Sale
Penfolds Grange + St Henri: The Collector's Set
Two of Australia's most enduring red wine expressions, together in one collection. Grange and St Henri represent opposite poles of the Penfolds phi...
View full details
Sale
Two of Australia's most enduring red wine expressions, together in one collection. Grange and St Henri represent opposite poles of the Penfolds phi...
View full details
Sale
Product Description:Elegant concentration and finely tuned structure define this expressive Central Otago Pinot Noir from one of Bannockburn’s benc...
View full details
Sale
Product Description:Celebratory elegance and classic Champagne craftsmanship define this special edition release from the historic house of Taittin...
View full details
Sale
Product Description:Bright Tasmanian purity and understated complexity define this elegant cool-climate Pinot Noir. The 2025 Pooley Pinot Noir is ...
View full details
Sale
Product Description:Rich texture and southern Rhône elegance define the Château Mont-Redon Châteauneuf-du-Pape Blanc 2024, a beautifully composed w...
View full detailsREVIEWS + ACCOLADES
96 Points
Sami-Odi’s ‘Hoffmann Little Wine 14’ is anything but small — it’s a masterclass in blending time, place and patience. Crafted by Fraser McKinley, this non-vintage Syrah weaves together ten consecutive harvests from the treasured Hoffmann Dallwitz vineyard, where vines range from 27 to over 135 years old.
Each ‘Little Wine’ release is a snapshot of Fraser’s meticulous farming and low-intervention winemaking. Parcels are picked for brightness or depth, fermented whole-cluster, and matured in seasoned Burgundy barrels. Older vintages add weight and savoury nuance; younger ones keep it pulsing with energy. It’s biodynamic Barossa Syrah reimagined — expressive, layered and unashamedly drinkable.
Expect immediate pleasure but don’t rush it; this wine will open beautifully in the glass and can age further if you’re patient. Pair with charred meats, roasted mushrooms or a generous platter of hard cheeses.
Sami-Odi’s ‘Hoffmann Little Wine 14’ is anything but small — it’s a masterclass in blending time, place and patience. Crafted by Fraser McKinley, this non-vintage Syrah weaves together ten consecutive harvests from the treasured Hoffmann Dallwitz vineyard, where vines range from 27 to over 135 years old.
Each ‘Little Wine’ release is a snapshot of Fraser’s meticulous farming and low-intervention winemaking. Parcels are picked for brightness or depth, fermented whole-cluster, and matured in seasoned Burgundy barrels. Older vintages add weight and savoury nuance; younger ones keep it pulsing with energy. It’s biodynamic Barossa Syrah reimagined — expressive, layered and unashamedly drinkable.
Expect immediate pleasure but don’t rush it; this wine will open beautifully in the glass and can age further if you’re patient. Pair with charred meats, roasted mushrooms or a generous platter of hard cheeses.
A complex, multi-vintage Barossa Syrah with stunning depth and energy.
Fraser McKinley is the force behind Sami-Odi—a singular project quietly revolutionising Barossa Syrah. A native New Zealander with a background in spatial design and fine art, McKinley took an unlikely path to winemaking. A formative stint at Torbreck and The Standish Wine Co. laid the technical groundwork, but Sami-Odi has always been something else entirely: a deeply personal expression of site, vine, and time.
Since 2010, McKinley has worked exclusively with Shiraz from the Hoffmann Dallwitz Vineyard, managing his own rows with rigorous organic care. These blocks—some with vines dating back to the 1880s—are cultivated with obsessive precision. Yields are low, the detail is high, and the winemaking is uncompromisingly hands-on: small-batch ferments, whole bunches, no additions except sulphur, and bottling by gravity, unfined and unfiltered.
Sami-Odi is not built on scale or consistency—it’s about curation. McKinley’s approach to wine is more akin to an artist building a body of work: careful, layered, and always evolving. Each release is a blend of individual ferments, often across vine age, blocks, and even vintages. The result is not showy but intricate—wines that unfold slowly, offering both immediate pleasure and long-term intrigue.
This is Barossa through a new lens. The ripeness and power are there, but reined in by early picking, thoughtful canopy work, and a refusal to follow formula. Ferments range from carbonic to traditional, all pressed in small basket lots and matured in neutral oak. What emerges is Syrah with tension and soul—equal parts structure and spontaneity, driven more by instinct than recipe. McKinley doesn’t talk much about technique. He talks about the vineyard, the blend, and how it all feels. And the wines speak fluently in return.
Cherry skin, black berries, liquorice and a touch of old leather.
Dark berry liqueur lifted by vibrant acidity and fine, firm tannins.
Extended finish with subtle warmth and savoury spice.