Spring has come and my drinking turns to cooler regions. While Tasmania has no official subregions, the zone of Piper’s River in the northeast is one of the coolest. This remarkable little district of rolling hills and sweeping Bass Strait vistas has increasingly established its credentials as home to Australia’s most elegant sparkling wines.
The ever-present influence of the nearby ocean makes this a particularly humid place, and this is a key to its success with sparkling, according to local grape-growing pioneer and PhD scientist in viticulture, Dr Andrew Pirie.
“Humidity is as important as temperature in determining wine style and the fingerprint of every region,” he says. Andrew perceives the most profound impact of moisture to be in the level and texture of the tannin structure. Dry conditions produce not only more tannin, but also more assertive tannin. This is most dramatically expressed in pinot noir for sparkling rosé, where the soft, subtle tannins of Piper’s River are the holy grail.
I drink and serve a lot of sparkling rosé in springtime, and when it’s not Champagne, it’s Piper’s River. There’s a good reason that sparkling rosé is the flavour of the moment, and I love its food-friendly versatility and wide appeal, as seen with the four examples below.
The ever-present influence of the nearby ocean makes this a particularly humid place, and this is a key to its success with sparkling, according to local grape-growing pioneer and PhD scientist in viticulture, Dr Andrew Pirie.
“Humidity is as important as temperature in determining wine style and the fingerprint of every region,” he says. Andrew perceives the most profound impact of moisture to be in the level and texture of the tannin structure. Dry conditions produce not only more tannin, but also more assertive tannin. This is most dramatically expressed in pinot noir for sparkling rosé, where the soft, subtle tannins of Piper’s River are the holy grail.
I drink and serve a lot of sparkling rosé in springtime, and when it’s not Champagne, it’s Piper’s River. There’s a good reason that sparkling rosé is the flavour of the moment, and I love its food-friendly versatility and wide appeal, as seen with the four examples below.
This article was taken from the Halliday Wine Companion newsletter on Thursday, October 1, 2020. Want more like this delivered to your inbox? Sign up.
See more from the tasting team.
Latest Articles
-
Meet the winemaker
The "trifecta": Why La Prova's Sam Scott chose to focus on Italian varieties
2 days ago -
Wine Lists
The rise of Italian varieties in Australia: 14 must-try wines rated 91+
19 Feb 2026 -
News
The history of Seppeltsfield's treasured 100 Year Old Para Vintage Tawny through our favourite tasting notes
18 Feb 2026 -
Travel
Six must-visit McLaren Vale cellar doors to add to your bucket list
18 Feb 2026