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Gamble Made New Zealand Wine History

By David Ellis
Special to The Epoch Times
Jul 18, 2007

(Photos.com)
(Photos.com)


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Back in 1973 when Ross and Bill Spence started a small family-affair winery in West Auckland, they hoped that many of the techniques they planned to employ would revolutionise New Zealand's fledgling wine industry.

They called their venture Matua Valley Wines and within a few years it had far exceeded their wildest expectations.

After gambling with planting New Zealand's first-ever Sauvignon Blanc, they went a step further by doing so in the Marlborough region in the northern part of the South Island, reasoning that its distinct micro-climate, soil type and topography would be ideal for the variety.

And the rest, as they say, is history. Marlborough Sauvignon Blancs are now considered among the finest in the world, with sales to Australia alone for these wines in the $US16–$30 bracket increasing at a phenomenal 21.7 per cent a year.

The latest import from Matua Valley, their Estate Series Paretai Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc, is made from fruit grown on the company's Northbank Vineyard that lies across an ancient stone river bed and has beautifully intense tropical flavours with an underlining minerality.

It's well priced at $US25.99 for a wine of its calibre; team it up with fresh oysters or green-shell mussels served with a slightly chilli-spiced coriander broth.


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