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Meadowbank

Derwent Dreaming—2024 Chardonnay and Pinot, ’23 Syrah and all the Cool Things
Meadowbank

When Gerald Ellis started planting vines on his sheep farm in 1976, conventional wisdom said you couldn’t grow grapes in the cold wilderness of southern Tasmania. Too wild, too unpredictable, too “at the edge of the world,” they said. “It can’t be done.” Ellis and his family have certainly kept the cynics busy. “I tip my hat to Dad for starting all this 50 years ago,” Mardi Ellis told us. “There's an element of luck that it happened to be a tremendous site that he planted and cracked on with. It's amazing to be able to produce such a broad spectrum of wines that express this place, from sparkling to aromatics, textural wines like Chardonnay and Gamay, all the way into Pinot and Syrah.” 

 

Nowadays, of course, Tasmania’s cool climes are the hottest property in Australian wine, with the Ellis family firmly in the vanguard. However, it has taken this fortuitous site and the family’s dedicated farming to convert that advantage into wines that speak of place and call you back to the glass. Meadowbank’s position about an hour up the Derwent Valley from Hobart gives it a relatively high degree of continentality, with warm days and more exaggerated swings to the cool nights in the ripening season. “Ultimately, we look for balance, and love the state of tension between fruit flavour and freshness,” says Mardi. “With our typically lighter, sandier soils, as well as Pete’s ‘soft’, nurturing hands, the wines tend toward lighter, aromatic and more ethereal in style.”

 

This is one of those rare polyamorous terroirs that seems to fall in love with every variety it meets. Chardonnay and Pinot Noir are nominally the headline act, both for Pete Dredge’s pristine table wines and knockout sparkling base. Yet equally at home with Riesling and Syrah, both of which count among Tasmania’s finest examples of these varieties. New Chardonnay and Pinot Noir plantings have been added, too, to prevent Meadowbank clawing back grapes from their clients to cover demand, plus a hectare of Chenin—a relative novelty on the Apple Isle. Few would bet against it thriving in Meadowbank’s soils.

 

After a four-year stretch of drier, cooler, lower-yielding years, 2024 marked what Ellis tentatively calls “normalised”, with generally moderate temperatures, timely rainfall and reasonable crops. The resulting wines are exceptional, from the Chardonnay's white peach and whetstone complexity to the crunchy, spiced raspberry of the Gamay. There’s a very classy, floral-tinged 2023 Syrah, too, and a killer pair of sparkling wines (and if you haven’t tasted the Meadowbank-Dredge Blanc de Noirs and Blanc de Blancs, do yourself a favour). If, to borrow Nick Ryan’s phrase, validation is faith’s greatest reward, then Gerald Ellis must be bathing in it. 

The Wines

Meadowbank Blanc de Blancs 2019

Meadowbank Blanc de Blancs 2019

The Meadowbank sparkling program is in full swing, and this 2019 Blanc de Blancs―the fourth release―is some of Peter Dredge’s finest work. That’s saying something, considering this winemaker’s pedigree when it comes to wines of an effervescent nature. The source is the same as the first three releases: the south-facing Far Horse Vineyard block, located close to the vines used for Meadowbank Chardonnay. While the latter are exposed to the north, the Blanc de Blancs parcel faces south in a slightly cooler mesoclimate. The clone is I10V1.

2019 was a dry, moderate year on the Derwent, delivering intensely flavoured Chardonnay with glisteningly fresh natural acidity. The fruit was picked by hand and pressed as bunches, with just the first two-thirds of the juice siphoned off to old barrels for fermentation over three months. As is the norm, Dredge washed one new barrel with the sparkling base this year. After three months in oak, the wine was bottled and spent the following five years on lees before disgorgement (September 2024) with just 3g/L dosage. It’s another fine, elegant, detailed wine from the sparkling maestro: refined and delicate, with citrusy acidity carving through creamy brioche and silky stone fruit. The finish is fine, tight and briny with excellent clarity and length of flavour. A very cool Blanc de Blancs. 

Meadowbank Blanc de Blancs 2019
Meadowbank Blanc de Noirs 2021

Meadowbank Blanc de Noirs 2021

Peter Dredge has vaulted Meadowbank’s sparkling programme to great heights in no time. The estate started producing its Blanc de Noirs in 2018, so 2021 marks the fourth release. Dredge tells us Pinot Noir takes on lees characters earlier than Chardonnay, so his Blanc de Noirs will always be released from a more recent vintage than the Blanc de Blancs. The fruit grows on a northeast-facing block with sandy soils over coffee rock on a rolling, five-degree slope in Far Horse Vineyard. The growing season was moderate to cool, paving the way for long, even ripening. Though yields were down, quality was through the roof.

This release was vinified in stainless steel, and Peter Dredge only extracted the cream of the crop, using just 300 litres of juice per tonne in its production (the norm is 500-550 litres). The wine spent three years on lees before disgorgement in late 2024 with 3g/L dosage. Here you get the kind of quality you expect from a vineyard that supplies House of Arras, made by a maverick talent who cut his teeth alongside Australian sparkling-wine doyens Brian Croser and Ed Carr. It’s a beautifully vinous and decadent release, with a generous mouthfeel and classic Meadowbank Pinot Noir characteristics of strawberries and forest fruits balanced by fine acidity and whopping energy. Add in some savoury complexity and great length of flavour, and away we go.

Meadowbank Blanc de Noirs 2021
Meadowbank Chardonnay 2024

Meadowbank Chardonnay 2024

The 2024 season saw a return to normal yields after a string of lean Chardonnay seasons at Meadowbank. Sunshine and warm days were a feature in summer, offset by cool nighttime temperatures, ensuring fresh natural acidity and vibrant fruit character. The fruit comes off the property’s oldest vines, which are P58 clone and well into their 30s. Peter Dredge describes the vineyard as a “beautiful little spot” with loose sand and sandstone overlaying dark brown coffee rock rich in iron oxides. The fruit was picked over two passes at slightly different ripeness levels, ensuring sufficient acidity to balance the ripe-leaning nature of the clone. The fruit was pressed as bunches to French barriques (10% new) for fermentation, followed by nine months’ maturation on lees.

In the classic Meadowbank mould, it’s focused and chiselled with a rocky palate layered with citrus, white flowers and crunchy stone fruits. Signature cool-climate acidity pulls everything together, leading to a tapered, pulpy finish teeming with slaty drive. 

Meadowbank Chardonnay 2024
Meadowbank Gamay 2024

Meadowbank Gamay 2024

Since its first release, Meadowbank’s Gamay has generated considerable excitement in the trade. With some foresight, Meadowbank’s original Pinot Block was planted to Gamay in 1987. Then, in 2015, a second small Gamay block (descriptively named Top Woolshed) joined the fold. The soils in each block are loose sand over sandstone and dark brown coffee rock. The second block has a component of dolerite. Both sites are farmed sustainably.

The blocks were picked separately and fermented as whole clusters over 12 days. The wine was foot-stomped over the next few days before being pressed to old French barriques before maturing for three months in barrel. Bottled without fining or filtration and packing plenty of lip-smacking freshness, this Gamay offers bright, lifted perfume and an irresistibly juicy, sappy, red-fruited palate. Peter Dredge is pretty happy with this one, and we can see why.

“A delicious gamay from Gerald Ellis's Meadowbank vineyard in the Derwent Valley, made by Peter Dredge. I'm all-in on Tasmanian gamay. I love it. Savoury, pure and beautifully weighted, it feels like it has been touched by the sea – all briny and rocky with savoury-edged red plum, cranberry and cherry fruits with some lovely exotic spice, pressed wildflower notes and light meaty nuance. So easy to drink with a bright cadence and plenty of spacious detail. It'll take a chill, too, if that's your thing (and that should be your thing).”
94 points, Dave Brookes, The Wine Companion
Meadowbank Gamay 2024
Meadowbank Pinot Noir 2024

Meadowbank Pinot Noir 2024

The fruit for Meadowbank’s lithe, detailed Pinot is drawn from a north-facing parcel of vines planted by Gerald Ellis in 1987 (which winemaker Peter Dredge thinks is probably a combination of clones MV6 and D5V12). The slopes descend over Meadowbank's typical loose sand and sandstone over dark brown coffee rock (sand cemented by iron oxides and organic matter), and these vines benefit from lovely exposure and airflow.

Vintage 2024 here was very dry; although temperatures were generally fairly moderate, there was barely any rain. Happily, there was a return to more “normal” yields relative to a run of leaner years, and the quality was exemplary again. The fruit for the 2024 Pinot was harvested by hand over two weeks. The wine fermented on skins for two weeks before being pressed to finish fermentation in a mix of old and new French oak barriques. It then matured in oak for nine months (just 10% new) before bottling without fining. Look out for the intensely fragrant, spiced red fruit aromas so typical of the Meadowbank site, alongside subtle undergrowth earthiness and sappy, cherry-spiked freshness. It isn’t a powerhouse, however (unlike many of our most revered examples); this is not what the Meadowbank site delivers, but a wine of perfume, sinuous charisma and dangerous drinkability!

Meadowbank Pinot Noir 2024
Meadowbank Riesling 2024

Meadowbank Riesling 2024

Meadowbank’s Riesling’s got form. “Redefines citrus,” read Halliday’s review for the 2023, a 98-point wine that sat high on his Top 100 list for the year. You can put the 2024 on the same pedestal. Meadowbank’s Riesling vines are spread across three parcels on the Derwent Valley vineyard, planted in 1974, 2005 and 2015. The block planted in 1974 predates the establishment of Meadowbank, and the clone is unknown. The 2005 block, which accounts for about two-thirds of the blend, is planted to Geisenheim 198, a clone susceptible to botrytis—something winemaker Peter Dredge lets run in most years (provided conditions are dry). He advocates for the botrytis influence to add intensity and weight to his Riesling and points to the practice used widely in Germany—he’s in a cool climate, using a German clone. What’s good for the goose…

All blocks were handpicked. Half the fruit fermented in stainless steel tanks and was handled oxidatively, with a touch of residual sugar remaining and some integration of clean botrytis. The fruit from the other plantings fermented in old oak barriques to round out the texture. Both parcels matured on their lees before blending and bottling without fining. As is usually the case with this wine, run, don’t walk.

“An Upper Derwent Valley riesling made by Peter Dredge that shows all the cut and crystalline focus that you'd expect from this top Tasmanian producer. Lime, grapefruit and green apple with hints of crushed riverstone, citrus blossom, clover, sea spray, lemon zest and lighter fennel at the top, and lemongrass further back. High-tensile stuff on the palate; it's all about pure, taut citrus and apple fruits and a vivid, brisk mineral cadence. Finishes long and moreish.”
96 points, Dave Brookes, The Wine Companion
“Apple and citrus, a little spice and lime zest, a slight petrol character mingles with some floral perfume. It’s a lively wine, though it’s kind of fleshy too with chalky texture, some saline and savoury flavours in with apple and lime, a subtle honeyed sweetness, and plenty of grip on a finish of good length. Complex and different.”
94 points, Gary Walsh, The Wine Front
Meadowbank Riesling 2024

“Meadowbank’s vineyard is one of the most important in Tasmanian wine; a whole host of the best quality and most interesting Tasmanian wine brands source fruit from it. The label and winery itself has had a bit of a hiatus but renowned winemaker Peter Dredge has teamed up with the Ellis family to kick things back into life.” Campbell Mattinson, The Wine Front

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