Schild Estate Prämie Shiraz, Barossa Valley
‘Prämie’ is the German word for ‘bonus’ or ‘reward.’ No doubt reward for diligence in the vineyard. Small parcels of exceptional fruit (sourced from the Liebich Vineyard) are set aside for the Prämie Shiraz. A more mature style of Shiraz than a number of the younger, more boisterous wines coming out of Schild estate. The winery describes the Prämie as a ‘grown-up.’ There’s more complex Barossa Valley Shiraz typicity, a touch more subtle and less shouty than it’s younger siblings.
The fruit is harvested, then crushed into either traditional open-top fermenters or large format oak. The crushed fruit is cold-soaked prior to 12-day fermentation. Further post-ferment maceration prior to being pressed into barrel. 18-24 months on oak with a little further bottling ageing.
Medium deep crimson. Fresh pure blackberry, dark plum, rosewater, chinotto aromas with underlying herb garden notes. Inky textured and mineral fresh wine with delicious blackberry, raspberry fruits, integrated toasted vanilla oak notes, plentiful fine lacy textures and linear acidity. Finishes with a lovely aniseed kick. Beautifully balanced wine with attractive density and drive. Drinking well now but should develop more complexity with further bottle-age. Now – 2028+ 14.5% alc
96 points (May 2021)
Beautifully youthful and vibrantly purple in the glass. Dark, plummy aromatics, there's also mulberry, dark chocolate, anise and some fruit pudding action as well. Powerful on the palate with all that dark, brooding plummy richness, there's some ironstone and graphite savouriness there and the tannins add a firmness and structure which tighten up the whole wine and gives it some real presence.
95 points, The Real Review (April 2021)
If life is like a box of chocolates, then this wine fits the bill very nicely. Plum, chocolate, vanilla, all the sweet condensed richness of the Barossa on show here, supple and creamy, a little earthiness and saline character, dense and thick, voluptuous and fleshy, with thick tannin on a long finish. Flavour and impact, it does not lack.
93 points, The Wine Front (April 2021)
Colonel William Light, the South Australian colony’s Surveyor-General, named the Barossa in 1837 after the site of an English victory over the French in the Spanish Peninsular War. In the mid-1800’s Silesian and English immigrants settled in the area. The Barossa itself comprises two distinct sub-regions: Eden Valley and the warmer Barossa Valley floor at 270m.The Barossa Valley enjoys a warm Mediterranean climate characterised by hot dry summers and relatively low rainfall. Cool sea breezes from the Gulf of St Vincent modify the temperature, however hot northerly winds can occasionally dominate creating considerable vine stress. Many older established vineyards are dry-grown, but supplementary irrigation is also extensively used. The valley is comprised of rich brown soils and alluvial sands. A long history of uninterrupted viticulture in the area means the Barossa valley is home to Australia’s largest concentration of old-vine Shiraz, Grenache and Mourvedre with many over 100 years old. Although most famous for Shiraz, the Barossa can also produce fragrant and deliciously fruity Grenache blends and beautifully rich, chocolatey Cabernet Sauvignons.