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Peter Lehmann Black Queen Sparkling Shiraz

Peter Lehmann Black Queen Sparkling Shiraz

Regular price £32.00
Regular price Sale price £32.00
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Producer Peter Lehmann Winery
Country Australia
Region Barossa Valley, South Australia
ABV 14%

Tasting Notes

Blackberry, Plum, Chocolate and Spice

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More About Peter Lehmann Black Queen Sparkling Shiraz

A signature Australian sparkling red, and one of the benchmark expressions of the Barossa’s most distinctive wine style: sparkling Shiraz. Made from 100% Barossa fruit, it was originally inspired by the historic “Sparkling Burgundy” tradition and refined into a modern, luxurious style by Peter Lehmann Wines.

In the glass it shows a deep crimson colour with a fine, persistent bead, giving it a creamy, mousse-like texture rather than sharp fizz.

The aromatics are immediately indulgent: dark cherry, plum, mocha, vanilla and Christmas cake spice, often with a subtle lift of toasted oak.

Meet the Producer, Peter Lehmann Winery

Peter Lehmann Winery

Style: Winery

Barossa wine has always carried a certain stubbornness to it. Old vines, old families and a refusal to panic every time the wine world decides elegance suddenly matters again. Peter Lehmann Winery sits right in the middle of that history.

The winery was founded in 1979 after Peter Lehmann famously broke away from Saltram to honour agreements with Barossa grape growers during a brutal grape surplus. Rather than leave growers stranded, he kept buying fruit on a handshake agreement and built the winery around that loyalty. It is one of the better stories in Australian wine, partly because it sounds almost impossible by modern corporate standards.

The wines themselves remain deeply Barossan. Shiraz is the headline act obviously, particularly Stonewell and Eight Songs, both carrying the rich blackberry, plum, dark chocolate and spice character the region does so well. Yet there is usually more freshness and structure than the old stereotype of Australian wine might suggest.

The white wines deserve more attention too. Riesling from Eden Valley brings sharp lime and mineral character, while Semillon quietly ages into something wonderfully waxy and complex over time. Barossa is often associated entirely with big reds, but the cooler elevated sites nearby can produce seriously elegant whites.

What keeps the winery appealing is that it still feels connected to growers and regional identity rather than simply functioning as a global export brand. There is a warmth and generosity to the wines that feels very Australian without tipping into caricature.