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Max Schubert

Max Schubert AM (9 February 1915 – 6 March 1994) was a pioneering Australian winemaker, with Penfolds, who is best known as the creator of Grange Hermitage.[1] Schubert was included in the Sydney Morning Herald's 100 most influential Australians of the century, which was published in 2001.[2]

Max Edmund Schubert
Max Schubert AM
Born(1915-02-09)9 February 1915
Moculta, South Australia
Died6 March 1994(1994-03-06) (aged 79)
NationalityAustralian
OccupationWinemaker
Years active1931–1982
Known forCreator of Penfolds Grange Hermitage

Life and career edit

Schubert was born to Lutheran parents in a German community on the fringes of the Barossa Valley, South Australia, a region renowned for its winemaking. He joined Penfolds in 1931 as a messenger boy and became Penfolds' first chief winemaker in 1948 at the age of 33, a position he held until 1975. Schubert spent his entire working life with Penfolds. He was described as "a true company man, devoted to Penfolds, (...) a humble and loyal servant of the Penfold family, and later of the public company."[3]

Schubert served in the Second World War, volunteering against the wishes of his managing director at Penfolds. He is believed to have saved the life of another Australia soldier when Stuka dive-bombers wiped out his convoy in north Africa, killing 200 men. He went on to serve in Greece, Crete, the Middle East, Ceylon and New Guinea, where he contracted malaria.[4]

Schubert died in 1994, aged 79, at his home in Adelaide, South Australia. In his obituary The New York Times noted that his Grange had won more wine show prizes than any other Australian red wine, and was regarded as the flagship of Australia's wine industry.[5]

Grange Hermitage edit

In 1949 Schubert was sent to France and Spain to learn more about fortified wine making, fortified wines being the main production focus of Australian wineries during the period.[6] As part of the trip he also visited the Bordeaux region, including first growth estates Château Lafite Rothschild, Château Latour and Château Margaux. On visiting these estates he was afforded the opportunity to taste aged Bordeaux wines.[7][8]

On returning to Australia, Schubert set about creating a wine for Penfolds that would similarly match the ability to age that he had seen in France. In 1951 the first experimental wine of the project was produced. Schubert named this wine "Grange Hermitage", a combination of the name of the Penfold family cottage "Grange" and the French appellation "Hermitage". Unlike the Bordeaux wines, Grange was comprised not of Cabernet, but almost exclusively of Shiraz. With the French appellation Hermitage being a Shiraz/Syrah growing area the wine was thus named.[9]

Schubert stated, "The method of production seemed fairly straightforward, but with several unorthodox features, and I felt that it would only be a matter of undertaking a complete survey of vineyards to find the correct varietal grape material. Then with a modified approach to take account of differing conditions, such as climate, soil, raw material and techniques generally, would not be impossible to produce a wine which could stand on its own feet throughout the world and would be capable of improvement year by year for a minimum of 20 years."[10]

1952 saw the first commercial release of Grange. Initially it did not receive a favourable reception. By 1957 Schubert was ordered by Penfolds management to cease production. However the 1957, 1958 and 1959 vintages of Grange were still made by Schubert despite this direction.[11]

A reprieve was granted for the production of Grange after a latter tasting by the Penfolds board of the early Grange wines met with much more favourable opinions. The 1960 vintage enabled Schubert to return to using new oak barrels, something he had been unable to do during the 1957–59 vintages.[12]

The 1955 vintage of Grange Hermitage was submitted to wine competitions beginning in 1962 and over the years has won more than 50 gold medals. The 1971 vintage won first prize in Syrah/Shiraz at the Wine Olympics in Paris. The 1990 vintage was named "Red Wine of the Year" by Wine Spectator magazine in 1995, which later rated the 1998 vintage a 99 points out of a possible 100.

A Schubert created 1951 Grange became the most expensive Australian Wine to ever be sold, when it was bought for $142,131 AUD at auction in July 2021.[13]

Bin 60A and other wines edit

In 1962 Schubert created a wine from that would become known as Bin 60A. Created using Cabernet Sauvignon from the Coonawarra (Sharam's Block and Block 20) and Barossa Valley shiraz (Kalimna Vineyard), the Bin 60A became Penfolds' most successful show wine, winning thirty-three gold medals and nineteen trophies in a short timespan.[14]

The experimental wine was produced in relatively small quantities, with a little over 400 cases of the wine produced. Acclaimed on the show circuit on release, the Bin 60A received even greater acknowledgement after Max Schubert's death, when in 2004 Decanter Magazine named it as the only New World wine in its top 10 of the greatest wines of all time.[15]

In 2008 respected Australian wine critic James Halliday said of the Bin 60A, "An utterly superb wine, a glorious freak of nature and man... The palate is virtually endless, with a peacock’s tail stolen from the greatest of Burgundies... This is possibly the greatest red wine tasted in our times in Australia."[16]

In 1953 Schubert created a solely Cabernet-based Grange, released with the moniker Bin 9. This wine was created using grapes from the Kalimna Block 42. Block 42 is stated as being the site of the oldest continuously producing Cabernet Sauvignon vines on earth. In 1961 a Bin 58 Cabernet Sauvignon was produced using Block 42 fruit, and again in 1963 as Bin 63 - a wine that won the prestigious Jimmy Watson Memorial Trophy in 1964. In 1964 Schubert created the first Bin 707 wine from Block 42 fruit.[17]

Schubert is also credited with the creation of Penfolds Bin series wine, beginning with Bin 28 in 1959, and followed by Bin 389 a year later in 1960.

Other work edit

His other innovations included the use of plastics, refrigeration, pH control, and cold stabilisation of white wines.[18]

Honours edit

Over the course of his career, and beyond, Schubert received many awards, including Member of the Order of Australia (AM)[19] and the inaugural Maurice O'Shea Award for his contribution to the Australian wine industry. He was also named 1988 Man of the Year by the UK's Decanter Magazine.[20]

In 1997 Max was posthumously honoured with the creation of the Electoral district of Schubert in the South Australian House of Assembly, a seat in the lower house of the South Australian state parliament. The electoral district includes the Barossa Valley wine region where Max Schubert was born and began working at Penfolds.

See also edit

References edit

  • The New York Times (9 March 1994). Max Schubert, Australian wine maker, dies
  • The Economist (16 December 1999). "The globe in a glass"
Footnotes
  1. ^ winepros.com.au. The Oxford Companion to Wine. . Archived from the original on 28 September 2011.
  2. ^ Stephens, Tony (22 January 2001). "The most influential Australians". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 22 November 2013.
  3. ^ Hooke, Huon (1994). Max Schubert Winemaker. Alexandria, NSW, Australia: Kerr Publishing Pty Lts. p. 5. ISBN 1-875703-19-5.
  4. ^ "The birth of Penfolds Grange". wine-searcher.com. Wine Searcher. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  5. ^ "Max Schubert, Australia Wine Maker, Dies". The New York Times. 9 March 1994. Retrieved 15 August 2014.
  6. ^ Hooke, Huon (1994). Max Schubert Winemaker. Alexandria, NSW, Australia: Kerr Publishing Pty Ltd. p. 1. ISBN 1-875703-19-5.
  7. ^ "The Story of Grange". penfolds.com. Penfolds. Retrieved 14 August 2014.
  8. ^ Caillard, Andrew (2013). The Rewards of Patience (7 ed.). Australia: Hardie Grant Books. p. 68. ISBN 9781742706078.
  9. ^ Caillard, Andrew (2013). The Rewards of Patience (7 ed.). Australia: Hardie Grant Books. pp. 68–71. ISBN 9781742706078.
  10. ^ Read, Adrian; Caillard, Andrew (2002). The Rewards of Patience (4 ed.). Sydney, Australia: Penfolds Wines Pty Ltd. pp. 137, 138. ISBN 0959980490.
  11. ^ Caillard, Andrew (2013). The Rewards of Patience (7 ed.). Australia: Hardie Grant Books. p. 70. ISBN 9781742706078.
  12. ^ Caillard, Andrew (2013). The Rewards of Patience (7 ed.). Australia: Hardie Grant Books. p. 71. ISBN 9781742706078.
  13. ^ Woodard, Richard (19 July 2021). "Penfolds Grange 1951 sets new auction record". Decanter. Retrieved 7 August 2021.
  14. ^ Caillard, Andrew (2013). The Rewards of Patience (7 ed.). Richmond, Victoria, Australia: Hardie Grant. p. 109. ISBN 9781742706078.
  15. ^ "Prince Charles offered the legendary Penfolds 1962 Bin 60A". decanter.com. Decanter, part of Time Inc. (UK). 7 November 2012. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  16. ^ "Penfolds Bin 60A, 1962" (PDF). decanter.com. Decanter, part of Time Inc. (UK). Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  17. ^ Caillard, Andrew (2013). The Rewards of Patience (7 ed.). Richmond, Victoria, Australia: Hardie Grant. pp. 107–110. ISBN 9781742706078.
  18. ^ australianfinewines.com Max Schubert - Penfolds Grange Hermitage Australian Winemaker
  19. ^ "Max Edmund SCHUBERT". Australian Honours Search Facility, Dept of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  20. ^ "Max Schubert". penfolds.com. Penfolds. Retrieved 15 August 2014.

schubert, february, 1915, march, 1994, pioneering, australian, winemaker, with, penfolds, best, known, creator, grange, hermitage, schubert, included, sydney, morning, herald, most, influential, australians, century, which, published, 2001, edmund, schubertam,. Max Schubert AM 9 February 1915 6 March 1994 was a pioneering Australian winemaker with Penfolds who is best known as the creator of Grange Hermitage 1 Schubert was included in the Sydney Morning Herald s 100 most influential Australians of the century which was published in 2001 2 Max Edmund SchubertAMMax Schubert AMBorn 1915 02 09 9 February 1915Moculta South AustraliaDied6 March 1994 1994 03 06 aged 79 Adelaide South AustraliaNationalityAustralianOccupationWinemakerYears active1931 1982Known forCreator of Penfolds Grange Hermitage Contents 1 Life and career 2 Grange Hermitage 3 Bin 60A and other wines 4 Other work 5 Honours 6 See also 7 ReferencesLife and career editSchubert was born to Lutheran parents in a German community on the fringes of the Barossa Valley South Australia a region renowned for its winemaking He joined Penfolds in 1931 as a messenger boy and became Penfolds first chief winemaker in 1948 at the age of 33 a position he held until 1975 Schubert spent his entire working life with Penfolds He was described as a true company man devoted to Penfolds a humble and loyal servant of the Penfold family and later of the public company 3 Schubert served in the Second World War volunteering against the wishes of his managing director at Penfolds He is believed to have saved the life of another Australia soldier when Stuka dive bombers wiped out his convoy in north Africa killing 200 men He went on to serve in Greece Crete the Middle East Ceylon and New Guinea where he contracted malaria 4 Schubert died in 1994 aged 79 at his home in Adelaide South Australia In his obituary The New York Times noted that his Grange had won more wine show prizes than any other Australian red wine and was regarded as the flagship of Australia s wine industry 5 Grange Hermitage editIn 1949 Schubert was sent to France and Spain to learn more about fortified wine making fortified wines being the main production focus of Australian wineries during the period 6 As part of the trip he also visited the Bordeaux region including first growth estates Chateau Lafite Rothschild Chateau Latour and Chateau Margaux On visiting these estates he was afforded the opportunity to taste aged Bordeaux wines 7 8 On returning to Australia Schubert set about creating a wine for Penfolds that would similarly match the ability to age that he had seen in France In 1951 the first experimental wine of the project was produced Schubert named this wine Grange Hermitage a combination of the name of the Penfold family cottage Grange and the French appellation Hermitage Unlike the Bordeaux wines Grange was comprised not of Cabernet but almost exclusively of Shiraz With the French appellation Hermitage being a Shiraz Syrah growing area the wine was thus named 9 Schubert stated The method of production seemed fairly straightforward but with several unorthodox features and I felt that it would only be a matter of undertaking a complete survey of vineyards to find the correct varietal grape material Then with a modified approach to take account of differing conditions such as climate soil raw material and techniques generally would not be impossible to produce a wine which could stand on its own feet throughout the world and would be capable of improvement year by year for a minimum of 20 years 10 1952 saw the first commercial release of Grange Initially it did not receive a favourable reception By 1957 Schubert was ordered by Penfolds management to cease production However the 1957 1958 and 1959 vintages of Grange were still made by Schubert despite this direction 11 A reprieve was granted for the production of Grange after a latter tasting by the Penfolds board of the early Grange wines met with much more favourable opinions The 1960 vintage enabled Schubert to return to using new oak barrels something he had been unable to do during the 1957 59 vintages 12 The 1955 vintage of Grange Hermitage was submitted to wine competitions beginning in 1962 and over the years has won more than 50 gold medals The 1971 vintage won first prize in Syrah Shiraz at the Wine Olympics in Paris The 1990 vintage was named Red Wine of the Year by Wine Spectator magazine in 1995 which later rated the 1998 vintage a 99 points out of a possible 100 A Schubert created 1951 Grange became the most expensive Australian Wine to ever be sold when it was bought for 142 131 AUD at auction in July 2021 13 Bin 60A and other wines editIn 1962 Schubert created a wine from that would become known as Bin 60A Created using Cabernet Sauvignon from the Coonawarra Sharam s Block and Block 20 and Barossa Valley shiraz Kalimna Vineyard the Bin 60A became Penfolds most successful show wine winning thirty three gold medals and nineteen trophies in a short timespan 14 The experimental wine was produced in relatively small quantities with a little over 400 cases of the wine produced Acclaimed on the show circuit on release the Bin 60A received even greater acknowledgement after Max Schubert s death when in 2004 Decanter Magazine named it as the only New World wine in its top 10 of the greatest wines of all time 15 In 2008 respected Australian wine critic James Halliday said of the Bin 60A An utterly superb wine a glorious freak of nature and man The palate is virtually endless with a peacock s tail stolen from the greatest of Burgundies This is possibly the greatest red wine tasted in our times in Australia 16 In 1953 Schubert created a solely Cabernet based Grange released with the moniker Bin 9 This wine was created using grapes from the Kalimna Block 42 Block 42 is stated as being the site of the oldest continuously producing Cabernet Sauvignon vines on earth In 1961 a Bin 58 Cabernet Sauvignon was produced using Block 42 fruit and again in 1963 as Bin 63 a wine that won the prestigious Jimmy Watson Memorial Trophy in 1964 In 1964 Schubert created the first Bin 707 wine from Block 42 fruit 17 Schubert is also credited with the creation of Penfolds Bin series wine beginning with Bin 28 in 1959 and followed by Bin 389 a year later in 1960 Other work editHis other innovations included the use of plastics refrigeration pH control and cold stabilisation of white wines 18 Honours editOver the course of his career and beyond Schubert received many awards including Member of the Order of Australia AM 19 and the inaugural Maurice O Shea Award for his contribution to the Australian wine industry He was also named 1988 Man of the Year by the UK s Decanter Magazine 20 In 1997 Max was posthumously honoured with the creation of the Electoral district of Schubert in the South Australian House of Assembly a seat in the lower house of the South Australian state parliament The electoral district includes the Barossa Valley wine region where Max Schubert was born and began working at Penfolds See also editAustralian wine List of wine personalitiesReferences editThe New York Times 9 March 1994 Max Schubert Australian wine maker dies The Economist 16 December 1999 The globe in a glass Footnotes winepros com au The Oxford Companion to Wine Penfolds Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Stephens Tony 22 January 2001 The most influential Australians The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 22 November 2013 Hooke Huon 1994 Max Schubert Winemaker Alexandria NSW Australia Kerr Publishing Pty Lts p 5 ISBN 1 875703 19 5 The birth of Penfolds Grange wine searcher com Wine Searcher Retrieved 16 December 2014 Max Schubert Australia Wine Maker Dies The New York Times 9 March 1994 Retrieved 15 August 2014 Hooke Huon 1994 Max Schubert Winemaker Alexandria NSW Australia Kerr Publishing Pty Ltd p 1 ISBN 1 875703 19 5 The Story of Grange penfolds com Penfolds Retrieved 14 August 2014 Caillard Andrew 2013 The Rewards of Patience 7 ed Australia Hardie Grant Books p 68 ISBN 9781742706078 Caillard Andrew 2013 The Rewards of Patience 7 ed Australia Hardie Grant Books pp 68 71 ISBN 9781742706078 Read Adrian Caillard Andrew 2002 The Rewards of Patience 4 ed Sydney Australia Penfolds Wines Pty Ltd pp 137 138 ISBN 0959980490 Caillard Andrew 2013 The Rewards of Patience 7 ed Australia Hardie Grant Books p 70 ISBN 9781742706078 Caillard Andrew 2013 The Rewards of Patience 7 ed Australia Hardie Grant Books p 71 ISBN 9781742706078 Woodard Richard 19 July 2021 Penfolds Grange 1951 sets new auction record Decanter Retrieved 7 August 2021 Caillard Andrew 2013 The Rewards of Patience 7 ed Richmond Victoria Australia Hardie Grant p 109 ISBN 9781742706078 Prince Charles offered the legendary Penfolds 1962 Bin 60A decanter com Decanter part of Time Inc UK 7 November 2012 Retrieved 16 December 2014 Penfolds Bin 60A 1962 PDF decanter com Decanter part of Time Inc UK Retrieved 16 December 2014 Caillard Andrew 2013 The Rewards of Patience 7 ed Richmond Victoria Australia Hardie Grant pp 107 110 ISBN 9781742706078 australianfinewines com Max Schubert Penfolds Grange Hermitage Australian Winemaker Max Edmund SCHUBERT Australian Honours Search Facility Dept of the Prime Minister and Cabinet Retrieved 6 November 2020 Max Schubert penfolds com Penfolds Retrieved 15 August 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Max Schubert amp oldid 1145159608, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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