2021 Sadie Family Columella

Type of Wine | |
---|---|
Country | South Africa |
Region | |
Appellation | Swartland |
Winery | |
Vintage | 2021 |
Grape | , , , , , , , |
Content (Alc) | 0.75 ltr (13.5%) |
Drink window | 2025 - 2052 |
- Buy 3 for 134.95 111.53 each and save 7%
In stock
37 items available
Description
Columella is the top model among the red wines of the Sadie Family. It is a blend of Cariñena, Cinsault, Garnacha, Mourvèdre, Syrah, Tinta Barocca and is a bit like how Telmo Rodrigues makes his wines - Field blends instead of one-man sausages. Eben Sadie and The Sadie Family in South Africa play a pioneering role just like Telmo. The Columella has a very limited production and is of course hand-picked with fermentation with native yeasts in open cement tanks of 3300 liters for 3 weeks. Maceration of another 3 weeks afterwards. No further additions. The malolactic fermentation in the oak barrels of which only around 5% is new wood (French oak) and the rest are used barrels. After 12 months of aging, the wine is aged in large wooden barrels for another 1 year with maturation on the yeast cells. After 2 years, the wine is then bottled without being filtered or clarified.
In the glass, this unique Columella has a deep ruby red color with a pale ruby red edge in the core. The Columella explodes from the glass with dark red fruit aromas of black raspberry, plum and dark cherry with a seductive layer of red flowers and baking spices. The wine is super elegant with nothing too much or too little. It is bursting with fruit and with a perfect alcohol content of (only) 13.5%, the wine has an impeccable balance, juicy acidity and lifting tannins. The wine somersaults on the palate, revealing new layers of black olives and black cherries before ending with a long finish. This is a wine that once you take a sip, it will entice you further and you won't be able to keep your hands off it. This wine remains beautiful for decades and receives high ratings every year.
FACT: In the 'Attachments' tab you will find the official fact sheet of this beautiful wine. We will send this to you automatically when you order this wine. The wine is stored in our conditioned Wine Warehouse and when you pick up the wine you will often receive a nice discount . You will see your discount immediately when you choose 'Collect' on the checkout page. We are located in Dordrecht almost next to the A16 with plenty of parking. Click here for our address.
Specifications
Packing information | Box |
---|---|
Type of Wine | Red |
Country | South Africa |
Region | Western Cape |
Appellation | Swartland |
Icons | Icon South Africa |
Winery | Sadie Family |
Grape | Carignan, Cinsault, Garnacha, Grenache, Monastrell, Mourvedre, Syrah-Shiraz, Tinta Barroca |
Biological certified | No |
Natural wine | No |
Vegan | No |
Vintage | 2021 |
Drinking as of | 2025 |
Drinking till | 2052 |
Alcohol % | 13.5 |
Alcohol free/low | No |
Content | 0.75 ltr |
Oak aging | Yes |
Sparkling | No |
Dessert wine | No |
Closure | Cork |
Promotion | Tier Price |
Parker rating | 98 |
James Suckling rating | 97 |
Vinous rating | 96 |
Tasting Profiles | Aards, Donker fruit, Droog, Houtgerijpt, Krachtig, Kruidig, Tannines, Vol |
Drink moments | Barbecue, Lekker luxe, Met vrienden, Open haard |
Professional Reviews
Parker
The Wine Advocate
RP 98
Reviewed by:
Anthony Mueller
Release Price:
$90
Drink Date:
2024 - 2046
Composed of a blend of Syrah, Mourvèdre, Grenache, Carignan, Cinsault and Tinta Barocca, the 2021 Columella is instantly impressive, with firm layers of red fruit over a spicy core of oak that sways with notions of turned earth and a kiss of wild herbs. Medium to full-bodied and with about 14% alcohol, the palate is fresh and nimble while delivering more oak on the palate than the nose leads on. The palate has flavors of wild sage and black peppercorn with notes of baked clay and plum skin. Undoubtedly, it will age for decades, but don't be too hasty to open this right away. Just over 14,000 bottles were produced from 50% whole-cluster grapes.
Published: Dec 29, 2023
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
James Suckling
SADIE FAMILY SWARTLAND COLUMELLA 2021
Tuesday, November 7, 2023
CountrySouth Africa
RegionCoastal Region
Vintage2021
CHECK PRICE
DOWNLOAD SHELFTALKER
Score
97
This is fragrant and polished with aromas of peach pits, sandalwood, cherry stones, hazelnuts and orange zest. Fabulously intense, building on the palate to a crescendo, slowly, with supple and very fine tannins giving an elegant structure to the fruit and spice. Elegant and immensely long. Syrah, mourvedre, carignan, cinsault, grenache and tinta barroca. Better from 2025.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Vinous
96
Drinking Window
2026 - 2052
From: The A to Z of South Africa (Nov 2023)
The 2021 Columella is a blend of Rhône varieties, 30% Syrah, the lowest ever, with more Mourvèdre, plus Tinta Barocca, 50% whole clusters, spending 12 months in cask (10% new) and 12 months in old foudres, bottled with slightly higher CO2 due to less racking. It has a mixture of red and blueberry fruit, touches of aniseed coming through with time. There’s very fine delineation. The medium-bodied palate has a gorgeous opening with blood orange, black pepper and ginger. It's sleek and less powerful than older vintages, yet it has far more elegance and precision. This is a long-term Columella.
- By Neal Martin on August 2023
No trip to the Cape would be complete without visiting Eben Sadie in Swartland. Before we tasted his 2022s, Sadie gave me a tour of his impressive new winery under construction. One thing that he or his sons, who are taking an increasing active role in the running, will be short of in the future is space. “The 2022 was a difficult vintage on paper,” Sadie explains. “All the rain fell to the south of Swartland, and so we had a hangover of drought. We didn’t have a good winter. Just after flowering, after fruit set, we reduced our crop by half, taking it down one bunch per shoot, and we thinned the shoots right down to maintain a conservative canopy management. It’s one of the benefits of having a fixed team of 26 people. Also, we have had the lowest alcohol levels ever, bringing in the fruit below 13.5% potential alcohol. I’m fascinated by the 2022s because they are way better than I thought they would be. It’s a radical and expensive vintage for us because we bottled very little. It’s been a revelation. It will be interesting to see if we can have the same levels of alcohol in a wetter year. We’ll do some trials to see if it is possible.” This is a brilliant range of 2022s under his Old Vine Series umbrella that includes one new cuvée, a pure Chenin Blanc from Swartland named Rotsbank that Sadie told me he had waited 14 years to make. The 2022 Skurfberg might well constitute the vinous highlight of my trip, consistently ranking amongst his best wines. Maybe just the Kokerboom left me wanting more. The 2021 Columella, his blend of Rhône varieties now around two decades old is wonderful, less powerful than older vintages yet imbued with greater finesse and articulating its site with greater clarity.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
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Wijnhuis
After years of work in Priorat and the founding of Terroir al Limit, Eben Sadie has returned to his roots. To put it in his own words: "A winemaker should make wines in his region of origin. Where he should know the terroir best." The wine world has some heroes, and Eben Sadie is one of them.
Eben graduated as an oenologist in Elsenburg (South Africa). There he became integrated by the vine: a plant that offers so much diversity, 5000 varieties all over the world. Sadie traveled the world for 8 years, working both in companies that make 6 million liters of wine annually and in companies that only produce 6 barrels. He ended up in Germany, France, Spain, Austria, Oregon and California, before returning to his native South Africa. There he is now counted among the new guard winemakers who want to give the New World a better reputation.
He settled in Swartland (1999), a new wine region for South Africa. At the same time, he resolutely broke with the New World custom of making wines from a single grape variety: he chose blends of complementary grape varieties. He based the reason for this on a sober analysis: "All over the world, wines from different grape varieties are made in a Mediterranean, southern climate, while wines from a single grape variety mainly occur in a continental, more northern climate.
Most countries there enjoy a Mediterranean climate, but they still started making wines from one grape variety: Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Chardonnay and so on. This was successful in the beginning, because it was new and because the grape variety was strongly placed in the foreground. But you don't make really great wines with that. As a result, the New World scores well in the lower price ranges, but is not seen as a supplier of great wines. I want to change that."
Sadie immediately put his vision into practice. He planted the grape varieties that give the best results in the southern Rhône region: Syrah, Grenache and Mourvèdre. 43 ha spread over 48 different plots, biodynamically treated and processed. He also managed to discover numerous old vineyards, restore them and give them a new lease of life (Ouwingerd series). And just like in the time of Terroir al Limit, he gave the wines individuality and provided them with his own signature, that of refinement.
The Swartland region extends north of Cape Town, between Durbanville and Piketberg, inland from the Atlantic Ocean, with Malmesbury in the middle. The region has a very stable climate, which means that a very consistent quality can be achieved every year. All grapes come from non-irrigated vineyards located in the Swartland region. Eben Sadie is a wine philosopher in many ways. As a result, he uses many old techniques in combination with experiments.
For example, he ferments parts of his wine in large concrete 'eggs', Stöckinger foeders, amphorae and he uses wooden barrels that have not been toasted. He has also started an experiment with fermenting in jars made from the soil around the winery and buried during the fermentation. This technique is very old and originates from the Balkan region.
Columella is the top model among the red wines of the Sadie Family. It is a blend of Cariñena, Cinsault, Garnacha, Mourvèdre, Syrah, Tinta Barocca and is a bit like how Telmo Rodrigues makes his wines - Field blends instead of one-man sausages. Eben Sadie and The Sadie Family in South Africa play a pioneering role just like Telmo. The Columella has a very limited production and is of course hand-picked with fermentation with native yeasts in open cement tanks of 3300 liters for 3 weeks. Maceration of another 3 weeks afterwards. No further additions. The malolactic fermentation in the oak barrels of which only around 5% is new wood (French oak) and the rest are used barrels. After 12 months of aging, the wine is aged in large wooden barrels for another 1 year with maturation on the yeast cells. After 2 years, the wine is then bottled without being filtered or clarified.
In the glass, this unique Columella has a deep ruby red color with a pale ruby red edge in the core. The Columella explodes from the glass with dark red fruit aromas of black raspberry, plum and dark cherry with a seductive layer of red flowers and baking spices. The wine is super elegant with nothing too much or too little. It is bursting with fruit and with a perfect alcohol content of (only) 13.5%, the wine has an impeccable balance, juicy acidity and lifting tannins. The wine somersaults on the palate, revealing new layers of black olives and black cherries before ending with a long finish. This is a wine that once you take a sip, it will entice you further and you won't be able to keep your hands off it. This wine remains beautiful for decades and receives high ratings every year.
FACT: In the 'Attachments' tab you will find the official fact sheet of this beautiful wine. We will send this to you automatically when you order this wine. The wine is stored in our conditioned Wine Warehouse and when you pick up the wine you will often receive a nice discount . You will see your discount immediately when you choose 'Collect' on the checkout page. We are located in Dordrecht almost next to the A16 with plenty of parking. Click here for our address.
Packing information | Box |
---|---|
Type of Wine | Red |
Country | South Africa |
Region | Western Cape |
Appellation | Swartland |
Icons | Icon South Africa |
Winery | Sadie Family |
Grape | Carignan, Cinsault, Garnacha, Grenache, Monastrell, Mourvedre, Syrah-Shiraz, Tinta Barroca |
Biological certified | No |
Natural wine | No |
Vegan | No |
Vintage | 2021 |
Drinking as of | 2025 |
Drinking till | 2052 |
Alcohol % | 13.5 |
Alcohol free/low | No |
Content | 0.75 ltr |
Oak aging | Yes |
Sparkling | No |
Dessert wine | No |
Closure | Cork |
Promotion | Tier Price |
Parker rating | 98 |
James Suckling rating | 97 |
Vinous rating | 96 |
Tasting Profiles | Aards, Donker fruit, Droog, Houtgerijpt, Krachtig, Kruidig, Tannines, Vol |
Drink moments | Barbecue, Lekker luxe, Met vrienden, Open haard |
Parker
The Wine Advocate
RP 98
Reviewed by:
Anthony Mueller
Release Price:
$90
Drink Date:
2024 - 2046
Composed of a blend of Syrah, Mourvèdre, Grenache, Carignan, Cinsault and Tinta Barocca, the 2021 Columella is instantly impressive, with firm layers of red fruit over a spicy core of oak that sways with notions of turned earth and a kiss of wild herbs. Medium to full-bodied and with about 14% alcohol, the palate is fresh and nimble while delivering more oak on the palate than the nose leads on. The palate has flavors of wild sage and black peppercorn with notes of baked clay and plum skin. Undoubtedly, it will age for decades, but don't be too hasty to open this right away. Just over 14,000 bottles were produced from 50% whole-cluster grapes.
Published: Dec 29, 2023
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
James Suckling
SADIE FAMILY SWARTLAND COLUMELLA 2021
Tuesday, November 7, 2023
CountrySouth Africa
RegionCoastal Region
Vintage2021
CHECK PRICE
DOWNLOAD SHELFTALKER
Score
97
This is fragrant and polished with aromas of peach pits, sandalwood, cherry stones, hazelnuts and orange zest. Fabulously intense, building on the palate to a crescendo, slowly, with supple and very fine tannins giving an elegant structure to the fruit and spice. Elegant and immensely long. Syrah, mourvedre, carignan, cinsault, grenache and tinta barroca. Better from 2025.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Vinous
96
Drinking Window
2026 - 2052
From: The A to Z of South Africa (Nov 2023)
The 2021 Columella is a blend of Rhône varieties, 30% Syrah, the lowest ever, with more Mourvèdre, plus Tinta Barocca, 50% whole clusters, spending 12 months in cask (10% new) and 12 months in old foudres, bottled with slightly higher CO2 due to less racking. It has a mixture of red and blueberry fruit, touches of aniseed coming through with time. There’s very fine delineation. The medium-bodied palate has a gorgeous opening with blood orange, black pepper and ginger. It's sleek and less powerful than older vintages, yet it has far more elegance and precision. This is a long-term Columella.
- By Neal Martin on August 2023
No trip to the Cape would be complete without visiting Eben Sadie in Swartland. Before we tasted his 2022s, Sadie gave me a tour of his impressive new winery under construction. One thing that he or his sons, who are taking an increasing active role in the running, will be short of in the future is space. “The 2022 was a difficult vintage on paper,” Sadie explains. “All the rain fell to the south of Swartland, and so we had a hangover of drought. We didn’t have a good winter. Just after flowering, after fruit set, we reduced our crop by half, taking it down one bunch per shoot, and we thinned the shoots right down to maintain a conservative canopy management. It’s one of the benefits of having a fixed team of 26 people. Also, we have had the lowest alcohol levels ever, bringing in the fruit below 13.5% potential alcohol. I’m fascinated by the 2022s because they are way better than I thought they would be. It’s a radical and expensive vintage for us because we bottled very little. It’s been a revelation. It will be interesting to see if we can have the same levels of alcohol in a wetter year. We’ll do some trials to see if it is possible.” This is a brilliant range of 2022s under his Old Vine Series umbrella that includes one new cuvée, a pure Chenin Blanc from Swartland named Rotsbank that Sadie told me he had waited 14 years to make. The 2022 Skurfberg might well constitute the vinous highlight of my trip, consistently ranking amongst his best wines. Maybe just the Kokerboom left me wanting more. The 2021 Columella, his blend of Rhône varieties now around two decades old is wonderful, less powerful than older vintages yet imbued with greater finesse and articulating its site with greater clarity.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Exclusive Content
Sign in to unlock professional wine reviews from world-renowned critics
After years of work in Priorat and the founding of Terroir al Limit, Eben Sadie has returned to his roots. To put it in his own words: "A winemaker should make wines in his region of origin. Where he should know the terroir best." The wine world has some heroes, and Eben Sadie is one of them.
Eben graduated as an oenologist in Elsenburg (South Africa). There he became integrated by the vine: a plant that offers so much diversity, 5000 varieties all over the world. Sadie traveled the world for 8 years, working both in companies that make 6 million liters of wine annually and in companies that only produce 6 barrels. He ended up in Germany, France, Spain, Austria, Oregon and California, before returning to his native South Africa. There he is now counted among the new guard winemakers who want to give the New World a better reputation.
He settled in Swartland (1999), a new wine region for South Africa. At the same time, he resolutely broke with the New World custom of making wines from a single grape variety: he chose blends of complementary grape varieties. He based the reason for this on a sober analysis: "All over the world, wines from different grape varieties are made in a Mediterranean, southern climate, while wines from a single grape variety mainly occur in a continental, more northern climate.
Most countries there enjoy a Mediterranean climate, but they still started making wines from one grape variety: Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Chardonnay and so on. This was successful in the beginning, because it was new and because the grape variety was strongly placed in the foreground. But you don't make really great wines with that. As a result, the New World scores well in the lower price ranges, but is not seen as a supplier of great wines. I want to change that."
Sadie immediately put his vision into practice. He planted the grape varieties that give the best results in the southern Rhône region: Syrah, Grenache and Mourvèdre. 43 ha spread over 48 different plots, biodynamically treated and processed. He also managed to discover numerous old vineyards, restore them and give them a new lease of life (Ouwingerd series). And just like in the time of Terroir al Limit, he gave the wines individuality and provided them with his own signature, that of refinement.
The Swartland region extends north of Cape Town, between Durbanville and Piketberg, inland from the Atlantic Ocean, with Malmesbury in the middle. The region has a very stable climate, which means that a very consistent quality can be achieved every year. All grapes come from non-irrigated vineyards located in the Swartland region. Eben Sadie is a wine philosopher in many ways. As a result, he uses many old techniques in combination with experiments.
For example, he ferments parts of his wine in large concrete 'eggs', Stöckinger foeders, amphorae and he uses wooden barrels that have not been toasted. He has also started an experiment with fermenting in jars made from the soil around the winery and buried during the fermentation. This technique is very old and originates from the Balkan region.
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