Rocking Horse 2021

Cape White Blend

Tasting Notes

Rocking Horse is our cornerstone wine and takes its name from a wooden rocking horse that we made for our daughters out of old oak barrel staves. This is our signature wine and it is where all our work comes together to make our most complete wine.

The wine is composed from a number of carefully selected vineyard sites in the Western Cape. A layered and complex nose reveals golden kiwi fruit, mace, apple skin and shy florals, leading into a rounded, rich palate of honeyed nougat with a long taut, slightly saline finish.

Nuts & Bolts

Roussanne – 32% Stellenbosch / Paardeberg – 14 years old - decomposed granite / clay
Semillon blanc – 29% Franschhoek – 39 years old - alluvial soils
Chardonnay – 19% Ceres Plateau 8 years old – clay
Chenin blanc – 16% Paardeberg 42 years old - decomposed granite
Clairette blanche – 4% Swartland 37 years old – decomposed granite

WO Western Cape
Alcohol – 13.11%
Residual sugar – 1.8 g/L
Total acidity – 6.0 g/L; pH 3.31

About The Wine

2021 was very much a cooler, wetter season, with average yields overall. We luckily avoided any heatwaves which are pretty standard in January and February, leaving us a lot of time to decide when to pick the grapes at optimal ripeness.

Our vineyard selection supports our vision to deliver a blended Cape White wine of depth, texture and subtlety. In sourcing Roussanne, Chardonnay, Semillon, Clairette blanche and Chenin blanc, we are looking for both heritage and more recently established vineyards which all bring their own unique elements and ability to ‘speak’ about the place in which they are grown.

The winemaking remains simple. Our primary challenge during the harvest is to ensure that we pick all of our far-flung blocks at the right time and get them back to the winery in perfect condition. Once this is achieved, we revert to working with very little in the way of ‘winemaking technique’.

Picking is done early and based mostly on taste with an eye on the style of the wine that we’re aiming at. We are not looking for a big alcohol expression (nor a low alcohol one for that matter) and prefer subtle wines that show ripeness, while being restrained and elegant.

The grapes are whole-bunch pressed and no treatments or additions are used on the juice. This hands-off regime on the juice really helps to develop the character of the wine. The juice is then racked off the heavy solids and taken to old oak barrels of various volumes. The wines are fermented naturally, and they are allowed to then go through their subsequent malolactic fermentation. We watch them carefully for the next few months until they ‘settle down’, at which point we add some sulphur dioxide. Primary fruit is not what we are looking for here, rather we’re trying to show the underlying character of the grapes and the vineyard where they came from.