Moss Wood 2019 Pinot Noir
Wine Facts | |
---|---|
Median Harvest Date | 13th March, 2019 |
Mean Harvest Ripeness | 14.2° Be |
Weather Data | Growing Season Ave Temperature – 18.7⁰C Number of hours accrued between 18 and 28⁰C – 1035 Number of hours above 33⁰C – 6 |
Yield | 5.78 t/ha |
Ripening Time from Flowering to Harvest | 105 days |
Bottled | 2nd November, 2020 |
Released | 09th September, 2021 |
Alcohol | 14.0 % |
Wine Facts
-
Median Harvest Date
13th March, 2019
-
Harvest Ripeness
14.2° Be
-
Weather Data
Growing Season Ave Temperature - 18.7⁰C
Number of hours accrued between 18° and 28⁰C – 1035
Number of hours above 33⁰C – 6
-
Yield
5.78 t/ha
-
Ripening Time from Flowering to Harvest
105 days
-
Bottled
2nd November, 2020
-
Released
09th September, 2021
-
Alcohol
14.0 %
Moss Wood 2022 Pinot Noir – Fergal Gleeson, Great Wine Blog
Moss Wood Pinot Noir 2022 is a delicious and accomplished wine. Lots of ‘pinotosity’ on the nose – strawberry, cherry and florals. Those red fruits flow through on the palate in what is a well balanced wine. Balance? It’s the refreshing, bright acid and fine smooth tannins that accompany the…
Moss Wood 2022 Pinot Noir – Ray Jordan, Ray Jordan Wine
Pinot in Margaret River remains an enigma. Yet when you get good years it works well. The generosity of the ’22 vintage is captured in this pretty and powerful pinot. Wild raspberry and cherry notes with a subtle spice. The palate is deeply intense but delivers a light effortless touch….
Moss Wood 2021 Pinot Noir – Jane Faulkner – James Halliday, The Wine Companion
Vibrant and lively, full of red flowers and redcurrants, black cherries and dried raspberry powder with some red lollies too. The palate is tight, a little lean, yet full of sweet fruit and puckering acidity, which does temper the slight bitter green edge to the tannins. It has an appeal….
Moss Wood 2020 Pinot Noir – Erin Larkin, The Wine Advocate
The 2020 Pinot Noir is concentrated and red fruited, with berries and garden mint. The mint character feels like a vineyard characteristic to me, as I see it so often in the wines, and it sits so well within the red fruit character of the wine, which includes red cherries,…
Moss Wood 2021 Pinot Noir – Erin Larkin, The Wine Advocate
The 2021 Pinot Noir leads with strawberry and garden mint on the nose, which pull through onto the palate. The wine is intense and concentrated, although light in the glass, and it shows a cavalcade of red fruits, briar, rose, cherry, pomegranate and pink peppercorns. This is a really lovely…
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…
Moss Wood 2021 Pinot Noir – Fergal Gleeson, Great Wine Blog
Beautiful aromatics of black and red fruits on the nose. they follow through on tasting along with cola and some fine, earthy tannins. It’s a clean and polished Pinot with great balance and acidity courtesy of a cooler vintage. Not many have followed Moss Wood’s lead on making a premium…
Moss Wood 2021 Pinot Noir – Ray Jordan, Ray Jordan Wine
This cooler vintage was ideal for pinot from this part of Margaret River. Perfumed and highly scented aromas of strawberry and sour cherry with a slightly truffly influence. The velvety palate captures that iron fist in a velvet varietal character. Smooth and seamless with a gossamer like sheen. Beautiful. November,…
Moss Wood 2021 Pinot Noir – Angus Hughson, Wine Pilot.com
This gently fragrant 2021 Pinot Noir offers up fleshy aromas of raspberry compote, tobacco and spice, nicely framed by French oak. Dry, and mid weight, layers of red licorice and raspberry flavours rise up on a supple palate with commendable length. Very approachable to enjoy now and over the medium…
Moss Wood 2021 Pinot Noir – Andrew Caillard, Wine Pilot.com – The Vintage Journal
Medium deep crimson. Very attractive strawberry pastille, red cherry, chinotto aromas and flavours, fine slinky textures, lovely mid palate viscosity and underlying roasted walnut notes. Finishes chalky and minerally with seductive sweet fruits. Early to medium term drinking wine. Drink now – 2027 September, 2023
Vintage Notes
One of wine’s great attractions is the natural variations in style that come with each new season. It’s a fascination for both winemakers and consumers. On the production side, vignerons are mere spectators while Mother Nature goes about her business and as events unfold, we wait to see which new direction we might be going in. So, it was in 2018/19 growing season.
The fun started right at the beginning, when we had a frost on 16th September. Luckily for the Pinot Noir, the vineyard is situated high enough in our valley for the cold air to drain away on a frosty night, so no problem there. However, the cool weather continued right through the full season and the median flowering date for the Pinot Noir was over 2 weeks late on 26th November. If the days are mild, the nights can be cold and we had 9 days when the temperature dropped below 8°C and indeed, on the 30th November, we had a very cool 2.9°C. Add to that we had 48mm rain on 8 of the 36 flowering days. This is not particularly wet but does add insult to the injury caused by the low temperatures. The net result was bunch weights were down by around 15% and at 5.78 t/ha, likewise the overall yield.
We hoped this might be an end to things but Mother Nature wasn’t yet finished.
At the end of January 2019, she decided to give 68mm of rain and then a further 31mm just before we started picking the Pinot Noir. This led us into some interesting winemaking.
By the time the rain came, the fruit had ripened to the point where it was changing colour and softening. Pinot Noir, as always, responds in a way all its own. The grapes very rarely split but because the berries are tightly clustered, they can tear from the stems. Many will simply drop off the bunch and when we walk through the vineyard, we find lots of them lying under the vines. Those that remain in the bunch dry out, leaving quite a few raisins and these, of course, increase the sugar level of the juice.
The complication is, the sound berries that provide the major fruit flavours in the finished wine, remain relatively immature, so, to avoid green notes, we wait until they have reached full flavour maturity before we harvest. To get the balance right we have to sample regularly and carefully.
This leads to a surprising result, where a cool and slightly wet vintage produces a slightly riper wine but often with the finer, early fruit notes still intact.
When all the boxes were finally ticked, we got under way on 8th March, roughly two weeks later than average, with a ripeness of 14.2 Baume, notably above our average of 13.4.
Production Notes
All the fruit was hand-picked, sorted and destemmed into small, open stainless steel fermenters. After cold-soaking for 48 hours, each batch was seeded with multiple yeast strains for primary fermentation and then hand-plunged 3 times per day. Temperature of fermentation was controlled to a maximum of 32°C. The wines remained on skins for 15 days and were then pressed to stainless steel tank.
Once malolactic fermentation was completed each batch was adjusted and racked to 228 litre French oak barrels, 12% of which were new. In October 2020, after 20 months aging, all barrels were racked and blended in stainless steel and fining trials were carried out to assess tannin balance. There was no improvement, so the wine remained unfined and was then sterile filtered and bottled on 2 nd November, 2020.
Tasting Notes
Colour and condition:
Medium ruby hue; bright condition.
Nose
Lifted, almost joyful aromas of strawberry jam, cherries and musk sticks, combined with poplar sap, cloves, mocha, earth and mushroom and light oak background.
Palate
The bright fruit note theme continues with strawberry-like red fruits, plus plums, cherries and rhubarb filling the full length of the palate. There is medium body, so the mouthfeel is generous and then the finish is a balanced combination of toasty oak and tannin.
Cellaring
Given the ripe stature and power of the vintage described above, this will be a long-lived Pinot Noir. Sure, it has a lovely and approachable generosity now but over the next 20 years it will build into a really complex wine. For those who have the cellar space and the patience, it will definitely be worth the wait.