• Victoria Park Barossa Valley Shiraz by Yalumba, 2018 750ml
  • Victoria Park Barossa Valley Shiraz by Yalumba, 2018 - image 1 of 1
tap to enlarge
Winery Direct Item

Victoria Park Barossa Valley Shiraz by Yalumba, 2018

750ml
$17.99
+CRV
Mix 6 for $16.19 each
James Suckling
92
Quantity
*Price, vintage and availability may vary by store.
*Price, vintage and availability may vary by store.
Share
Product Highlights

James Suckling-Australia - Barossa - "A juicy and delicious Shiraz from a top vintage with medium body, creamy tannins and a fresh and silky finish. Balanced and fine textured." Produced by the talented team at Yalumba.

SpiceMulberryDark Chocolate

OVERVIEW

Victoria Park wines

Matt’s family has been selling grapes to the Yalumba winery since 1962. But it wasn’t until he spent 17 years in electronic repair and sales and got a wine degree that he was able to circle back to his first loves—Yalumba and winemaking.

He joined the Yalumba team as a nightshift red winemaker and worked his way up to red winemaker at Oxford Landing estates, leading the team to eight successful vintages. Matt and his Victoria Park are proof that no matter how long it takes, following your passion pays off.

If South Australia, Australia’s best-known state for wine production, is “what California is to the USA,” wine writer Hugh Johnson notes, the Barossa Valley is its Napa Valley. The Barossa Valley boasts the highest number of vineyards of any Australian wine region, producing popular full-bodied wines with bold fruit flavors.


Red grapes produce an amazing array of red wine types: from the boldest, heartiest big reds, to elegant and structured dry red wines, to sweet and simple picnic sippers. So much depends on where grapes are from and what the winemaker does with them, but the most important factor is the variety of the grape itself.

There are the familiar international red varieties – Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot Noir, Merlot and more – produced in the world’s top winemaking regions. Then there are regional red varieties, which produce types of red wine nearly synonymous with their place of origin, such as Sangiovese, from Italy, and Tempranillo, from Spain. There are hundreds more red grape varieties regularly used to make wine around the globe.

Most red wine varietals fare best in warmer climates, where they can ripen fully before harvesting. So climate and soil – as well as market demand – determine the best grape types to plant in a particular vineyard. In Europe, centuries of tradition, trial and error determined what wine grapes grew best where, and modern regulations have enshrined those winemaking practices into law.

Our red wine guide details the flavor profiles and regions of the most popular red varieties – plus a few you may not yet know. Use it as a road map for Total Wine & More’s selection of more than 8,000 wines. You’ll learn everything there is to know about your favorite red wines, and we’re sure you’ll find some new red wines to love.