Tricky pinotage rewards patient Cape growers
Pinotage is a very misunderstood varietal – and it is now time for the world to give it a chance,” says Abrie Beeslaar, cellarmaster at leading Cape estate Kanonkop.
“I believe 80 per cent of the bad experiences people have had with this grape in the past come from winemakers who do not understand the varietal, and have not managed it properly in vineyard and winery,” he says.
Kanonkop, an old 100 hectare family estate in northern Stellenbosch now in its fourth generation owned by Johann and Paul Krige, was one of the first to plant pinotage in 1940s. They have focused on it since the 1980s, even through the grape’s unfashionable days. Today they are the world’s leading exponent of pinotage, a grape which is only planted in tiny plots elsewhere in the world: California, Brazil, New Zealand and now in England.
Beeslaar is only the third winemaker to have worked at Kanonkop. He arrived in 2002 from Swartland winery to work with Beyers Truter, who left the following year to set up Beyerskloof. Previously Jan Coetzee ( now at his own Vriesenhof) had been in charge – best known for his comment: “Pinotage is not for sissies”.
Today Coetzee, Truter and Beeslaar still meet regularly – they have more experience of this awkward, much maligned grape than anyone else in the Cape.
“Pinotage was created back in 1925 by Professor Perold in South Africa. I reckon Perold was aware that pinot noir was not suited to our conditions, so he crossed it with sturdier higher- yielding cinsault,” says Beeslaar.
Pinotage is a very sturdy grape, which will be useful when it comes to our warming climate. “It can handle heat and drought better than European varietals – and has thick skins which are better adapted to tough conditions,” he continues.
In the winery, the challenge is that pinotage is ‘ superquick’ at fermenting. “It takes just three days, whilst cabernet sauvignon takes five to six days, so the window for extraction is small,” adds the winemaker.
Oak maturation is tricky too. “It is quite a sweet varietal, but with oak you can push it too far. In South Africa our fruitier wines lack structure and tannin layers compared to say Bordeaux, so French oak can help us.” Beeslaar also experiments with part- ageing in American oak for his own label.
In its youth pinotage displays few characteristics from its pinot parent, but with age these start to come to the fore. Beeslaar believes that all proper pinotage should move
in that direction: “if it is too light it will fall apart at this stage”.
“Pinotage is a young varietal,” explains Johann Krige, owner of Kanonkop. “No- one has the opportunity to taste mature examples, so each vintage we keep back 8,000 bottles and re- release after ten years to show how different it is with age.”
Today you can find a wide variety of Cape pinotages – from simple fruity early- drinking to serious structured well- oaked styles. Other good producers are Kaapzicht and Beyerskloof in Stellenbosch, Cape Chamonix in Franschhoek or David and
Nadia in Swartland – but for the most serious expressions of the grape, Kanonkop and Beeslaar clearly lead the field. For the ultimate pinotage expression, Kanonkop’s single vineyard Black Label is £ 140 bt ( not tasted).
Kadette Cape Blend 2018
Superb example of how pinotage ( 37 per cent) plays an important role in a blend, making cabernet sauvignon ( 33 per cent) more accessible at an early age and helping to soften a blend. Sweet brambly fruits, plush succulent fruits, subtle oak and silky tannins. Outstanding wine for the price.
£ 11, Tesco; £ 13, www. frontierfinewines. co. uk; www. greatgrog. co. uk
Kanonkop Pinotage 2017
An exceptional example with lovely finesse, from a hot dry vintage, with cool nights retaining acid. Great future promise; currently dense black cherry fruits, quite muscular, fresh, savoury, smoky graphic notes with tannic tension.
£ 28, www. frontierfinewines. co. uk; www. greatgrog. co. uk; www. waitrosecellar. com
Kanonkop Pinotage 2010
“Winds were so strong in 2010, we lost 40 per cent of the crop,” says Beeslaar. What survived was so good – and still surprisingly fruity considering its age. Forest floor and earthy notes, smoky bonfires, minerally core with velvet smooth palate – hints at parent pinot noir’s softness.
£ 36-£ 39, www. frontierfinewines. co. uk; www. greatgrog. co. uk; www. waitrosecellar. com
Beeslaar Pinotage 2018
Beeslaar’s own pinotage from a small 2.5 hectare plot of shale soils, matured in both French and American oak – shows beautifully fine perfumed floral character, deep red cherry pure fruits and fine grained tannins. Only 800 cases made annually. ■
£ 55, www. redsquirrelwine. com
Join Rose’s Small French Wine Growers virtual wine tasting 3 and 9 October, www. rosemurray brown. com