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How to get perfectly aged wine without any of the work


Read time 5 Mins

Posted 25 Apr 2024

By
Alexandra Whiting


A line-up of older vintages of wine and a glass of red wine

It’s time to enter your aged-wine era – without having to put in any effort at all.

Investing in anything that will pay dividends down the track is always three things: an upfront cost, a little bit risky, and more likely to pay off if you put research and effort behind it. Aged wine is exactly like that. It’s a category of wine unto itself and there’s no way to fast-track it. To get it, you need to know which wines will actually improve with cellaring and how long to leave them there (which feels a bit like fortune telling). Then, of course, you need a temperature-controlled space (ideally a cellar) to keep it in. If you’re still just trying to get your laundry done weekly, this level of adulting might feel way out of your league, but it doesn’t mean your palate has to know life without the developed, nuanced, blossomed flavours of aged wine. 
What is the Dan Murphy’s Cellar Release program?

The Dan Murphy’s Cellar Release program does all the hard work for you, with clever wine experts selecting bottles that are prime for the cellaring – wines that will thrive, evolve and only get better with age – and keeping them in optimal controlled conditions (cool, dark, quiet and a little bit humid). Then, rather than a set-and-forget system, the experts routinely check the wines to ensure they are ageing gracefully and make sure they catch them as they’re hitting their stride. For most, this is around three to five years (when they’re still fresh, but the tannins and oak have some presence), but some bottles can take decades to peak.

When that perfect time arrives, a booming voice from the heavens says, “Release the wine!” No, not really, but the wines are indeed released from the cellar. They make their way to the hallowed shelves of your local Dan’s where you can swan in, pick one up and get all the applause and praise for arriving at your evening’s event with something as special as a fine aged wine that tastes gosh-darn amazing. So thoughtful.

What happens to wine when it ages?

Aged wine has been enjoyed since ancient times. Partying with the early Romans meant popping decade-old reds. “And no one after drinking old wine desires new, for he says, ‘The old is good’”, is a line, not from a Wes Anderson film, but from the Bible. The Bible! Aged wine made its way into the realm of man’s greatest delights early in the game, and has stayed there. Why? It’s simple. Aged wine hits different. Not with every bottle (in fact, the vast majority are designed for early drinking), but when you pick the right style, ageing can take its sharpness away, integrate the flavours, and make it more complex, more interesting, and more delicious. 

Wines with a tonne of intense flavours, as well as high acidity and tannins, can really benefit from maturing. As small amounts of oxygen slowly infiltrate the bottle (a good thing, when done in a controlled way) and acids and alcohols react to form new compounds, the wine changes in taste, texture and colour. Fresh fruit notes evolve into rich dried fruit. Other flavours that were previously laying low now step to the front – like honey, caramel, stone and earth. Gritty tannins and sharp acid are mellowed, making the wine super silky and elegant. In short, it becomes a smoother ride. You might just find that a bottle that you once found too OTT becomes your new favourite – or perhaps your current fave is even better with a few years under its belt.

The best way to skip the cellaring process

Now, it pays to know that cellaring wine isn’t anything new for Dan Murphy’s; the founder Daniel Francis Murphy established one of Australia’s significant wine cellars back in the ’60s. Today, there are – wait for it – more than three million cellared bottles slowly maturing in an aptly ginormous and perfectly temperate cellar in Laverton, Victoria. Bottles waiting for their time to shine… in your glass.

They say time is money, but is it? Cellared wines need years of attention, and seeking out a Cellar Release wine in your local Dan’s store can provide you with a bottle that’s had years of patient cellaring, often for just a fraction more cost than the wine’s current vintage. From the latest batch of perfectly aged wine to be released, these are the five we’d jump on if we were you.

The Pepperjack Shiraz 2016

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1. Pepperjack Shiraz 2016

What it was: A fan-favourite red with a big bouquet, tannins and ripe flavours that stay.

What it is now: All stewed black plum and prune with hints of leather, mocha and dark chocolate. This full bodied beauty is now silky as hell.

2. Penfolds Bin 28 Kalimna Shiraz 2016

What it was: A wave of ripe fruit, rich flavour and chocolatey textures that are a signature of Penfolds.

What it is now: Aromas of blackberries, figs, five spice and a hint of grilled coconut. Complex flavours of dark cherries, pepper and licorice have developed and the now-supple tannins provide a rich mouthfeel with excellent length.

The Penfolds Bin 28 2016 on a shelf with a glass of this red wine

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Holding a bottle of the Wynns Black Label Cabernet Sauvignon 2016

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3. Wynns Black Label Cabernet Sauvignon 2016

What it was: Graceful fruit character with lively acidity. A wine with a 70-year-old rep, made from the top-quality cabernet sauvignon fruit.

What it is now: A little slice of history. That bright freshness remains, now bolstered by richer flavours of blackcurrants and cloves. Silky tannins lead to a lengthy finish. This is one of Australia’s most collected wines for good reason. 

4. St Hugo Coonawarra Cabernet Sauvignon 2015

What it was: Raw tannins, with youthful fruitiness. Firm, gritty and powerful. 

What it is now: Fine, chewy tannins, with excellent black fruit flavours lifted by a vibrant acidity. A touch of dried tobacco and cocoa have taken this cab  from delicious to superb.

The St Hugo Coonawarra Cabernet Sauvignon 2015

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The Jacob's Creek Double Barrel Shiraz on a shelf with glasses

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5. Jacob’s Creek Double Barrel Shiraz 2015

What it was: Think red berries, strawberry jam and pepper. Very fresh.

What it is now: It’s gone from light jam to blackberry confit, with undertones of menthol and dried tobacco. Full-bodied with pronounced oak characters of toasted cedar, roasted chestnut and coconut husk. A Barossa baby in its perfect drinking window.

image credits: Charlie Hawks (photography), Bridget Wald (styling).