BRIMBANK NORTH WEST
Home » Uncategorized » Wine: Sue Hodder makes her mark

Wine: Sue Hodder makes her mark

When it comes to wine, we choose a bottle based on the grapes, the region and maybe the vintage and the wine. The people who make the wine are usually an afterthought.

Most winemakers like it that way. They refer to themselves as farmers, happy telling the story about their patch of dirt and why their wines taste like they do.

But sometimes the story is the winemaker, rather than their wines.

Wynns chief winemaker Sue Hodder has played a key role in some of the best, and best-known, wines made in Australia.

It started at Penfolds, where Hodder went to work after finishing at Roseworthy Agricultural College in the 1980s.

“Penfolds had just merged with Kaiser Stuhl, a co-op of Barossa growers, which is a label that not many people remember now, but in the ’70s and ’80s, it was a significant part of the Australian wine industry,” says Hodder.

“My job at that time was to visit all the growers from Kaiser Stuhl and … rate them on quality and how they would fit into the Penfolds wines.

“Penfolds was relatively small at that time. They were lucky to acquire the Kaiser Stuhl vineyards. It’s a chapter that’s not often described.”

A stint in London – as for so many Aussies in the past 30 years – followed Penfolds. It included a job at wine retailer Oddbins. “At that time there were two Australian wines in the shop: Rosemount chardonnay and Brown Brothers’ red something,” Hodder says.

After working wine vintages in California, Hodder returned home to stints at Seaview in McLaren Vale and Seppelt in Great Western before joining the Wynns winemaking team in Coonawarra at the end of 1992. Six years later she was promoted to chief winemaker and inherited vineyards scattered with old, dying vines.

Hodder’s promotion was followed by the appointment of viticulturalist Allen Jenkins. In 15 years the pair has carried out a massive rejuvenation of Wynns’ vineyards.

“The ’90s was a beautiful decade [for making wine] – we really didn’t have to work too hard as winemakers. But we knew that we had these old vines with too much dead wood on them,” Hodder says.

“When Allen arrived, I think he was shocked at [the state of] these beautiful old vineyards, and we had to work out how to rejuvenate the old vines. And that’s become an enormous undertaking.

“We’ve also done a big replanting project in the past two years … We’ve put a lot more effort in the vineyards and the winery.”

Hodder has also had to contend with her region and its flagship grape, cabernet sauvignon, playing second fiddle in the past decade’s boom in big, boozy shiraz.

“In early 2000s you had to have a big wine,” she says. “The success of Australian wine was driven by the powerful shiraz and we didn’t have it.”

The next challenge for Hodder and her team is dealing with climate change.

“We have seen climate change in Coonawarra – it has got warmer and we have to contend with that. Over that past decade, we’ve seen our coldest, warmest, wettest, and driest years in the past 60.”

Digital Editions


  • Watergardens parking woes

    Watergardens parking woes

    Residents have raised concerns about illegal parking and a shortage of carparks at the Watergardens precinct. Brimbank resident Neil Hunichen expressed safety concerns over motorists…

More News

  • Williamstown cold case mystery

    Williamstown cold case mystery

    Thirty-two years ago, 79-year-old Leah Buck was attacked and robbed in Williamstown in broad daylight. The severe injuries she sustained would result in her death the following day. Her attacker…

  • CPR presentation

    CPR presentation

    Brimbank locals can join Ambulance Victoria for a friendly and helpful session about keeping young children healthy and safe. The ‘call, push, shock’ (CPR) presentation, for parents, carers, and anyone…

  • Community garden produce stolen

    Community garden produce stolen

    Volunteers at Horseshoe Bend Community Group (HBCG) have been left shocked after a large quantity of ripened vegetables were stolen from a community garden. President Cynthia Frain said the theft…

  • Faces of the west

    Faces of the west

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532699 Each week Star Weekly photographers are out and about capturing events and people across the west.

  • Parkers run over

    Parkers run over

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 449514 For the first time in five seasons, there will be no Deer Park in the Bowls Victoria weekend pennant premier division grand final.…

  • My Place

    My Place

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 533986 Kate Newitt is the principal of the recently de-merged Hillside Primary School. She spoke to Sam Porter about her role and her connection…

  • Ardeer grassfire, smoke warning

    Ardeer grassfire, smoke warning

    Firefighters responded to a grassfire on Ballarat Road in Ardeer on the afternoon of Tuesday 17 February. Crews arrived on scene to find a grass and scrub fire burning across…

  • Seedlings for schools

    Seedlings for schools

    Public and private early learning centres, family day cares and schools within Brimbank can sign up for the autumn rollout of the ’veggie seedlings in schools’ program to receive a…

  • Total fire ban declared

    Total fire ban declared

    Residents across Brimbank are being urged to remain vigilant today, with a total fire ban declared for Victoria’s Central District amid hot, dry and windy conditions. Authorities have warned that…

  • From office to paramedic

    From office to paramedic

    Graduate paramedic Tracie Avion had never interacted with Ambulance Victoria (AV) paramedics until she witnessed someone go into cardiac arrest about eight years ago. Seeing crews respond to that case…