Volcanic Wine Awards | The Jancis Robinson Story | Mission Blind Tasting

Lowerland, Vaalkameel Colombard 2018 Prieska

• 5 min read
Lowerland vineyards in the Northern Cape

An ugly-ducking grape turns swan in a remote region of the arid Northern Cape to celebrate tonight's #SpectacularSouthAfrica initiative to encourage everyone to open a bottle of South African wine.

From 275 rand (per bottle in a case of 6), €29.95, £31.95, $39.99, 38.90 Swiss francs

Find this wine

NB I have included prices for the 2017 vintage, and the link to Wine-Searcher includes 2017 and 2019, because this wine is going to be good, no matter which vintage you can get hold of.

No wine-producing country has been more severely affected by COVID-19 than South Africa. Not because of illness or death, but because the South African government made a momentous prohibition-style decision to ban all sales of alcohol (and tobacco), including exports, during lockdown (see this thread in our Members' forum). Lockdown has now eased, leaving in place the ban on national sales or any movement of alcohol but allowing exports since 1 May. Who knows when that will change. The decision-making body has been capricious, to say the least.

Alcohol-related violence and abuse is rife in South Africa. The reasoning was that it would reduce domestic violence, free up police to focus on making sure that people were obeying the lockdown and ease pressure on hospitals which dealt with an average of 34,000 hospital trauma admissions a week (now down to 12,000). Whether this is due to fewer people out and about and less traffic on the roads in general (South African roads are a death trap) or less alcohol, is a matter of controversy. Not everyone agrees and it has certainly created other problems.

South African wine producers and wine merchants have not been able to sell or move a drop of liquid. Devastating for hundreds of businesses with thousands of people dependent on them for their livelihoods.

So when I got an email from WOSA telling me about their Spectacular South Africa campaign to support the SA wine industry through this tough period, I decided that my wine of the week would be South African.

Usually I pick a wine that is well under £20. A bargain. This one is not. And that’s because sometimes, to celebrate and support something, you need to push the boat out. This wine is well worth pushing the boat out for…

As anyone who is familiar with South Africa knows, the Kalahari is not exactly what you would describe as wine country. My childhood memories are of bleak, never-ending hours driving through red dust and skinny thorn scrub on our way from Zimbabwe to Cape Town (three days in a clapped-out tank of a station wagon smelling of boiled eggs and salt and vinegar crisps), and it filled me with a sense of enervation and loneliness. It was dry and rocky, and even the goats on the side of the pocked tarmac road were bony.

I’d never heard of Prieska, nor wine from the Northern Cape, nor, indeed, Lowerland, before this bottle crossed my path. This makes Swartland look like Bordeaux. It’s a remote, high-elevation (1,000 m/3,280 ft above sea level), semi-arid region, 900 km (560 m) inland from the rest of the Cape wine regions. Rainfall is under 250 mm (9.8 in) a year. Soil is Kalahari red sand on limestone. Bertie Coetzee fought long and hard to have Prieska recognised as a Wine of Origin.

But this is a seriously exciting producer. Lowerland was a Merino sheep and horse farm owned for four generations by the Coetzee family before the first table grapes were planted there in the 1960s. In 1999 the first wine grapes were planted.

When, in 2013, Bertie Coetzee joined the farm to work with his father Hennie (pictured below), his vision was for conservation and regenerative agriculture, holistic management and sustainable practices across the spectrum of human, environmental and economic. The whole direction of Lowerland changed.

Bertie and Hennie Coetzee of Lowerland in their vineyards
Bertie and Hennie Coetzee of Lowerland in their vineyards

The vineyards are organically certified, farmed naturally without chemicals, and they use kudus to prune the vineyards (!), bat-eared foxes and owls for pest control, and pecan shells (pecans are one of the farm’s crops) and Bronsmara cattle manure (cattle, not manure, pictured below) to fertilise the vines. Winemaking is all natural fermentation, basket pressing and manual pumpovers. They invest heavily in their local community and in building national farming knowledge.

Bronsmara cattle on the Lowerland farm
Bronsmara cattle fertilising Lowerland vineyards
Lowerland vineyards in flower
Lowerland vineyards in flower

This is a family with big hearts, and they not only wear their hearts on their sleeves but they walk their talk.

Bertie Coetzee and his wife Alette
Bertie Coetzee and his wife Alette

And now to wine. Believe me, if it weren’t stunning, I would not have wasted all these words on the preamble.

It’s made from the oh-so-humble workhorse grape Colombard, about which Jancis gave, in The Oxford Companion to Wine, a career-ending coup de grâce: ‘It would take some sorcery to transform Colombard into an exciting wine.’

Ouch.

But.

Winemaker Lukas van Loggerenberg and farmer Bertie Coetzee are sorcerers.

Bertie Coetzee with Lowerland's Valkameel Colombard
Bertie Coetzee with Lowerland's Vaalkameel Colombard

This wine stopped me in my tracks. Is it possible to make something so beautiful out of a Cognac blending grape?

It smelt of golden-green figs, mimosa, ripe avocado and Mexican orange blossom. On the palate it plumbed the depth of rocks and apricots, swirling in wide, satiny circles around the mouth. An amazing play between acidity and richness, scalpels and cream with halyards of lightly toasted oats, ginger root and a billowing sheet of bay-leaf green spiciness twisting into the finish. Long and sculpted and complex. Unbelievable length. The wine just rides the light, on and on.

This is, quite simply, a stunning wine.

It’s from a 3-ha (7.4-acre) vineyard of 19-year-old vines, harvested at 15 tons/ha. The grapes are shipped south in a refrigerated truck to be vinified in what the 2020 Platter Guide describes as 'a simple shed atop a Devon Valley hill' by rising star Lukas Van Loggerenberg, already snapped up in the UK by Justerini & Brooks. Alette Coetzee wrote in an email, that he had been making their Tolbos Tannat since 2015, and 'then wanted to try the Colombard as a still wine. With his Midas touch and very hands-off natural methods he turned this grape into something really special.'

Whole-bunch-pressed grapes were left to settle overnight in stainless steel and then put into old French oak for spontaneous fermentation. 10 months on primary lees, no bâtonnage, no additives and only a little SO2 before bottling. Total acidity is 7.1 g/l, pH is 3.2, residual sugar 1.7 g/l and alcohol 13.3%. Total SO2 was 78 mg/l – it would be interesting to see what the free SO2 is now.

We paired it with coal-grilled scallops and this scrumptious roasted carrots and tahini yogurt recipe from Thomasina Miers and it soared. It’s a wine that loves food. It would be just as beautiful with a simple roast chicken, or pork chops in an apple-fennel sauce, or caramelised butternut with harissa spice and a sweetcorn puree. You could have a glass of it with a handful of pan-warmed almonds or Nocellara olives. You could drizzle feta with honey and a green fig and it would tuck itself into the salt and sweetness with a grin.

In addition to the #SpectacularSouthAfrica celebration today, there is the Great British Braai Off over this coming UK bank holiday weekend. The weather is perfect here in Europe, so get out there! (But to be blunt, you don’t have to be British or have a bank holiday to just get in there and stick something delicious on the coals. WOSA supplies some yummy SA recipes and if you’re going into winter (thinking of you, Australia), bobotie is the perfect cold-weather pairing for this wine.)

Vallkameel is, by the way, the Afrikaans name for the Grey Camelthorn, or Acacia haematoxylon. That’s the skinny thorn scrub I told you about.

The wine is imported into the UK by Graft Wine Company and you can buy it from Red Squirrel online shop as well as Phoenix Wines (Cirencester) and the Whisky Exchange (London). It’s also available in South Africa (when lockdown alcohol restrictions ease), the Netherlands, Switzerland and the US. There is also a pallet on its way to Brazil as we speak.

Lowerland Vaalkameel Colombard 2018 Prieske
Lowerland Vaalkameel Colombard 2018 Prieske

Find this wine

Choose your plan
Member
$135
/year
Save over 15% annually
Ideal for wine enthusiasts
  • Access 294,796 wine reviews & 16,082 articles
  • Access The Oxford Companion to Wine & The World Atlas of Wine
Inner Circle
$249
/year
 
Ideal for collectors
  • Access 294,796 wine reviews & 16,082 articles
  • Access The Oxford Companion to Wine & The World Atlas of Wine
  • Early access to the latest wine reviews & articles, 48 hours in advance
Professional
$299
/year
For individual wine professionals
  • Access 294,796 wine reviews & 16,082 articles
  • Access The Oxford Companion to Wine & The World Atlas of Wine
  • Early access to the latest wine reviews & articles, 48 hours in advance
  • Commercial use of up to 25 wine reviews & scores for marketing
Business
$399
/year
For companies in the wine trade
  • Access 294,796 wine reviews & 16,082 articles
  • Access The Oxford Companion to Wine & The World Atlas of Wine
  • Early access to the latest wine reviews & articles, 48 hours in advance
  • Commercial use of up to 250 wine reviews & scores for marketing
Pay with
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
Join our newsletter

Get the latest from Jancis and her team of leading wine experts.

By subscribing you agree with our Privacy Policy and provide consent to receive updates from our company.

More Wines of the week

Pine Ridge Chenin Blanc-Viognier bottle and glass of wine outdoors, on table with books
Wines of the week A summer-ready, silky white wine that’s widely available from just $8.99, £20.90 . The sleeper hit of Napa winery Pine...
Niepoort rabbit illustration
Wines of the week A traditional, versatile and inexpensive white port that is both dry and sweet – and doesn’t take itself too seriously...
Quinta do Vesuvio aerial view
Wines of the week A gorgeously fragrant, dry Portuguese red from an iconic producer. And it’s widely available for as little as €13.65, £21.57...
Weingut J. Hofstätter Dr Fischer Zero Brut Sparkling bottle with glass of white wine; Photo ©Mattia Mionetto
Wines of the week A non-alcoholic wine that’s a welcome alternative to mineral water and fruit juice, plus its lower-priced bargain alternative, Steinbock. From...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Ballymaloe House May 2026
Nick on restaurants An international institution in the southern Irish countryside. In 2011 I travelled to Ballymaloe House, a 40-minute drive from Cork...
female urban hands each holding a glass of wine - Shutterstock
Free for all Pauline Vicard asks, can wine still justify its cultural relevance? The answer to this question, rather than economics, may become...
Thomas Walk Vineyard in Kinsale
Free for all Jancis is put in her place, by the hybrid grapes of the Emerald Isle. A shorter version of this article...
Split Rail vineyard
Tasting articles Part 4 of an exploration of California’s westernmost vineyards. Above, the Split Rail vineyard in Corralitos (credit: John Benedetti)...
Fernando Mora MW and Mario López of Bodegas Frontonio
Tasting articles A close look at three of Zaragoza’s most important projects. Above, Fernando Mora MW (left) and Mario López of Bodegas...
Ungrafted monastrell vines in Jumilla
Free for all 4 June 2026 In advance of the 2026 Old Vine Conference on 8 June, we’re republishing this overview of our...
Acered vineyard
Tasting articles To celebrate Aragón’s new map in the upcoming World Atlas of Wine , Ferran explores the wines of Zaragoza. Above...
Alexandre Delétraz's (Cave des Amandiers) vineyards in Valais @ Leif Carlsson
Tasting articles Red, white, young, old – there’s no shortage of diversity or deliciousness available in Swiss wines. You just need to...
Wine inspiration delivered directly to your inbox, weekly
Our weekly newsletter is free for all
By subscribing you're confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.