
Collect your luggage, pick up your hire car, and drive due east for 20 minutes from Adelaide airport. As the rolling foothills come into view, you arrive at Penfolds Wines’ historic Magill Estate . Moments ago, you were on a plane, then in the centre of a bustling little city of 1.3 million. Now you’re in wine country.
That’s the brilliant thing about the South Australian capital, eight hours by air from Hong Kong. Adelaide’s extreme proximity to some of Australia’s greatest terroir makes it the ideal jumping-off point for the impatient oenophile or time-pressed epicurean.

At Penfolds’ Magill Estate, just eight kilometres from Adelaide’s central business district, you can take a twilight tour of the picturesque winery, established in 1844 – before settling in for a seven-course degustation meal with matching wines at the celebrated on-site restaurant.
A mere 45 minutes’ drive south of Adelaide lies McLaren Vale , famed for its sensational shiraz; winemaker d’Arenberg’s signature Dead Arm series is among the most prized. Although d’Arenberg was founded over a century ago, its eccentric owner and chief winemaker Chester Osborn is a forward-thinking sort, apparent from the five-storey, AU$15 million (HK$82 million) glass-and-steel Rubik’s Cube-like structure constructed smack in the middle of the family property.
‘The building had to happen because we had to make the d’Arenberg story even bigger, provide really memorable experiences,’ says Osborn. ‘When people visit a winery today, they are demanding experiences – more than just a rolling up at a tasting room and having a glass of wine. They want great photographs to post on social media, and they actually want to learn something.’


To that end, visitors can take part in wine tastings and blending classes within the imposing building or enjoy a noon-to-five degustation lunch with matching wines in the award-winning restaurant. A faster meal can be had at the more architecturally traditional – but no less culinarily creative – d’Arry’s Verandah Restaurant .
A little farther out is the Barossa Valley. Top spots in this area include the gorgeous St Hugo winery and restaurant, the Barossa Valley Cheese Company in the quaint town of Angaston, and the pioneering Seppeltsfield