20M+ Bottles Delivered
58k+ Customer Reviews
Pouring Since 2012
Easy Return Policy
Top Rated Shiraz
Filters
- Mixed Wines (2)
- Alkoomi Wines (0)
- Ashbrook Estate Wines (0)
- Bleeding Heart Wines (0)
- D'Arenberg Wines (0)
- De Bortoli Wines (0)
- Geoff Merrill Wines (0)
- Grape Gang Wines (0)
- Little Giant Wines (0)
- Mountadam Wines (0)
- Open Book Wines (0)
- Printhie Wines (0)
- Red Claw Wines (0)
- Te Mata Estate Wines (0)
- The Black Vulture Wines (0)
- Wirra Wirra Wines (0)
- Word Search Wines (0)
-
Free Shipping
Dazzling Premium Shiraz Mixed - 12 Bottles
Original priceOriginal price Original priceOriginal pricePrice $169.954.8 / 5.0
78 Reviews
A premium 12-bottle Shiraz collection showcasing some of Australia's most celebrated wine regions and standout producers. Featuring bold Barossa Va...
View full detailsRRPOriginal price $380.98PriceCurrent price $169.95| /55% %Ships Next Business Day
Shiraz
Mixed
-
Free Shipping
Top Sellers Shiraz Mixed - 12 Bottles
Original priceOriginal price Original priceOriginal pricePrice $121.854.5 / 5.0
119 Reviews
A bold 12-bottle Shiraz collection featuring some of our best-selling red wines from renowned Australian wine regions. Bringing together rich Baros...
View full detailsRRPOriginal price $245.98PriceCurrent price $121.85| /Sold outNotify meShips Next Business Day
Australian Shiraz That Actually Deserves the Hype
Shiraz is Australia's signature red wine, and honestly, there's good reason for that reputation. When it works, it really works. This collection brings together Shiraz bottles that have earned genuine customer love and strong ratings, not because they're trendy or heavily marketed, but because they deliver real quality.
What makes these wines special? They share a certain character. Rich dark fruit, that wonderful peppery spice, enough structure to pair beautifully with food, and a generosity of flavour that makes every sip feel worthwhile. These aren't austere, overly serious wines. They're generous bottles that work just as well at a casual dinner party as they do at something more formal.
Here's what sets this collection apart from generic Shiraz selections. We have tasted through hundreds of Australian Shiraz bottles. Our team has tried wines from Barossa Valley's warm, generous style to McLaren Vale's slightly more elegant approach, to the cooler climate refinement of regional selections. We've looked at award winning winery releases, customer reviews that actually mean something, and vintage quality that delivers consistency.
The result is a curated selection that represents what's genuinely good about Australian Shiraz right now. These are bottles that repeat customers keep coming back to. These are wines that receive five star reviews from people who actually bought and drank them. These are selections from producers who understand their craft and care about quality.
You'll find Shiraz here in different price ranges, from everyday drinking bottles to serious cellar candidates. You'll see regional variation that shows how climate and terroir shape the final wine. But across the board, every bottle in this collection had to clear one simple standard: we would buy it and drink it ourselves.
That's the Just Wines promise. Not marketing hype. Not inflated ratings. Just solid, genuine Shiraz that performs better than the price tag suggests.
Why Shiraz Became Australia's Wine
Australian Shiraz isn't an accident. It's the result of geography, climate, and about 200 years of winemakers figuring out what works.
Shiraz (also called Syrah in other parts of the world) thrives in warm climates. Australia's warm, dry regions are basically Shiraz paradise. The grape ripens fully, developing dark berry fruit, spice notes, and enough alcohol to create wines with body and richness. But Australian winemakers learned something important: you don't have to overcook it. The best Australian Shiraz shows ripe fruit without being jammy, spice without being overwhelming, and structure without being harsh.
That balance is everything. A really good Australian Shiraz tastes generous and approachable, but not simplistic. You taste layers of fruit. You notice the tannin structure. You feel the wine evolve as it warms in the glass. That complexity is what separates genuinely good Shiraz from merely decent bottles.
What Makes Shiraz Different From Other Red Wines
Cabernet Sauvignon tastes structured and serious. Pinot Noir can be elegant and delicate. Grenache is often lighter and more approachable. Shiraz sits in this interesting middle ground. It's bold enough to be impressive, friendly enough to be approachable, and food friendly enough to work with almost any meal.
That versatility matters. You can serve Shiraz at a casual weeknight dinner with pasta and nobody judges you. You can also serve it at a fancy dinner party and people will be impressed. That flexibility is one reason it became Australia's signature wine.
The Regional Story
Different Australian regions produce noticeably different Shiraz styles. Warm regions like Barossa Valley produce rounder, riper wines with darker fruit and more alcohol. Cooler regions like parts of Victoria produce more structured, elegant Shiraz with brighter acidity and more nuance. Margaret River Shiraz is different again, with its own character shaped by ocean influence and soil type.
This regional diversity is actually brilliant. It means Australian Shiraz isn't one thing. You can explore different styles and find what speaks to you. That's part of what makes this collection valuable. You can see that diversity represented in bottles you can actually buy.
Where Australia's Best Shiraz Comes From
Australian Shiraz regions are scattered across the country, and each produces noticeably different wines. Understanding these regional differences helps you choose the style you actually want.
Barossa Valley: The Big Bold Style
Barossa is basically the king of Australian Shiraz. The warm, dry climate produces ripe, generous wines with dark berries, chocolate, pepper, and sometimes licorice. Barossa Shiraz tends toward fuller body, riper fruit, and higher alcohol (often 14.5 to 15.5 percent). It's bold and unapologetic. If you like wines that feel substantial in your mouth and pair beautifully with red meat and hearty food, Barossa Shiraz delivers.
What makes Barossa special? The region has been making Shiraz for about 180 years. The vineyard sites are established and quality is proven. The winemaking style here emphasizes the fruit and structure without overthinking it. You taste the wine, not the winemaker's ego.
McLaren Vale: Elegant and Balanced
McLaren Vale is slightly cooler than Barossa but still warm enough to produce ripe, full bodied Shiraz. The difference is nuance. McLaren Vale Shiraz shows bright red berries alongside dark fruit, fresh herbs alongside spice, and elegant tannins that feel refined without being austere. These wines walk a beautiful line between bold and elegant.
McLaren Vale has something Barossa doesn't quite have: ocean influence. This cools things down just enough to create wines with more complexity and finesse. It's the regional difference you can taste. Barossa feels like a warm hug. McLaren Vale feels like a carefully crafted experience.
Eden Valley: Elegant, Structured, Age Worthy
Eden Valley is cooler than both Barossa and McLaren Vale. At higher altitude with cooler nights, Shiraz ripens more slowly. The result is wines with more acidity, more elegant tannins, and more complexity. These Shiraz bottles have more mineral notes and less jammy fruit than warmer region examples.
Eden Valley Shiraz is often more age worthy than other Australian regions. A good Eden Valley Shiraz from a top vintage can improve for 10 to 15 years, developing complexity and refinement. If you're thinking about cellaring, Eden Valley is worth exploring.
Margaret River: Diverse and Distinctive
Margaret River is known more for Cabernet than Shiraz, but the Shiraz it does produce is excellent. Ocean influence and diverse soil types create Shiraz with its own character. You often find fresh fruit, herbal notes, and elegant structure. These aren't the biggest, boldest Shiraz, but they're often the most interesting and complex.
Other Notable Regions
Heathcote produces bold, peppery Shiraz with dark fruit and impressive structure. Orange (New South Wales) produces elegant, cool climate Shiraz with beautiful acidity. Clare Valley produces Shiraz with regional character and excellent food pairing potential. Yarra Valley produces elegant, complex Shiraz with minerality.
How to Choose by Region
Want bold, generous, fruit forward? Barossa Valley. Want balanced, elegant, food friendly? McLaren Vale. Want complex, age worthy, structured? Eden Valley or Yarra Valley. Want unique and interesting? Try Margaret River or Heathcote.
The beauty of Australian Shiraz diversity? You can explore different regional styles without leaving Australia. Try a few, find your preference, and you've just become a real Shiraz expert.
How to Taste Shiraz Like You Actually Know What You're Doing
Tasting Shiraz properly isn't complicated, but a few simple techniques genuinely improve the experience.
Temperature Matters
Shiraz is best served at 16 to 18 degrees Celsius. If your house is warm, put the bottle in the fridge for 20 minutes before opening. Too cold and you lose the fruit flavours. Too warm and it tastes flabby and the alcohol becomes prominent. Getting temperature right is one easy way to make any Shiraz taste better.
The Tasting Process
Start by looking at the wine. Hold the glass to light and notice the colour. Young Shiraz is bright ruby or even purple at the rim. As it ages, it moves toward darker red and eventually garnet. The colour tells you something about the wine's age and style.
Smell the wine properly. Stick your nose in and take a good sniff. What do you notice first? Dark berries? Spice? Pepper? Leather? Plum? Don't overthink it. Your nose is the expert, not anyone else's description.
Take a small sip and let it sit on your tongue for a moment. Notice the fruit flavours, the tannin texture (the drying sensation on your gums), the acidity (puckering sensation), and the finish (how long the flavour lingers). Think about whether you like what you're tasting.
Sip it again while thinking about food. How would this wine taste with a steak? With pasta? With BBQ? The best tasting note? Thinking about what you'd eat with it.
Pro Tips
Aeration helps Shiraz, especially younger bottles. Either decant for 30 minutes or open 15 minutes before drinking. The wine opens up, fruit becomes more pronounced, and tannins soften.
Don't stress about having the "right" opinion. If you like it, it's good. Wine appreciation is about what you genuinely enjoy, not impressing people with big words.
Taste wine when you're relaxed and enjoying it. You'll have better experiences and better memories that way.
How to Choose Your Shiraz From This Collection
With 22 excellent Shiraz options in this collection, having a strategy helps you find exactly what you want.
Strategy 1: By Price Point
Under $15: Great everyday drinking wine. These are honest, well made bottles for casual enjoyment. Not the most complex, but genuinely good quality for the price.
$15 to $30: This is the sweet spot. You get real quality, actual complexity, and wines you'll genuinely enjoy. Most of our bestsellers sit here.
$30 to $50: Premium bottles from excellent producers. You're getting single vineyard selections, limited releases, or top tier wines from legendary producers. These deserve to be treated as special occasion wines.
Above $50: Serious collector bottles. These are prestigious releases, limited production runs, or trophy bottles from iconic producers. These improve with age and are worth cellaring.
Strategy 2: By Occasion
Casual weeknight? Under $20 Shiraz from Barossa Valley or McLaren Vale. You want something you can open without overthinking it.
Dinner party to impress? $25 to $40 selection from a top producer. Bold enough to be impressive, elegant enough to work with varied food.
Special occasion or celebration? Premium bottles from collectors' producers or prestigious limited releases. These are wines worth talking about.
Strategy 3: By Region Preference
Prefer bold and generous? Look for Barossa Valley selections. Prefer balanced and elegant? Focus on McLaren Vale. Prefer complex and structured? Explore Eden Valley or cooler regions.
Strategy 4: By Producer Reputation
Check reviews and ratings. Real customers who actually bought and drank the wine are the best source of information. Five star reviews from 50+ customers means something. Two reviews means less information.
Look for producer background. Established, family owned wineries with consistent history usually make reliable wines. New or smaller producers can be excellent, but established track records matter.
Our Honest Recommendation
If you're new to Shiraz: Start with Barossa Valley in the $15 to $25 range. Bold, approachable, no surprises.
If you know you like Shiraz: Explore different regions. Try a Barossa, a McLaren Vale, and an Eden Valley at similar price points. Notice the regional differences.
If you want best value: McLaren Vale consistently offers excellent quality at fair prices. You often get more complexity than Barossa for the same cost.
If you want to impress: Premium selections from Wirra Wirra, Mountadam, or D'Arenberg are worth the investment. These are genuinely special bottles.
What to Eat With Your Shiraz
One genuinely brilliant thing about Shiraz is its food friendship. It pairs beautifully with way more food than most people realise.
The Classic Pairings
Steak: This is Shiraz's home. Medium rare steak with Shiraz is genuinely one of wine and food's great partnerships. The wine's tannins actually enhance the beef flavour, and the fruit doesn't get lost in savory meat.
Lamb: Even better than beef in some ways. Roasted lamb, lamb chops, lamb stews all work brilliantly. The wine's subtle herbal notes mirror the herbs you'd use with lamb, creating a natural harmony.
Burgers: Seriously. A quality Shiraz with a good burger is genuinely excellent. Casual, unpretentious, and genuinely delicious.
BBQ and Grilled Meat: Shiraz is basically the BBQ wine. Charred meat, smoky flavors, caramelized edges - Shiraz handles it all. The fruit stays bright even with heavy smoke flavors.
Beyond Red Meat
Rich Sauces: Beef stews, ragù, rich pasta sauces all work beautifully. The wine's structure handles richness, and the fruit echoes the cooked meat flavours.
Mushroom Dishes: Mushrooms are earthy, and Shiraz's spice and structure complement that earthiness perfectly. Mushroom risotto, beef and mushroom pies, roasted mushrooms all pair well.
Hard Cheeses: Aged cheddar, other hard cheeses work with Shiraz. The wine's acidity cuts through the richness beautifully.
Spiced Food: Because Shiraz often has peppery notes, it works surprisingly well with peppery or spiced food. Pepper encrusted steak is magic.
Occasions Where Shiraz Works
Casual dinner at home: Any Shiraz, any food, no stress. Open it and enjoy.
Dinner party: Quality Shiraz paired thoughtfully with food impresses without pretension.
BBQ gathering: Bring Shiraz and become the hero. Everyone will agree it's the perfect pairing.
Corporate function: A good Shiraz shows you have taste without being ostentatious.
The Universal Rule
If it involves cooked meat, sauces, or spice, Shiraz will work. If it's delicate fish or light vegetables, Shiraz might overpower it. That's literally it. Simple rule, easy to remember.
The best pairing? Whatever food makes you happy paired with whatever Shiraz you genuinely like. Your experience matters more than any rule.
Should You Age Your Shiraz Or Drink It Now
Most Shiraz, even top rated selections, taste excellent when you buy them. But some improve with bottle age. Knowing the difference matters.
Shiraz Made for Now
Most everyday Shiraz (under $30) is made for current drinking. These are fruit forward, approachable wines that taste delicious immediately. They don't improve with age. They might stay good for 3 to 4 years, but they don't get better. These should be opened and enjoyed within a year or two of purchase.
Look for wines described as having bright fruit, youthful energy, or immediate appeal. These are now wines.
Shiraz Worth Cellaring
Premium Shiraz from top producers (over $40), especially from cooler regions or limited edition releases, genuinely improve with age. A 5 year old Eden Valley Shiraz tastes noticeably better than when released. A 10 year old prestigious selection from a top producer might be genuinely exceptional.
How do you tell? Look at alcohol level (14 to 14.5% suggests aging potential), producer reputation (established producers know how to make age worthy wine), and region (cooler climates usually age better). Premium pricing also usually indicates aging intention.
The Cellaring Experiment
Want to learn? Buy two bottles of the same wine. Drink one now and cellar one for 2 to 3 years. Taste them side by side. Notice how it evolves. This teaches you more about wine aging than any description could.
Proper Storage
Keep bottles in a cool, dark place. A wine fridge is ideal, but a kitchen cabinet away from heat works fine. Keep them horizontal if storing cork bottles long term (prevents cork drying out). Away from light and vibration and temperature fluctuations.
When Shiraz Is Fading
If it tastes flat, brown tinged, oxidized, or just tired, it's past its peak. Open it and enjoy what's left, but replace it in your cellar. Old Shiraz doesn't become undrinkable overnight, but quality declines.
The Bottom Line
Most Shiraz you buy should be drunk within a couple of years. Premium selections from top producers are worth keeping. But don't stress too much. These aren't investment wines for most people. These are bottles to enjoy drinking.
Questions We Get Asked About Shiraz
Q: Is top rated Shiraz actually better or just more popular?
Both. Shiraz became Australia's signature wine because it's genuinely good at what it does. But popularity also drives rating systems and awards. A fairly obscure but excellent wine might get fewer customer reviews than a popular Shiraz. That said, wines in this collection have earned real customer ratings, not just marketing hype. The five star reviews come from people who actually bought and drank the wine.
Q: Should I spend more on Shiraz or is good wine available under $20?
Good wine absolutely exists under $20. Really good wine exists under $20. The difference between $20 and $40 is usually refinement, complexity, and age worthiness rather than drinkability. You can enjoy $15 Shiraz genuinely, but $35 Shiraz from a top producer might show you more layers of flavour. Spend what feels right for the occasion.
Q: What's the difference between Shiraz and Syrah?
Same grape, different names. Shiraz is the Australian and South African name, Syrah is the French and American name. Australian Shiraz tends to be riper and fruit forward compared to French Syrah which is often more structured. But they're the same grape.
Q: How long can Shiraz be aged?
Everyday Shiraz: 2 to 4 years. Premium quality Shiraz: 5 to 10 years. Prestigious collector bottles: 10 to 20+ years. Check the producer and tasting notes. Top producers usually design wines for longer aging.
Q: What's with the point scores and are they important?
Point scores are one wine critic's opinion. Useful as guidance (90+ is usually very good) but not absolute truth. Customer reviews from actual buyers often tell you more about whether you'll like it. Use scores to narrow options, not as final decision maker.
Q: Can I return Shiraz if I don't like it?
Just Wines has an easy return policy. If you order Shiraz and genuinely don't like it, return it. That said, our selections are chosen because we think they deliver quality, so returns are uncommon.
Q: Is there such thing as "bad" Shiraz?
Not really in this collection. You might prefer some styles over others, but everything here meets quality standards. You might prefer Barossa boldness over McLaren Vale elegance, but both are good.