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Delheim Pinotage Rosé 2024

Delheim Pinotage Rosé 2024

R115,00

The 2024 vintage produced another Delheim classic dry rosé revealing the elegant side of Pinotage with an ethereal light salmon pink colour, a bouquet of fresh strawberries and orchard flowers with a palate that is delicately constructed around a fresh acid backbone that displays notes of pink grapefruit, berries and sweet cherries. Light and elegant body makes this wine perfect to turn any meal into the perfect occasion.

The first Pinotage Rosé produced in South Africa back in 1976.

Specifications

SKU: DEH-005
Alcohol Volume: 12.50%
Sugar G/L: 4.1 g/L
Type of wine: Rosé
Food Pairing: Cheese, Salads, Sushi, Vegetables

More Information

In the cellar

Picking is done by hand only in the early mornings to keep the temperature as cold as possible. Grapes are de-stemmed and crushed before being transferred into a press where the juice is drained immediately and separated from the skins. Only the free run juice and some of the lightly pressed juice at 0,5 bar is used. The juice is clarified by means of floatation and racked to a fermentation tank. Fermentation is done by a few selected yeast strains at different fermentation temperatures in order to obtain a diverse aroma profile. After fermentation the wine is then blended and receives a very light filtration just before bottling.

Cultivar

100% Pinotage

Food Pairing

Pair with your favourite summer salad or try with spicy Thai soups or a selection of sushi.

Awards and Recognition

94 Points Tim Atkin

About the Wine Estate

Delheim is a family owned wine farm situated on the slopes of the Simonsberg mountains in Stellenbosch. Celebrating 80 years of sustainable farming and winemaking practices. Delheim is owned by the Sperling family. The late Michael Hans “Spatz” Sperling, was the Patriarch and also a South African wine industry legend. His wife Vera still resides on the farm. Eldest son Victor Sperling and eldest daughter Nora Sperling-Thiel serve as Directors of the company and live on the farm with their families. The other two children, Maria and Nicholas, live in Europe. The Simonsberg is named after the first Governor of the Cape, Simon van der Stel, after which Stellenbosch is also named. In 1699, he granted the freehold of this piece of land to Lourenz Kamfer, a German. It was originally named De Driesprong. The farm had various owners until Mr Hans Otto Hoheisen bought it in 1938 as a retirement home for himself and his wife Deli. DELHEIM comes from the German for “Deli’s home”. Initially they only planted citrus trees, which are not really suited to Delheim because of the wind conditions – they sustained much wind damage. German friends suggested that they grow vineyards and two years later Hans Otto planted the first grape vines. The concrete tanks in the cellar were completed in 1944 by Italian prisoners-of-war. During one of Deli’s visits to friends and family in Germany, she mentioned to her nephew that they needed help on their wine farm in South Africa. This was just after the Second World War and he couldn’t see any future in Germany, so he decided to join them. This was Michael “Spatz” Sperling (Sperling is the German word for “sparrow” and Spatz means “baby sparrow”), who arrived in 1951 on the ship Winchester Castle with nothing more than £10 in his pocket. He soon took a keen interest in the few vineyards Hans Otto had planted. He knew nothing about winemaking and there were no books or winemaking schools in South Africa at that time, so he taught himself through a process of trial and error and with some help from neighbours and visiting German winemakers. Spatz began winning numerous awards and having established himself as a serious winemaker, he embarked on a series of pioneering initiatives in the South African wine industry in the decades that followed, for example creating the first “wine route” in 1971. The Stellenbosch Wine Route then had only three members and today it boasts more than 200: there are also 18 other wine routes in South Africa. In 1971, the company bought another property up the road from Delheim. With its warmer, drier climate and sandier soils it is better suited to growing super reds. This property is called Delvera in honor of Spatz’s wife, Vera. The vineyards there are called Vera Cruz – Cruz meaning “cross”, allegedly for the cross Vera has had to bear during her long marriage to Spatz!

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