SKU: 44218400199

Howard Park Jete Premier Brut NV x 6

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Howard Park Jete Premier Brut NV x 6The awesomely scenic and wildly remote Great Southern of Western Australia, produces fine, elegant Pinot Noir and Chardonnay grapes for Howard Parks mthode traditionnelle wines. With a family history in classical ballet, our mthode traditionnelle wines are Premier Brut nv Varieties Chardonnay 47% Pinot Noir 43% Pinot Meunier 10% Region South West Australia Analysis pH: 3. 0 Acidity: 6. 65 g l Alcohol 12. 5% v v named after the signature ballet

The awesomely scenic and wildly remote Great Southern of Western Australia, 
produces fine, elegant Pinot Noir and Chardonnay grapes for Howard Park‘s 
méthode traditionnelle wines.
 With a family history in classical ballet, our méthode traditionnelle wines are 
Premier Brut  
nv
 Varieties
 Chardonnay 47%
 Pinot Noir 43%
 Pinot Meunier 10%
 Region 
South West Australia
 Analysis
 pH: 3.0 |  Acidity: 6.65 g/l
 Alcohol 12.5% v/v
 named after the signature ballet movement of jeté - to leap.
 The perfection of this ballet movement and the crafting of méthode traditionnelle 
wine, share the demands of time, dedication, commitment and great skill to 
create the illusion of boundless control, refinement, elegance and poise.
 TECHNICAL NOTES
 Early harvest of grapes from our vineyards located in the cool subregions of 
south west Western Australia, ensures we maintain fine, linear acidity and capture 
delicate fruit flavours - all critical to the crafting of méthode traditionnelle wine. 
The grapes are hand harvested. Whole bunches are gently pressed with only 
the finest free run juice used for sparkling base. Our base wines are fermented in 
stainless steel plus a few new barrels to give the slightest hint of oak in the final 
blend. Malolactic fermentation of select batches enhances complexity.
 This Jeté Brut NV is based on the 2021 vintage. Disgorgement took place in 
batches after a minimum 30 months on lees. Along with its dose of sugar, an 
addition of reserve wine at dosage further enhances bouquet, texture and 
complexity. This wine is extra-brut style with a residual sugar level of 3.6 grams 
per litre.
 TASTING NOTES
 Pale straw in colour with a bright lemon skin hue, indicating the wine’s youthful 
freshness and vibrancy. Notes of beachside rocks, dried seaweed, and ocean 
spray blend intriguingly with roasted nuts and an earthy mushroom ragout, to 
create a multifaceted and captivating bouquet. An elegant core of red fruits, 
beautifully intertwined with overtones of grapefruit and stone fruit, graces the 
first sip. The mid-palate is textured and savoury, offering flavours of truffle, flint, 
and toasted bread, which add depth and complexity, while a hint of ripe Meyer 
lemon provides a refreshing and lingering citrus finish. 
FOOD IDEAS
 Enjoy with fresh oysters, seared scallops, salmon blinis and chevre, honey and 
walnut crostini.

It has toasty complexity, as in some toasted brioche with butter, and all the refreshing flavours of lemon and zest with spine-tingling acidity. Plenty of creamy mousse, fine bead and enough class to serve at a fancy dinner party or enjoy in the backyard simply because you can.

Jane Faulkner
Halliday Wine Companion
 
- 93 points

Medium yellow, bright colour. Complex smoky, toasty and rubbery notes with roasted hazelnut chiming in. It’s rich and full in the mouth, soft and balanced, superbly harmonious and long, with beautiful texture and completeness. Absolutely nails a serious but accessible NV style.

Huon Hooke
The Real Review
 
- 91 points

This excellent sparkling wine made from South-West chardonnay provides a perfect illustration of how successful Howard Park’s investment in sparkling wine has been. This is a complete wine that retains a freshness and purity. It was aged in French oak before bottling and was then left on its lees for 24 months, allowing the palate flavours and richness to develop. Excellent wine.

Ray Jordan
WA Wine Review 2024
 
- 94 points

Light lemon gold colour with plentiful fast moving bubbles. Meringue, sea spray, warm apple, light grapefruit and lemon citrus, frangipane blossom, stone fruit skin and light brioche. Tight, fine and playful. An easy structure with super clean lines and a soft, pillowy mousse. A well balanced aperitif style.

Vinonotebook
 
- 91 points

Mid-yellow colour, with a pungent, richly mellow-developed bouquet with attractive complexity due in part to aged wine in the blend. Toasted bread, roasted nuts. The finish is dry and clean, low in sweetness and refreshing on the aftertaste. This has length, too.

Huon Hooke
The Real Review
 
- 91 points

A creamy, nicely complex sparkling with aromas of pears, apples, pastries, honey and praline. Fine, integrated bubbles and bright acidity. All in balance.

jamessuckling.com
 
- 91 points

Vibrant mousse and persistent bead, looks the goods in the glass. Lifted, fragrant aromas of just-ripe stone fruit, lemon rind and toast. Flavours are rich and focused, toasty brioche, citrus and a creamy mouth-feel, smart length, dry and complex.

Aaron Brasher
The Real Review
 
- 92 points

Aromas of ripe lemon, lemon zest, white peach skin, wet rock, seaspray, seaweed, and sourdough make for a complex opening. The palate has a good architectural appeal, showing a backbone of Pinot Noir influence. Strawberry, pink grapefruit, preserved lemon, with toastiness in support. All of this before a structural finish carrying the preserved lemon bitterness long. This punches above its price point thanks to solid complexity, structure and length.

Tom Kline
Winepilot
 
- 93 points

Fortunately, here in Australia, we’re blessed with high quality sparkling wines that offer much better value. And there are plenty to choose from. At my place, guests are often treated to Howard Park Jeté sparkling, which sells for around $40 a bottle. I love its creamy citrus and bakery notes, and the racy acidity that leaves a crisp Granny Smith finish.

Travis Schultz
Sunshine Coast Daily
 

A fine galaxy of excited, fast moving bubbles. Honeyed tones over nougat, brioche and cherry Danish (even with the white icing). A little sea spray saltiness over citrus with dusty chalk and watermelon juice, pickle brine and blonde oak. Well layered, with structural complexity vying for the attention over focused crisp fruit. Chalky grip around narrow eyed intensity and a bright, crisp tail with plenty of fruit powering through.

Regan Drew
Vinonotebook
 
- 92 points

Lovely oyster shell and lemon bath salts, white dried florals and lavender. Lemon salinity. White pith. Chalky. It’s a lovely wine with fine phenolics and delicacy. Sourdough autolytic notes are not too fierce but toasty and have a dry, mineral finish. Bit of tart shell too, and lime zest on palate. Dried herbs and a succulent nature to it. Refreshing and mid-length. Lots to enjoy, though not the most complex wine. Kaffir lime finish and succulence. It has a heavier mid-palate; it’s not as light as you first think. Lovely crushed granite finish. Talc and minerality. Little spice, too, but firmly in the sea brine, lemon pith realm. Aperitif style. Good fruit at it’s core too. Bright, lifted, with a steely, green apple finish. Tasty.

Cassandra Charlick
Winepilot
 
- 91 points

This has an elegance and a softness, in a context of length. It has texture but at heart it’s a fine-boned style. It tastes of grapefruit pulp and lemon, oyster shells and lees, a subtle strawberried note evident as much through the aftertaste as anything. It’s good without being outstanding.

Campbell Mattinson
The Wine Front
 
- 91 points
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SKU: 44218400199

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4.2 ★★★★★
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Product Reviews
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Tia James
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
I love this book
Format: Paperback
I’m not your avid reader but I love this book!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2024
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Xenophobe Fedison
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
I needed this so bad!
Format: Kindle
As i began my journey to revisiting all dreams wrote down this book is one of the best da to interpreting your dreams biblically with Holy Spirit having his way!
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Reviewed in the United States on October 25, 2021
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Richard T. Karnosh
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
Warning: You will want to read the classics after you read this book!
Format: Hardcover
This book beautifully captures what I didn’t realize was possible until I got to college: That the Lord can speak through great literature. When I was younger I largely avoided reading any fiction books because I felt guilty for not reading my Bible (but for some reason my apologetic books were ok? Lol). However, this book seeks to show (and I think accomplishes quite well) that great literature isn’t a hinderance to the Christian life but actually serves to cultivate a deep and thoroughly Christian imagination. Great literature has the capacity to convict you of your sins, to invoke worship and prayer, and to cultivate our desire to live lives of virtue. Great literature is a mirror through which you can examine your own way of life, but it also acts as a lens through which you can see with fresh eyes the world around you. The author presents a lot of helpful practical advice in here too. Like how to know if a book is worth reading, different ways to approach reading books, as well as a thoughtful critique of the bad logic often used in Christian circles to avoid reading great literature. “In a world that tries to convince us that we are computers or animals, that treats us like automatons or worker bees, what better protest than the reading life? If we are to be fully human, we must practice human acts— civility, creativity, contemplation, charity.” All four of these acts are intertwined with reading great books! So let’s get to it!
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Reviewed in the United States on October 4, 2023
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Joseph McBee
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
A Book to Read and Read Again
Format: Hardcover
I finished this book a few days ago and have been obsessing over it in my mind ever since. Hooten Wilson (which is a delightfully fun name) is a brilliant scholar, excellent guide/teacher, and lover of Christ and the written word and all of that shows on every page. This book is a call to look up from our screens and dive deep into the written word, both Scripture and literature. It is equal parts inspiring and practical. The robust and rich writing of the author is still easily accessible. As one who grew up in love with books and reading, I moved to almost exclusively non-fiction in my adult years. This book inspired me to return to the beauty of fiction once again and to see the value of the written word as a way to love God, not just to gather and process information. I will definitely be reading this one again.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2023
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Panda Incognito
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 4
Rich Academic Insight
Format: Hardcover
Near the beginning of "Reading for the Love of God," Jessica Hooten Wilson addresses why we should read fiction, responding to arguments in some Christian circles that we should only read the Bible. Other topics that she covers include the difference between using and enjoying books, how reading can help us develop greater virtue, and how we can rightly interpret books through the "trinity" of rightly balancing the text, the author's intent, and our own takeaways, instead of forcing the text to mean whatever we want. She also shares "bookmarks" between chapters about the reading lives of Augustine of Hippo, Julian of Norwich, Frederick Douglass, and Dorothy L. Sayers. These sections are thoughtful and encouraging, and the latter two are my favorite parts of the book. There is a recommended reading list at the end that offers many wonderful selections, but I want to offer one quick warning. She includes the graphic novel adaptation of Octavia Butler's "Kindred" in her list for school-age readers, and although she mentions that it's more for the 10-12 age range, it is an adult book. The main character is an adult, and the graphic novel includes vivid on-page depictions of racial violence, attempted rape scenes, and a lot of talk about rape. Some older kids can handle that, but it would terrify others and was never intended for that age group. Reading and the Bible Hooten Wilson emphasizes that enhancing our reading skills through literature will help us better read, understand, and appreciate the Bible. She makes excellent points about how learning to read different literary genres will help with biblical interpretation, and she makes a convincing case for how practicing our interpretive skills and becoming more fluent with metaphor and other literary devices will enhance our experience with the Bible. However, I felt that she sometimes went too far, making it sound like Bible-reading is an activity for the well-educated and well-practiced. God intended the Bible for everyone regardless of their socioeconomic class, abilities, or educational level, and even though reading the Bible badly can have negative consequences, this book focuses more on our own literary skills than the power of the Holy Spirit to reveal truth to us, convict us, and comfort us through Scripture. Hooten Wilson provides excellent next steps for people who want to deepen their relationship with the Bible, but I wished that she had articulated additional vital context around this. Audience This book is highly academic in content and tone, and even though I enjoyed this book and found it very enriching, it is only for serious readers. Hooten Wilson writes about highly abstract concepts in complex ways, and she often uses specialized vocabulary without explaining what she means. She also makes lots of references to monastic practices and obscure literary works that even highly bookish Christians are unlikely to be familiar with. This book shares rich scholarly perspectives, but it is not for reluctant or casual readers, especially since Hooten Wilson only acknowledges the worth of popular-level books in the special section on Dorothy L. Sayers. It disappoints me that Christian books about reading are almost always written at such a lofty level that they are inaccessible to the people who need them most. I read hundreds of books every year, including dozens of academic ones, but I still felt that parts of the book were beyond me. If someone wants to begin getting more serious about reading, I would recommend Karen Swallow Prior's "On Reading Well" as a more accessible alternative with similar themes. My other concern is that Hooten Wilson was always the expert in the anecdotes she shared, never the person learning something new. Only one anecdote bothered me in and of itself, and that is the chapter-opening illustration about a time when she set up an undergrad student for embarrassment to make a point during class. The other anecdotes don't involve power differentials and were perfectly fine, but taken together, they give the impression that the author needs to feel superior. I am sure this was unintentional, but I wish she had given examples of times that she lost an argument and learned something new. Conclusion Overall, I enjoyed "Reading for the Love of God," appreciating Hooten Wilson's unique insights and her scholarly perspective on the spiritual importance of reading. This book is deep and thoughtful, and there are a lot of important messages about reading great books to expand your mind, enhance your understanding of Scripture, and become closer to God. However, this book is so dense and academic that it is only for scholarly readers. I wish that this book could be an on-ramp for people who want to get more serious about reading, but it will probably just make them feel judged, lectured at, and so overwhelmed that they give up. This book has great value for people who inhabit the author's literary world or are so well-read that they can make the leap, but I hope that the she will consider ways to effectively reach popular audiences in the future.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2023

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