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- HENSCHKE Hill of Grace Shiraz, Eden Valley 2018 Magnum
henschke
HENSCHKE Hill of Grace Shiraz, Eden Valley 2018 Magnum
henschke
HENSCHKE Hill of Grace Shiraz, Eden Valley 2018 Magnum
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About this wine
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Taste Profile
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Expert Review
Andrew Caillard MW
Deep crimson. Fresh blackberry pastille, mulberry, elderberry, chinotto aromas with mocha, roasted chestnut oak notes with dried roses, sage, herb garden complexity. Beautifully balanced with voluminous blackberry, mulberry, elderberry, roasted chestnut flavours, lovely fine grained and loose knit tannins, superb volume, and integrated acidity. Finishes firm and minerally long. A superb young wine that is destined to become a classic vintage.
Drink 2028 - 2045 14.5% alc
100 points, The Vintage Journal (April 2023)
Expert Review
James Halliday
Matured in mainly French oak (20% new) for 18 months. It opens with gloriously heady scents of wild herbs, spice and pepper, thence flawlessly balanced dark berry fruits, velvet tannins and quicksilver acidity. It’s not often a red wine with a 30-plus-year future is ready for consumption from day one. 14.5% alc, screwcap, drink to 2050
99 points, The Weekend Australian (April 2023)
Expert Review
Huon Hooke
Deep red colour with tints of purple and black, less bright than the Hill of Roses, the bouquet more earthbound, more terrestrial at first, with fresh-turned earth and charred oak aromas leading, an echo of the eucalypt forest on a hot day too, while the palate is very powerful, firmly structured and solidly built, with abundant firm tannins and a slight alcohol afterglow. There is tremendous intensity, very full body and amazing horsepower. With time in the glass the trademark dried-herb notes arise, sage and oregano, with traces of black pepper and clove as well, the palate bursting with richness, a deep core of sweet fruit and a tremendously long follow-through, redolent of ironstone. A big wine for this vineyard, with bold, drying but supple tannins and great authority. (60th anniversary release; 57th vintage)
Drink 2023–2048
99 points, The Real Review (March 2023)
Expert Review
Matthew Jukes
The 2018 vintage coincides with 150 years of Henschke family winemaking. This is immediately juicy and forward, then it regains its composure, remembers its origins and finishes closed and firm. This is a classic 2018 with a great fruit expression, yet the incredible concentration and inbuilt density of tannins are in perfect sync. The length is impressive, and the fruit character is kept up from start to finish, and while the earth, five spice and pepper notes seem to sit back a little in the glass, they are buried in this wine. Only 20% new oak was used here; I suspect because the earth and spice notes are so prevalent in this vintage, a decision was made not to push them even harder by adding oak, and so it is a fascinatingly juicy wine.
Drink: 2026 - 2050
99 points, Club Oenologique (April 2023)
Expert Review
James Suckling
A superb and harmonious Hill of Grace with wonderful complexity on the nose that keeps bringing you back to the glass. Minty blueberries, red berries and some blackberries. Heather and violets with beautifully integrated spices of peppercorn and five spice. Graphite, salt chocolate and cigar box, too. Intense, lush and concentrated. This is barely full-bodied but the concentration is simply effortless and the flavors grow on the palate. Super silky and svelte tannins glide through the even and cohesive palate. Persistent finish, lasting for more than two minutes. Let it breathe if you decide to open it now, but it will sleep well in your cellar, too. Screw cap.
99 points, JamesSuckling.com (March 2023)
Expert Review
Wine Spectator
This remarkable wine is rich, dense and generous yet also restrained and wonderfully elegant, with silky tannins and flavors ranging from fresh, fleshy black cherry, wild blackberry and baked plum cobbler fruit to sage and rosemary. The long, epic finish shows strong, malty Assam black tea and whiffs of sandalwood and rose petal, plus a savory note of Kalamata olive that lingers. Shiraz. Drink now through 2040.
97 points, MaryAnn Worobiec, Wine Spectator (2023)
Expert Review
Jancis Robinson MW
Mid lustrous, shaded crimson. Subtle nose of minerals and earth with quite a 'sharp' palate entry. Lots of ripe-but-refreshing fruit suggests there's hardly any tannin here at all. It's somehow more 'comfortable' and settled – less sharp – than Hill of Roses 2018, with notes of molasses but nothing heavy nor obviously sweet. Wonderfully long and refreshing. It does taste like a vineyard in a bottle! I'm sure Stephen H works awfully hard in the winery but this almost tastes as though he doesn't. Difficult to know how long this will still offer great drinking; the Henschkes suggest '30+ years from vintage'.
18+ points, JancisRobinson.com (March 2023)
Expert Review
Jane Anson
Inky plum colour, the deepest of the Henschke single vineyard lineup for this iconic wine. Hang out with the aromatics before even heading in for a sip, because they are beautiful, with a hit of star anise, fennel and white pepper. On the palate, you get rosebud, peony, blackberry, redcurrant and slate, all revving up and lifting off. This just tingles with fine tannins and keeps you fully engaged.
100 points, Inside Bordeaux
Expert Review
Decanter
The 60th anniversary of Australia's most famous single-vineyard wine, whose oldest contributing patch – the 0.56ha Grandfathers – was planted an incredible 160 years ago. There can't be many wines whose inaugural vintage came from 100-year-old vines! As always, it's a powerful, muscular wine built for the long haul, showcasing silky but structured tannins, fresh acidity, and concentrated, complex yet graceful flavours of ripe blackberry and boysenberry, lighter red and blue fruits, earthy beetroot, peppery cured meat and an exotic, herbal incense note. Named for the Gnadenberg Lutheran church which stands opposite the vineyard, itself named for the region in Silesia from which Johann Christian Henschke emigrated in 1841.
Drink: 2023 - 2045
99 points, Tina Gellie, Decanter (March 2023)
Expert Review
Erin Larkin
The Hill of Grace vineyard, in Eden Valley, comprises 13 separate blocks, six of which feed into the Hill of Grace Shiraz. The oldest block (0.56 hectares), known as "Grandfathers," was planted around 1860. The other blocks were planted in 1910 (0.33 hectares), 1951 (1.08 hectares), 1952 (0.7 hectares), 1956 (0.88 hectares) and 1965 (0.57 hectares). The 2018 Hill of Grace Shiraz was matured in a combination of new (20%) and seasoned (80%) oak hogsheads (83% French, 17% American) for 18 months prior to blending and bottling. On the nose, the 2018 vintage assists this wine in speaking clearly of its regional location: raspberry and licorice, coal dust, black tea and tobacco leaf. There are inflections of black truffle and bone broth, which always seem to emerge, however the wine is brighter and more focused than I have seen. It offers a beautiful, svelte display of fruit and tannin, with all things in harmony in the mouth. This is very long, as we would expect from the pedigree of this wine and the vineyard. It is concentrated and intense, sinewy, elegant and powerful—a wine for the future generation.
Drink: 2023 - 2053
98 points, The Wine Advocate (April 2023)
Expert Review
Ken Gargett
2018 has already established itself as one of the truly great years (Stephen Henschke has dubbed 2018 as the vintage of wonder). Not surprisingly, this is a stunning wine, extremely approachable already. An inky purple hue, this is still quite tight but the notes of plums, cassis, bergamot, blueberries and aniseed come forth riding a wave of flavour. There is immaculately integrated oak and the complexity in the wine is already evident with five-spice and chocolate emerging on the palate. The finish is of a length more often associated with great old fortifieds. The tannins are abundant but soft, cashmere-like and ever-so-fine. The focus and structure will see the wine sail into the future. A profound wine of finesse and ethereal class. Well cellared bottles will easily see out forty or fifty years. And blossom over that time.
Drink: 2023-2073
100 points, Winepilot (April 2023)
Expert Review
Jeni Port
We think of the Hill of Grace vineyard as a single, scintillating entity. Wrong. The vineyard is divided into 13 blocks, of which six contribute to Hill of Grace, the wine. Of that six, the Grandfathers Shiraz planted in 1860, are the oldest. To understand what the Henschkes call “the tapestry” of the Hill of Grace vineyard goes some way to understand exactly what it is capable of in a superb vintage like 2018.
What looks like a jigsaw on paper comes together harmoniously in the glass. The fruit soars in blackcurrant pastille, black fruits, briar, earth, bramble, toasted spice, supported by – once again – the most magical and lifted floral aromatics in violet and rose. A fine web of tannins offers a deeper insight, one that is dense and firm, built to last.
The word on the palate is elegance. The winemaking detail bears noting, especially the 18 months maturation in new (20%) and seasoned French (83%) and American (17%) hogsheads. For every drinker who questions the role of American oak in Shiraz – is it too loud? – think again. A smidge of American oak is just one small but telling piece in the great complex tapestry that is Hill of Grace. And in 2018, every piece fell into place producing a wine for the ages.
Drink: 2023-2048
99 points, Winepilot (March 2023)
Expert Review
Angus Hughson
The 2018 Shiraz Hill of Grace is stunning from the get-go, boasting ethereal aromas that immediately draw you in, including mixed spices, damson plum, new leather, five-spice and old earth notes with a gravelly edge. Oak sits comfortably in the background with remarkable all-around composure. The immaculate palate showcases robust flavors and muscular tannins packed tightly together. The wine slowly builds in the glass to reveal layers of roasted meat and spice with exceptional palate tension and vigor to finish. The 2018 is so complete and destined for greatness.
97 points, Vinous (April 2023)
Expert Review
Dave Brookes
The 60th anniversary of what is widely considered Australia's finest single-vineyard wine. Sometimes you've got to pinch yourself and ponder what a lucky existence this wine hack stuff is, sitting here in the Henschke cellar door having just tasted 26 vintages of Hill of Grace spanning back to 1958. Grace by name, grace by nature, it is an elegant, beautiful wine, tannin–acid architecture on point, the fruit depth is just stunning, dotted with five-spice, sage, pepper, charcuterie, crushed quartz and the most lovely, kinetic tannin structure. Finishes with great sustain, harmony and grace. Voluminous and complex, with amazing fruit density and just a complete wine. A classic!
Drink 2023 - 2070
99 points, Wine Companion (March 2023)
