90

NV Jansz, Premium Non Vintage Cuvée, Tasmania

( £15.75, 12.5% )

Jansz’s “ordinary” cuvée is pretty good, so you’d expect a premium cuvée to be even better. And, guess what, you won’t be disappointed. This is a little richer and toastier than the regular release, with notes of toast and cream and a supple cushion of bubbles. Appealingly dry. 

BuyDrinking window: 2013-16Similar Wines: £10-£20, 86-90, Australia, Sparkling
94

Greywacke Wild Sauvignon, Marlborough

( £17.49, 14%, Excel Wines )

Kevin Judd is a master of New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc. As its name suggests, this is his wild yeast-fermented expression of the grape, along the lines of Cloudy Bay’s Te Koko. It’s a stunning wine, combining notes of white Burgundy, white Bordeaux and Kiwi fruit exuberance. The older oak is very subtle, the savoury, grapefruity, yeasty flavours perfectly judged. 

BuyDrinking window: 2013-18Similar Wines: £10-£20, 91-95, New Zealand, White, Sauvignon Blanc
88

2011 François Lurton, Janeil, Gros Manseng & Sauvignon, Côtes de Gascogne

( £7.25, 12.5%, Oddbins )

The sort of wine that has made Gascony one of the best value-for-money white wine regions in France, this is a comparativley unusual blend of Sauvignon and Gros Manseng, a grape more often found in Jurançon. It’s tangy, refreshing and crisp, with peach, apricot and grapefruit flavours and a zesty finish.

BuyDrinking window: 2013-14Similar Wines: £5-£10, 86-90, France, White, Sauvignon Blanc
90

2007 Domaine William Fèvre Chablis Premier Cru Fourchaume, Vignoble de Vaulorent, Chablis 1er Cru Fourchaume, Burgundy

( £29, 13%, The Wine Society )

2007 was a vintage that was overlooked in Burgundy, both for reds and whites, which is a shame as they are drinking really well now. This has a delicious combination of honeyed development with bracing acidity to pull the wine back into line. Taut and chalky, with impressive palate length. 

BuyDrinking window: 2013-16Similar Wines: £20-£30, 86-90, France, White, Chardonnay
89

2010 Paololeo, Fiore di Vigna Primitivo, Salentino, Puglia

( £13, 14.5%, Oddbins )

Essence of Primitivo (aka Zinfandel) from the Salento Peninsula, this is rich, ripe and textured, but carries its 14.5% alcohol with ease. The focus here is on fruit rather than oak: plummy, spicy and sweet, with tobacco and Asian spices and enough acidity for balance. Needs robust food to show at its best.

BuyDrinking window: 2013-17Similar Wines: £10-£20, 86-90, Italy, Red
94

2006 Elio Grasso, Gavarini Chiniera, Barolo, Piedmonte

( £48, 14%, Lay & Wheeler )

2006 is a delicious vintage in Piemonte – less ripe than 2007, perhaps, but more classic in structure. This is still in short trousers, but it’s already approachable, with lifted aromas of tar, red fruits and incense, medium weight tannins, bight acidity and a core of savoury, focused fruit. Needs food to shine. 

BuyDrinking window: 2014-20Similar Wines: £30-£50, 91-95, Italy, Red, Nebbiolo
89

2012 Cristina Ascheri, Arneis, Langhe, Piedmont

( £13.95, 13.5%, Great Western Wine )

Arneis is Piedmont’s best white grape in my opinion, especially when it offers the sort of value and fruit concentration on show here from Ascheri in Bra. Refeshing and zesty, with a slight spritz, but with plenty of weight and concentration behind, with pear and angelica spice and a deliciously bitter twist.

BuyDrinking window: 2013-15Similar Wines: £10-£20, 86-90, Italy, White, Arneis
90

2011 Trinity Hill Syrah by John Hancock, Hawkes Bay

( £13.50, 12.5%, Great Western Wine )

This is only the “entry point” wine from Hawkes’ Bay producer, Trinity Hill, but what a cracker is it. The addition of a splash of Viognier gives a little more aroma, but it’s the Syrah that drives the wine and gives it focus. Violets, plums and cracked pepper on the nose and palate, with spicy tannins and oak adding extra complexity.

BuyDrinking window: 2013-17Similar Wines: £10-£20, 86-90, New Zealand, Red, Syrah/Shiraz