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tyrrell's
TYRRELL'S 8 Acres Shiraz, Hunter Valley 2021 Bottle
tyrrell's
TYRRELL'S 8 Acres Shiraz, Hunter Valley 2021 Bottle
About this wine
Tyrell’s 8 Acres Shiraz, Hunter Valley 2021
Tyrell’s 8 Acres Shiraz comes from the pioneering estate’s Sacred Sites range, heroing singular vineyards that best express the unique terroir of the Hunter and Tyrell’s incredible holdings. The 8 Acres vineyard was planted in 1892.
Handpicked fruit takes place in open top vats with 15% whole bunches. It is then matured for 14 months in a one-year-old 2700L French oak cask. Bright and vibrant, this is a medium-bodied Shiraz that’s juicy and approachable.
Wine Details
Classification and Scores
Taste Profile
Technical Aspects
Winery and Region
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Expert Review
James Suckling
A balanced and brightly flavored old vine shiraz with dried strawberry, cracked black pepper and cloves. Bark and moss, too. Medium to full body. Succulent and juicy. Wonderful length and depth. Not overbearing and so fresh and lively. From vines planted in 1892. Magical. Drink or hold. Screw cap.
97 points, James Suckling, jamessuckling.com
Expert Review
Gary Walsh
The old 8 Acres, always a bit richer than many, kind of like a Vat 9 in character, Vineyard planted in 1892.
Ripe, red berries, a little earth, and green peppercorn, but kind of generous and creamy in mid-palate, albeit in a finer-boned frame. Fine almost milk chocolate tannin, solid length. A little more come-hither than 4A, clean acidity, lively, but a little rugged, chewy and charry as a young wine. Good.
94 points, Gary Walsh, winefront.com.au
Expert Review
Gary Walsh
Vineyard planted in 1908.
A bit autumnal and earthy, little black pepper and clove spice, maybe some liquorice. A sandy chew to tannin, blue fruit, quite a peppery finish, but heaps of character, and it could only be from the Hunter. Acidity a little orange and orange rind-like, but really good all the same.
92 points, Gary Walsh, winefront.com.au
Expert Review
James Halliday
Vines planted in 1892. Exceptional colour for a relatively wet vintage. Cherries – even liqueur cherries – take control of the bouquet, the medium-bodied palate nodding in agreement, but bringing more, much more, to the party via a luscious assemblage of red and purple fruits. Whole bunches and berries have contributed, tannins making it clear that their presence is not a mere sinecure. The wine is a thing of beauty.
97 points, Wine Companion (December 2022)
