56 hours above 33⁰C.

The median harvest date of 26th February was 5 days earlier than average, although the time elapsed from flowering to harvest was slower than average, 117 days compared with 113 days.

All this suggests the weather was benign but in fact Mother Nature threw us a big curve ball, a hint of which can be seen in the last paragraph.  Why was the season period from flowering to harvest extended by 4 days?  The answer is, we had 115mm of rain during January, 106mm of which fell over 3 days, the 18th, 19th and 20th.  This was very worrying but by a combination of good luck and good management we were able to get through with no damage, although it was all a bit close for comfort.

The good luck came with the timing.  Rain can cause the fruit to split, which in turn allows rot to take hold.  Fortunately, all the varieties still had hard green berries that are resistant to splitting but had the rain come a week later, with the resulting increase in ripeness, the Chardonnay grapes would have been softening and very prone indeed.

Without wanting to take too much credit, we can also claim our management made a contribution as well.  Yes, the timing of the rain was in our favour, but any rain can promote fungal infections on the leaves and the fruit.  That this didn’t happen is a tribute to our spray program and we’d like to think this is the result of our careful work in this area.

As with all industries, technology advances and wine is no different.  For the 2015/16 growing season we took a significant step forward and replaced our old-fashioned “air blast” fungicide sprayer with a new, self-calibrating machine which captures and recycles any spray drift.

The accuracy and efficiency of the new unit has exceeded our expectations.  Spray volumes are accurate to within 5% of our target and there is no waste.  The recycling system ensures any liquid that doesn’t hit the plant is recovered and returned to the tank.  There is no unnecessary drift into the environment and refills are reduced, so spraying time is cut by half.  Most importantly of all, under extreme conditions, the spray program worked.

Having got the fruit safely past these various challenges, harvest commenced on 26thFebruary at a ripeness of 12.6⁰ Baume.

Production Notes

All the fruit was hand-picked, whole bunch pressed and then the juice was settled in stainless steel tank for 48 hours.  Once clarified, it was seeded with a mixture of different yeast cultures and racked to wood for the primary and malolactic fermentations.  All the barrels were 228 litre French oak and 50% were new.

After 16 months, all the barrels were racked and blended in stainless steel.  Fining trials were carried out and the wine was fined with bentonite for protein stability and no other treatments were necessary.  It was then sterile filtered and bottled on 2nd August, 2017.

Cellaring Notes

Here at Moss Wood the consensus is this is quite likely the best Chardonnay we’ve made since 2006 and looms as a rival for Keith’s favourite, the 1984. Speaking of the latter, when we tried our last bottle in 2016, it had survived the journey to 32 years old and done it in style. We have the same expectation of the 2016 and believe it will show off its great fruit depth for the next decade, after which the bottle bouquet will gradually emerge, such that full maturity should be reached around 20 years cellaring. Beyond that, it should age slowly and gracefully to beyond 30 years of age.

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