Gilligan Marsanne Roussanne 2009

Why is Coke so popular? Why isn’t Passiona taking the world by storm? Personally, I adore Passiona and think it has a lot to offer the soft-drinking community. Yet Coke flies off the shelves. It all begs the question: are some soft drinks inherently better than others? Ditto grapes; do some varieties, barring easy targets like Trebbiano, simply make better wines than others? 

I don’t care to attempt an answer but, given the role fashion plays in wine appreciation and commerce, it seems dangerous to use market acceptance as an indicator of a variety’s potential. (Hunter) Semillon is a great example, and I wonder about the white RhΓ΄ne varieties too. Viognier is, of course, enjoying an odd sort of resurgence, though I’m buggered if I can figure out what to eat with it. Marsanne and Roussanne are even more interesting. Tahbilk continues to make its iconic Marsanne at Nagambie Lakes, and a street price of about $A10 should tell you how scandalously little it is valued by the market (not that my wallet is complaining). Australian Roussanne is even thinner on the ground, yet my infallible fashion radar indicates a growing interest in these two varieties, even if the local industry’s collective expression suggests a degree of puzzlement rather than confidence. 
Enter McLaren Vale producer Gilligan with the first vintage of its Marsanne Rousanne blend (about half each). It’s a striking label, and I mean that literally; its bold typographic treatment on reflective silver should stand out on a shelf. It should also stand out when smelled, because it delivers a big hit of honeysuckle and bubblegum with the eagerness of an overweight teenager deciding what to order at McDonald’s (I speak from personal experience). If it had lingered too long on this note, it would have quickly become cloying, but the nice thing about this wine is that it keeps defying my expectations. From its Britney Spears start, it evolves to show subtle yet lively fruit flavours (in a sort of pineapple and orange spectrum) and, a little unexpectedly, savoury minerality too. The aroma profile never lives up to the impact of its first impression; whether this is good or bad is probably a matter of taste. 
The palate starts full and generous, as one might expect from these varieties, with a shapely flow into the mouth herded by fine, fresh acid. Again, intensity of fruit wanes a little towards the mid-palate, and it’s here more than on the nose that I was left wishing for just a bit extra. Compensation comes in the form of decent complexity and a pleasingly nuanced structure. That same savouriness as on the nose (is it sulphur-derived?) presents through the after palate and tastes very grown up. A fresh finish of unremarkable length.
You could throw this back as a simple quaffer if you chose but, like an unexpectedly smart movie, it prods and provokes more complex responses. This intelligence, combined with a still-unusual mix of grape varieties, is a lot of wine for $A21. Nice.

Gilligan
Price: $A21
Closure: Stelvin

5 thoughts on “Gilligan Marsanne Roussanne 2009

  1. Well, most Viognier can happily be consumed without food. Some suits Asian, some Moroccan, some seafood πŸ™‚

    Sounds like I’d enjoy this wine. Sometimes I want a challenge! The complexity is key to me. Eg when Mitchelton nails Marsannes or Roussannes it’s the complexity that gets them over the line. And often the orange or orange skin oil plays a large part IMHO.

    I’ll be getting some of their 2007 Airstrip MVR when I can afford to (don’t know when that will be, and no one retails these sorts of wines. Grrr). Very good wine, and perhaps showing more restraint whilst not losing compexity.

    • I’ll share a bottle with you. I enjoyed it even if it threw up more questions than answers about its proper style. I almost wanted it to cut loose, be that tart of a wine that it seemed at times to want to be. But then it would have lost its restraint, a term with prim, proper, positive connotations in wine, it seems.

      The hint of orange (oil, as you say) was really lovely alongside the more tropical fruit; people sometimes speak of a wine’s perfume when they ought to be referring to the smells of fresh things, like fruit. Perfume, for me, is a concoction, something artificial and at a remove from the natural world, yet evoking it at the same time. This wine shows aspects of that idea of perfume.

  2. Hmm, different levels of simulacra & simulation eh? I believe they exist πŸ˜‰ Baudrillard be damned…

    Like the distinction between Perfume and other aromatic qualities. Needs its own post though.

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