Skip to Content

penfolds grange

Australia's Clarendon Hills Winery For Sale

Filed under: Wine


One of Australia's most famous vineyards is up for sale. The Clarendon Vineyard and Winery is located at the northern end of McLaren Vale. Decanter reports that the vineyard has supplied grapes for esteemed wines including Penfolds Grange. It is also the source of the Clarendon Hills and Hickinbotham brands. The land is planted with Cabernet Sauvignon, Shiraz, Grenache, Merlot, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc and Viognier. The property also includes a winery and two unique homes-- one known as The White House designed by architect Rob Cheesman and the underground Earth Shelter House created by German architect Gerhard Schurer. The Onkaparinga River flows through the estate. Expressions of interest for the property are due to close on December 7 and is for sale for more than $10 million Australian.

Penfolds Grange Selling For Record Prices

Filed under: Wine

penfolds grangePrices for Bordeaux may be dropping but down under, the latest vintage from the Penfolds Grange may be the priciest yet. The 2004 Penfolds Bin 95 Grange, which will be released on May 1, is already selling in pre-release for $599 Australian (around $422 a bottle). It is said to be among the great vintages of the Grange (recent past top vintages have been the 1998, 1996 and 1990).

Decanter also reveals that the Penfolds' super-premium collection will also be released on May 1. The complete collection is seven wines that includes he 2006 Penfolds Bin 707 Cabernet Sauvignon with a recommended retail price of AUS$185; 2006 Penfolds RWT Barossa Valley Shiraz - $170; 2006 Magill Estate Shiraz - $100; 2005 St. Henri Shiraz - $95; and 2007 Penfolds Reserve Bin A Adelaide Hills Chardonnay - $90.

Penfolds Grange is one of the top name brands for wine in the world and widely regarded as Australia's most prized wine but at a time when even marquee name wines like Mouton Rothschild are being offered at the lowest prices in years it seems a daring strategy to charge this much no matter how highly regarded a wine it is.

Wine Exec Surrenders Pricey Vintages to Airport Rules

Filed under: Wine

If you've traveled over the past year you have probably seen someone having to surrender a bottle of shampoo or some other liquid due to the rules about carrying liquids on planes. But pity poor Neil Grant, southern region general manager with Foster's Australia, who recently had to surrender bottles of a 1980 and an '82 Penfold's Grange, treasures worth a couple of thousand dollars. Grant was going to conferences in Scotland and Ireland and pulled the precious vintages from his personal cellar. At the final security check he ran into a woman who informed him the bottles would be destroyed because he could not take them on board. He argued that people from Emirates airlines were willing to find his checked baggage and put the wine in there but she refused. He also offered to open them and share them with everyone around. Finally, rather than just throw them whole into the trash, he smashed them. The best part of the article for me is that Grant was man enough to admit he was close to tears. To quote an old song, you would cry too, if it happened to you.

Featured Galleries

Aperion SLIMstage30 Speaker System
Fortis Spaceleader Volkswagen Design White Watch
Gustafsson & Sjogren Stockholm watches
Sensai Summer Skin Care and Makeup Must-Haves
Four Season Provence
Casa Noble Tequila
Turks & Caicos Style
Ulysse Nardin Lady Diver Watch New Colors
Vacheron Constantin Historiques Aronde 1954 Watch