Torbreck Vintners, Descendant, 2023
Torbreck Vintners, Descendant, 2023
- 75cl
- 15%
- Red Still
- Shiraz, Viognier
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Optimal drinking window: 2027 - 2045
Est. delivery in early spring, 2027
Torbreck's Descendant is one of the Barossa's most serious Shiraz-Viognier blends, modelled closely on the northern Rhône — specifically Côte-Rôtie — where a small percentage of white Viognier grapes are co-fermented with Shiraz to lift the colour and add a haunting floral perfume to what is otherwise a very dark, very concentrated wine.
The fruit comes from the RunRig vineyard's own propagation, hence the name: the Descendant is, literally, a child of the vines that produce Torbreck's flagship RunRig. That lineage matters.
What the critics say:
"The 2023 Descendant is a single-vineyard wine composed of co-fermented Shiraz (96%) and Viognier. The vineyard was planted in 1994 for Torbreck, and the old cuttings used for the planting were from great old heritage blocks around the district. Aromatically, the wine is classically Descendant – meaty, floral, savory and earthy, with mineral tannins and sandalwood as well. There is a fresh juniper character alongside the dark fruit. The intensity of tannin endures long beyond the flavor. The cool season has birthed a wine of great concentration and length, which demands time. 15% alcohol, sealed under natural cork. Drink 2026-2043."
"Descended from RunRig, and made from Shiraz and Viognier, this is always a spectacular wine, and it usually packs an extraordinary perfume. The cooler 2023 has heightened the aromatics to an extraordinarily penetrative level, and you can smell the spice, pepper, and iodine from a foot away! This is, without doubt, one of the most Olympic perfumes of all time. In addition, the acidity is high-tensile, and the chassis shows more rigidity and coolness throughout. And then there are the tannins that rake at the dirt like bullocks straining to be unleashed. And yet, with all this drama, the palate is pristine, alluring, hypnotic and evisceratingly cool."
The Descendant vineyard sits in the Barossa Valley floor, where deep, free-draining sandy loam over red-brown clay and ironstone gravel gives the vines enough stress to produce concentrated, complex fruit without sacrificing freshness. The continental climate — hot, dry summers and cold winters — is the engine behind the Barossa's signature richness, while the old-vine root systems reach deep enough to buffer against heat spikes. Co-planted Viognier rows run alongside the Shiraz, allowing the two varieties to be harvested and fermented together, the Viognier's aromatic compounds binding to the Shiraz and deepening its colour and fragrance in the wine.
The Barossa Valley is one of Australia's most celebrated and self-assured wine regions, sitting about 70 kilometres northeast of Adelaide in South Australia. Unlike much of the New World, the Barossa has genuine viticultural history stretching back to the 1840s, with Shiraz vines pre-dating phylloxera and some of the world's oldest continuously producing Grenache and Mourvèdre still in the ground. There are no prescriptive appellation rules in the European sense, but the Barossa's identity is built on a handful of things: old vines, warm-climate intensity, and a Rhône-leaning grape palette. The Valley floor, where Torbreck farms, is warmer and more powerful in style than the cooler Eden Valley to the east.
The 2023 Barossa delivered one of those seasons that had producers checking their calendars twice. A wet winter set the vines up nicely, but then came the curveball: an unusually cool growing season that stretched harvest well into May for some producers. The rain kept coming at awkward moments, demanding serious canopy management and forcing difficult decisions about picking dates. Those who waited were rewarded; those who panicked weren't.
What emerged defies the usual Barossa script of power and concentration. The Shiraz shows restraint we rarely see here — still recognisably Barossa with its dark fruit and earth, but with a freshness that makes you reach for another glass rather than a lie-down. Grenache positively sang in the cooler conditions, producing wines with genuine perfume rather than jammy sweetness. The Cabernet Sauvignon benefits most from the extended hang time, showing proper structure beneath the fruit. Most are drinking beautifully now until 2035, though the best Shiraz will reward patience until 2040.

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