Tomfoolery Trouble and Strife Rose 2024 - Caravan Wines & Spirits

Tomfoolery

Tomfoolery Trouble and Strife Rose 2025

Style Wine Australia Rose
Producer Tomfoolery
Origin Barossa Valley (eastern slopes); Adelaide Hills excursions
Caravan buyer note

Nose: Strawberry, watermelon, white-flower lift. Palate: Dry, fresh red-fruit weight with clean acidity. Finish: Bright, dry, fruit-led.

C Caravan teamBottle shop notes
$25 / btl
6 pack mixed six eligible

Build a mixed six around the bottle. Free Australia-wide delivery from $250.

192 left Ships from Brisbane
Open this first

What it tastes like.

Nose: Strawberry, watermelon, white-flower lift. Palate: Dry, fresh red-fruit weight with clean acidity. Finish: Bright, dry, fruit-led.

Nose

Strawberry, watermelon, white-flower lift

Palate

Dry, fresh red-fruit weight with clean acidity

The house

About Tomfoolery.

Barossa Valley (eastern slopes) ·Est. 2004

Tomfoolery is a Barossa Valley estate founded in 2004 by brothers Ben and Toby Chipman with mate Troy Mortimer. Tasmanian-born Ben moved to the Barossa as a teenager, took a Wine Marketing degree at Adelaide, and trained for five years at Rockford under Robert O'Callaghan before launching Tomfoolery. Ben and his wife Sarah purchased the homestead and vineyard on the Barossa's eastern slopes in 2011 and built the estate winery in 2014. The wine names are deliberately playful; the winemaking pedigree is Rockford-school.

View 13 bottles from Tomfoolery →
What to eat with it

Pairing notes.

Summer salads, charcuterie boards, grilled fish; a working dry by-the-glass rosé for warm-weather menus.

Vintage drinkers

Tell me when the next vintage lands.

We'll email you when the next release of this wine arrives. Once, no marketing follow-up unless you ask.

Bottle questions

Before you open it.

A few practical answers for storage, delivery, and choosing the right bottle.

How should I store it before opening?

Keep it somewhere cool, dark, and steady. Wine prefers cellar temperature; spirits are happier away from heat and direct sunlight.

How long will it keep once opened?

Wine changes quickly after opening; spirits and liqueurs generally hold longer if capped tightly and kept out of heat. If it is a special bottle, ask before opening and the team can give product-specific guidance.

Can I ask for a similar bottle?

Yes. Contact Caravan with this bottle name and the occasion; the team can suggest a close match, a safer gift, or a step up or down in price.

How is it packed for delivery?

Orders are packed in bottle-safe cartons. If anything arrives damaged or looks wrong, contact the team with your order number and a photo so they can sort the next step.

What about hot weather shipping?

The team avoids making one-size-fits-all promises around heat and carrier timing. For heat-sensitive or cellar bottles, contact Caravan before ordering and they can advise the safest dispatch window.

Tomfoolery Trouble and Strife Rose 2024 - Caravan Wines & Spirits
Producer visit

Why Caravan backs Tomfoolery

Barossa Valley (eastern slopes); Adelaide Hills excursions

Ben Chipman, Toby Chipman and Troy Mortimer founded Tomfoolery in 2004, registering a label rather than building a winery — a not-uncommon Barossa pattern for emerging producers in the 2000s, where the wines are made under a contract arrangement at an established Barossa winery while the brand finds its market. Ben Chipman is Tasmanian-born and moved to the Barossa as a teenager. He completed a Wine Marketing degree at Adelaide University, worked at Yalumba and Lou Miranda, then spent five years at Rockford Estate under Robert O'Callaghan — Rockford being the reference for old-school traditional Barossa Shiraz technique.

In 2011, Ben and his wife Sarah (also ex-Rockford, where the two met in 2006) bought an 1850s homestead and adjoining vineyard on the eastern slopes of the Barossa. The cellar door now operates from what was once Ben's parents' family home. The winery itself was built in 2014. The Chipman approach maps the Rockford technique forward: low-intervention winemaking with traditional fermentation methods, dry-grown old-vine fruit where available, and a bias toward big-shouldered Barossa Shiraz, Cabernet, Mataro and Grenache.

The Tomfoolery range carries playful names but classical Barossa structure: Black and Blue Shiraz (the headline Shiraz), Skullduggery Mataro Shiraz, Young Blood (multiple expressions: Shiraz, Grenache, Mataro Shiraz Grenache), Son of a Gun Cabernet Shiraz, Artful Dodger Shiraz, Monkey Business Cabernet Franc, Burla Negra Tempranillo, Trouble and Strife Rosé. White-side: Cut n Run Riesling, Fox Whistle Pinot Gris. The estate also makes Adelaide Hills excursions for Sauvignon Blanc and a Pinot Noir × Syrah blend (High Cotton).

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