Torbreck Vintners, The Steading Blanc, 2025
Torbreck Vintners, The Steading Blanc, 2025
- 75cl
- 13.5%
- White Still
- Roussanne, Marsanne, Viognier
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Optimal drinking window: 2026 - 2032
Est. delivery in early spring, 2027
Torbreck's The Steading Blanc is a Southern Rhône-inspired white from the Barossa Valley, blending Marsanne, Roussanne, and Viognier — the same trio that produces some of the most compelling whites in France's northern and southern Rhône. It is a wine that sits slightly outside the mainstream conversation about Barossa whites, which is precisely why we find it so interesting.
The Steading is sourced entirely from the Estate's Descendant Vineyard on Roennfeldt Road. Torbreck is best known for their bold reds but this white is a bit of a standout: elegant and versatile.
What the critics say:
"This time, the top white wine at Torbreck is sourced from vineyards with clay in the mix. 53% Roussanne, 45% Marsanne, and 2% Viognier are carefully blended to create a fabulous, sensationally clean, and stunningly resonant wine. Sitting at only 12.5% alcohol, The Steading Blanc is a glorious ‘white Rhône blend’, and the only downside is that only 350 cases of 12 bottles were made! I cannot remember tasting a more layered and yet so brightly fruited and perfumed white blend! Vivacious, refreshing and with a good few years in the tank, this is going to amaze allcomers when it hits the market, and I imagine it will only improve and mellow over the coming five years."
"The 2025 The Steading Blanc comprises a blend of Roussanne (60%), Marsanne (37%) and Viognier (3%) and will be released on March 1, 2026. The wine spends a year in barrel, with a small percentage new. This is floral and juicy, full on the middle palate and rich in flavor but not heavy. It’s a wine that shows the personalities of its varieties but is not defined by any one of them. It has notes of white pineapple, green apple, cheesecloth, wet chalk, layers of wax and pressed flowers. This is a truly successful blend. It’s classy. 12.2% alcohol, sealed under screw cap."
The Steading Blanc draws on Barossa Valley fruit grown on ancient alluvial soils over clay and loam, with the valley floor's warmth tempered by cool overnight drops that help preserve aromatic freshness in white varieties. Marsanne and Roussanne in particular respond well to the heat here, building the waxy texture and phenolic grip that define the blend. Viognier, always a diva, benefits from the old-vine discipline Torbreck applies across its holdings.
The Barossa Valley GI sits in South Australia, roughly an hour north of Adelaide, and is among the most famous wine regions in the southern hemisphere. It is best known for old-vine Shiraz, Grenache, and Mourvèdre, but a small cohort of producers — Torbreck chief among them — have long championed Rhône white varieties here. There are no strict varietal rules governing what can be planted, which gives winemakers the freedom to work with Marsanne, Roussanne, and Viognier in ways that would be regulated or prescribed elsewhere.
It's still early days for 2025 — harvest has only just concluded as we write this, and the full picture is still coming into focus. What we can say is that the Barossa experienced a season marked by warm, dry conditions through the growing period, broadly consistent with the valley's recent run of low-yielding but concentrated vintages. Growers were vigilant about water stress, particularly in the Barossa floor's older Shiraz blocks, but those old vines have a habit of finding reserves that younger plantings simply can't.
From what we're hearing, 2025 looks set to produce wines with the kind of density and structure that suit the Barossa's best material — Shiraz with real depth, Grenache with freshness and definition, Cabernet from the higher Eden Valley sites showing good line and length. These are wines to watch rather than rush. Give the reds at least three to five years before you start seriously pulling corks, and the best Shiraz will be in no hurry until the mid-2030s.

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