Moss Wood 2022 Cabernet Sauvignon
| Wine Facts | |
|---|---|
| Blend | 94% Cabernet Sauvignon 4% Cabernet Franc 2% Petit Verdot |
| Median Harvest Date | Cabernet Sauvignon – 8th April, 2022 Cabernet Franc – 5th April, 2022 Petit Verdot – 5th April, 2022 |
| Mean Harvest Ripeness | Cabernet Sauvignon – 13.1⁰ Be Cabernet Franc – 13.4⁰ Be Petit Verdot – 13.5⁰ Be |
| Yield | Cabernet Sauvignon – 5.81 t/ha Cabernet Franc – 4.5 t/ha Petit Verdot – 2.33 t/ha |
| Weather Data | Growing Season Ave Temperature – 20.8⁰C Number of hours accrued between 18⁰C and 28⁰C –1119 Number of hours above 33⁰C – 120 |
| Days Elapsed between Flowering and Harvest | Cabernet Sauvignon – 127 days Cabernet Franc – 127 days Petit Verdot - 126 days |
| Bottled | 25th October, 2024 |
| Released | 20th March, 2025 |
| Alcohol | 14.0% |
Wine Facts
-
Blend
Cabernet Sauvignon – 94%
Cabernet Franc – 4%
Petit Verdot – 2% -
Median Harvest Date
Cabernet Sauvignon – 8th April, 2022
Cabernet Franc – 5th April, 2022
Petit Verdot – 5th April, 2022 -
Mean Harvest Ripeness
Cabernet Sauvignon – 13.1⁰ Be
Cabernet Franc – 13.4⁰ Be
Petit Verdot – 13.5⁰ Be -
Yield
Cabernet Sauvignon – 5.81 t/ha
Cabernet Franc – 4.50 t/ha
Petit Verdot – 2.33 t/ha -
Weather Data
Growing Season Ave Temperature – 20.8⁰C
Number of hours accrued between 18 and 28⁰C – 1119 hours
Number of hours above 33⁰C – 120 hours -
Days Elapsed between Flowering and Harvest
Cabernet Sauvignon – 127 days
Cabernet Franc – 127 days
Petit Verdot - 126 days -
Bottled
25th October, 2024
-
Released
20th March, 2025
-
Alcohol
14.0 %
Moss Wood 2022 Cabernet Sauvignon – Aaron Brasher
Moss Wood sets the bar at the highest level when it comes to Australian cabernet sauvignon. This latest release continues a lineage of superb cabernet sauvignon that began in 1973. This is a wine that can undoubtedly be classed as an Australian ‘First Growth’ and deserves its place as one…
Moss Wood 2022 Cabernet Sauvignon – James Suckling
Plush, perfumed aromas of red and black currants, black cherries, spices, graphite, purple flowers, crushed blackberries and violets. Finely tuned tannins and bright acidity lead into a midweight, fruit-driven palate with almost silky texture and no heaviness. Tightly wound with some early-drinking generosity and plenty of polish. 92% cabernet sauvignon,…
Moss Wood 2022 Cabernet Sauvignon – Ciao Magazine, Winsor Dobbin
If you have a special occasion to celebrate, or someone who deserves a treat then this excellent Bordeaux-style blend would be an excellent choice if you have cash to splash. From one of the best producers in Margaret River this is a complex and rewarding wine that would grace any…
Moss Wood 2022 Cabernet Sauvignon – The Wine Advocate, Erin Larkin
I taste in batches of six, pouring each glass, gassing the bottles and working my way through the flight. Today, this 2022 Cabernet Sauvignon was poured in glass number five, and so it has had some time to breathe. Upon pouring, the nose was so abundantly, luxuriatingly steeped in graphite,…
Moss Wood 2022 Cabernet Sauvignon – Cassandra Charlick, Decanter
Still a baby of a wine, tightly bundled, but goodness: the presence is there. Toasty oak wraps the fruit, yet it’s well matched to the power of 2022. Red fruit laced with aniseed, a graphite through line and warm spice – just a pinch of vanilla. The palate is like…
Moss Wood 2022 Cabernet Sauvignon – Angus Hughson, Wine Pilot
Exceptional purity to the 2022 Moss Wood Cabernet Sauvignon as it radiates with blackcurrant, warm slate, gravel and earthy aromas. It is a fuller-flavoured vintage but retains the estate signature of finesse with powerful, sweet cassis and red earth flavours with a not unwelcome touch of mint. Mid weight and…
Moss Wood 2022 Cabernet Sauvignon – Andrew Caillard, The Vintage Journal
Medium deep crimson. Attractive cassis, truffle, vanilla aromas with hints of mocha/ cedar. Inky deep with fresh blackcurrant vanilla, espresso flavours, fine grainy tannins and well-integrated vanilla/ marzipan notes. Finishes chalky and long with chinotto and aniseed notes. A classic Moss Wood vintage with lovely richness, definition and mineral length….
Moss Wood 2022 Cabernet Sauvignon – Ken Gargett, The Wine Pilot
This stunning Margaret River Cabernet has 4% Cabernet Franc and 2% Petit Verdot included. The team talk of some of the difficulties encountered by Margaret River wineries during this year, but everything is relative and a difficult vintage here seems to be the dream of many other regions. It was…
Moss Wood 2022 Cabernet Sauvignon – Ray Jordan Wine
This was a very good vintage in Margaret River after the slightly more challenging ’21. This has the refined elegance and prettiness that is the Moss Wood DNA. The colour is quite pale compared to some previous vintages, but don’t be fooled into thinking this is some shrinking violet. Violets,…
Moss Wood 2022 Cabernet Sauvignon – Fergal Gleeson, Great Wine Blog
Moss Wood Cabernet Sauvignon is one of Australia’s most respected, desired and resaleable wines! The 2022 marks Moss Wood Cabernet’s 50th vintage. Another winery might make a brouhaha about that. But if you’ve spoken to Keith and Clare Mugford you’d know they don’t do that sort of thing! They just…
VINTAGE & PRODUCTION NOTES
As we muse over the conditions that prevailed during the 2021-22 growing season, it’s fair to say that Mother Nature displayed her full range of talents.
The calendar year 2021 was extremely wet and Moss Wood recorded 1440mm of rain, which is 40% above average and for the statistically-minded, very interesting because it’s outside 2 standard deviations from the mean. Something was certainly different in 2021.
It gave us one of our latest vintages, courtesy of mild summer temperatures and notable for the above average summer and autumn rainfall, when we received a succession of tropical depressions moving down the WA coast. The damp conditions, with solid rain, continued through the year. When we say solid, that’s exactly what we mean. For example, in July 2021, it rained on 29 of the 31 days and delivered 370mm. Needless to say, the vines began the new season in September, with soil moisture in the vineyard at field capacity, always an important thing for our unirrigated vineyards.
Regular rainfall continued through to the end of October, after which things began to ease. The Cabernet varieties began flowering on 11th November and over the next 4 weeks it rained on only 5 days delivering a total of 15mm. At the same time, there were only 4 days when the temperature dropped below the critical 8°C, with a coldest day of 5.7°C on 15th December.
Taken at face value, these benign conditions suggested we should have had reasonable crops but this wasn’t the case. Cabernet Sauvignon was down 20%, at 5.82t/ha and Cabernet Franc was down 22%, to 4.5t/ha. As usual, Petit Verdot was its usual petulant self and produced a generous 2.33t/ha, down a whopping 55%. Even slightly disruptive conditions send this variety into a temper tantrum and it pays us back with pitiful yields.
An explanation for the above may lie with Mother Nature’s change of heart. With the arrival of Christmas, she decided to flick the switch to hot. On Christmas Day, we enjoyed our turkey lunch with the air conditioner on and 37.6°C outside. A warm night followed, something we don’t often get in Wilyabrup, with a minimum temperature of 20°C and that set the scene for a warm Boxing Day. While we again sat in the air conditioning, this time watching the Test Cricket from Melbourne, the temperature peaked at 2.45pm at 41.2°C, our warmest day since 25th February 1985. Overnight, things cooled to a balmy 24°C and we were starting to wonder when the heat would ease. This it fortunately did, with a maximum temperature that day of 38.6°C and from then on things began to return to normal. This continued until mid-January, when temperatures rose again, this time delivering a maximum of 40.1°C on the 19th. By and large, the remainder of January and February were warm but not too hot. The arrival of March brought autumnal temperatures and ripening began to slow.
Mother Nature had one more card to play, introducing rain into the equation just as the Cabernet varieties were nearing full maturity. This caused a few heart flutters but nothing serious and we got under way on 5th April, picking Moss Wood Cabernet Franc. The impact of the cooler autumn can be seen in the length of the season. Despite the generally warm to hot conditions, Cabernet Sauvignon still took 127 days to go from flowering to harvest, 7 days longer than average, making it a similar season to 2008, although 4 days longer.
All the fruit was hand harvested and delivered to the winery, where it was carefully hand-sorted and destemmed. Each variety was then placed into small, open fermenters and seeded for primary fermentation with multiple yeast strains and hand plunged 3 times per day, for extraction of colour and flavour. Time on skins varied from 13 to 16 days, depending on tannin balance and after pressing, each batch underwent malolactic fermentation in stainless steel before being adjusted and racked to oak in May 2022. All barrels were 228 litre French oak and 16% were new.
In December 2022 all batches were racked and returned to wood for the second year and then in November 2023 all batches were racked again to stainless steel and the wine was blended for the first time. The makeup is 94% Cabernet Sauvignon, 4% Cabernet Franc and 2% Petit Verdot.
The finished blend was returned to wood, where it stayed until October 2024, when all barrels were racked and blended for the final time in stainless steel. Fining trials were carried out but none improved the tannin balance and so the wine remained unfined. It was then sterile filtered and bottled on 25th October, 2024.
In summary, what do we make of the 2022 Moss Wood Cabernet Sauvignon, the 50th vintage of this wine? Given the milestone, we’re happy and just a bit relieved we’ve been able to deliver a year with all the classic features of the style. The warm season ensured consistent ripeness, so the wine displays the vineyard’s typically dark fruit aromas and the palate certainly has the expected key feature of concentrated but balanced tannin, all enhanced by the prettier fragrances which we attribute to the cooler final weeks in March. Very few have been better.
Tasting Notes
Colour and condition
Bright condition, deep ruby with purple hues.
Nose
Bright and lifted aromatics with intense dark fruits of mulberry, blackberry, blueberry and plum. These fruit notes then give way to tobacco leave, cigar box, sage and bay leaf. The oak is subtle and integrated with notes of vanilla bean, cinnamon and cedar.
Palate
The palate is dense and rich in all of the Cabernet fruit spectrum- blackberry, blueberry, red currants and black cherry. Fresh acidity and violets sit in behind this as well as background notes of nutmeg, clove and earth. Tannins are dense, mouth coating and velvet-like with subtle, dusty oak notes on the finish.
CELLARING
There is no doubt the 2022 vintage takes its place among the finest Moss Wood Cabernet Sauvignons, and we have high expectations for its cellaring potential. Thanks to the season’s balance of power and elegance, along with moderate yields, this wine possesses the structure and depth to age gracefully.
We anticipate that a minimum of 10 years will be required to see the first signs of bottle development, with further complexity—cedar, earth, and classic aged Cabernet characters—emerging between 15 and 20 years. However, for those with patience, full maturity will take at least 25 years, and we expect this wine to evolve beautifully for 40 years or more.