Noon Winery has been one of my favorite wineries since I first tasted their wines around 1985. In those days it was owned by :the old man” and had Clive – one of the worlds gentlemen and one who had a photographic memory. I have very fond memories of visiting the cellar door and spending time with a man small in stature who wore thick lensed glasses and a terry toweling hat. Clive could also remember what you purchased last year and would ask how you enjoyed that specific wine. I used to love to visit Noon’s as the last point of call for a McLaren vale winery visit and just give them all the money I had left and just asked “how many bottles could I get for this?” Invariably we would walk away with more bottles than we had money for, but we always went back. When I returned to McLaren Vale in September 2007 I found the Noon cellar door not open, the old man had sold the winery to his son (Drew) and that Clive had passed on to that great cellar door in the sky.
Today, the Noon Wines cellar door is only open for 3 weekends a year and their wine is sold under allocation to their mailing list members and to those brave soles who line up to see what limited allocation they could get.

Lineup to purchase Noon wines
The wines can be tasted at a wooden bench just outside the cellar, so there is something you can do while waiting to get into the winery. Drew gets help from his friends to make what must be a hectic few days work as smoothly as possible. Many of those who line up keep coming back each year and their request is constant – how can I get onto the mailing list? Yes folks, there is a waiting list for the mailing list. The Noon family go to great lengths to be fair to as many as possible. If you do not purchase wines and are on their list, then you are politely asked to move on so others can benefit. They request that the allocation available is per family and not per person – I have seen a few people smile as they exit the cellar with more than they really should have.
The wines are made from a couple of vineyards around the Noon Wines complex plus from long term growers based in Langhorne Creek. The wines are consistently made with flavor in mind and Dew needs to be comfortable that the required flavor profile is available. To do this the wines usually have relatively high alcohol – it is not unusual for a 15% alcohol Rose as an example.
For the scarcity of the wines (the wines usually are sold out after the members receive theirs and the first weekend at the cellar) and the reputation these wines are value for money. I have seen many times a Noon wine up for sale at inflated prices compared to that at time of purchase. Well for me these wines are mine, I may share some with you but I will never give them away or sell them for profit!

Noon Wines with the wonderful Winery Block Grenache
And after picking up my allocation and tasting the wines, here are my comments…..
2011 High Noon Rose
Back to the Grenache based wine and it it better for it. At 14.2% alcohol this wine packs a smaller punch than most High Noon Rose wines of the last few years. Fresh and lively aromas and flavors that are based on the red fruits of raspberry in particular. Lovely and I will be looking to this as a food Rose style compared to many other Rose wines that are really veranda wine.
2010 Twelve Bells
Due to a lower crop of Grenache in the 2010 year (after a heatwave damaging the Grenache flowers in November 2009) means this wine has changed from a Grenache based wine to a Shiraz based wine. At first I got the aromas of the red Grenache based fruits but as this wine spent time in my glass the black fruits from Shiraz started to come through more and more. There are cedar hints and loads of subtle spices here. The flavor profile was medium bodied wine that is easy drinking now. The darker fruits dominate and there is wonderful soft tannins that will strengthen the drink now-ability of this wine.
2010 Reserve Shiraz
Good to see this is a blend with 7% Grenache and 3% Cabernet to provide what I suspect to be a much better balanced wine that it would have been as a straight Shiraz. Well, what can I say – this is Shiraz as it should be! Black concentrated fruits with subtle spices of cardamon and white pepper with just a hint of anise hanging around. The mid palate is as it should be to give a great mouthfeel with such a wonderfully full, but not intrusive, tannin structure
2010 Eclipse
I was so looking forward to this Grenache based blend (45% Grenache, 35% Shiraz, 15% Grenaciano and 5% Cabernet) and I was not disappointed. The glass exploded with red fruit aromas and I even got some blue fruit hints as the glass got close to my nose. Lots of depth apparent here even from these aromas. The flavors showed both balance and power – fruit character, smooth tannins, good acid length. Everything seemed to be in balance with everything else – and even so I suspect this wine will get better over the next few years. Sorry guys, I have 5 bottles and they will be mine and mine alone!