Decanter

South Africa’s Semillon Gris: a remarkable phenomenon

Growers in the Cape are nurturing this red mutation of the green Semillon Blanc grape. Malu Lambert investigat­es the unusual phenomenon, first identified in vineyards here back in the 1800s

- Malu Lambert

There’s something strange happening in South Africa’s Semillon vineyards. Green bunches turn red one year, then back to green the next. Hung like Christmas baubles on gnarled bush vines, the shapeshift­ing clusters are an enduring mystery.

Viticultur­al juggernaut and protector of old vines Rosa Kruger thought she was losing her mind when she first noticed this phenomenon, known as red Semillon or Semillon Gris.

‘I started marking the mutated [red] vines while taking cuttings for planting material,’ she explained when I asked her about the variety. ‘The following year the bunches on the vine would be green again. I thought I was making a mistake, but after a couple of years I realised that Semillon Gris can actually mutate back to Blanc. In general though, the Gris vineyards are fairly consistent once they’ve mutated.’

Semillon Gris seems only to occur in the Cape winelands and appears to be an old-vine oddity. One of the Cape’s oldest varieties, Semillon was widely planted in the early 1800s. It was so ubiquitous it was simply called Groen Druif translated from Afrikaans as ‘green grape’.

These days, plantings of Semillon have fallen massively, though there are still pockets of heritage vineyards, some more than 100 years old, carefully guarded by viticultur­ists and winemakers.

In the early 1800s it’s said that 80% of the vines in South Africa were thought to be Semillon. By the mid-1800s, half of these had mutated into Semillon Gris.

Green and red

Is the secret the Cape’s sunshine? One such sun-soaked day before the Covid-19 lockdown, I made my way to Swartland for the weekend. My first stop was to track down Andrea Mullineux of Mullineux & Leeu Family Wines, to pull at the threads of this red-skinned mystery.

It’s big sky and big sun country here, and the aspect of Roundstone Farm – tucked into a mountainsi­de in Swartland’s heartland – is tilted just right to soak up those life-giving rays. Since purchasing Roundstone in 2014, Andrea and husband Chris have planted Syrah, Chenin Blanc, Cinsault, Clairette Blanche, Roussanne, Maccabeu and Semillon Gris. The vineyards fan over a bedrock of deep schist.

‘It’s all about texture,’ Andrea says of the glass of The Gris Semillon Old Vines 2018 she has poured. ‘It’s from an extremely rare, dryfarmed vineyard planted in 1960 on the granite soils of the Paardeberg. The grapes were hand-picked and fermented naturally in a single barrel.’

Aromas of pear, orange rind and jasmine tea rise from the glass, but this wine is all about the palate. There’s a tension; a pull between chalkiness and an oily glycerol roundness, with a saline edge and bright, pithy acidity.

As I leave, Andrea hands me my next piece of the Semillon Gris puzzle: ‘Get hold of Jasper Wickens. He has a wine you must try.’

Sun and latitude

Winemaker Jasper and his viticultur­ist wife Franziska make wines under their Swerwer label on her family farm in Paardeberg. Jasper thinks the key to the Gris mutation may lie in South Africa’s latitude.

‘For centuries Semillon was the Cape’s most widely planted grape, and as time passed in its new African environmen­t – with hotter, more intense sun and UV conditions than in France – farmers discovered their grapes turning red or pink. My guess is the pigmentati­on is a way for the grape to protect itself from the sun.

‘It used to be such a common sight that farmers simply referred to it as Rooi-Groendruif or Rooi-Groen [red-green] for short,’ he explains. ‘We have old records which show the number of mutated vines. In certain cases & Home

Food

Andrea & Chris Mullineux with family, Mullineux & Leeu Family Wines farms were told to harvest and deliver the two colours of grapes to the co-ops separately. This is how common and significan­t the phenomenon was.’

He pours a bottle of his Swerwer, RooiGroen Semillon 2018. Where the Mullineux wine was lemon in colour, Jasper has worked more with the skins to produce a wine that is burnished copper. There’s gingered peach, orange and blossom aromas. Then nectarine, red apple and grapefruit fill the palate, leading to a gently savoury finish.

Not only is the wine a triumph in taste but so is its genesis: produced from a young Gris vineyard planted specifical­ly for the purpose – something not thought possible. ‘Franziska and her father started selecting mutated vineyard material from an old 1960s block,’ he explains. ‘From those propagated cuttings, they then selected the best young vines over a three-year period. The grapes stayed pink-red. From this vineyard only the best material was again used to establish another vineyard close to my cellar. That vineyard is now six years old.’

Ancient vines

A few hours’ drive from Swartland is Franschhoe­k, the unofficial capital of old-vine Semillon, with the oldest block dating back to 1902. Surrounded by three mountains, there are more shadows here than in Swartland, but the sun still locks heat into the alluvial soils.

Franschhoe­k’s most famous Semillon vineyard is called La Colline. Planted in 1936, it’s used by a few lucky winemakers, including Chris Alheit of Alheit Vineyards.

‘During summer, these tightly planted bush vines form a slightly wild-looking mess of life and grapes,’ Alheit says. ‘In winter they resemble a crowd of drunkards cartwheeli­ng across the slope. It is a beautiful old thing.’

The Semillon Blanc here is interplant­ed with the Gris: ‘At this age the vines are very settled, giving a dependable crop of perfect little yellow and pink pearls of flavour,’ he says.

Boekenhout­skloof, hidden away in the furthest corner of Franschhoe­k, also makes use of La Colline. Winemaker Gottfried Mocke blends parcels of both Gris and Blanc from the three oldest vineyards in the region: 1902, 1936 and 1942. The grapes are whole-bunch pressed and then spontaneou­s fermentati­on takes place in foudres and concrete eggs.

To create the oxidative style he is looking for, Mocke ferments the juice at low temperatur­es in order to inhibit malolactic activity. His 2017 Semillon is rich and

from the historic La Colline vineyard, vinified by Adam Mason. Crushed peaches, camomile tea and crisp red apple crunch together on a fine-textured palate with a chalky, savoury finish.

Drink 2020-2030 Alc 13%

Swerwer by JC Wickens, Rooi- Groen Semillon, Swartland 2018 90

N/A UK @swerwerwin­e

Rooi-groen (‘red-green’) is an old Afrikaans colloquial­ism used by farmers in South Africa to describe the colourchan­ging ability of Semillon, widely thought to be an old-vine phenomenon. Winemaker Jasper Wickens and his viticultur­ist wife Franziska have produced this 100% Gris from a vineyard planted six years ago with cuttings from a block dating back to the 1960s. Thanks to partial skin contact, it has a shimmering, copper-pink hue. On the nose there’s gingered peach, orange, honeycomb and white blossom. Nectarine, red apple and pink grapefruit fill the palate, complement­ed by soft acidity and a gently savoury finish.

Drink 2020-2024 Alc 13.5%

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 ??  ?? Malu Lambert was named Emerging Wine Writer of the Year at the Louis Roederer Internatio­nal Wine Writers’ Awards 2019. She writes for numerous South African titles and is the wine editor of the country’s
magazine
Malu Lambert was named Emerging Wine Writer of the Year at the Louis Roederer Internatio­nal Wine Writers’ Awards 2019. She writes for numerous South African titles and is the wine editor of the country’s magazine
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 ??  ?? Above: Chris Alheit of Alheit Vineyards
Above: Chris Alheit of Alheit Vineyards
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