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Sadie Family Wines

Trail Blazing Swartland from a South African Visionary

The first rule of the Sadie Family: tasting is believing. On tasting through our first, mini allocation from this Swartland visionary, the Bibendum team were left in a kind of collective shock. The fact is, you can be a total believer when you order the wines, but the moment your first allocation arrives in Australia, it’s kind of a moment of truth. Will this first shipment live up to expectations? Will these wines stack up to everything we’ve told our clients? As we tasted, the faces in the room collectively lit up. This is why we get up in the morning—to bring to our market wines that move wine people.

Of course, the Sadie name will be familiar to many of our clients, either through Eben Sadie’s international profile or via the link to Terroir al Límit (where Sadie was a founding partner but is no longer involved). Regardless of whether or not you know these wines, you MUST do your best to make their acquaintance (or reacquaintance). If you knew the wines in the early days, be prepared for a shock, they are totally different today. In short, they are far, far finer than the early releases. As Eben puts it, “…until 2009 we made wine like you make coffee, since then we have made wine like you make tea.” But forget about style, the Sadie Family bottlings, crafted from old vine, high-grown vineyards in South Africa’s Swartland, are simply some of the greatest non-European wines we have ever tasted. 

The Sadie Family team work with roughly 30 hectares of vines, one-third of which are estate, with the other vines farmed entirely under their control. This is quite the undertaking when you consider, at their furthest point, the vineyards lie some 250 miles apart and are spread across 53 separate parcels. Then consider that everything is dry grown and organically farmed and that each parcel, having different geologies, aspects and often grape varieties, will require different management. These vines, (from overwhelmingly old parcels), lie mostly on the high-altitude slopes of Swartland’s Atlantic-influenced mountains, one hour north of Cape Town on the Western Cape. The terroirs include Paardeberg Mountain (on granite), Riebeek Mountain (slate), Piquetberg (sandstone and quartz), Coastal Plain (chalk) and Malmesbury (Glenrosa clay). Further afield, several of the Old Vine Series plots fall outside of the Swartland WO, notably Soldaat in the Piekenierskloof highlands and the Skurfberg vineyards in Citrusdal Mountain. 

“Eben Sadie has become the great curator of the old treasures out in the field of South Africa's Swartland, with his Old Vines series the reliquary.” Jon Bonné

While the terroirs differ significantly, Sadie notes, in general, that he’s farming with very old, low fertility, decomposed soils which are exceptionally demanding to work. With poor soils, an absence of irrigation and old vines, yields are naturally tiny—25 hl/ha at best—and three consecutive drought years have seen these figures drop far lower. There are no chemical additives to either the vines or the soils—a philosophy which extends to the cellar. Sadie’s key challenge in the vineyard, he notes, is preserving the grape’s acidity, freshness and purity—a challenge that starts in the vineyards with building the (previously neglected) soils’ life through inter-planting and organic composting. Whatever he’s doing, it’s working as the wines lack for nothing when it comes to energy and freshness.

As mentioned above, Sadie’s winemaking philosophy has evolved considerably over the years and his wines have become far purer, better balanced and now offer wonderful transparency of place. There is almost zero new oak in the cellar and these days extraction for the reds is limited to foot-stomping, the odd, irregular punch down and, what our own Dave Mackintosh calls, jugotage, whereby the team scoop the free juice over the top of the whole bunch ferments. All the wines are spontaneously fermented and there is no stainless steel, only concrete vats, a few eggs and mostly large format oak. Sadie uses no sulphur additions until the very end of the aging — and there are no other additions for that matter — with a final total of 60 milligrams that he finds is the minimum for aging and travelling. All the wines clarify naturally and are bottled without filtration.

Since we have been shipping the wines, Sadie’s Domaine has increased with new plantings on the West Coast (near the Skerpioen vineyard), and there’s a new project in the Cedarberg Mountains. Then, there are two extensions at Rotvas (Sadie’s home farm in Paardeberg) where the fruit is destined for Columella and Palladius. These vineyards bring Sadie’s holdings to nine hectares—still small, yet spaced over a huge distance of some 400 kilometres. Eben has bought in vineyard manager, Morné Steyn and viticulture consultant Jaco Engelbrecht to manage the increased workload. Despite this increase, Sadie notes that with these new sites, the aim is not necessarily to make more wine. Instead, it’s in planting a plethora of Mediterranean varieties more suited to Swartland’s ever-drier climate—including Vermentino, Picpoul, Marsanne, Grenache Blanc, Cinsault Blanc and Assyrtiko. He hopes these vineyards will help The Sadie Family adapt to the ongoing challenges of global warming and climatic shifts.

Currently Available

Sadie Family Stellenbosch Mev. Kirsten 2024

Sadie Family Stellenbosch Mev. Kirsten 2024

Stellenbosch. Sadie has been working with Chenin off this “truly incredible” granite vineyard since 2006. It sits at 220 metres on the foot of Bothmaskop Mountain in Stellenbosch’s Jonkershoek Valley. With most of the vines planted between 1905 and 1920, the mere one hectare (belonging to Mrs Kirsten and her family) is the oldest Chenin Blanc in South Africa. Due to the age of the vines, Sadie has been interplanting mass-selection cuttings to prolong the vineyard’s life, though the younger vines are vinified separately. In time, the younger fraction will also be included in the blend.Eben describes this hyper-rare wine as his most powerful and structured Chenin Blanc, juxtaposing silky elegance with immense texture, density and power. It fermented in an old foudres with lots of solids and was bottled unfiltered after 12 months of aging. According to its maker, “the acidity in this 2024 vintage is fresher than usual, and it is an absolute textbook vintage for this vineyard,” and Eben urges drinkers to give this wine the benefit of time in the bottle, noting it needs a decade to reveal its full potential. If you can’t wait, a decanter will help! In a word: epic. 

“The 2024 Mev. Kirsten comes from the oldest Chenin in the Cape, originally planted in 1905 and then every other row was pulled out in 1946. Factoid: it was the first vineyard in South Africa ploughed by tractor. It has a fragrant bouquet with sea spray, light lanolin and crushed chalky scents. The palate is beautifully balanced with a wonderful texture, perfectly balanced, laser-like focus, with a deft hint of lemongrass on the prolonged finish. Brilliant.”
97 points, Neal Martin, Vinous
“The Mrs Kirsten block sits at the entrance to the Jonkershoek Valley and is generally the last picked of Eben Sadie's white wine vineyards. Rich, dense and powerful, the resulting wine has plenty of weight and extract, some appealing skin tannins, pear, quince and waxed lemon flavours and underlying minerality. A beautiful expression of an historic parcel. 2027-35.”
98 points, Tim Atkin MW, South Africa Special Report 2025
Sadie Family Stellenbosch Mev. Kirsten 2024
Sadie Family Citrusdal Mountain Soldaat 2024

Sadie Family Citrusdal Mountain Soldaat 2024

Citrusdal Mountain. The Soldaat is 100% Grenache from a parcel of 55-year-old vines in the highland Piekenierskloof Ward (just shy of the Swartland catchment, going north to Citrusdal). The vineyard got its name from the foot soldiers (piekeniers) who once used this area as a lookout. Sadie’s east-facing parcel sits around 780 metres—one of the Cape’s highest elevations—and the soil is decomposed granite. The vines here are unirrigated and still on their own roots. Eben notes that The Piekenierskloof Pass has firmly positioned itself as the leading location for Cape Grenache, capable of giving vibrant, perfumed wines with lifted red fruit, smoky, spicy notes and earthy minerality. This wine calls to mind the elegant, perfumed Garnachas from Gredos and San Martín de Valdeiglesias in the Madrid highlands, yet with precision and class all its own. “The entire wine is an exhibition of elegance,” says Eben. 

“Sliced strawberries, pomegranates, rose hips, orange rind and wet stones on the nose of this supremely elegant, fragrant red. Sour cherries, too. It’s medium-bodied, very fresh and silky, with very fine tannins, seamless but present. Persistent and salty at the end. Great expression of grenache. Fermented and aged in concrete.”
97 points, JamesSuckling.com
“Erasmus van Zyl's farm in Piekenierskloof, located on quartz and sandstone soils, supplies the grapes for this ethereal old-vine Grenache, described by Eben Sadie as "transparent." Fermented with 30% whole-clusters, it has aromas of fresh earth and Campari spices, flavours of pomegranate and red cherry, remarkable freshness and some underlying tannic grip. 2027-32.”
96 points, Tim Atkin MW, South Africa Special Report 2025
Sadie Family Citrusdal Mountain Soldaat 2024
Sadie Family Swartland Treinspoor 2024

Sadie Family Swartland Treinspoor 2024

Swartland. “It’s a Swartland thing,” notes Sadie of Tinta Barocca (the South African spelling has only one ‘r’ and two ‘c’s). This variety arrived in South Africa from the Douro and has found an opportune home in the Western Cape. Historically, Tinta das Baroccas (as it was once labelled) has played a prominent role in Swartland’s red blends, and interest in the variety—particularly from old, dry-grown vineyards—has spiked in recent years. This vineyard, planted in 1974 and located next to the old railway line (treinspoor), lies four kilometres west of Malmesbury on decomposed granite and sandstone. Sadie notes that while the very fragile, thin skin of Tinta Barocca is prone to sunburn, the site’s old bush vines keep the bunches sheltered from Swartland’s intense sun. He likens his Treinspoor to a sort of stylistic cross between Northern Rhône Syrah (black cherry/blackcurrant/grenadine fruit, iodine and nettles) and Piedmontese Nebbiolo (spice, flowers, acidity and tannins). “It has Piedmont-like tannins and Northern Rhône aromatics,” says Eben. Regardless, as you can read below, it’s an outstanding, idiosyncratic red. Eben notes that the 2024 “is one of the most lifted versions, and the purple hue also suggests a new definition of Tinta Barocca, or at least for us.”

“"One of the greatest Mediterranean grapes," says Eben Sadie of Tinta Barroca, although he concedes that it needs time in bottle as well as the glass. A red for fans of Italian wines – it reminds me of Sagrantino - Treinspoor is dense, chewy and a little scary, with violet, thyme, tar and liquorice aromas and flavours of damson and plum skin complemented by chewy tannins. 2027-34.”
95 points, Tim Atkin MW, South Africa Special Report 2025
“This spicy, brooding yet pure wine has aromas of licorice, violets, blackberries, cranberries, graphite and hints of fennel. It’s medium- to full-bodied, firm and focused, with fantastic spicy undertones. Lots of structure. Tight and firm finish. Tinta barroca from 50-year-old vines.”
96 points, JamesSuckling.com
Sadie Family Swartland Treinspoor 2024
Sadie Family Swartland Pofadder 2024

Sadie Family Swartland Pofadder 2024

Swartland. In the 1920s, Cinsault was the most-planted black grape in South Africa. However, as one of the fickler varieties to work with, it suffered a fall from grace post-WWII. It’s only very recently that (with growers such as Eben Sadie and Chris Alheit leading the charge) the “Pinot Noir of Swartland” has been reborn. The results are revelatory. This charming variety is being planted more by top growers in the south of France, and wines like this show you why.Pofadder is pure Cinsault, cropped from a 1973-planted parcel in Riebeeksrivier on the Kasteelberg Mountain (west of Malmesbury). The soils are slate and decomposed shale. Pofadder is Afrikaans for a puff adder, a type of snake in these parts that claimed the life of a vineyard worker in the 1940s. Sadie is a champion of old-vine Cinsault in the Cape, but even he concedes that this is the vineyard and the wine that need the most care. Controlling yields, rigorous sorting and protection from oxidation in the cellar are all vital. The wine is a gloriously textured yet vibrant ode to variety and region. Sadie notes that the wine’s tannins are softer than usual this year, gifting an exceptionally well-balanced young Pofadder.

“Pofadder uses raw material from a 2.5-hectare block on the Riebeeksrivier farm in the Swartland. Always approachable young, it's exceptionally so in 2024, with haunting schistderived aromas that invite you into the glass. Subtle, charming and elegant, it has flavours of rosehip, wild strawberry and Turkish Delight and a racy, mineral-etched core. 2026-32.”
96 points, Tim Atkin MW, South Africa Special Report 2025
“This pulls you in with aromas of peppercorns, citrus rind, rosemary, red cherries and red currants. It’s supremely fresh and silky, with a medium body and fine, seamless tannins. Elegant, but with tension and texture.”
95 points, JamesSuckling.com
Sadie Family Swartland Pofadder 2024
Sadie Family Swartland Palladius 2023

Sadie Family Swartland Palladius 2023

Swartland. Palladius is a blend of 14 white varieties, with old bush-vine Chenin Blanc playing a principal role. Like the Columella red, the idea is to produce a great white that represents the overall terroir of Swartland. As a result, it is harvested from 17-odd sites, taking in Grenache Blanc, Clairette Blanche, Viognier, Verdelho, Roussanne, Marsanne, Semillon Blanc, Palomino and Colombard, as well as the hyper-rare Semillon Gris (which plays a starring role in Sadie’s Kokerboom and ’T Voetpad cuvées). Scattered throughout Swartland, most of the vineyards are rooted in decomposed Paardeberg granite (although four parcels lie on sandstone), and most qualify for old-vine status (35-plus-years), with the oldest planted in 1935. The younger-vine fruit comes from Sadie’s own plantings, though even here, the yields max out at 30 hl/ha. For the first time, the 2024 includes Grillo and Assyrtiko from Sadie’s coastal limestone vineyard at St Helena Bay. Sadie sees this competent adding even more freshness and minerality. The fruit was sorted and pressed in a traditional, vertical press directly into clay amphora and concrete eggs (725 litres). The wine then went to large wooden foudres for maturation. The entire aging cycle was 24 months, after which it was bottled without fining or filtration. Throughout the season, Sadie’s primary goal was, in his own words, “to try and get the maximum volume of compact fruit and texture together with the best potential volume of acidity and freshness.” He has unquestionably achieved that here, with the extra breadth, power and texture setting Palladius apart from his District Series whites. Eben continues: “Over the past five years, Palladius has been the wine that gained the most in quality and refinement, and much of this has to do with the addition of more vineyards and the improvement of their viticulture.” It’s a white of vast complexity; the kind you can sit with for hours. 

“The 2023 offers pressed yellow flowers and light walnut and hazelnut scents in the background. The palate is well balanced with a slightly honeyed texture on the entry. Wonderful depth, edgy, a little more acidity than the '22, with a long, quite saline finish. Give this three or four years in bottle if you can.”
96 points, Neal Martin, Vinous
“Palladius now includes 14 different varieties, with the addition of 6% Assyrtiko to the blend in 2023. Fresher and more focused than it used to be, with less stone fruit sweetness, this is one of the best young releases I've tasted, but will age very well too. Pear, citrus and apricot flavours are underpinned by pithy acidity, with a salty undertone, subtle wood and a tapering finish. 2027-35.”
98 points, Tim Atkin MW, South Africa Special Report 2025
“Very fresh and exciting, showing lemon curd, wild thyme, white pepper, sliced apple, pear, clove and crushed stone aromas. It’s layered and creamy, complex, with a full body and wonderful freshness brought by mineral and very subtle herbal undertones. Long, salty and structured.”
97 points, JamesSuckling.com
Sadie Family Swartland Palladius 2023
Sadie Family Swartland Columella 2023

Sadie Family Swartland Columella 2023

Swartland. First released in 2000, Columella is Sadie’s most famous wine. While it’s regularly described as an icon of Swartland (and indeed South Africa), Eben Sadie’s goal is simply to produce the finest, most honest expression he can from Swartland as a whole. As such, the blend includes six of the seven official red grapes that grow in the region. The 2023 is 38% Syrah, with the remainder a blend of Mourvèdre, Grenache, Carignan, Tinta Barocca, Cinsault and a little Pinotage. Eben notes that the incremental growth of Mourvèdre, Carignan, Cinsault and Tinta Barocca in the final blend has contributed to the depth and complexity of tannins, and that it displays more fruit purity.Eben also wants to capture as many Swartland soils and climates as possible. This year, the grapes came from seven soil types (including granite, slate, gravel and sandstone) across 11 separate vineyards in Paardeberg, Kasteelberg, Malmesbury and Piquetberg. Most are low-yielding, old-vine parcels, although some of the Estate’s younger material also play a part. Many of the Syrah vines have been trained to their stake (échalas style, per Northern Rhône). Most of the fruit was destemmed, although an increasing percentage of bunches are used each year. Sadie has a sorting team of 25 who discard 8 to 15% of the fruit each year. The grapes went into a huge open fermenter for an average of three weeks on skins before being basket-pressed into primarily old French oak barrels (less than 10% new). After a year on lees, the wine was racked into seasoned oval casks (foudres) for further maturation on the fine lees. The wine was then bottled without fining or filtration.Columella is a more powerful, complex wine than those in the District Series, with unforced intensity and a corresponding increase in texture and ripeness. We recommend decanting, and Sadie suggests a minimum of eight years in the cellar before opening. Good luck with that! Bottled with just 13.5% alcohol, it has the finesse, sappiness and vibrancy of great Burgundy (from a powerful year) and the depth and structure to live for decades. According to its maker, the 2023 is textbook Columella (with all this entails). More than ever, here we have one of the new world's greatest blended red wines. 

“The latest in a run of stellar Columella releases, this is now a seven-variety blend led by 38% Syrah and complemented by half a dozen Iberian and southern Rhône grapes. Expressing "all the oils of the Swartland", it has subtle 30% whole clusters, aromas of garrigue, oregano and Negroni spices, fine-grained tannins, haunting minerality and a core of bramble, redcurrant and black cherry. One of the Cape's greatest reds. 2027-38.”
98 points, Tim Atkin MW, South Africa Special Report 2025
“Black cherries, fresh plums, sandalwood, peach pits, sage and cloves on the nose of this deliciously polished and complex red. It’s medium- to full-bodied, intense yet full of finesse and elegance, with firm and very fine-grained tannins. Long, continuous and delicious, with a beautiful interplay of fruit and spice. I love this wine. Syrah, mourvedre, grenache, carignan, cinsault, tinta barocca and pinotage. Drinkable already but better after a couple of years.”
98 points, JamesSuckling.com
Sadie Family Swartland Columella 2023
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AT-A-GLANCE

• Visionary grower-producer Eben Sadie founded the estate in 1999 in South Africa’s Swartland region.

• Sadie is a regional pioneer in site-specific bottlings.

• The estate covers 30 hectares of vines across more than 50 plots throughout the surrounding area, covering almost 400 kilometres.

• Approximately 10 hectares are estate-owned, with the balance not owned but under the viticultural control of the Sadie family.

• Farming is organic, yields are very low, vine age can reach 100 years old, and all plots are dry-farmed at high elevations on varied soils from granite to chalk to sandstone and clay.

• Next to no new wood is used, extractions are gentle, and vinification takes place mostly in concrete, with a handful of eggs and large-format wood in play.

• Varieties include Cinsault, Grenache, Tinta Barocca (sic), Mourvèdre, Carignan, Palomino, Chenin Blanc, Semillon, Grenache Blanc, Clairette Blanche, Viognier, Verdelho, Roussanne, Marsanne, Colombard and Semillon Gris.

• The range includes the signature Columella and Palladius wines–blends of varieties and sites–and single-site District Series wines.

• The Sadie Family wines are in high demand and sold on allocation. We ship some wines in large formats.



IN THE PRESS

“The wines shine through with a level of magnificence that is simply stunning [although the] wines are tough to find as most of these wines are on allocation.”
Anthony Mueller, The Wine Advocate

“...That these rare and beautiful bottlings continue to be sold at prices that would not encourage a Bordeaux Classed Growth proprietor out of his bed each morning is still quite unbelievable, especially when you've seen the passion and commitment up close.” Neal Martin, The Wine Advocate

“I remember him pouring me the first [Old Vine Series] vintage at a café in Riebeek Kasteel with Chris Mullineux and South African writer Tim James. They were not your typical South African wines. There were differences in terms of aromas and taste, challenged the senses and asked questions rather than just giving you what you wanted.”
Neal Martin, Vinous

“To understand the split character of the Swartland, the old and the new, it is instructive to simply stand amongst Sadie’s unirrigated, organically treated, gnarled old bushvines, knowing what they produce, and to see on a neighboring hillside the thick green of long hedges of the same variety—knowing that they are grown to produce abundant, easily harvested crops for Distell.”
Tim James, Wines of the New South Africa

Country

South Africa

Primary Region

Swartland

People

Winemakers: Eben Sadie & Paul Jordaan

Availability

National

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