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Ravensworth

As he tells it, Bryan Martin established Ravensworth in Murrumbateman with his partner Jocelyn and brother David in 2001 because “it seemed like a good idea at the time.” This former chef, restaurant critic, food writer and winemaker at Clonakilla is known for his emotional symbiosis with the region and his exceptionally good taste. And that’s the constant to Bryan’s wines: they express the region, and they taste good. Really good.

Home for the Martin family is in Murumbateman. Here they organically farm 3.3 hectares of predominantly own-rooted vines on soils rich in decomposed granite and red, loamy clay. The region’s star varieties, Shiraz and Riesling, hold the lion’s share of acreage, closely followed by Bryan’s passion project, Sangiovese (on which The Wine Front has written, “Bryan Martin and sangiovese should be shouted from the rooftops). The estate is also home to small plots of Nebbiolo, Gamay, Chardonnay, Marsanne, Roussanne, Viognier, Savagnin and Ribolla Gialla. Martin is unflinching when it comes to farming: the site is certified organic; no synthetic chemicals are ever used; and he uses under-vine cultivation, cover crops and green manure. His soils are rich in organic material, his vines and vegetable garden are thriving, and the biodiverse vineyard is filled with bees and birds – it’s a site humming with energy and life.
 
In the winery, Martin takes a hands-off approach when it comes to additions, but a hands-on approach when it comes to coaxing the very best out of his fruit. To this end, he utilises a wide range of vessels for fermentation and maturation; ceramic, concrete, clay amphora, glass wine globes, all sizes of oak and, less and less, stainless steel. Martin also prescribes long ageing across the range, with each wine now seeing two years in vessel, resulting in a more together and balanced wine on release. Extensive lees interaction helps achieve Ravensworth’s signature silky and seductive textures, as well as skin contact and malo for whites, extended macerations for reds, natural fermentations and no fining or filtration. 

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Ravensworth Shiraz Viognier 2021

Ravensworth Shiraz Viognier 2021

A style of wine that Bryan Martin champions—after all, he made Australia’s most famous rendition for 15 years at Clonakilla. The 2021 is a co-fermented blend of Shiraz (95%) and Viognier (5%). The fruit is sourced from the Murumbateman estate vineyard, from 25-year-old vines at 650 metres above sea level, growing on soils rich in decomposed granite and red, loamy clay. The fruit was processed as whole berries in cuve, spending four weeks on skins before being pressed to old barrique for 12 months. It was then racked to seasoned Stockinger foudre, where it rested for a further 12 months before being bottled unfined and unfiltered.Mr. Bennie’s note below captures the wine nicely. If we were to lend our thoughts, it would be to highlight the impressive purity and texture Bryan has coaxed from his fruit; it’s a wine of attitude and power, yet it’s perfectly balanced and deftly weighted. Superb indeed.

“Oh, beautiful. With concentration but coolness. Like a chamomile tea-soaked flannel on the eyes after too much sun. Red fruit, ripe and rich in the mix, floral lift, meadow herbs and fennel with gentle cinnamon spice notes – wonderful characters for scents and flavours. It feels sleek and lengthy, gentle but with a building framework of fine tannin lacing it all together. Superb.”
95 points, Mike Bennie, The Wine Front
“Lively vibrancy and youthfulness in the glass. Lifted aromas of blueberry, spice, sarsaparilla, earth, dried flowers and violets. The flavours are fresh, bright and crunchy. Mid-weight and laden with blue fruits, spice, bramble and nutty oak. Long, layered and mouth-filling.”
92 points, Aaron Brasher, The Real Review
Ravensworth Shiraz Viognier 2021
Ravensworth Barbera & Nebbiolo 2025

Ravensworth Barbera & Nebbiolo 2025

This cracking red is Bryan Martin’s tip of the hat to wonderful Langhe rosso, the blend so loved and consumed by Piemonte locals. Once again, he sourced the fruit for this wine from the Bit of Heaven, Shale and Duplex vineyards in Hilltops. This year’s wine comprises 85% Barbera and 15% Nebbiolo from vines rooted in duplex soils of clay and shale. Both parcels fermented as whole berries for 3 to 4 weeks in small, open-top fermenters before being racked to old barriques for 11 months’ maturation. A perfect companion for an autumn braise.

“Barbera lends a sweet, cherry fruitiness to this wine and it doesn’t let up much. A nice crisp edge to texture, juiciness at its core, mulberry jubilance comes to play, a touch of choc-liquorice. Faint, Italianate herbal nuance is a boon too. The wine is a little bulbous and sloshy; a sense of fun with that. It feels like something that would be good to drink cold and doesn’t require much brain power to compute. Go forth.”
90 points, Mike Bennie, The Wine Front
Ravensworth Barbera & Nebbiolo 2025
Ravensworth Tumbarumba Chardonnay 2024

Ravensworth Tumbarumba Chardonnay 2024

There isn’t much Bryan Martin can’t turn his hand to, Chardonnay included. He’s been tinkering with the variety for years, experimenting with different fermentation and maturation techniques to define the Ravensworth style. And figure it out, he has. The fruit comes from two sites in Tumbarumba (both run by Johansen Wines): Mountain View and Glenburnie. The Glenburnie site sits at 710 metres and has soils rich in basalt and iron minerals, while Mountain View lies at 760 metres on granite and quartz. The fruit was kept on skins for eight to 24 hours before being pressed to demi-muids and foudre for fermentation. The demi-muids were not topped, contributing an alluring nutty/saline note to the finished wine. After 12 months’ maturation, the wine was blended and bottled. Not your average Chardonnay, but something so much more.

“There’s distinct nougat and hazelnut savouriness set amongst peachy fruitiness, grapefruit, brine, slate and the flickers of alpine herbs and botanicals of the region. That being said, the nuttiness is the charm, suggestions of fino sherry a delight. It’s plush in a way, but you don’t miss a cut and thrust of freshness. It stains the palate gently, a medium weight, perhaps just that touch diffuse, but an energetic wine of easy pleasure and interest.”
93 points, Mike Bennie, The Wine Front
Ravensworth Tumbarumba Chardonnay 2024
Ravensworth The Grainery 2022

Ravensworth The Grainery 2022

Over the years, this wine has garnered quite the following. Though never around for very long, each release inevitably ends up on the lists of the great restaurants and wine bars of this country. And with good reason; it’s a lesson in balance, restraint and texture, with textbook Martin precision. The blend this year is Marsanne (35%), Roussanne (35%) and Viognier (30%) and the fruit is mainly sourced from 25-year-old vines grown on the Ravensworth Estate’s granite soils at 650 metres.The fruit was picked in passes from 20th March to 19th April and pressed to seasoned 600-litre demi-muids for fermentation and maturation. After 10 months, the wine was stirred and transferred to 20-hectolitre seasoned Stockinger foudre for a further 12 months’ maturation. The wine was bottled unfined and unfiltered in February 2024.

“A medium weight and exciting white wine for its compelling some of parts. Slipperiness, a little grip, fragrance, stone fruits, oatmeal, lively acidity, baked pears, cashew nuts. All happening, all so well balanced and evenly spread. It drinks with utter charm and a sense of quiet complexity. Great now, but I reckon cellaring works too.”
94 points, Mike Bennie, The Wine Front
Ravensworth The Grainery 2022
Ravensworth Tempranillo Graciano Garnacha 2023

Ravensworth Tempranillo Graciano Garnacha 2023

This is Bryan Martin’s take on the classic Spanish red blend. The Blend comprises 75% Tempranillo, with the balance equal parts Graciano and Garnacha. All the fruit is sourced from Hilltops in Canberra District, a region whose fruit has constantly impressed Martin over the last few years. Soils vary across the sites, but there’s a common thread of granite with seams of windblown clay sediments and a similar elevation of 500-600 metres. The fruit fermented as whole berries in small one-tonne fermenters. After four weeks, the wine was pressed to puncheons and barriques for a 15-month maturation.

"Formerly known as Tinto, Bryan Martin felt that name was too generic, hence leading with the varieties now split with 75/20% tempranillo/graciano, a splash of garnacha and a dollop of mataro, with fruit sourced from four different regions. Lots of black pepper, licorice, roasted tomatoes and chargrilled red peppers, plus red fruits. A little sinewy, with perky acidity and gritty tannins."
Jane Faulkner, Halliday Wine Companion
Ravensworth Tempranillo Graciano Garnacha 2023
Ravensworth Regional Sangiovese 2023

Ravensworth Regional Sangiovese 2023

Bryan Martin sourced the fruit from his estate vineyard in Murrumbateman and the Young and Harden vineyard in the Hilltops region. The sites hold a lot of similarities despite the regional difference: they have high components of shale and granite, sit at lofty heights between 550 and 650 metres, and vine age is similar at 18 years on average. The fruit was processed as whole berries to small tanks for natural fermentation. After four weeks, the wine was pressed to used barriques and puncheons for 15 months’ maturation. Bryan’s instinct with Sangiovese plays out beautifully here; it’s packed with red fruits, juicy appeal and varietal charm. Once again, it’s a case of grab it while you can. 

Ravensworth Regional Sangiovese 2023
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IN THE PRESS

“… the wines are irresistibly drinkable…” James Halliday, The Australian

“Ravensworth winemaker Bryan Martin does it all – the full epicurean deal. So his wines tend to be all the more gastronomic, if you get my gist. Stuff that sits better with food than legs dangling in swimming pools or flopping around in plastic tumblers, not that stemware abuse is a crime, but the wines just seem to go better with the foraged, the home cooked, the pickled and the homegrown. Just a feel you get. And ever challenging his winemaking, grown and advanced at Clonakilla, but given wings with his own grapes.Mike Bennie

Country

Australia

Primary Region

Canberra District, ACT

People

Winemaker: Bryan Martin

Availability

National

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