Winemaker releases alluring set of Barossa drops with 'the full Penfolds treatment'
The former Army veteran who walks with a limp has released an alluring set of Barossa wines made unashamedly in the Penfolds style.
The release is under 56-year-old Barrette's own label, Camino Wines.
His first foray into winemaking began at Magill Estate in Adelaide at the spiritual home of Penfolds.
Under the tutelage of Penfolds winemaking commander-in-chief Peter Gago, Barrette rose to be a senior winemaker handling the A grade fruit and assisting Mr Gago in making top-tier wines like Grange, St Henri and Bin 707 while being in charge of the cellar reserve range.
'Gago was my boss and my mentor and became a great friend,' Mr Barrette said.
He said Mr Gago was a stickler for detail and had an enormous capacity for work.
Some mistakenly regard Mr Gago as a mere figurehead because of his frequent globetrotting to host dinners and show wine to critics in key markets in Europe, the US and Hong Kong.
Even some within his own company Treasury Wine Estates saw Mr Gago as a figurehead, even though he was hands-on during all phases of the winemaking, Mr Barrette said.
He remembers he once went to the winery at 11.30pm after a long flight because he was excited to taste the new ferments.
'During vintage he is at the winery at 5am. He is at work before anyone and the last to leave.
'Although he does a lot of travelling, he is always down there to taste when the grapes come.
'We tasted twice a day.
'With Peter I learnt more in my first 12 months at Penfolds than I did in four years at university. The passion he has for Penfolds runs through his veins.
'Gago is one of the top five winemakers in the world. What he does for the Australian wine industry is amazing. He elevates everyone's wine in the eyes of the world.'
Mr Barrette said Camino was the culmination of 20 years of winemaking in Europe, the US and Canada.
'Camino is a celebration of every vineyard I've worked in, every lesson I've learned, and every story I've had the privilege to tell,' he adds.
His first collection features seven wines, including 2024 Barossa Valley Tempranillo, 2024 Adelaide Hills Grüner Veltliner, 2024 Barossa Valley Grenache Blanc de Noir, 2023 Adelaide Hills HSV Chardonnay, 2023 Centenary Vines Barossa Valley Grenache, 2023 Barossa Valley Grenache Rosé, and the flagship 2021 Paradigm Vineyard Marananga Shiraz.
The flagship Camino 2021 Paradigm Vineyard Marananga Shiraz makes a bold statement about where Barrette sees his new venture.
It's a powerful yet poised Shiraz from 80 to 100-year-old vines in the heart of Marananga.
It's next door to Torbreck's famed Laird vineyard.
His leading wine shows a marriage of dark plums, dried herbs and spice on the nose with underlying cedary oak.
The palate is plush, generous, and structured, finishing long with earthy ironstone notes.
'It's had the full Penfolds treatment,' he said.
The fruit is picked at optimum ripeness, and he chose AP John Coopers American oak barrels to store it. And Mr Gago would approve.
'I've had a lot of experience working with fruit from Marananga.
'When I was at Penfolds and later at Paulmara Estates and now with my own brand.'
Mr Barrette was an air defence artillery specialist in the Army.
'I'm a World War I buff and went backpacking with a group of my Army mates to Gallipoli and the Western Front. In Europe I fell in love with the food and wine culture.
'Later I had a serious training accident when I fell from a great height at Woodside (Army base in South Australia) and ended up with a 12-inch plate and 13 screws in my leg.
'Twenty operations later there was less opportunity for me to deploy on active service.'
Injury sidelined him from the second Gulf War.
He quit the Army and a week later went straight to Adelaide University to study winemaking.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


West Australian
2 days ago
- West Australian
Treasury Wine Estates faces China growth concerns amid changing drinking habits
There are 'cracks appearing' in Treasury Wine Estates' China prospects, analysts say, as consumer preferences shift from large banquets to lifestyle-oriented occasions. Unveiling its full-year results on Wednesday, Australia's top wine producer flagged a recent shift in alcohol consumption behaviour in China, with less large-scale banqueting and more smaller scale occasion events. Citi analyst Sam Teeger warned this did not 'bode well' for the rest of the new financial year, with Barrenjoey's Tom Kierath expecting the China commentary to weigh on TWE's shares on Wednesday. However, the stock was up 3.5 to $7.90 in early trade. TWE said full-year net profit before material items was 15.5 per cent higher than the previous financial year at $470.6 million. Earnings grew 17 per cent to $770.3m, driven by its high-end Penfolds label and a full year contribution from its Californian wine operation DAOU. It also announced a share buyback of up to $200m. Penfolds division earnings rose 13 per cent to $477m, driven by strong growth in its Bin and Icon shipments to China. Outgoing chief executive Tim Ford said it 'continued to face headwinds in a number of markets'. Penfolds managing director Tom King later told analysts on a call it had strong plans for the mid-autumn festival in China in October and was 'feeling pretty good around how the initial collection release has gone down in China'. 'I think we've proven over recent years that we're pretty good at adapting to shifting environments,' he said. 'China is a very dynamic market for sure and things can change very quickly. 'We've got levers that we can pull as demand increases and decreases across our global business.' But Mr Teeger said: 'We think today's incrementally more cautious tone on (China) could lead to some of the China bulls on the stock to moderate their growth expectations. RBC Capital Markets analyst Michael Toner said a key question was whether the softness observed in China in June and July would persist for the remainder of the financial year. Treasury Americas delivered a 33.9 per cent lift in earnings to $308.6m, despite slowing sales for the Snoop Dogg-backed 19 Crimes. Treasury Premium Brands suffered a 27.6 per cent decline in earnings to $55.1m. TWE is forecasting a $50m hit to revenue this financial year from changes to its wine distribution model in California, with its local distributor ceasing operations later this year. It declared a final dividend of 20¢ a share. Mr Ford will leave the company at the end of September to make way for incoming chief Sam Fischer, who was poached from alcohol giant Lion.

The Age
06-08-2025
- The Age
Australia news LIVE: Trump envoy meets Putin in Moscow; Indian tariffs doubled amid US push for Ukraine ceasefire
Latest posts Latest posts 6.55am A super-sized GST – with a $3300 cheque in the mail By Shane Wright, Paul Sakkal and Olivia Ireland All Australians would receive $3300 a year in exchange for accepting a higher and broader GST under a plan which proponents claim would boost the budget by $28 billion a year while driving up the nation's living standards. Before this month's economic roundtable, independent MP Kate Chaney has backed an idea first floated by leading Australian economist Richard Holden to lift the GST to 15 per cent and extend the tax on food, education, health and childcare services and water and sewerage. This would raise an additional $92.5 billion in its first full year of operation, but would be offset by a $3300 rebate to every person over the age of 18 that would effectively erase the impact of the higher GST on the first $22,000 of an individual's annual purchases. 6.52am US Army sergeant shoots five Soldiers at Georgia base An Army sergeant using a personal handgun opened fire on his unit at Fort Stewart-Hunter Army Airfield in Georgia on Wednesday, the base's commander said. Five soldiers were wounded in the attack, which ended when soldiers tackled the gunman. None of the injuries were life-threatening, base commander John W. Lubas said in a news conference. He said the victims would not be identified publicly until their families had been contacted. 'All are expected to recover,' he said. Army officials identified the suspect in custody as Sergeant Quornelius Radford, 28, an automated logistics sergeant assigned to 2nd Brigade Combat Team. They said they were not sure of his motivations or how he had concealed the weapon he used. About 8,800 people live at Fort Stewart, about 40 miles southwest of Savannah. The Army Criminal Investigation Division was leading the investigation of the shooting. President Donald Trump was briefed, said Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, and the FBI's Savannah office was assisting the investigation. The New York Times 6.45am What's making news today By Daniel Lo Surdo Hello and welcome to the national news live blog. My name is Daniel Lo Surdo, and I'll be helming our live coverage this morning. Here's what is making news today: White House special envoy Steve Witkoff met Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow hours ago, in an almost three-hour meeting that canvassed Donald Trump's threat to intensify sanctions and tariffs on Russia if an urgent move towards a ceasefire with Ukraine wasn't achieved. Trump described the meeting as 'highly productive', noting that 'great progress was made' towards ending Russia's war in Ukraine. A proposal that would see all Australians receive $3300 a year in exchange for accepting a higher and broader GST has been proposed ahead of this month's economic reform roundtable. The plan would lift the GST to 15 per cent and extend the tax on food, education, health and childcare services, and water and sewerage, with proponents arguing it would boost the budget by $28 billion a year and drive up national living standards. Trump has signed an executive order to double tariffs on Indian exports to 50 per cent within three weeks, days after the Indian government warned against new trade penalties. The move is designed to penalise India for its purchasing of Russian oil, as Trump continues work to negotiate an end to Russia's war in Ukraine.

Sydney Morning Herald
06-08-2025
- Sydney Morning Herald
Australia news LIVE: Trump envoy meets Putin in Moscow; Indian tariffs doubled amid US push for Ukraine ceasefire
Latest posts Latest posts 6.55am A super-sized GST – with a $3300 cheque in the mail By Shane Wright, Paul Sakkal and Olivia Ireland All Australians would receive $3300 a year in exchange for accepting a higher and broader GST under a plan which proponents claim would boost the budget by $28 billion a year while driving up the nation's living standards. Before this month's economic roundtable, independent MP Kate Chaney has backed an idea first floated by leading Australian economist Richard Holden to lift the GST to 15 per cent and extend the tax on food, education, health and childcare services and water and sewerage. This would raise an additional $92.5 billion in its first full year of operation, but would be offset by a $3300 rebate to every person over the age of 18 that would effectively erase the impact of the higher GST on the first $22,000 of an individual's annual purchases. 6.52am US Army sergeant shoots five Soldiers at Georgia base An Army sergeant using a personal handgun opened fire on his unit at Fort Stewart-Hunter Army Airfield in Georgia on Wednesday, the base's commander said. Five soldiers were wounded in the attack, which ended when soldiers tackled the gunman. None of the injuries were life-threatening, base commander John W. Lubas said in a news conference. He said the victims would not be identified publicly until their families had been contacted. 'All are expected to recover,' he said. Army officials identified the suspect in custody as Sergeant Quornelius Radford, 28, an automated logistics sergeant assigned to 2nd Brigade Combat Team. They said they were not sure of his motivations or how he had concealed the weapon he used. About 8,800 people live at Fort Stewart, about 40 miles southwest of Savannah. The Army Criminal Investigation Division was leading the investigation of the shooting. President Donald Trump was briefed, said Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, and the FBI's Savannah office was assisting the investigation. The New York Times 6.45am What's making news today By Daniel Lo Surdo Hello and welcome to the national news live blog. My name is Daniel Lo Surdo, and I'll be helming our live coverage this morning. Here's what is making news today: White House special envoy Steve Witkoff met Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow hours ago, in an almost three-hour meeting that canvassed Donald Trump's threat to intensify sanctions and tariffs on Russia if an urgent move towards a ceasefire with Ukraine wasn't achieved. Trump described the meeting as 'highly productive', noting that 'great progress was made' towards ending Russia's war in Ukraine. A proposal that would see all Australians receive $3300 a year in exchange for accepting a higher and broader GST has been proposed ahead of this month's economic reform roundtable. The plan would lift the GST to 15 per cent and extend the tax on food, education, health and childcare services, and water and sewerage, with proponents arguing it would boost the budget by $28 billion a year and drive up national living standards. Trump has signed an executive order to double tariffs on Indian exports to 50 per cent within three weeks, days after the Indian government warned against new trade penalties. The move is designed to penalise India for its purchasing of Russian oil, as Trump continues work to negotiate an end to Russia's war in Ukraine.