Surprise Platinum winners at Decanter World Wine Awards 2017

Surprise Platinum winners at Decanter World Wine Awards 2017

Find new wines and regions to explore with this round-up of some of the more surprising winners at the Decanter World Wine Awards 2017, which saw record entries of more than 17,200 wines coming in from Chile to China…

Below, we round-up some of the less-expected Platinum wins at this year’s Decanter World Wine Awards, a competition that has sought to shine a light on the wine world’s hidden gems since its inception in 2004.

Uruguay Best Red Single-Varietal

Platinum winners Decanter World Wine Awards

Bodega Garzón’s Single Vineyard Tannat, Maldonado 2015

The dark horse proved to be Uruguay’s wines made from the Tannat grape, which took the competition’s top accolades for red wines.

Marks & Spencer’s Pisano Cisplatino Tannat, Canelones 2015 won Platinum Best in Show for Best Value Red Single-Varietal. And Bodega Garzón’s Single Vineyard Tannat, Maldonado 2015 was awarded the medal for the best red wine overall made from a single grape variety.

Last month, Decanter’s Jane Anson predicted the ascent of the country’s Tannat grape and recognised it’s potential to top popular South American Malbec wines. 

‘Tannat does well in Uruguay because it is the only South American country with an Atlantic Ocean influence,’ she explained. ‘You can find penguins on the beach here in February, and the cool climate makes the thick skin of Tannat a huge bonus.’

Anson even mentioned Decanter’s surprise winner: 

‘Estates like Bodega Garzón have produced a more contemporary-styled version that is helping to smooth Tannat’s image of rustic, hard tannins in international markets.’

Marks and Spencer’s £9.50 Tannat wine was praised by judges for its ‘unbeatable value’, with notes of ‘blueberries, cassis and a whisper of smoke’.

Where to buy them:

Marks & Spencer, Pisano Cisplatino Tannat, Canelones, Uruguay 2015 £9.50 M & S

Bodega Garzón, Single Vineyard Tannat, Maldonado, Uruguay 2015 £13.90 GP Brands


United Kingdom Best Value White Single-Varietal

English wine, decanter awards, winbirri

Image credit: Winbirri

Who could ignore the unprecedented victory of an English Bacchus wine from Norfolk?

Winbirri’s Bacchus 2015 was given a Platinum Best in Show award by judges, giving it DWWA status as the Best Value White Single-Varietal wine in the competition. Judges deemed it to be ‘a perfect aperitif wine’, which is ‘well-defined on the palate’ with a ‘long clean finish’.

Until now, the UK has largely been celebrated for its sparkling wines, but the success of Winbirri Vineyards’ Bacchus could signal the rise of its still wines too.

Bacchus is well-suited to English terroirs, as its cooler climate tends to lift the acidity — leading to some touting it as the country’s answer to Sauvignon Blanc.

Where to buy it

Winbirri, Bacchus, Norfolk, United Kingdom 2015

Currently out of stock at Waitrose and Lea & Sandeman are expecting more orders this week (£12.95)


Czech Republic Best Dry Aromatic

Sonberk, V.O.C. Pálava 2015

Made entirely from the Pálava grape, this white wine from Moravia in the Czech Republic made a splash this year — walking away with the Platinum Best in Show award for the Best Dry Aromatic.

Its producer, Sonberk, makes wines on ancient viticultural land in Moravia, and the vineyards face the Pálava hill after which the grape was named.

The grape is believed to be a Gewürztraminer and Müller Thurgau hybrid created in the 1950s, and grown exclusively in Czech Republic and neighbouring Slovakia.

Judges found the wine ‘superb’, with a ‘round, creamy mouthfeel’ and notes of peach and pear mingling with bitter leaf and almond.

Where to buy it:

Sonberk, V.O.C. Pálava, Mikulovská, Moravia, Czech Republic 2015 £18.75 Ellis of Richmond


China Platinum Best in Category

Platinum winner Decanter World Wine Awards

Vidal Icewine made by Yajianggu, which translates into ‘duck river valley’.

Could China be the next big thing in ice wine? Yajianggu Winery, in China’s northeastern Jiln province won a Platinum medal for its Vidal Icewine 2014. Judges noted:

‘The unctuous palate has bright concentrated mangoes and pineapples, and a generous lychee fruit aftertaste leading into the rich syrupy finale.’   

Two other Chinese ice wines won gold medals at DWWA 17: Taihang Valley, Ice Wine Vidal, Shanxi 2013 and Château Fenhe, Ice Wine, Heilongjiang 2015

The continued success of the country’s ice wines could help to raise its profile on the world’s wine stage.


Learn more: DecanterChina.com — How to make ice wines in China the natural way


Round-up: Canada, Russia and Israel’s prize wines

Other unexpected triumphs included Canada’s top spot as Platinum Best in Show for Best Value Dry Riesling.

Adamo’s Riesling 2016 from Ontario beat off competition from Germany, Austria and Alsace with its ‘cascading minerality’.

Two Platinums went to Bosnia-Herzegovina for their wines named as the best red and whites in Central & Eastern Europe.

Further afield, Russia made its way into the Platinum arena — impressing judges with Fanagoria’s ‘A Hundred Shades of Red Saperavi’ wine from Krasnador.

As did Israel, which won a Platinum medal for Golan Heights Winery, Yarden Cabernet Sauvignon 2013 made in Galilee.

Last but not least, Japan was awarded the highest accolade for Asian white wine, scoring a Platinum for Grace’s Private Reserve Koshu 2016 from Yamanashi.

Written by Laura Seal for Decanter.com

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