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Iona Winery

Iona Monopole Elgin Highland Sauvignon Blanc

Iona Monopole Elgin Highland Sauvignon Blanc

12.90%

Regular price £20.00
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Fragrance of pure white grapefruit, intense tropical fruit, ripe gooseberry and fleshy kiwi fruit over-lay Iona’s distinctive herbal and floral undertone. The palate is keenly balanced showing cut green apples and lime marmalade followed by great minerality and length.

 

Don’t forget your corkscrew 🍷

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Tasting Notes

Lime, White Peach, Fynbos and Wet Stone

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Iona Winery

Style: Winery

Country: South Africa

Region: Elgin Highlands

Iona sits way up in the Elgin Highlands where the vineyards spend half their life covered in mist and blasted by cold ocean air, which turns out to be very good news for wine. Founded by Andrew Gunn in the late 1990s on what used to be an apple farm, the estate quickly became one of South Africa’s standout cool-climate producers. Sauvignon Blanc might be the headline act, but there’s far more going on here than just aggressively tropical fruit and grass clippings.

The altitude and proximity to the Atlantic keep everything fresh and slow-ripening, so the wines end up with loads of acidity and precision instead of becoming huge overripe fruit bombs. Sauvignon Blanc stays citrusy, mineral and sharp, Chardonnay gets all tense and elegant, and the Pinot Noir has this lovely savoury edge that cooler South African sites can pull off brilliantly when they’re done well.

There’s also a very obvious “we actually care about the vineyard” energy running through the whole place. Minimal intervention in the cellar, sustainable farming and a lot of focus on letting the site do the talking rather than drowning everything in oak or winemaking tricks. The wines feel clean and polished, but not over-manufactured.

The setting probably helps too. The estate looks absurdly dramatic, all rolling vineyards, cloud cover and ocean influence. Feels less “sunny postcard winery” and more “someone built a vineyard inside a weather system”.

South Africa has loads of brilliant producers these days, but Iona still stands out for how calm and restrained the wines feel. Freshness first, power second. Which honestly makes them much more dangerous because bottles disappear very quickly.