
d'Arenberg The Dead Arm Shiraz 2019
d'Arenberg Pty Ltd · d'Arenberg, McLaren Vale, South Australia
The Dead Arm is an experiment in turning disaster into distinction. Most growers would rip out vines afflicted with Eutypa lata, but Chester Osborn saw what the disease did to the surviving fruit — concentrated it, intensified it, made it something a healthy vine could never produce. The resulting wine is enormously concentrated without being heavy, packed with dark fruit and cedar but retaining the savory, earthy character that marks great McLaren Vale Shiraz. It's a reminder that some of the best things in wine happen when nature forces the maker's hand.
Nose
Intense black cherry and dark plum lead, layered with mocha, Kalamata olive, dark chocolate, and a lift of violet and dried herb.
Palate
Full-bodied and deeply concentrated with plush blackcurrant, cherry, and cedar. The tannins are plentiful but ripe, and the French oak adds structure without masking the fruit's intensity.
Finish
Long and persistent with cedary oak, cherry, and a savory, earthy note that lingers.
- Varietal
- 100% Shiraz
- Blend
- 100% Shiraz from vines affected by Eutypa lata (Dead Arm)
- Vineyards
- Estate vineyards in McLaren Vale, South Australia — old vines affected by Eutypa lata
Cocktail Suggestion
Cocktail — The Survivor Sangria: 4 oz Dead Arm Shiraz, 1 oz brandy, 0.5 oz orange liqueur, fresh orange and cherry slices, splash of sparkling water. Combine in a glass with ice, stir gently.
Food Pairing
Pair with: Slow-braised lamb shoulder with rosemary and Kalamata olives — the wine's dark fruit and savory olive notes find a perfect mirror in the dish.
Be the first to comment.
Leave a comment

Hayman's Royal Dock Navy Strength Gin
Hayman's
Navy strength gins were originally proofed to ensure gunpowder would still ignite if rum rations spilled on it — a practical origin that yields an expressive spirit. Hayman's Royal Dock is a textbook example of how higher ABV amplifies botanical clarity. In cocktails, it refuses to be diluted into anonymity.

Ron Diplomático Mantuano
Diplomático
Diplomático's Mantuano is often overshadowed by its Reserva Exclusiva sibling, but it stands on its own as a well-crafted daily sipper. The Venezuelan tropical climate accelerates the angel's share and concentrates flavors. At its price point, it punches well into cocktail territory while remaining pleasant neat.

Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond 7 Year Old
Heaven Hill
Heaven Hill's bonded expression punches well above its price. The seven years in Bardstown's climate-stressed rickhouses push real complexity into the wood interaction. This is a workhorse bourbon with a scholar's depth.

El Tesoro Añejo
El Tesoro
El Tesoro's tahona-crushed, oven-roasted production methods are traditional to the bone, and the two-year rest in ex-bourbon barrels at altitude in Arandas lets the highland terroir breathe through. This is añejo tequila that respects the agave rather than burying it under oak.

Bodegas R. López de Heredia Viña Bosconia Reserva 2012
López de Heredia
López de Heredia releases wines only when they decide they're ready, and Viña Bosconia Reserva 2012 has spent years in the bodega's famous underground caves — a network of ancient cellars with stable temperatures and high humidity. The result is a wine that feels like it has already done the aging work for you. Open it and it's ready to converse.

Domaine du Comte Armand Pommard 1er Cru Clos des Epeneaux 2020
Domaine du Comte Armand
Clos des Epeneaux is a monopole — one of Burgundy's rarest single-owner premier cru vineyards. The 2020 vintage shows the warmth of the year but retains the tension and structure that make Pommard compelling. This is Pinot Noir shaped by a very specific piece of earth, and it shows.

Penfolds Grange 2018
Penfolds
Grange is Australia's most celebrated blend, and the 2018 vintage reminds us why. Max Schubert's original vision — multi-vineyard, multi-region Shiraz with a small percentage of Cabernet — lives on in a wine where blending is not just technique but philosophy. Each parcel contributes something the others lack, and the result is greater than any single vineyard could deliver.

Domaine de Trévallon Rouge 2019
Domaine de Trévallon
Eloi Dürrbach's roughly equal blend of Cabernet Sauvignon and Syrah has been one of Provence's most singular wines for four decades. The 2019 vintage captures the estate's signature tension between power and elegance — a wine that demands cellaring but already reveals its architecture to patient tasters.