Barossa Valley and The Wines of South Australia

Written by Madeline Puckette

While Barossa is famous for Shiraz, you’ll soon find out that there’s more than meets the eye with South Australian wines. Learn what wines to look for, what makes them great, and how to find good quality.

Wine lovers are generally of two tribes on Australian wines: those who love Australian wines and those who, let’s say, don’t understand them (yet!). To be fair, I can’t really blame the haters. Encounters with yellow kangaroos and other marsupial-clad wine labels at college parties or backyard BBQs may have scarred them, but let’s hope not irreversibly!

We won’t talk about the sub $10-retail Australian plonk-wine market. Let’s focus on the good stuff because there is a wealth of it coming from South Australia.

“If you love Syrah, lust after Cabernet or bold white wines, South Australia has you covered.”

South Australia Wine Map by Wine Folly
South Australia contains six primary growing areas (plus a very lightly-planted seventh area, “The Peninsulas”). The major regions are Barossa, Fleurieu, the Limestone Coast, Lower Murray (Riverland), and Far North (Southern Flinders Ranges). You’ll find wines are stylistically distinct in each area.
TIP: Shiraz and Syrah are the same grape. The name Shiraz was adopted by Australian producers to differentiate their unique Syrah style.
Barossa-Valley-Vineyards-kyle-taylor
In Barossa Valley, you can find 100+ year old Shiraz vines. Photo by Kyle Taylor.

Barossa

Stunningly complex Shiraz, GSM blends, lush white wines (Chardonnay, Semillon, Viognier), and elegant, dry Riesling come from Barossa.

Sub-regions of Interest: Barossa Valley, Eden Valley

Barossa is the oldest and most important region (in terms of familiarity). Barossa is the larger encompassing area for two sub-regions (Geographical Indications or “GIs” for short), called Barossa Valley and Eden Valley. Despite their proximity to each other, these two areas produce recognizably different styles of wines.

TIP: A GSM blend contains Grenache, Shiraz and Mataro (aka Mourvèdre). The GSM blend owes its creation to the Southern Rhône of France, where it originated.
Temperature differences in Barossa.

Barossa Valley

Shiraz from Barossa Valley tends to deliver some of the most powerful, flavorful wines not just in Australia but worldwide. The typical Barossa Valley Shiraz profile centers around powerfully ripe (confected) blackberry, dried currant, and mocha aromas, along with a healthy punch of tobacco and an earthiness similar to smelling a wet red clay pot. 

Often, these wines have significant meaty (beef broth, beef jerky) and black pepper aromas. The fruit flavors are big. Tannins are generally grippy but fine-grained and powdery rather than chapping or harsh.

Alcohol levels are naturally relatively high due to the love provided by the Aussie sunshine, starting at 14%–15% ABV and continuing upwards. Despite the intense fruitiness of these wines, the highest quality wines from Barossa Valley are known to develop positively for decades.

While Shiraz is the mainstay of this region, you’ll discover that GSM blends and Shiraz-Cabernet blends are quite popular and generally high in quality. Wineries frequently produce blends to tease out even more complexity in their finished wines by combining various flavor profiles.

Eden Valley

Eden Valley (and its sub-zone: High Eden) is in a chain of hills called the Mount Lofty Ranges, east of Barossa Valley. The increase in elevation makes Eden a distinctly cooler climate, leading to wines with a tart and intense acidity.  Acidity is an important trait for age-worthiness in wines, and thus, some of the most age-worthy Barossa wines are from Eden Valley (or have Eden Valley fruit blended in). Of course, what ages well also takes time to taste great, so keep that in mind when on the hunt for something to drink right now.

Shiraz from this area is slightly more elegant (with increased acidity) and has a more delicate fruit profile overall. One of Australia’s most famous single vineyard wines, Henschke’s Hill of Grace, is made here.  The area also produces most of Barossa’s white wines, including a bony, acid-driven style of dry Riesling and high-quality but lush styles of old-world white grapes.


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Adelaide Hills and Clare Valley are much greener and lusher than the drier, hotter Barossa Valley. Photo by Stebbing.

Mount Lofty Ranges

Stately, rich white wines of Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc, dry and floral Riesling, and elegant, earthy red wines of Cabernet Sauvignon.

Regions of Interest: Adelaide Hills, Clare Valley

Adelaide Hills

Adelaide Hills is one of the most striking regions to visit in South Australia (and they know it). The roads bumble through gentle, rolling hills and reveal large sheep-covered meadows and beautifully sloping vineyards. The region is cooler than Barossa; thus, you’ll find a prevalence of white and red wines that focus on elegance and more savory flavors.

The Adelaide Hills produce many oak-aged white wines, including filigreed, ambitious examples of Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc. Many mass-produced, stainless-steel-raised wines exist, but these are generally more everyday-oriented than the best rich-style wines.

Clare Valley

Clare Valley is entirely detached from the rest of the Mount Lofty Ranges GIs. The Clare arguably produces some of the finest dry Riesling in Australia, especially from the famous sites at Watervale, namely Polish Hill.

Despite their fame for Riesling, several wineries produce outstanding, elegant, complex, savory, and fruity Cabernet Sauvignon and Cabernet Sauvignon-Merlot blends. We tasted several aged (10 years or older) examples to discover beautifully balanced, tobacco-laced, lush red wines that could have easily lasted another five years or more.


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It’s dry and hot in McLaren Vale and reminded us of Paso Robles, CA. Photo by James Yu.

Fleurieu

Rich, fudge-y Shiraz and Cabernet with savory notes of scorched earth.

Regions of Interest: McLaren Vale, Langhorne Creek

The dry oak-covered hills of Paso Robles are to Napa Valley as the southern hot rolling hills of Fleurieu are to Barossa. Fleurieu focuses primarily on Shiraz in the rolling hills around McLaren Vale and Cabernet Sauvignon in flats around Langhorne Creek (although both regions grow both grape styles quite successfully).

The temperature increase as you drive into Fleurieu is noticeable, and the wines take a more rugged, animalistic presence in how they’re flavored. Intense, savory notes lace these wines: licorice, roast meat flavors, mocha, graphite, and exotic spices. The alcohol levels can get naturally quite high, around 15%–16% ABV, so be sure to pour yourself a teensy portion and swirl it rigorously. If you like rich, flavorful wines, it will be hard not to pour more.

 

phylloxera free south Australia sign McLaren Vale

South Australia wouldn’t be the amazing region it is today had it not been for a scourge (phylloxera) which decimated the fledgling wine industry in Victoria (around Melbourne) in the late 1800s. The disease’s spread to South Australia was limited. As a result, South Australia has some of the oldest continually-producing vineyards on the planet, some with planting dates in the middle 19th century. The Australians have worked hard to preserve this heritage to keep the louse from entering South Australia’s pre-phylloxera vineyards. If you plan to travel there, be sure to clean your shoes well or take them off when you’re in the vineyard!

 

Roderick-Eime-Coonawarra-Cabernet-Harvest-machine-Australia
Harvesting grapes in Coonawarra–a region most famous for Cabernet Sauvignon. The harvest in South Australia starts in February. Photo by Roderick Eime.

Limestone Coast

Black fruit driven, Tobacco-laced Cabernet with mint and spice.

Regions of Interest: Coonawarra, Wrattonbully, Padthaway

The name of the limestone coast comes from a millions-of-years-old sea that once covered the land. This formed the chalky white bedrock of the region, which was slowly covered with iron-rich clay soils, garnering the name “Terra Rossa” for its red color (not a place for white-pants-wearers!).

Cabernet-based wines from the region offer black and red fruit flavors with tobacco and a savory leafy, minty note. While most of the wines from the area are pretty affordable (through mechanization), some producers hand-harvest their Cabernet vines and produce some of the most respected Cabernet in Australia, especially from Coonawarra.


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Lower Murray is the largest grape grower in South Australia. Nearly all the fruit from Riverland goes into commercial wine production. Photo is public domain.

Riverland

Smoky, sweet-tobacco Shiraz and Cabernet wines for everyday drinking.

By volume, the Riverland GI produces a whopping majority of wine from South Australia. Most grapes that grow in Riverland go into the most affordable wine labels. Despite the lack of pretense to Riverland (it’s basically a large flat farming community), the wines can be pretty delicious for the price. The better wines from the area are the reds (including Shiraz and Cabernet), and while a wealth of Chardonnay is planted in Riverland, most are quite big-boned and very low in natural acid.


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Southern Flinders in the far north is true Australian bush country. Photo by Ka Hi.

Southern Flinders Ranges

High-desert style red-fruit driven, juicy red wines of Syrah, Sangiovese, Grenache, and Tempranillo.

In 1865, surveyor George Goyder identified a line north of Adelaide above which agricultural plants would not survive. Goyder’s line also marks the upper reach of the Southern Flinders Ranges GI. Above this line, Australia’s interior is too dry (and hot) to grow anything.

Wineries in SFR are sparse and rely on elevation and the durability of desert-climate grape varieties to create their enigmatic wines. All of this is to say we don’t see many of them in the United States. Oddly enough, despite the region’s dryness, the climate is a little less hot overall (because of cool, higher-altitude nights), and wines are typically harvested later in the season. For this reason, you’ll find them to have lots of fruit but naturally higher acids.

While the area is known for Cabernet and Syrah (like all of South Australia), the other more desert-friendly varieties of Sangiovese and Tempranillo show the most exciting potential.


south-australia-bold-red-wines

Last Word on South Australia

While modern tastes have turned away slightly from the staggeringly opulent, powerful wines that South Australia made their name on in the late 90s, the deep history and new energy in South Australia can’t be ignored.

Many classic producers continue to make bold, full-on reds. Still, there’s a whole new wave of producers focusing on South Australia’s other potentials — vineyard-focused, low-intervention winemaking, obscure varieties, and new vineyard sites are all coming into vogue.

Written byMadeline Puckette

James Beard Award-winning author and Wine Communicator of the Year. I co-founded Wine Folly to help people learn about wine. @WineFolly