
2024 Brill Pinot Gris
This one is all about crisp mornings and clean air — think Adelaide Hills springtime in a glass. The 2024 vintage was cool and steady, which means the fruit hung out on the vines a little longer and got beautifully ripe without losing its zing.
Flavour-wise, it’s all pear, white peach, and a hint of apple blossom — fresh and bright, with a subtle almond-meal nuttiness and just a whisper of spice. The palate is silky and textural (thanks to a bit of time on lees), with a nice line of acidity that keeps it lively right to the finish. It’s refreshing but not thin — there’s enough weight to make it feel serious without getting heavy.
This is a crowd-pleaser that still has personality — the type of wine that works for an easy Tuesday night but won’t feel out of place at a long Sunday lunch.
Food Match
– Pan-fried snapper with lemon butter and capers
– Vietnamese chicken salad with crunchy peanuts and herbs
– Roast cauliflower with tahini dressing for a vego option
– Creamy brie or a soft washed rind cheese with crackers
Serve it chilled but not icy-cold (around 8–10°C) to let the texture show. Expect a satisfied nod from anyone who’s been drinking cheap Pinot Grigio — this will ruin them for the supermarket stuff forever.

Vermentino might just be the next big thing — an Italian variety that’s starting to get noticed for all the right reasons. It’s kind of the best of a few worlds: brings some floral lift like Riesling, has the texture and palate weight you’d find in a good Chardonnay, and finishes bone dry with a salty snap that makes you want another glass straight away.
This one opens with honeysuckle and jasmine on the nose — fragrant without being perfumed — and a hint of seaspray that gives it a bit of coastal charm. On the palate, it’s bright and zippy but with a lovely slippery texture through the middle, finishing long, clean, and dry. No oak, no fluff, just pure, characterful white wine.
It’s ideal for Sauvignon Blanc or Pinot Gris drinkers who are up for something a little different but not too out-there. Like, if you want to upgrade your usual white but don’t want to sit around analysing it — this’ll do the trick.
Basically, if the sun’s out and someone’s cooking, this wine belongs on the table.
Keep it fresh and fun:
– Anything from the ocean — grilled prawns, oysters, calamari. That salty edge in the wine loves seafood.
– Crumbed whiting and chips — seriously, this is next-level fish and chip wine.
– Pasta with lemon, garlic, olive oil and herbs — keep it simple, let the wine do the heavy lifting.
– Goat’s cheese or fresh ricotta — that floral note plays really nicely off creamy, tangy cheese.
Tasting Profile
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Let customers speak for us
from 8 reviewsI do love a dry Rose and this one was a corker. The kind of wine you open ‘just for one glass’... and suddenly the bottle’s gone. Will be back for more.

Crisp, zesty and sooo easy to drink. It was a like a chardonnay, but different and quite fresh. Loved every sip.

Absolutely loved this Shiraz. It’s everything I want in a red - juicy fruit with a velvety finish. Great quality.
