CellarTracker!™

Search: (advanced)


External search
Google (images)
Wine Advocate
Wine Spectator
Burghound
Wine-Searcher

Vintages
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
Show more

From this producer
Show all wines
All tasting notes
  Home | All Cellars | Tasting Notes | Reports | UsersHelp | Member Sign In 
  >> USE THE NEW CELLARTRACKER <<


 Vintage2005 Label 1 of 19 
(NOTE: Label borrowed from 2004 vintage.)
TypeRed
ProducerVergelegen (web)
VarietyCabernet Sauvignon
Designationn/a
Vineyardn/a
CountrySouth Africa
RegionCoastal Region
SubRegionStellenbosch
AppellationStellenbosch

Drinking Windows and Values
Drinking window: Drink between 2015 and 2018 (based on 10 user opinions)

Community Tasting History

Community Tasting Notes (average 89.3 pts. and median of 89 pts. in 29 notes) - hiding notes with no text

 Tasted by Keith Cooper on 4/3/2024 & rated 92 points: Tasted at Three Borders Wine Group, Hampshire, UK. We enjoyed a vertical tasting of Vergelegen Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve, tasting six vintages from 2012 to 2005. This case was made available in the UK through The Wine Society and the wines had recently been shipped from the winery.

These notes feature the note on all 6 vintages:

2012: Decanted one hour as recommended. This has a dash of petit verdot. This bottle was expected to be one of the best, but sadly was slightly oxidised with a metallic taste and no fruit. It was drinkable. The colour was medium plum. The palate was earthy, mushrooms, veggie. Not good.

2011: Decanted one hour as recommended. Dark plum colour. Fully mature and ready to drink. Rich and silky. Blackcurrants. Smooth. Good.

2010: Opened one hour before tasting. Dark plum with browning at edges. Rich, chocolatey, full and long. Good.

2007: Cork broke (but that was probably my fault), so decanted and filtered. This has some cabernet franc and merlot. Dark plum colour, slightly cloudy. Menthol nose, perfumed. Rich, full and well balanced. Drinking well. Good.

2006: This vintage was tasting very well. The palate has a sweetness about it, tending to port like. It's fresh, medium purple. Lots of blackcurrant fruit on the palate. Very good.

2005: This vintage does not bear the Reserve label, because that wasn't introduced until the following vintage. We had saved the best till last! Still remarkably young looking, lots of blackcurrant fruit, plenty of tertiary flavours showing. This had also developed a sweetness, becoming almost port like in style. Excellent! (118 views)
 Tasted by Wallgranger on 2/15/2024 & rated 94 points: Beautiful dark and rich wine; dusky perfume. Fruit is red rather than black, nice and sharper, but with very ripe overtones. Classy palate: a treat, reaching the end of the drinking window (149 views)
 Tasted by Joshvoulters on 2/3/2024 & rated 87 points: Not profound or life changing but a very reasonably priced way to scratch the mature Cab itch: cedary with some green pepper notes, blackcurrant, blackberry hedgerow, beef stock. Compact on the palate, reasonable concentration but pinched and a little short: relatively grippy tannins and powerful acidity. (253 views)
 Tasted by Gone with the wine on 1/12/2024 & rated 93 points: Pretty blackberry, plum, smoke and violet on the nose. Still quite robust grippy drying tannins. Only got better with time. (225 views)
 Tasted by dave747400 on 10/18/2022 & rated 92 points: This is why you cellar great SA wine. Superb. 17yrs old but still fresh. No softie, still a tannic framework, perfect with something seared, red & bloody. (757 views)
 Tasted by Millennial Drinkers on 11/2/2018 & rated 89 points: Third of the blind wines this evening for our 9th year together, someone might have forgotten the theme here. This is the Cabernet Sauvignon from the Vergelegen in the Somerset West region of Stellenbosch in South Africa. This is made up of 91% Cabernet Sauvignon, 4.5% Cabernet Franc and 4.5% Merlot from multiple vineyards on the property (Stonepine, Rondekop, Rooiland and Kopland). Aged for 24 months in around 50% new French oak.

Dark brick red with lighter edges. Classic South African nose with layers of chalk, cassis, a little vegetal and earthy. But seems to be shutting down a bit. Medium tannins (5.5/10) with a medium body and quite a bit of acidity. Dark profile on the palate with baking spices and red plums. Medium plus finish. Drink till 2020. (1482 views)
 Tasted by rs on 12/10/2016 & rated 88 points: Matured, very bordeauxlike with cedar, currants, oak. Balanced with dry tannins. (2099 views)
 Tasted by Dancing with bottles on 2/12/2016 & rated 91 points: Serious stuff. Takes at least two hours to blossom. According to estate: 91% CS, 4.5% CF, 4.5% M.

Tightly knit but with ripe tannins. Neither lean nor exhuberant or opulent. Just in between, elegant and balanced. This style made the new world Cabernets to real competitors of great Medocs. Could be confused with a great Napa Cab from the 80s. Great value for around 25-27 Euros.
No need to hurry. It will further develop for at least 3-4 years (2515 views)
 Tasted by S-C-S on 1/15/2016 & rated 92 points: Fantastic cab, perfect to dring now �� (2503 views)
 Tasted by F&JCELLARS on 1/3/2016 & rated 89 points: STILL A FEW MORE YEARS UNDER IT'S BELT. THE COLOUR WAS A BIT BROWN ON TH EDGES. THE TANNINS AND ACIDITY WAS STILL THERE TO SUGGEST A COUPLE MORE YEARS LEFT. IT HAD A MID LENGTH FINISH WITH WELL INTEGRATED FLAVOUR. (2252 views)
 Tasted by derekjohn on 10/18/2015 & rated 89 points: Dark damask red showing no significant signs of age.
This proved to be a very difficult wine to characterise. It had an excellent nose of pepper, blackcurrants, spice (nutmeg), and quite full. In the mouth the original impression was that it was dry, tannic, almost styptic with green stems and a curious charcoal-like mid-range. Reading other people's notes someone described dusty/turmeric and that conveys the impression better, very odd, but it was very good with food (grilled lamb leg steaks and gratin dauphinoise). But as the evening progressed this dustiness was blown away and it opened out into a blackcurrant , full-bodied wine with spicey overtones and a sweeter flavour. My initial scores were in the order of 82/83 but higher with food; I finally settled on the higher score, but I would emphasise that this wine needs a lot of air to fully open out; I had decanted it at the start of the evening.
I would also add that the drinking window posted with this wine seems astonishingly narrow and short to me, my own would be more like 2015 to 2023. (1782 views)
 Tasted by macaujames on 8/14/2015 & rated 91 points: Pomerol like despite the Cabernet and highish alcohol. (1570 views)
 Tasted by TheMajor on 1/23/2015 & rated 89 points: One of my wedding wines (so this note starts in 2012, but extra cases ordered have since been used as the staple dinner party red on many occasions). Chosen as I thought it would appeal to everyone (it did) and it gave a great ratio of tastiness and approval per pound spent (seems to have gone up in price recently though). Slightly blunt but warm cassis nose, excellent colour and body, pretty (if slightly dry) finish. (1410 views)
 Tasted by Jasper May on 2/4/2014 & rated 89 points: Red/orange at the rim, tending to black at the core - quite a pure nose of cedar and dark fruits. Full bodied, fairly intense on the palate without too much SA smokey notes, fresh and less sweet on the palate than many SA cabs, the tannins are still evident, but well integrated - this has many years in it yet. Good value. (1793 views)
 Tasted by Keith Clark on 6/2/2013 & rated 91 points: Great colour- deep, velvety crimson. Green, vine leaf aromas overlaying cassis and blackberry with some dusty spices - cumin and perhaps some turmeric. Somehow unmistakedly SA cabernet on the nose. Big, juiciy mouthful with a touch of spearmint - delicious black fruits. Well integrated tannins. A long acidic finish. I cannot tell whether this wll improve or not and I regret not having a few more to look at in the next two or three years. (2169 views)
 Tasted by Alexroy on 4/20/2012 & rated 83 points: Beautiful Bordeaux colour. Tangy green, cedar, pungent nose. Opens up but burnt rubber SA flavour. Smooth, medium length, grippy tannins. Not to my taste, too SA. (2848 views)
 Tasted by rs on 12/2/2011 & rated 88 points: tobacco, cedar, spices and cassis. Very dry. Drinking well now (until 2015). (2903 views)
 Tasted by martinnugent on 8/2/2011 & rated 88 points: Deep dark red colour. Strong jammy aroma, strawberries and red berries very refreshing. On the taste it continue with the nose of strong jammy rich flavour, just a hint of tannins. Develops into a rather smooth taste with a slightly acidic after taste. (2954 views)
 Tasted by quickben on 7/5/2011 & rated 88 points: evolved through the evening into a distinguished wine - lots of blackcurrant, leather and cigar - tannins are taut but balanced (2304 views)
 Tasted by belfast taxman on 3/8/2011 & rated 89 points: This is maturing into a very nice bottle of piney fruit with smooth tannins and not too sweet or alcoholic in the mouth - hopefully it will keep going for a few years yet (2166 views)
 Tasted by Vitisvinifera on 3/14/2010 & rated 85 points: Harsh on opening. Softened in the glass, but remained tannic and harsh in the mouth. Better South African alternatives in the same the price range (Rustenberg John X Merriman) (2091 views)
 Tasted by kevin h on 12/7/2009 & rated 90 points: Good, solid claret alternative. Youthful and a little hard still but a couple of hours in the decanter revealed a nice brambly nose and plenty of restrained, balanced but ripe cassis flavours. (2193 views)
 Tasted by pjaines on 2/17/2009: Big, dark wine with expressive nose and good complexity but could do with a bit more acidity to lend the wine some freshness. Not a bad wine for £15 but the overall impression is of a fuzzy, furry wine that kind of smothers the mouth and clings to it. Having said that, there is good complexity here and the wine will age for a considerable time. I used to love this wine but perhaps my palate is changing (maturing?). Overall pretty good. (2284 views)
 Only displaying the 25 most recent notes - click to see all notes for this wine...

Professional 'Channels'
By Richard Hemming, MW
JancisRobinson.com (6/12/2012)
(Vergelegen Cabernet Sauvignon Stellenbosch Red) Subscribe to see review text.
By Richard Hemming, MW
JancisRobinson.com (2/3/2011)
(Vergelegen Cabernet Sauvignon Stellenbosch Red) Subscribe to see review text.
NOTE: Scores and reviews are the property of JancisRobinson.com. (manage subscription channels)

CellarTracker Wiki Articles (login to edit | view all articles)

Vergelegen

Producer website

Cabernet Sauvignon

Cabernet Sauvignon is probably the most famous red wine grape variety on Earth. It is rivaled in this regard only by its Bordeaux stablemate Merlot, and its opposite number in Burgundy, Pinot Noir. From its origins in Bordeaux, Cabernet has successfully spread to almost every winegrowing country in the world. It is now the key grape variety in many first-rate New World wine regions, most notably Napa Valley, Coonawarra and Maipo Valley. Wherever they come from, Cabernet Sauvignon wines always seem to demonstrate a handful of common character traits: deep color, good tannin structure, moderate acidity and aromas of blackcurrant, tomato leaf, dark spices and cedarwood.

Used as frequently in blends as in varietal wines, Cabernet Sauvignon has a large number of common blending partners. Apart from the obvious Merlot and Cabernet Franc, the most prevalent of these are Malbec, Petit Verdot and Carmenere (the ingredients of a classic Bordeaux Blend), Shiraz (in Australia's favorite blend) and in Spain and South America, a Cabernet – Tempranillo blend is now commonplace. Even the bold Tannat-based wines of Madiran are now generally softened with Cabernet Sauvignon

South Africa

Wines of South Africa

Stellenbosch

Stellenbosch Wine Routes

Stellenbosch

The historical town of Stellenbosch boasts a winemaking tradition which stretches back to the end of the 17th-century.

Stellenbosch is the educational and research centre of the winelands. Stellenbosch University is the only one in South Africa with a viticultural and oenological department, and many of the country's most successful winemakers studied there. The Nietvoorbij Institute of Viticulture and Oenology is also in Stellenbosch and this organisation has one of the most modern experimental wineries in the world and, at its experimental farms (situated in several wine growing districts), important research into new varietals, clones and rootstocks is undertaken.

The mountainous terrain, good rainfall, deep well-drained soils and diversity of terroirs make this a sought-after viticultural area. The rapidly increasing number of wine estates includes some of the most famous names in Cape wine. The district, with its mix of historic estates and contemporary wineries, produces excellent examples of almost all the noble grape varieties.

The intensively farmed Stellenbosch district has been divided up into several smaller viticultural pockets including Jonkershoek Valley, Papegaaiberg, Simonsberg-Stellenbosch, Bottelary, Devon Valley and Banghoek.

 
© 2003-24 CellarTracker! LLC. All rights reserved. "CellarTracker!" is a trademark of CellarTracker! LLC. No part of this website may be used, reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of CellarTracker! LLC. (Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.) - Follow us on Twitter and on Facebook