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Best German Wines and Winemakers – Eichelmann Wine Guide Deutschland 2015 Awards, Germany

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Picture: Johannes Selbach Pouring for the Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014) Group. The Visit of Weingut Selbach-Oster in Zeltingen, Mosel, and Tasting with Johannes Selbach was one of the Highlights of the Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014). See: Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

The Eichelmann Wine Guide Deutschland 2015 – one of the 4 main wine guides in Germany (along with GaultMillau, Feinschmecker and the relatively new Falstaff) - was released in November 2014.

In the Eichelmann Wine Guide Deutschland 2015, Gerhard Eichelmann presents 850 winemakers and reviews 9400 wines. For the rating of the winemakers, he employs a system that awards a winery up to five stars, where 5 stars indicate “world class, top international producers”. There are about 2 dozens of German winemakers in this group and I will post separately about the new list. The wines are assessed using a 50-100 point scale rating system.

Additionally, in each issue a Rising Star of the Year as well as the producers of the best collections of red wines, white wines and noble-sweet wines are named.

Best White Wine Collection of the Year: Weingut Beurer from Stetten in Württemberg

1o hectares. Completely unknown outside of Germany. Even within Germany, not a name that wine drinkers would come up with if asked for the best producer of German white wine. Jochen Beurer is totally committed to biodynamic winemaking; he prunes his vines only when the moon is waning. Weingut Beurer was asked to join the VDP - the German association of about 200 elite winemakers - in 2013.

Gerhard Eichelmann: This award will not please everybody. Those consumers who look for fruity wines that can be consumed rather young, will not find these kind of wines at Weingut Beurer. But those who are looking for authentic wines will find them at Weingut Beurer.

Best Red Wine Collection of the Year: Weingut Wachtstetter in Pfaffenhofen in Württemberg

16.5 hectares. Again, a surprise nomination. As for myself, I visited Weingut Wachstetter and have written about the outstanding wines of Pfaffenberg. In his speech, Gerhard Eichelmann singled out the world class Lembergers of Weingut Wachstetter. Indeed, they are top.

For more, see:
Weingut Wachtstetter in Wuerttemberg – A Profile, Germany

Pictures: Christian G.E. Schiller and Rainer Wachtstetter, Weingut Wachtstetter in Pfaffenberg, Wuerttemberg

Best Collection of Noble-Sweet Wines of the Year: Weingut Selbach Oster in Zeltingen, Mosel

21 hectares. A world-class producer of Mosel wines, well known in Germany and abroad. Interestingly, earlier this year, Johannes Selbach teamed up with Paul Hobbs to create a new winery in the Finger Lakes Region in Upstate New York. See: Johannes Selbach, Weingut Selbach-Oster, teams up with Paul Hobbs to make Riesling in the Finger Lakes Region in New York State, USA/Germany

Pictures: The Visit of Weingut Selbach-Oster in Zeltingen, Mosel, and Tasting with Johannes Selbach was one of the Highlights of the Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014). See: Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Gerhard Eichelmann: The Rieslings of Selbach-Oster convince with their elegance and cleanness, the sweetness is never offensive and the alcohol level always very moderate: Classic Mosel Rieslings

Rising Star of the Year: Weingut Höfflin in Bötzingen, Kaiserstuhl (Baden)

11 hectares. Organic wine producer.

Gerhard Eichelmann: The Höfflin wines are very different and very authentic.

schiller-wine: Related Postings Eichelmann

For previous years, see:

Best German Wines and Winemakers – Eichelmann Wine Guide Deutschland 2015 Awards, Germany

Germany’s 26 Top Winemakers - Eichelmann WeinGuide Deutschland 2014

Best German Winemakers – Eichelmann Wine Guide Deutschland 2014 Awards, Germany

Best German Wines and Winemakers – Eichelmann Wine Guide Deutschland 2013 Awards, Germany

Best German Wines - Eichelmann Wine Guide 2012 Awards, Germany

Wine ratings: German wine --- Eichelmann 2010  (Awards)

schiller-wine: Related Postings

Johannes Selbach, Weingut Selbach-Oster, teams up with Paul Hobbs to make Riesling in the Finger Lakes Region in New York State, USA/Germany

Weingut Wachtstetter in Wuerttemberg – A Profile, Germany 

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014


In the Vineyard and the Wine Cellar (and Lunch) with Robert Schätzle, Owner and Winemaker, Weingut Schloss Neuweier in Baden – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

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Picture: In the Vineyard with Owner and Winemaker Robert Schätzle at Weingut Schloss Neuweier in Baden

The first stop of the Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, which took place from September 14 – 20, 2014, was at Schloss Neuweier in the small village of Neuweier in Baden, close to the spa-town Baden Baden. We had a wine tasting luncheon at the 1-star Michelin restaurant of Chef Armin Röttele with the owner and winemaker of Weingut Schloss Neuweier, Robert Schätzle. Before lunch, Robert showed us around in the vineyards and the cellar. This posting focusses on the initial part of the visit, i.e. the vineyard and cellar tour with Robert. A second posting focusses on the luncheon at Röttele's Restaurant.

See also:
Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

Schloss Neuweier

(1) Weingut Schloss Neuweier is part of the wonderfully restored, historic castle Schloss Neuweier, where wine has been made for centuries.

Picture: Arriving at Weingut Schloss Neuweier

(2) Schloss Neuweier also includes a top notch restaurant, where we had lunch during our visit. The restaurant is in the first floor of the castle. It is owned and run by Chef Armin Roettle and his wife and since 2006 in the 1 star Michelin category.

(3) Weingut Schloss Neuweier focuses on Riesling wines, which are outstanding. You would expect that in the Mosel or the Rheingau region, but not in Baden. Reflecting the special soil of the vineyards surrounding the castle and the special micro-climate there as well as a long-standing Riesling tradition and passion, Weingut Schloss Neuweier produces world class Rieslings.

(4) The export share of Weingut Schloss Neuweier is negligible, which is typical for the Baden region. But this may change for Weingut Schloss Neuweier in the future and was not like this in the past. Its Mauerwein (Wall wine – from a terraced vineyard on the hill behind the castle) was one of Queen Victoria’s favorites. It had won an award at the International Exhibition of Philadelphia in 1876 and was on the airship Graf Zeppelin’s maiden flight.

Pictures: Welcome!

(5) Until recently, the driving force behind Schloss Neuweier, including Weingut Schloss Neuweier, was Gisela Joos. She and her husband, a well-known architect from Frankfurt am Main, took over the castle, including the winery, in 1992 and invested around Euro 50 million in the castle, including the winery. What you see today is essentially due to their efforts and money. In 1999, Weingut Neuweier was admitted to the prestigious VDP association, when Gisela Joos was in charge.

(6) Today, the “Schlossherr” (owner) of Schloss Neuweier and the winemaker at Weingut Schloss Neuweier is Robert Schaetzle. His family acquired the estate in 2012. The senior management of the winery of course changed with Robert taking over. The already high quality level of the wines was definitely maintained if not increased by Robert Schaetzle. The Joos family is still living in the castle, but on a lease basis. Also, the lease of the 1 star restaurant was not affected by the change in ownership.

See also:
Weingut Schloss Neuweier – Robert Schaetzle, Baden, Germany

History

When we arrived, Robert suggested to walk over to the vineyards first. While walking there, he introduced us to the rich history of Schloss Neuweier.

The castle belongs to the few historic buildings from the 12th century that still exist. Die Ritter von Bach were the first who started planting vines and producing wine. All subsequent owners showed interested in winemaking.

Its current shape took the castle, when it was owned by Philipp Kämmerer von Worms, called von Dalberg. During 1548 to 1549, this gentleman created the castle as you can see it today. To remind everyone of his creation he put in the entry portal: Zeyt bryngt Rosen – Time brings Roses.

In 1615, the castle was passed onto the second daughter of Philipp von Dalberg, whose husband was Wolf von Eltz and Knebel von Katzenellenbogen. Katzenellenbogen was a high ranking knight who fought under the rule of the Archbishop of Mainz. He also was an important person in terms of winemaking at Weingut Schloss Neuweier. He brought his knowledge from the Franken area, the Bocksbeutel bottles and the Niersteiner and the Laubenheimer grape varities, which replaced the traditional Elblinger and Ortlieber.

Pictures: Walking Over to the Vineyards

During the 19th century the castle changed its owners quiet frequently. From 1869, the Rößler family from Baden-Baden became the owner of the castle. The Rößler family is responsible for the Mauerberg vineyard gaining international recognition.

The Joos family bought the estate including all the buildings and the vineyard in 1992. With great enthusiasm and financial investments they brought the castle and all the attached buildings back to the full bloom, which you can still admire today. The renovations were completed in 2009.

In 2012, the estate was sold to the family of Robert Schaetzle; they come from a traditional vintners background in the Kaiserstuhl area near Freiburg.

The Vineyards

The heart of the vineyard area (15 hectares) of Weingut Schloss Neuweier are two very steep monopoly sites: Schlossberg and Goldenes Loch.

Robert Schaetzle: Schlossberg - This is a monopoly site of 3 hectares of south-facing slopes with up to 55°incline, entirely Riesling. The soil is very special, made up of ground granite, schist, shale and slate. Due to being close to an extinct volcano you also find quartz crystals on the surface. The climate is defined by being on the lower slopes of the Black Forrest Mountains and close to the Rhine plateau and in combination with the soil is ideal growing grounds for Riesling. The Riesling grown here gets a lot of sun during the day and at night the release of the heat that was accumulated during the day in the soil.

Pictures: In the Vineyards

Goldenes Loch - Another monopoly site of 1 hectare south-west facing cauldron between the Schlossberg and the Mauerberg. The name was established because of the foliage glowing golden in the autumn sun due to the concave mirror effect caused by the cauldron, catching the last rays of the day. The extreme incline of 60° or more was the main reason it was left alone but in 1993 the land was reclaimed by using small diagonal terraces. The grapes grown here produce exquisite Riesling wines.

Mauerberg: This is a south facing site. Historically, 60% of the Mauerberg was terraced, with each terrace large enough for one or two vines. The man-high natural stone walls contribute to the micro climate for the vines by keeping the warmth during the day as well as being dried be the wind from the Black Forest.

Heiligenstein: The name seems to originate from the Celtic culture stating a magical powerful place, which it is still today. The foundation is full of granite being enjoyed by our young Pinot Noir vines. Here is where we get our very clean, clear classical red wines from.

Wine Cellar

After the viniyard tour, we visited the wine cellar of Weingut Schloss Neuweier.

Pictures: In the Cellar

Robert Schaetzle

Robert Schaetzle is a very interesting and charming fellow, with curly, almost Afro-style hair and a strong regional southern Baden accent. He lives at the castle with his French wife and one son, if I remember correctly.

Robert did not appeared out of nowhere. He has put in time at serious wineries over the years – at Franz Keller and Dr. Heger in Baden, across the Rhine in Alsace with Zind-Humbrecht and Marc Kreydenweiss, and in Bordeaux at La Tour de By. Before turning to wine, Robert was in academia. He studied at Université Bordeaux Segalen in France.

Weingut Schloss Neuweier

Vineyard area (hectare): 18 ha
Varietal in %: 88 % Riesling 8 % Spätburgunder 3 % Weißburgunder 1 % Gewürztraminer
Output per year: 98.000 Flaschen

Pictures: Schloss Neuweier

Lunch and Wine Pairing at Röttele's Restaurant im Schlossweier

After the vineyard and cellar tour, we walked over to the Michelin-starred Röttele's Restaurant im Schloss Neuweier and had a spectacular wine tasting luncheon with Robert Schätzle and his Weingut Schloss Neuweier wines. I will report about the luncheon in a separate posting. Here are already some pictures.

Pictures: Lunch at Michelin-starred Rötteles Restaurant im Schloss Neuweier, with Robert Schätzle and his Weingut Schloss Neuweier Wines

Bye-bye

Thanks Robert for a wonderful visit.

Picture: Good-bye

schiller-wine: Related Postings

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

Weingut Schloss Neuweier – Robert Schaetzle, Baden, Germany

Visiting Winemaker and Web 2.0 Guru Patrick Johner - Weingut Karl Heinz Johner and Johner Estate - in Baden, Germany

In the Glass: A 2007 Pinot Noir from the Gault Millau Shooting Star of the Year - Estate of Baron Gleichenstein

One of the Fathers of the German Red Wine Revolution: Weingut Huber in Baden

Joachim Heger, Weingut Dr. Heger: Winemaker of the Year, Gault Millau WeinGuide Deutschland 2013, Germany

Visiting Jean Trimbach at Maison Trimbach in Ribeauville in Alsace (2011)

Steffen Christmann (Weingut A. Christmann) and Wilhelm Weil (Weingut Robert Weil) Presented the New Wine Classification of the VDP, Germany

The World Meets at Weingut Weegmueller, Pfalz, Germany

The Wines Chancelor Merkel Served President Obama and Michelle Obama in Berlin (and the Wines she did not Serve), Germany

Visiting Agnes and Fritz Hasselbach at their Weingut Gunderloch in Nackenheim, Rheinhessen, Germany  

#Winelover-s With High Klout Scores (65+), December 2014

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Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasy POR and WineTours, Jancis Robinson, #1 on the List, and Christian Schiller in Switzerland

Periodically, you find rankings of wine writers (bloggers, journalists, multipliers) in the internet with the 100 or so most important wine writers. The most recent ranking is a list put together by Luiz Alberto, founder of the #winelover-s community, published on December 1, 2014, and updated during the following days. Luiz Alberto used the Klout scores of members of the large #winerlover-s community to establish his list.

Klout uses various networks to measure influence including Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Wikipedia, Instagram, Bing, Google+, Tumblr, Foursquare, YouTube, Blogger, WordPress, Last.fm, Yammer and Flickr to derive a score that ranges from 0 to 100. Klout critics argue that Klout measures activity (quantitiy), but not content (quality). And they have a point. 

Christian Schiller is on the list, with 65 points score.

For other, earlier lists, see, for example:
The 100 Most Influential Wine Peeps on Social Media (Mid-2014)
Social Media Wine Influencers and #Winelover-s (2013)
Top 100 Global Wine Tweeters - 2013

Luiz Alberto's New List

Luiz Alberto: I prepared a list of the #winelover-s (people who love wine and that dedicate – a lot of – time to talk about it!) with scores 65+.

They are the top people in the wine industry who efficiently use social media and I’m very proud to be part of it.

Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller (65), Luiz Alberto (78) and Magnus Reuterdahl (75) - 3 #winelover-s, who are on the new list.

Are you a #winelover and your score is 65 or higher? You should be on this list… In case you aren’t, please let me know and I’ll fix it ASAP!

Great to see that Jancis Robinson remains at the top. Hard to think of someone with her credibility in the wine industry who uses social media as efficiently as she does… so I guess that Jancis also gives credibility to Klout! :) Not to mention that she is closely followed by a few other stars of the “winesphere”.

Jancis Robinson: 84

Tim Atkin: 82
Jamie Goode: 82

The Wine Wankers: 81

Jon Thorsen: 80
Alder Yarrow: 80

Randall Grahm: 78
Luiz Alberto: 78

Katherine Cole: 77
Fabien Lainé: 77
Andre Ribeirinho: 77

Paul Mabray: 76

Nicolette Waterford: 75
Nannette Eaton: 75
Magnus Reuterdahl: 75

Ted Lelekas: 74
Dusan Jelic: 74
Andrea Gori: 74

Robert McIntosh: 73
Peter Handzus: 73
Marilena Barbera: 73
Emmanuel Delmas: 73

Wine Folly: 72
Sarah May Grunwald: 72
Russ Beebe: 72
Rick Bakas: 72

Ricardo Bernardo: 71
Nacho Sanz Maestre: 71
Meg Maker: 71
Ken Waggoner: 71
Elisabetta Tosi: 71

Leeann Froese: 70
Ryan Opaz: 70
Giampiero Nadali: 70
Ed Thralls: 70
Arto Koskelo: 70
Andrea Petrini: 70

John Corcoran: 69
Christian Callec: 69
Ana Sofia de Oliveira: 69

Vinumvitis Carlos: 68
Vincent Pétré: 68
Simon Woolf: 68
Panos Kakaviatos: 68
Jasmine Hirsch: 68
Sean Piper: 68

Reka Haros: 67
Magnus Ericsson: 67
Karina Aggarwal: 67
Jameson Fink: 67
Clayton Bahr: 67
Dracaena Wines:67
Martin Redmond: 67
Blanca Valbuena: 67

Karin Carvalho: 66
Helmut Knall: 66
Eric Asimov: 66
Cathrine Todd: 66
Natalie MacLean: 66
Ralf Kaiser: 66
Chiara Giovoni: 66
Shiba Sommelier: 66
Michelle Williams: 66

Stéphane Ferreira: 65
Rita Takaró: 65
Christian Schiller: 65
Elena Roppa: 65
Debra Meiburg: 65
Mario Scheuermann: 65
Jens De Maere: 65
Loreena #GK Meda: 65
Cindy Rynning: 65

schiller-wine: Related Postings

The 100 Most Influential Wine Peeps on Social Media (Mid-2014)

2014 Wine Blog Awards Finalists

#Winechat at Capital Grille in Washington DC with Fellow Wine Bloggers and Virginia Wine Producers, USA

Social Media Wine Influencers and #Winelover-s (2013)

Germany's Wine Makers and twitter

Wine and Web 2.0 in Germany 

Schiller's List of Twitter Handles of German Wine Makers

Top 100 Global Wine Tweeters - 2013

Germany’s Top Winemakers and Social Media (2014)

Complete List of Wine Blogs in the World (April 2013)

4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

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Picture: Annette Schiller with Armin and Monika Diel, Owners, Schlossgut Diel in the Nahe Region, and Didier Cuvelier,  Owner, Château Léoville-Poyferré in Bordeaux, at Weingut Robert Weil in the Rheingau Region. We will visit both estates in 2015 on the Germany-North and Bordeaux tours by ombiasy.

See also:
New Vintage Tasting at Schlossgut Diel, with Armin and Caroline Diel, Germany, 2014
Tour, Tasting and Lunch at Château Léoville-Poyferré, with Didier Cuvelier and Anne Cuvelier, France

A couple of days ago, Annette Schiller announced her wine tours by ombiasy program for the coming year. It includes 3 tours to Germany (East, South, North) and 1 tour to Bordeaux. 
Annett Schiller. Dear friends of good wine,

I would like to let you know about my wine tours in 2015. All itineraries have been finalized, the website is up to date and everything is set up for you to be able to sign up online.

This year, I cover ALL! 13 wine regions in Germany and of course my love, when it comes to red wine: Bordeaux. 

Please check my website: The itineraries are spelled out in detail so you know exactly what you get when you join me on one of these tours. To make it very easy for you I included the direct link to the itinerary after each brief tour description.

All tours will be in English. Feel free to disseminate this information to people whom you know and who are interested in touring wineries in Germany or Bordeaux.

Tour 1: June 11 - June 20, 2015:   GERMANY EAST   (USD  4,195 per person / dbl occupancy)
This 10 day very special tour allows wine lovers and aficionados of the arts to experience what the statement “wine is a form of art” entails. We will live the profound relationship between wine, music, dance, and visual arts by visiting Germany’s beautiful wine regions in the East and the cradle of German intellectual thinking. We will visit 19 top wineries, among them wineries that embody the wine and art approach, and attend 3 performances at world-renowned theater houses.    (for this tour people will have to hurry up to sign up because of the limited availability of the theater tickets!!)


Tour 2: August 30 - September 05, 2015:   GERMANY SOUTH    (USD  3,595 per person / dbl occupancy)
This 7 day tour takes us to the southernmost German wine regions and we will experience the German red wine revolution, in particular gorgeous Pinot-Noirs. We are going to visit 16 wineries, among them Germany’s unconventional, but exceptionally gifted winemakers. This tour has a strong culinary component reflecting the southern German region's affinity with good food, and proximity to culinary Alsace in France across the Rhine.

Tour 3: September 06 - September 12, 2015:   GERMANY NORTH    (USD  3,695 per person / dbl occupancy)
This 7 day tour lets us explore the regions that are quintessential to understand “Riesling”. We will visits 18 wineries and a lot of cultural gems, including a cruise on the romantic Rhine River with its castle- and vine-ribboned bank; the Mosel valley with its dizzying steep vineyards; delving into 2000 years of history; and tasting first class wines at world-renowned wine estates.

Tour 4: September 15 - September 24, 2015:  BORDEAUX    (USD  4,995 per person / dbl occupancy)
Spend 10 days in Bordeaux! ”Bordeaux” embodies more than just wine. In France the interplay of wine and food is very important and plays an integral part of our journey through the Bordeaux wine region. Drawing on our love and deep knowledge of the region as well as our personal ties to many of the players in the Bordeaux wine scene, we will visit many of the hidden gems that other tours pass by, but which are essential to feel what Bordeaux is all about. In a nutshell: this is an on ground Bordeaux wine class.

Touring (and Tasting the Wines of) Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA in Mendrisio, Ticino, with Guido Brivio, Switzerland

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Picture: With Guido Brivio at Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA in Mendrisio, Ticino, Switzerland

As part of the 2014 Digitul Wine Communications Conference in Montreux, Switzerland, I explored the wines of Ticino during a post-conference press trip. This is the second of a series of postings emanating from my visit of Ticino (see below) .

Exploring the Wines of Ticino in Ticino, the Italian Speaking Part of Switzerland
Touring (and Tasting the Wines of) Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA in Mendrisio, Ticono, with Guido Brivio, Switzerland
Polenta at Grotto Bundi, Mendrisio, Switzerland
Touring and Tasting the Wines of Cantina Kopp von der Crone Visini, with Anna Barbara von der Crone and Paolo Visini, Switzerland
Visiting and Tasting the Wines of Tamborini Carlo SA and Lunch with Valentina Tamborini, Switzerland
Touring and Tasting the Wines of Vini e Distillati Angelo Delea SA, with David Delea, Switzerland
Touring an Tasting the Wines of Agriloro SA and Diner with Owner Meinrad Perler, Switzerland
Touring and Tasting the Wines of Vinattieri Ticinesi, Switzerland
Lunch at Ristorante Montalbano in Stabio, Switzerland

Wine Producer Switzerland

Switzerland is a small wine producer with about 15 000 hectares of vineyards only. This is about 15 percent of Germany’s total winegrowing area and a bit more than 1 percent of that of Spain. Only less than 2% of the wine is exported, mainly to Germany.

Switzerland's particular situation - in between four wine-producing nations (France, Italy, Germany and Austria) and itself divided into four different areas with different languages and traditions - has resulted in an extreme diversity of its wines.

Picture: Map of Switzerland

Switzerland has an extensive range of grape varieties. Among the white grapes, the Chasselas is the most widespread. Müller-Thurgau, cultivated above all in the German speaking part of Switzerland, and Sylvaner are also popular. The main red grape varieties are Pinot Noir, which can be found in all the wine-producing regions of Switzerland, and Gamay, which predominates in the Valais; Merlot has found a second home in the Italian speaking part of Switzerland, the Ticino.

Ticino

Ticino is a quite distinct winemaking zone in Switzerland, totaling 1000 hectares. The canton Ticino (and the wine region Tecino) is divided into two regions by the dividing line of the Monte Ceneri Pass: Sopraceneri in the north and Sottoceneri in the south. The Sopraceneri soils are rather stony with a full complement of silt and sand, while the Sottoceneri soils are limestone and deep, rich clays. Ticino's climate is Mediterranean.

Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasy PR and WineTours, and Christian G.E. Schiller in Lugano

There are a total of about 3600 grape growers in Ticino and 200 or so winemakers, including a co-operative. The 200 or so winemakers range from pure negociant-type producer (who buy all the grapes the use for their wine) to winemakers that only use their own grapes for making wine. Vineyards are generally small, steep plots of between 3 ha and 6 ha and yields are at 70 hl/ha. 15 winemakers account for about 80% of the total production. The co-op produces 1 million bottles annually.

Merlot is the dominant grape variety. The Ticino Merlot ranges from easy drinking, including white, Merlots to ultra-premium Merlots that can compete with the best in the world (including Bordeaux) and cost US$50 to US$150 per bottle.

Guido Brivio, Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA

We were received by Guido Brivio, who showed us around and led a tasting of Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA wines. Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA are operating as a negociant-type winery under the same roof and management in Mendrisio. Together, they buy fruit from 400 farmers operating on 100 ha of land in the region (which is about 10% of the total) and produce 100.000 cases.

Pictures: Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA in Mendrisio, Ticino

Interview with Guido Brivio

I found on the web site of Alpine Wines, an importer of Swiss wines based in London, an interesting interview with Guido Brivio, which I am copying here. Its content is not very different from what we heard from Guido Brivio during the couple of hours we spent with him at the winery.

What is your story? My family has a background in the spirits industry. We hold the license to produce Cynar throughout Switzerland, but my true passion has always been to produce wine from grapes grown in the region of Ticino.

Picture: Guido Brivio

My story began at the end of the 1980s when I acquired the winery “Fratelli Valli di Stabio” (Brothers Valli of Stabio) with the help of my mother and uncle after finishing my oenology studies in France. At that time, Valli wine was imported from abroad and produced around 5,000 bottles of wine Ticinese - too small a quantity to allow for new markets.

The acquisition spurred me to want to produce a high-quality local wine with a new and attractive image.

Right from the start, I teamed up with Gialdi Wines and, thanks to the grapes supplied by the winegrowers from Mendrisio, the first wines of the new Brivio brand came into being. All the bottles were destined for top-class restaurants and dedicated connoisseurs.

In 2001 Brivio Wines SA was integrated in the Gialdi Wines Group SA. Our slogan became ‘United we stand.’

What grape varieties do you specialise in? The Canton of Tinicio has been producing Merlot here for 100 years. Tinicio is the Italian part of Switzerland – only five miles from the Italian border.

About 90% of the grapes grown here are Merlot, grown with an Italian touch, and we want to concentrate on that are becoming a specialist on Merlot. The soil here is ideal for that type of grape. We are lucky because Merlot is recognised internationally and much easier to sell than a Fendant.

Do you grow any other varietals? We have white wines: some Sauvignon and Chardonnay but Merlot - red and white - is our main focus.

Why is Merlot the main grape variety in this region? In the canton of Ticino – from north to south there are fantastic soil conditions for Merlot.

Merlot is a great grape. You can make tons of different styles of wine - rosé, white, dry white, blend it with Cabernet, make it red and fruity and light, or make a big heavy red for aging. Our dry white Merlot is very popular.

In the south, where we are, the soil is mainly clay. This produces a tobacco smell, spicy, Cuban cigar and contributes to a nice elegant Merlot.

The alcohol content is usually 12.5%, but the wine we presented at the Circle of Wine Writers event in London recently, Platinum, is 100% Merlot with 14% alcohol. It is a late harvest and we increase the concentration further by drying the grapes. We then leave the grapes in small boxes in a room with special air circulation for three weeks. the wine is matured 20 months in new French oak barrels. This produces a very powerful and elegant wine.

We don’t produce the wine every year just in top vintages. It was interesting to try the latest vintage the 2011 and compare it to the 2005 - these wines ought to be cellared, and the 2005, while still young, shows why.

Pictures: In the Wine Cellar with Guido Brivio

Tell us about your ‘white Merlot? When I started, out, I received a lot of slammed doors in my face - especially for white Merlot. Once I even received a letter from a restaurant owner saying: ‘You are going to ruin red grapes to make wine. You’re going to ruin the image of Ticino. Please stop! It’s not going to be successful.’ Now he reserves maybe 60 bottles a year. Sometimes you have to go against the wave to try new things.

We use a lot of oak, all from the Massif Central of France. For red wine we go for medium toasting. For white we use a heavier toasting. The most important is the grain of the wood. Big grain gives less oxygen.

The important thing is oxygen going through the oak and breathing with the wood and wine.

And the climate in Ticino? We are blessed with a Mediterranean micro climate in the south of Ticino. It is the last corridor before the. We are blessed with hot summers and even havepalm trees here!

A lot of Swiss people have holiday houses here in Ticino because of the climate. It is also located in the middle of everything. If you drive towards Italy, in two hours you are by the sea. Drive half hour the other way you can ski.

Tell us more about the winery? The winery has been completely renovated with the adoption of the most advanced wine-making technology and we are gradually replacing all of the wine-making machinery. Currently, the winery can process up to 300,000 kilos of grapes, through the use of high-tech systems.

To obtain the best grapes in Ticino, closer personal contacts were established with the region's wine-growers and new vineyards were planted in accordance with the most recent wine-growing methods. They produce grapes of the highest quality, among the best that this territory can offer.

The aging of the wines is in French oak barrels in our centuries-old cellars dug deep into the rock at the base of Monte Generoso. They were built to season cheese, salami, and wine, and for those who built them, to party with their friends.

There is natural aeration through holes dug in the rock to channel a flow of cool air into the cellars. When it rains the water pushes out fresh air on this Swiss side. This produces the ideal atmospheric conditions for making wine. The perfect level of humidity is also maintained naturally that way.

What are you future plans for the winery? We are exploring export markets for Swiss wines. When people think of Switzerland, they don’t think about wine. They think about banking, watches, chocolate but wine is the last thing.

But when they try the wine they are amazed by the quality that is why it’s important to us to allow people access to the wines. We are part of ‘old Europe’ for making wine and want to keep that culture and to spread it.

What other interests do you have? I love art and in our tasting room, the bottles stand before paintings. Each image represents the taste of a particular wine to the artist.

Pictures: Tasting with Guido Brivio .... and Gregory Dal Piaz

Do you think your son will carry on the family tradition of winemaking? Our son has always been around the winery. He is 14 and showing signs of wanting to come into the business but I will never push him.

Winemaking is not like any other career. To make good wines you have to feel it inside. It really is a 60 degree job but exciting. I enjoy working with nature, the technical side of wine making and communicating the wines. For me, every harvest is like creating a new painting. You have to interpret what nature gives you and keep up with your style. It’s a challenge every year but exciting.

The Wines Guido Poured

CONTRADO 2013

Ticino DOC Bianco di Merlot
Zona di produzione: Sottoceneri
A white wine made of Merlot. Fermented in stainless steel. No malolactic fermentation.
Wine-searcher average price: US$18

Keith Edwards: The Ticino white wine environment is not as monoilithic as its red but the primary red variety -- Merlot - also plays an important role in white wines. For the production of white wines, the Merlot grape is crushed and then gently pressed with little or no contact between the skin and the juice. The 2013 Brivio Contrado is such a wine. It is barrel-fermented and aged for 10 months in oak. The wine was cold-filtered to remove any color and, according to the owner, fermentation flavors were also removed during this process. Aromas include chocolate, coffee, banana, and lychee. It had great weight on the palate. This was the standout white Merlot for me.

BIANCO ROVERE 2013

Ticino DOC Bianco di Merlot
Zona di produzione: Sottoceneri
Vinified and aged in oak barrels for 7-8 months.
Wine-searcher average price: US$33

RIFLESSI D'EPOCA 2011

Ticino DOC Merlot
Zona di produzione: Sottoceneri
Aged in French oak barrels for over 14 months. Frequent racking allows for bottling without fining, filtration or other physical stabilization. This can result in a slight sediment in the bottle.
Wine-searcher average price: US$39


SASSI GROSSI 2011

Ticino DOC
Merlot 100%
Zona di produzione: Sopraceneri
Vinification: long maceration in stainless steel tanks. Aged in French oak barrels for over 15 months.
Wine-searcher average price: US$50


PLATINUM 2011

Ticino DOC Merlot
Zona di produzione: Sottoceneri
The grapes are dried in boxes for 2 weeks after harvesting before vinification. Aged for 20 months in new French oak barrels. No filtration.
Wine-searcher average price: US$78

TRENTASEI 2010

Ticino DOC
Merlot 100%
zona di produzione: Tre Valli
The grapes are dried in boxes after harvesting before vinification for 2 weeks. Fermentation for 14 days in stainless steel tanks. Aging in French barriques for 36 months.
Produced vintages: 2003, 2005, 2009, 2010
Wine-searcher average price: US$88

Tasting Notes by Keith Edwards:

Brivio 2011 Refisi de Epoca -- Concentrated fruit, balsamic notes, coconut oil, tobacco, cuban cigars. Elegant, refined, integrated, balanced. Long refined finish with chocolate aftertaste.
Brivio 2011 Sassi Grossi -- Grapes from the north. Spice, toast, balsamic, tar, shoe polish. Good acidity. Rich, weighty, and smooth. Coffee. Long finish with a creamy aftertaste.
Brivio 2010 Trentasei -- Grapes from the north. Two 18-month new oak treatments. Straight oak notes with spice, smoke, sweet baking spices and milk chocolate. Elegant. Long finish with a creamy aftertaste.

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Thomas Haag, Weingut Schloss Lieser, Germany’s Winemaker of the Year, Gault Millau WeinGuide Deutschland 2015

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Picture: Thomas Haag, Owner and Winemaker, Weingut Schloss Lieser

Thomas Haag is Germany’s Winemaker of the Year (Gault Millau WeinGuide Deutschland 2015).

See also:
Germany’s Best Winemakers and Wines – Gault Millau WeinGuide Deutschland 2015 Awards Ceremony in Mainz, Germany

Wilhelm, Fritz, Oliver and Thomas Haag

Thomas Haag is the son of winemaker Wilhelm Haag (who was Germany’s Winemaker of the Year 1994) and the brother of winemaker Oliver Haag. He grew up at the famous Weingut Fritz Haag in Brauneberg. The first record of Weingut Fritz Haag is from 1605, with the Haag family having continuous ownership since that time. Wilhelm Haag was in charge of Weingut Fritz Haag until 2005, when he retired and handed over to Thomas Haag’s younger brother, Oliver Haag.

Picture: Joel B. Payne, Gault Millau, Thomas Haag, Winemaker of the Year, and Father Wilhelm Haag

Thomas Haag has been the winemaker at Weingut Schloss Lieser in Lieser since 1992 and its owner since 1997. Schloss Lieser – a mighty castle – is the landmark of Lieser, a tiny, quaint Mosel village, built in 1875 by Baron von Schorlemer. Weingut Schloss Lieser was founded in 1904 and produced some of the greatest wines in the Mosel region. In the second half of the 1900s, however, the estate passed through several hands and went into decline.

Thomas Haag entered the picture in 1992, when he was appointed General Manager of Weingut Schloss Lieser. In 1997, Thomas Haag purchased the estate out of bankruptcy. From then on, Weingut Schloss Lieser went only one way: upwards. Today, Weingut Schloss Lieser is again one of the great estates in the Mosel region, and in all of Germany.

Weingut Schloss Lieser produces 8,000 cases and is a member of the VDP.

Winemaking Philosophy

Thomas Haag: With an average yield of 55 hectolitres per hectare we attend to a consistent reduction of the yield to ensure the high quality standards that characterize our wines. Using a strict selection process and exclusively manual harvesting that spans across several cycles, only fully ripened grapes will be harvested. Subsequently, a speedy but extremely gentle soft pressing of the grapes takes place. The carefully cleared must is stored according to their different characters in barrels of wood or stainless steel tank. Here, a slow fermentation will kick-start under cool temperatures using entirely natural yeast. When the favored degree of remaining natural residual sugar is attained the traditional decanting is performed. That means the young wine gets separated from the yeast. The remaining residual sugar is consequently an original component of the primordial must so that every aspect of individuality remains.

Picture: Markus Molitor, Weingut Markus Molitor, Thomas Haag, Weingut Schloss Lieser, and Christian G.E. Schiller

Vineyards

Thomas Haag: The estate Schloss Lieser cultivates a total area of 13 hectares, the majority of is located at the top sites of Lieser Niederberg Helden. Additional top sites are the Brauneberger Juffer Sonnenuhr and Brauneberger Juffer.

Promotion to 5 Grapes

Thomas Haag is the Winemaker of the Year, Gault Millau WeinGuide Deutschland 2015. This is a very important award. In addition, Thomas Haag got the Best Riesling Spätlese Award of the Gault Millau WeinGuide Deutschland 2015. Last, but not least, Weingut Schloss Lieser was promoted to the 5 (out of 5) grapes group of (11) winemakers in the Gault Millau WeinGuide Deutschland 2015.

Picture: Thomas Haag, Weingut Schloss Lieser, Germany’s Winemaker of the Year, Gault Millau WeinGuide Deutschland 2015

Thomas Haag: Starting from scratch by buying the winery without any client base and bottled wine in 1992, we faced the challenge to rehabilitate the winery, its buildings and vineyards: Now we have been rewarded! The Gault & Millau Wine Guide honored us ‘Wine Maker of the Year 2015’ and rewarded our hard work with the 5th grape, the highest category which includes only 11 top-wineries throughout Germany.

schiller-wine: Related Postings

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Weingut Kloster Pforta: Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Tasting with Managing Director Christian Kloss – Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

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Picture: Opening a Bottle of Sekt in Style: Sabrage

The Germany North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014) took us to 3 exceptional winemakers in the Saale Unstrut region. One of them was Weingut Kloster Pforta.

See also:
4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux
Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

Managing Director Christian Kloss toured with us the vineyards and the cellar and then sat down with us for a tasting.

The Saale Unstrut Wine Region

The Saale Unstrut wine region is Germany’s most northern wine region, in the valleys of the Saale and Unstrut rivers, around Freyburg and Naumburg. With 730 hectares of vineyard area, it is one of the smaller wine regions in Germany. The oldest record of viticulture dates back to the year 998 during the reign of Emperor Otto III.

Located in the area of the former German Democratic Republic (GDR), Saale-Unstrut has become a thriving emerging wine region after the Berlin Wall came down in 1989 (as Sachsen, the other wine region in the area of the former GDR; Sachsen is half of the size of Saale Unstrut).

Most of the region's vineyards are situated in the State of Saxony-Anhalt, with the remainder in the State of Thuringia and in the State of Brandenburg (the "Werderaner Wachtelberg" near Potsdam). The vineyards are located on the hillsides lining the Saale and Unstrut rivers. It all looks very attractive, with steep terraces, dry stone walls and century-old vineyard cottages, interspersed with meadows, floodplains. High above, are defiant castles and palaces. Culture, history, nature and wine are combined here perfectly.

Picture: Saale Unstrut

Saale-Unstrut is the northernmost of Germany's wine regions, and is therefore one of Europe's northernmost traditional wine regions. It lies to the north of the 51st degree of latitude, which was considered to be the limit for viticulture before global warming. Also, the weather is more variable than in the regions to the west.

White grape varieties make up 75% of Saale-Unstrut's plantations. The most common grape varieties are the white varieties Müller-Thurgau and Weißburgunder (Pinot Blanc). The wines tend to be vinified dry and have a refreshing acidity.

Weingut Kloster Pforta

Weingut Kloster Pforta is owned and run by the State Government of Sachsen Anhalt. It is one of five important wine estates owned by a state government in Germany. The others are: Hessische Staatsweingueter Kloster Eberbach (Rheingau and Hessische Bergstrasse), Saechsisches Staatsweingut Schloss Wackerbarth (Sachsen), Staatliche Hofkellerei Wuerzburg (Franken) and Staatsweingut Meersburg (Baden).

Its history mirrors German history. Its origins date back to the Pforta Abbey, founded in 1137 by Cistercian monks. In 1154 the monks started to plant vines in the Pfortenser Köppelberg vineyard, which still today is one of the six vineyards of the winery, producing excellent wines. Pforta Abbey soon had a reputation as the richest abbey in medieval Thuringia, with vineyard holdings in 192 communes, totaling at least 250 ha (around 625 acres).

Pictures: Managing Director Christian Kloss Welcoming us

After Reformation (during the 16th century the eastern part of Germany became Lutheran and the monks had to leave), ownership went to the kings of Saxony, which subsequently lost the Abbey Pforta to the Kingdom of Prussia at the Vienna Congress in 1814.

Prussia converted Pforta into a wine estate and wine research institute. After World War II, it became the socialist co-operative VEG Weinbau Naumburg in East-Germany, with 120 hectares of land. After the breakdown of the socialist system in East Germany in 1989, Pforta was in the hands of the privatization organization Treuhand for a couple of years, but not privatized and became the Landesweingut Kloster Pforta of the Federal State of Sachsen-Anhalt.

The vineyard area totals 51 hectares, with holdings in the following sites: Goseck (Dechantenberg), Großjena (Blütengrund), Naumburg (Paradies), Pforta (Köppelberg) and Saalhäuser (with eponymous monopole sites). The main grape varities are Müller-Thurgau (10 ha), Silvaner (6 ha), Riesling (6 ha) and Pinot Blanc (5 ha) as well as Portugieser (5 ha), and Zweigelt.

See also:
The Role of Government - Government Owned Wineries in Germany 

Christian Kloss

Christian Kloss was born and grew up in the Rheingau, but he was deep roots in the Saale Unstrut wine sector. The Sekt Giant Rotkäppchen-Mumm, based in the Saale Unstrut region, was founded in 1856 by the rothers Moritz and Julius Kloss and their friend Carl Förster. After World War II, the Kloss + Förster Sekt House was nationalized by the communist regime and became VEB (Volkseigener Betrieb/Company owned by the People) Rotkäppchen Sektkellerei Freyburg / Unstrut. Günther Kloss - the grandson of the founder and grandfather of Christian Kloss fled to West Germany and reestablished the Kloss and Förster Sekt House in West Germany in 1952.

Christian Kloss has degrees from the Fachhochschule Wiesbaden, University of Texas at Austin and the Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen.

Sekt Reception

We started the tour with a 2011 Kloster Pforta Burgunder Premium Sekt.

Pictures: Sabrage and Sekt Reception

Vineyard Tour

We then toured the vineyards of Weingut Kloster Pforta, with a 2013 Bacchus trocken.

Pictures: In the Vineyards of Weingut Kloster Pforta

Cellar Tour

Christian Kloss then showed us the wine cellar of Weingut Kloster Pforta.

Pictures: In the Cellar of Weingut Kloster Pforta

Tasting

We finished the visit with an excellent tasting of Weingut Kloster Pforta wines. All the wines we tasted were bone-dry.

2013 Naumburger Roter Traminer trocken
2013 Pfortenser Köppelberg Blauer Silvaner trocken
2012 Breitengrad 51 Saalhäuser Weisser Burgunder Barrique trocken
2011 Saalhäuser Blauer Zweigelt Alte Reben trocken
1999 Grossjenaer Blütengrund Andre trocken

Pictures: Wine Tasting

Bye-bye

Thank you very much Christian Kloss for a memorable visit. We will return!


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A New Dr. Loosen Project Setting the Standard for Dry German Rieslings

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Picture: German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy (2013) at Weingut Dr. Loosen with Ernst Loosen

See:
German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013
4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

Weingut Dr. Loosen has just announced that they have launched two Grosses Gewächs Riesling Reserve wines which are bringing back the true origins of dry Riesling in Germany. The release of these Grosses Gewächs Riesling Reserve culminates Ernst Loosen’s 25-year search to find the most precise expression of dry Riesling and its terroir. Ernst is convinced that his Dr. L Riesling brand has been instrumental in introducing a new generation to the Riesling grape, and that the time is right to show the wine world that a dry Riesling from Grosse Lagen (Grand Cru) vineyards can make its name among the best wines in the world. To separate these wines from his normal Grosses Gewächs wines, Ernst Loosen has added the term “Reserve” to highlight their extended barrel aging.

Picture: Annette Schiller, Ernst Loosen and Christian G.E. Schiller at the 2013 Rheingau Riesling Gala at Kloster Eberbach, Rheingau, Germany

Ernst Loosen: “These Reserve Rieslings are a unique approach to Grosses Gewächs wines, which are dry Riesling from the top Grosse Lagen (Grand Cru) vineyards. I am returning to the traditions of my great grandfather who produced exclusively dry Riesling from our best vineyards and aged them for 24 to 36 months in large oak Fuder barrels. I have always believed that dry German Riesling deserved the same respect internationally as sweet Riesling, which has not been the case up to now. With the Grosses Gewächs Riesling Reserve, I feel we are now at the level of excellence I have been striving for over the last 25 years.”

Pictures: Tête-à-tête dinner at Rasika in Washington DC with Washington Post Wine Columnist Dave McIntyre, Annette Schiller, wine tours by ombiasy and Christian Schiller.

To produce the Grosses Gewächs Riesling Reserve wines, Dr. Loosen looked for the most traditional way of making great dry Riesling. The use of Riesling grapes from Grosse Lagen parcels, fermentation using only indigenous yeasts, and aging in large old oak Fuder barrels on the full lees with no batonnage, has proven to be a winning combination. For the just-released 2011 vintage, parcels of 100-year-old Riesling vines with original rootstocks from the Ürziger Würzgarten and Erdener Prälat vineyards were aged on their lees for 24 to 36 months in 1,000-liter Fuder barrels. Due to the outstanding results, the 24-month method of aging has been expanded to another Grand Cru vineyard for the 2012 vintage, which will bring the total of Reserve Riesling to three for the 2012 vintage: Wehlener Sonnenuhr, Ürziger Würzgarten and Erdener Prälat. Dr. Loosen has also seen that a year of aging in bottle has given even more elegance and charm to the 2011 Grosses Gewächs Riesling Reserve wines; thus, in addition to the extended barrel aging the future Reserve Riesling will also be aged one year in bottle before release.

Click here for a video with Ernst Loosen explaining his new ultra-premium dry wines.

This is a press release by Dr. Loosen Imports. For more info, contact: Kirk Wille, Dr. Loosen Imports (USA) kirk.wille@drloosen.com

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Polenta and Ticino Wine at Grotto Bundi in Ticino, Switzerland

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Picture: Polenta at Grotto Bundi in Ticino, Switzerland

As part of the 2014 Digitul Wine Communications Conference in Montreux, Switzerland, I explored the wines of Ticino during a post-conference press trip. This is the third of a series of postings (see below) emanating from my visit of Ticino. It is the first posting that does not focus on wine, but on food – polenta.

Exploring the Wines of Ticino in Ticino, the Italian Speaking Part of Switzerland
Touring (and Tasting the Wines of) Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA in Mendrisio, Ticono, with Guido Brivio, Switzerland
Polenta at Grotto Bundi, Mendrisio, Switzerland
Touring and Tasting the Wines of Cantina Kopp von der Crone Visini, with Anna Barbara von der Crone and Paolo Visini, Switzerland
Visiting and Tasting the Wines of Tamborini Carlo SA and Lunch with Valentina Tamborini, Switzerland
Touring and Tasting the Wines of Vini e Distillati Angelo Delea SA, with David Delea, Switzerland
Touring an Tasting the Wines of Agriloro SA and Diner with Owner Meinrad Perler, Switzerland
Touring and Tasting the Wines of Vinattieri Ticinesi, Switzerland
Lunch at Ristorante Montalbano in Stabio, Switzerland

Wine Producer Switzerland

Switzerland is a small wine producer with about 15 000 hectares of vineyards only. This is about 15 percent of Germany’s total winegrowing area and a bit more than 1 percent of that of Spain. Only less than 2% of the wine is exported, mainly to Germany.

Picture: Map of Switzerland

Switzerland's particular situation - in between four wine-producing nations (France, Italy, Germany and Austria) and itself divided into four different areas with different languages and traditions - has resulted in an extreme diversity of its wines.

Switzerland has an extensive range of grape varieties. Among the white grapes, the Chasselas is the most widespread. Müller-Thurgau, cultivated above all in the German speaking part of Switzerland, and Sylvaner are also popular. The main red grape varieties are Pinot Noir, which can be found in all the wine-producing regions of Switzerland, and Gamay, which predominates in the Valais; Merlot has found a second home in the Italian speaking part of Switzerland, the Ticino.

Ticino

Ticino is a quite distinct winemaking zone in Switzerland, totaling 1000 hectares. The canton Ticino (and the wine region Tecino) is divided into two regions by the dividing line of the Monte Ceneri Pass: Sopraceneri in the north and Sottoceneri in the south. The Sopraceneri soils are rather stony with a full complement of silt and sand, while the Sottoceneri soils are limestone and deep, rich clays. Ticino's climate is Mediterranean.

Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasy PR and Wine Tours, and Christian Schiller in Ticino, Switzerland

There are a total of about 3600 grape growers in Ticino and 200 or so winemakers, including a co-operative. The 200 or so winemakers range from pure negociant-type producer (who buy all the grapes the use for their wine) to winemakers that only use their own grapes for making wine. Vineyards are generally small, steep plots of between 3 ha and 6 ha and yields are at 70 hl/ha. 15 winemakers account for about 80% of the total production. The co-op produces 1 million bottles annually.

Merlot is the dominant grape variety. The Ticino Merlot ranges from easy drinking, including white, Merlots to ultra-premium Merlots that can compete with the best in the world (including Bordeaux) and cost US$50 to US$150 per bottle.

Guido Brivio, Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA, and Polenta Dinner at Grotto Bundi

In an interview, winemaker Guido Brivio, Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA, was asked: What traditional dishes would you recommend to drink with your wines? His answer: Polenta and risotto are traditional dishes. We have a north Italian culture here. What restaurants do you recommend in the region? If you want rustic food then the tavern, Grotto Bundi (grottobundi.com), located on a road full of ancient wine cellars, is a must. Grotto serves the best polenta in the world, in my opinion.

In fact, after the tasting with Guido Brivio, see here: Touring (and Tasting the Wines of) Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA in Mendrisio, Ticono, with Guido Brivio, Switzerland, we were treated to a fabulous Polenta Dinner at Grotto Bundi.

Picture: Guido Brivio and Christian G.E. Schiller

Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA are operating as a pure negociants-type winery under the same roof and management in Mendrisio. Together, they buy fruit from 400 farmers operating on 100 ha of land in the region and produce 100.000 cases.

See also:
Touring (and Tasting the Wines of) Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA in Mendrisio, Ticono, with Guido Brivio, Switzerland
Exploring the Wines of Ticino in Ticino, the Italian Speaking Part of Switzerland

Polenta

thegreedyantgourmet.com: The word “polenta” has Hebrew, Greek and Latin (pulmentum) origins. Since the most ancient times, people have eaten some form of ground grain cereal (originally made from wheat, barley, millet, spelt (farro) or buckwheat), cooked in water or milk. In some areas of Italy polenta was prepared using course chestnut flour or flours made from dried legumes, such as fava beans, chickpeas, or cicerchia - a cereal similar to chickpeas but with a sweeter, earthier flavor still common in central and southern Italy. These different types of polenta, as alternatives to bread and pasta, have been basic to the diet of rural populations for centuries.

Pictures: Grotto Bundi

Beginning in the late 16th century - after the introduction of corn in Europe from the Americas (where it was known in Peru as “mahyz”) - polenta made from corn became the main source of nourishment for farm families in northeastern Italy. The importance of polenta in the everyday diet of northern Italians - especially in Veneto and Lombardy, where the climate and soil are well suited for the cultivation of corn cannot be overstated; historically, polenta has been as essential to the diet of northern Italians as the potato has been for the Irish and Germans. To this day, polenta is mainly associated with northern Italy and is a beloved element of the now celebrated “cucina povera” - meaning the “humble food” of Italian cuisine.

Pictures: Grotto Bundi - Sandrine e Stefano Romelli, Proprietari e Gerenti

For many northern Italians - particularly those who immigrated to South and North America - polenta evokes memories of family, warmth and winters around the fireplace when polenta was cooked in the paiolo - a copper pot used exclusively for the making of polenta.

Pictures: Polenta and Ticino Wine at Grotto Bundi in Ticino, Switzerland

Venetians in general, but also gourmands and people that love good regional food, still appreciate this wonderful way to accompany an infinite number of regional recipes - from Fegato alla veneziana (a delicious recipe based on veal liver and onions) to Baccalà alla vicentina (a unique stockfish recipe) to the various pasticci (a culinary term meaning a “delicious mess”).

Pictures: Starters

Grotto Bundi’s Polenta Recipe

Here is a polenta recipe that you can find on the web site of Grotto Bundi.

Ingredients:
240 g di farina ogni litro d'acqua (per una polenta non troppo spessa)
240 g. of flour per each water liter (for a not too thick polenta)
200 g. of flour per water liter (for a very smooth polenta).
Salt as for pasta.
½ liter of water for one person.

Pictures: Polenta at Grotto Bundi

Procedure: Put a pot with a thick bottom and a lid on the burner. Salt water, when it starts boiling take it away from fire and pour flour using the whisk , paying attention not to form lumps. Put on the large burner until polenta starts boiling again.

Picture: Dessert

When boil lessens and the first “vapor volcanoes” appear cover with lid and finish cooking with low temperature for at least 45 - 60 minutes. You can cook it longer if you want: the longer it cooks the more it’s good and digestible. If polenta remains too firm add a little boiling water.

Pictures: Grappa Nostrana

schiller-wine: Related Posting

4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Bordeaux Wine Tour 2013 by ombiasy

The 2014 Digital Wine Communications Conference (DWCC) in Switzerland 

The Wines of Weingut Saxer, a Winemaker in the German-speaking part of Switzerland

The Wines of Switzerland– Grand Tasting with (and Introduction to Swiss Wines by) Jancis Robinson and José Vouillamoz 

Germany’s Best Dry Rieslings – Feinschmecker Riesling Cup 2014

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Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasy PR and WineTours, and Stephanie Weegmüller at Weingut Weegmüller during the visit of the Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014), see: Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

The results of the Feinschmecker Riesling Cup 2014 - Germany’s Best Dry Rieslings - were announced.

Picture: Feinschmecker Riesling Cup

The Feinschmecker Riesling Cup 2014 went to a producer in the Pfalz: Weingut Weegmüller in Heustadt-Haardt for: 2013 Weingut Weegmüller, Der Mineralische, Riesling Kabinett trocken.

Already 15 years ago, Weingut Weegmüller won the Feinschmecker Riesling Cup (for its 1998 Weingut Weegmüller, Haardter Herrenletten, Riesling Spätlese trocken).

Picture: Stephanie Weegmüller and Gabriele Weegmüller receiving the Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014 Group  at Weingut Weegmueller

Picture: Stephanie Weegmüller, Christian G.E. Schiller, Annette Schiller and Gabriele Weegmüller at Weingut Weegmüller, Pfalz, Germany, during the German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

Weingut Weegmüller is owned and run by two charming and entertaining sisters, Stefanie and Gabriele Weegmüller. The Weegmüller sisters and their winery are well established in the German wine scene; Gault Millau gives them 3 (out of 5) grapes. On both the Germany Wine Tour by ombiasy (2013) and the Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014), we stopped at Weingut Weegmüller and had a wonderful tasting with Steffi and Gabi.

For more on Weingut Weegmüller, see:
The World Meets at Weingut Weegmueller, Pfalz, Germany

Runner-up was Weingut Fritz Haag from the Mosel with: 2013 Weingut Fritz Haag, Brauneberger Juffer Sonnenuhr Riesling GG.

Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller and German Winemaker Oliver Haag, Weingut Fritz Haag, in Seattle

Weingut Fritz Haag, currently owned and run by Oliver Haag, is a world class producer from the Mosel, with 5 (out of 5) grapes in the Gault Millau. Interestingly, Weingut Fritz Haag is known for its fruity-sweet and noble-sweet, low alcohol wines. But Oliver also knows who to make ultra-premium dry Riesling.

For more on Weingut Fritz Haag, see:
The German Winemakers at the 4th Riesling Rendezvous in Seattle, USA 

The third place also went to the Mosel: Weingut Carl Loewen with its 2013 Weingut Carl Loewen,
Thörnicher Ritsch Riesling trocken

For previous years, see on schiller-wine:
Germany’s Best Dry Rieslings – Feinschmecker Riesling Cup 2013
Germany’s Best Dry Rieslings – Feinschmecker Riesling Cup 2012
Germany’s Best Dry Rieslings - Feinschmecker Riesling Cup 2011
The 11 Top German Dry Rieslings – Feinschmecker German Riesling Cup 2010 (Vintage 2009)
The 13 Top German Dry Rieslings – Feinschmecker German Riesling Cup 2009 (Vintage 2008)
Riesling Cup 2009 - Germany's Top Dry 2007 Rieslings

Riesling in the World

There are about 47000 hectares planted with Riesling worldwide. Germany – with 22500 hectares – accounts for about half of the total. The second and third largest Riesling producer are the US (mainly Washington State and Finger Lakes Region) with 4800 hectares and Australia with 4100 hectares. But this is only about 1/10 of the total. Alsace follows with 3500 hectares. Alsace, Ukraine and Austria follow with 3500 hectares, 2700 hectares and 1900 hectares, respectively.

Overall, Riesling is really a niche wine, accounting for less than 1 percent of total wine production in the world - but a very special niche wine. In terms of quality wines, Riesling is usually included in the top three white wine varieties, with Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc. Riesling is highly terroir-expressive, meaning that the character of Riesling wines is clearly influenced by the wine’s place of origin.

The Top 16 Wines

Platz 1
Weinname: 2013 Der Mineralische Riesling Kabinett trocken
Weingut: Weegmüller
Weinregion: Pfalz
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Platz 2
Weinname: 2013 Brauneberger Juffer Sonnenuhr Riesling Großes Gewächs
Weingut: Fritz Haag
Weinregion: Mosel
——————————————
Platz 3
Weinname: 2013 Thörnicher Ritsch Riesling trocken
Weingut: Carl Loewen
Weinregion: Mosel
——————————————
Platz 4
Weinname: 2013 Hörrweiler Gewürzgärtchen Riesling Spätlese trocken
Weingut: Huff-Doll
Weinregion: Rheinhessen
——————————————
Platz 5
Weinname: 2013 Oberweseler Oelsberg Riesling Spätlese trocken Alte Rebe
Weingut: Dr. Randolf Kauer
Weinregion: Mittelrhein
——————————————
Platz 6
Weinname: 2013 Lorcher Schloßberg Riesling Spätlese trocken
Weingut: Paul Laquai
Weinregion: Rheingau
——————————————
Platz 7
Weinname: 2013 Graacher Ortsriesling trocken
Weingut: Dr. Loosen
Weinregion: Mosel
——————————————
Platz 8
Weinname: 2013 Escherndorfer Lump Riesling Großes Gewächs
Weingut: Horst Sauer
Weinregion: Franken
——————————————
Platz 9
Weinname: 2013 Trittenheimer Apotheke Riesling Großes Gewächs
Weingut: Grans-Fassian
Weinregion: Mosel
——————————————
Platz 10
Weinname: 2013 Niederhäuser Hermannshöhle Riesling Großes Gewächs
Weingut: Hermann Dönnhoff
Weinregion: Nahe
——————————————
Platz 11
Weinname: 2013 Bopparder Hamm Mandelstein Riesling Auslese trocken
Weingut: August & Thomas Perll
Weinregion: Mittelrhein
——————————————
Platz 12
Weinname: 2013 Kiedricher Turmberg Riesling trocken
Weingut: Robert Weil
Weinregion: Rheingau
——————————————
Platz 13
Weinname: 2013 Maximin Grünhaus Abtsberg Riesling trocken
Weingut: Maximin Grünhaus – Schlosskellerei C. v. Schubert

Weinregion: Mosel/Ruwer
——————————————
Platz 14
Weinname: 2013 Niederberg-Helden Riesling trocken
Weingut: Schloss Lieser
Weinregion: Mosel
——————————————
Platz 15
Weinname: 2013 Monzinger Halenberg Riesling Großes Gewächs
Weingut: Schäfer-Fröhlich
Weinregion: Nahe
——————————————
Platz 16
Weinname: 2013 Gross-Winternheim Bockstein Riesling trocken
Weingut: Bioweingut Elke und Eckhard Weitzel
Weinregion: Rheinhessen

schiller-wine: Related Posting

4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

Bordeaux Wine Tour 2013 by ombiasy

The German Winemakers at the 4th Riesling Rendezvous in Seattle, USA 

Wine Tasting Luncheon at 1 Star Michelin Röttele's Restaurant im Schloss Neuweier in Baden, with Winemaker Robert Schätzle and his Weingut Schloss Neuweier Wines – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

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Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasy PR and WineTours, and Chef Armin Röttele, Owner of  Röttele's Restaurant im Schloss Neuweier in Baden

The first stop of the German South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014), which took place from September 14 – 20, was at Schloss Neuweier in the small village of Neuweier in Baden, close to the spa-town Baden Baden. We had an exciting wine tasting luncheon at the 1-star Michelin restaurant of Chef Armin Röttele, with the owner and winemaker of Weingut Schloss Neuweier, Robert Schätzle. Chef Armin Röttele prepared an amazing “menu di passion”. His wife Sabine Röttele was our host. And Robert Schätzle paired the menu with his top wines and commented on them.

Picture: Being Received by Sabine Röttele

The luncheon was preceeded by a vineyard and cellar tour by Robert Schätzle, on which I have already reported: In the Vineyard and the Wine Cellar (and Lunch) with Robert Schätzle, Owner and Winemaker, Weingut Schloss Neuweier in Baden – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

See also:
4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux
Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

Schloss Neuweier

(1) Röttele's Restaurant and Weingut Schloss Neuweier are both part of the wonderfully restored, historic castle Schloss Neuweier, where wine has been made for centuries.

Picture: Arriving at Weingut Schloss Neuweier

(2) The castle belongs to the few historic buildings from the 12th century that still exist.

(3) Die Ritter von Bach were the first who started planting vines and producing wine. All subsequent owners showed interested in winemaking.

(4) Its current shape took the castle, when it was owned by Philipp Kämmerer von Worms, called von Dalberg. During 1548 to 1549, this gentleman created the castle as you can see it today. To remind everyone of his creation he put in the entry portal: Zeyt bryngt Rosen – Time brings Roses.

(5) In 1615, the castle was passed onto the second daughter of Philipp von Dalberg, whose husband was Wolf von Eltz and Knebel von Katzenellenbogen. Katzenellenbogen was a high ranking knight who fought under the rule of the Archbishop of Mainz. He also was an important person in terms of winemaking at Weingut Schloss Neuweier. He brought his knowledge from the Franken area, the Bocksbeutel bottles and the Niersteiner and the Laubenheimer grape varities, which replaced the traditional Elblinger and Ortlieber.

(6) During the 19th century the castle changed its owners quiet frequently. From 1869, the Rößler family from Baden-Baden became the owner of the castle. The Rößler family is responsible for the Mauerberg vineyard gaining international recognition.

(7) Until recently, the driving force behind Schloss Neuweier, including Weingut Schloss Neuweier, was Gisela Joos. She and her husband, a well-known architect from Frankfurt am Main, took over the castle, including the winery, in 1992 and invested around Euro 50 million in the castle, including the winery. What you see today is essentially due to their efforts and money. In 1999, Weingut Neuweier was admitted to the prestigious VDP association, when Gisela Joos was in charge.

(8) Today, the “Schlossherr” (owner) of Schloss Neuweier and the winemaker at Weingut Schloss Neuweier is Robert Schaetzle. His family acquired the estate in 2012. The senior management of the winery of course changed with Robert taking over. The already high quality level of the wines was definitely maintained if not increased by Robert Schaetzle. The Joos family is still living in the castle, but on a lease basis.

Pictures: Schloss Neuweier

Röttele’s Restaurant and Residence at Schloss Neuweier

During the period when the Rössler family owned Schloss Neuweier, a “Besenwirtschaft” (basic wine tavern, where the winemaker sells his own wine) was opened at Schloss Neuweier. Over time, that basic tavern developed into a fine dining restaurant.

Armin and Sabine Röttele took over in 2005. A year later, Armin was awarded a Michelin star. Today, Röttele’s Restaurant at Schloss Neuweier is one of the best restaurants in Germany.

Sue Style: Expect deliciously pronounced southern accents (the chef spent years in Switzerland’s Tessin before returning here to his roots), intense flavors and colors, silken home-made soups and pastas, toothsome vegetables, locally raised meat and game.

Pictures: Lunch at Röttele's Restaurant with Robert Schätzle

Robert Schaetzle: We were very lucky that in the year 2005 the family Röttele took on the restaurant on the ground floor of the castle. Mr. Röttele is a very inspiring and inventive Chef whose creations leaves your mouth watering. Mr. Röttele’s talent was internationally recognized so it was not surprise that he gained 1 Star from the Michelin in 2006.

Armin Röttele: Il menu di passione

Chef Armin Röttele suggested an amazing "Il menu di passione", complemented with Weingut Schloss Neuweier wines. Robert Schätzle supplemented these wines with another half a dozen Weingut Schloss Neuweier wines, some of which where not yet bottled (and thus did not have a proper label).


2008 Schloss Neuweier Riesling Sekt brut


Amuse-gueule


Small appetizer

2013 Schloss Neuweier Riesling trocken


Pumpkin cream soup with melted foie gras and Amaretto foam

2012 Schloss Neuweier Neuweierer Riesling Alte Reben trocken
2013 Schloss Neuweier Schlossberg Erste Lage Riesling trocken
2012 Schloss Neuweier Schlossberg Erste Lage Riesling trocken


Lukewarm marinated codfish with Gremolata, orange sauce and Tagliolini

2012 Schloss Neuweier Goldenes Loch Riesling trocken GG
2012 Schloss Neuweier Mauerberg Riesling trocken Erste Lage 
2013 Schloss Neuweier Mauerberg Riesling trocken Erste Lage


Roasted rack of venison with walnut crust on parsley-curd “Knöpfle” with Savoy cabbage and lingonberries

2009 Schloss Neuweier Heiligenstein Spätburgunder Spätlese trocken
2012 Schloss Neuweier Heiligenstein Spätburgunder trocken Erste Lage
2013 Schloss Neuweier Heiligenstein Spätburgunder trocken Erste Lage


Duo of plum with cinnamon in a sorbet and Mille Foglie with Marsala-zabaglione

2012 Schloss Neuweier Grand Cuvee Riesling + Gewürztraminer Auslese 


Sweet autumn surprise


Bye-bye

Thank you Sabine, Armin and Robert for the great time we had at Schloss Neuweier.


schiller-wine: Related Postings

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013 

Weingut Schloss Neuweier – Robert Schaetzle, Baden, Germany

Winemaker Dinner with John Kolasa (Château Canon und Château Rauzan Ségla) and Wine Journalist Panos Kakaviatos at Restaurant Le Français in Frankfurt, Germany

Lunch at Château Le Bon Pasteur with Winemaker/Owner Dany Rolland, Pomerol, France


South Africa’s Top Wines - Platter´s South Africa Wine Guide 2015

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Pictures: Franschhoek Valley and Cape Town

The undisputed authority in terms of South African wine is the Platter's South African Wine Guide. The 2015 Platter's South African Wine Guide was just released.

For Platters of previous years, see:
Platter’s South African Wine Guide 2014
Platter’s South African Wine Guide 2013
South Africa’s Top Wines - Platter´s South Africa Wine Guide 2012
Platter´s South Africa Wine Guide 2011

Modern South Africa

I have traveled in South Africa many times in the past 3 decades, in particular during the period 1989 to 1992, when I used to live in Madagascar. When traveling in South Africa today, it quickly becomes evident that apartheid is resting in the dustbin of history. South Africa’s current President is the Zulu Jakob Zuma, who is mired in personal and political controversy. The Txosa Nelson Mandela, who had spent more than 25 years in prison during apartheid, was President in the 1990s and is now a revered elder called "Madiba" ("Papa"). South Africa successfully hosted the Soccer World Cup. The Soccer World Cup was hoped to provide a boost to the tourism industry; but indications are that the expected boost did not materialize, at least not fully. The gap between the haves and have-nots continues to be wide, but is narrowing and a black middle class is emerging. This, however, is not so much evident in the wine region, which continues to be dominated by the whites. 99% of the vineyard area is in the hands of whites. The AIDS pandemic is taking a toll with the HIV infection rate at about 10 percent, though declining.

Over the course of the years, I have detected an increasing openness, pride and camaraderie among all the South Africans – white, colored or black, Boers or Brits; Indians, Jews, Zulus, Txosas or Vendas, I met. Nevertheless, this rainbow society with a share of 75% of blacks, has huge challenges to cope with.

South African Wine Industry

Unlike other New World wine regions, the South African wine industry is strongly influenced by several large wine-cooperatives, including Distel and KWV; in total, there about 60 co-operatives. In addition, there are about 25 trading companies, or negociants, which often operate wineries, but seldom own their own vineyards. Among these are SAVISA, Winecorp, Stellenbosch Vineyards and Graham Beck; Western Wines is among the trading companies that are foreign based and owned; their brand Kumala is by far South Africa’s biggest brand. Over 80% of the total crop is delivered to these large wineries by about 4000 wine growers. However, private wineries have increasingly emerged and seen an impressive growth; there are now about 600 winemakers with their own cellars, most of them in the premium wine segment.

More than half of the total production is exported. The previous Cape powers, the UK and Netherlands, are traditionally the main destinations for wines shipments; but other markets are coming up, including Sweden, Denmark, the USA, Germany and Angola.

The wine industry is firmly in the hands of the whites, both white South Africans and foreign investors. But I had the pleasure to meet Ntsiki Biyela, a female black winemaker, who is producing outstanding wines at Stellekaya in Stellenbosch. Also, the Diemersfontein wine portfolio included a line of wines that was produced in the framework of the Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) program (to promote the black community's involvement in the South African wine industry-including ownership opportunities for vineyards and wineries).

Platter’s South African Wine Guide 2015

South Africa's well-known Platter's Guide announced its favorite wines for the year 2015 during an opulent evening at the Mount Nelson hotel in Cape Town on October 27th, 2014.

The guide, which was originally published from 1980 by John and Erica Platter, offers wine enthusiasts a good cross-section of available wine producers across the country, rating commendable wines using a star rating. Additionally, the guide includes awards such as the Winery of the Year, Red Wine and White Wine of the year and features 50 five star wines.

Swartland-based Sadie Family Wines is the Guide's Winery of the Year for a historic second time. The winery first took the honor in 2010 and it is the only winery to emerge from this year’s stringent judging process with three maximum five star ratings for the 2015 edition of Platter’s.

De Trafford Blueprint Syrah 2012 was named Red Wine of the Year, and DeMorgenzon Reserve Chardonnay 2013, is celebrated as the White Wine of the Year.

The 2015 guide features 50 five star wines, with nine wineries achieving five stars for the first time: Creation Wines, Crystallum, Diners Club Bartho Eksteen Academy, Fram, Iona, Oldenburg, Porseleinberg, Stellenbosch Vineyards/Flagship and Sumaridge.

The five star achievers for 2015 are:

Cabernet Franc

Warwick Estate Cabernet Franc 2011

Cabernet Sauvignon

Groot Constantia Estate Cabernet Sauvignon 2012
Le Riche Wines Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve 2011
Nederburg Wines II Centuries Cabernet Sauvignon 2010
Oldenburg Vineyards Cabernet Sauvignon 2011
Stark-Condé Wines Three Pines Cabernet Sauvignon 2012

Cinsaut

Sadie Family Wines Pofadder 2013

Petit Verdot

Stellenbosch Vineyards Flagship Petit Verdot 2010

Pinotage

Flagstone Winery Time Manner Place Pinotage 2012
Kanonkop Estate Black Label Pinotage 2012

Pinot Noir

Creation Wines Reserve Pinot Noir 2013
Crystallum Cuvée Cinéma Pinot Noir 2013
Newton Johnson Vineyards Family Vineyards Pinot Noir 2013
Sumaridge Wines Pinot Noir 2012

Shiraz/Syrah

Boekenhoutskloof Winery Syrah 2012
Boschendal Wines Cecil John Reserve Shiraz 2012
De Trafford Wines Blueprint Syrah 2012
Fable Mountain Vineyards Syrah 2012
Porseleinberg Porseleinberg 2012

Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller with Jean Smit, Winemaker at Boekenhoutskloof

See:
Boekenhoutskloof– Producer of Sensational Premium Wines as well as Good Value Table Wines in Franschhoek

Red Blends

Delaire Graff Estate Botmaskop 2012
Ernie Els Wines CWG Auction Reserve 2012
Hartenberg Estate The Mackenzie 2011
Thelema Mountain Vineyards Rabelais 2010
Vilafonté Series C 2011

Chardonnay

DeMorgenzon Reserve Chardonnay 2013
Iona Vineyards Chardonnay 2013
Richard Kershaw Wines Elgin Chardonnay 2013
Sterhuis Barrel Selection Chardonnay 2012

Chenin Blanc

Alheit Vineyards Magnetic North Mountain Makstok 2013
Fram Wines Chenin Blanc 2013
Kaapzicht Wine Estate The 1947 Chenin Blanc 2013

Grenache Blanc

The Foundry Grenache Blanc 2013

Sauvignon Blanc

Buitenverwachting Husseys Vlei Sauvignon Blanc 2013
Diners Club Bartho Eksteen Academy CWG Auction Reserve Vloekskoot Sauvignon Blanc 2013
Reyneke Wines Reserve White 2013

Semillon

Vergelegen Wines Reserve Semillon 2013

White Blends

Constantia Uitsig Constantia White 2013
David & Nadia Sadie Aristargos 2013
DeMorgenzon Maestro White 2013
Flagstone Winery Treaty Tree Reserve White Blend 2013
Miles Mossop Wines Saskia 2012
Oak Valley Wines Mountain Reserve White Blend 2010
Sadie Family Wines Palladius 2012
Sadie Family Wines Skerpioen 2013

Picture: Constantia Uitsig Vineyard

See:
A Day in Cape Town's Wine Cellars and Vineyards - Constantia Valley in South Africa 

Méthode Cap Classique

Graham Beck Wines Blanc de Blancs Brut 2009

Dessert Wine, Unfortified

Delheim Wines Edelspatz Noble Late Harvest 2013
Mullineux & Leeu Family Wines Straw Wine 2013

Dessert Wine, Fortified

Nuy Wine Cellar White Muscadel 2013

Port-Style

Boplaas Family Vineyards Cape Tawny Vintners Reserve NV
De Krans Cape Vintage Reserve 2012

Brandy

KWV 12 Year Old Barrel Select Brandy

schiller-wine: Related Postings

In the Plane: Wine on South African Airways from Johannesburg to Livingstone in Zambia (Victoria Falls)

New World Wine Producer South Africa

Boekenhoutskloof– Producer of Sensational Premium Wines as well as Good Value Table Wines in Franschhoek

Lunch with Raphael Dornier in Stellenbosch

Burgundy Wines in South Africa: Hamilton Russell Vineyards

Devon Rocks - A Boutique Producer of Pinotage in South Africa

Wining, Dining and Relaxing with the Chocolate/Coffee Pinotage at Diemersfontein Wine and Country Estate in Wellington, South Africa

In the Glass: A Rust en Vrede 2007 Cabernet Sauvignon With South African Oysters in Stellenbosch

Marianne Wine Estate: South African Wine with a French Soul

Meeting Ntsiki Biyela at Stellekaya in Stellenbosch – South Africa’s Only Female and Black Winemaker with International Recognition

Wine, Art and Food: Donald Hess’ Glen Carlou Estate in South Africa

Riesling in South Africa  

Winzerhof Gussek in the Saale Unstrut Region: Cellar Tour, Vineyard Tour and Tasting with Owner and Winemaker André Gussek – Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

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Picture: The Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014) at Weingut André Gussek  

The Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014) took us to 3 exceptional winemakers in the Saale Unstrut region. One of them was André Gussek at Winzerhof Gussek.

See also:
4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux
Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013 

André Gussek showed us the estate, including the cellar and the surrounding vineyards, and introduced us to his stunning wines.

See also:
Visiting Andre Gussek and his Weingut Winzerhof Gussek in Saale Unstrut, Germany, 2012

Pictures: Welcome!

The Saale Unstrut Region

The Saale Unstrut wine region is Germany’s most northern wine region, in the valleys of the Saale and Unstrut rivers, around Freyburg and Naumburg. With 730 hectares of vineyard area, it is one of the smaller wine regions in Germany. The oldest record of viticulture dates back to the year 998 during the reign of Emperor Otto III.

Located in the area of the former German Democratic Republic (GDR), Saale-Unstrut has become a thriving emerging wine region after the Berlin Wall came down in 1989 (as Sachsen, the other wine region in the area of the former GDR; Sachsen is half of the size of Saale Unstrut).

Pictures: In the Vineyard

Most of the region's vineyards are situated in the State of Saxony-Anhalt, with the remainder in the State of Thuringia and in the State of Brandenburg (the "Werderaner Wachtelberg" near Potsdam). The vineyards are located on the hillsides lining the Saale and Unstrut rivers. It all looks very attractive, with steep terraces, dry stone walls and century-old vineyard cottages, interspersed with meadows, floodplains. High above, are defiant castles and palaces. Culture, history, nature and wine are combined here perfectly.

Saale-Unstrut is the northernmost of Germany's wine regions, and is therefore one of Europe's northernmost traditional wine regions. It lies to the north of the 51st degree of latitude, which was considered to be the limit for viticulture before global warming. Also, the weather is more variable than in the regions to the west.

Pictures: In the Wine Cellar

White grape varieties make up 75% of Saale-Unstrut's plantations. The most common grape varieties are the white varieties Müller-Thurgau and Weißburgunder (Pinot Blanc). The wines tend to be vinified dry and have a refreshing acidity.

Winzerhof Gussek

Winzerhof Gussek is in Naumburg, the gateway to the Saale-Unstrut. It was founded by André Gussek in 1993.

André Gussek came to Naumburg in the 1980s. For more than 20 years he was the cellar master at Kloster Pforta in Bad Koesen, near Naumburg, first during GDR times at the socialist co-operative VEG Weinbau Naumburg, and later after reunification at Landesweingut Kloster Pforta, with 120 hectares of land.

Pictures: Tasting with André Gussek

After the breakdown of the socialist system in East Germany in 1989, Pforta was in the hands of the privatization organization Treuhand for a couple of years, but not privatized and became the Landesweingut Kloster Pforta of the Federal State of Sachsen-Anhalt.

In 1993, André Gussek bought property in Naumburg surrounded by 5 acres of vineyard land (Kaatschener Dachsberg and Naumburger Steinmeister) to pursue his dream of making his own wine. In the beginning, this was a part-time endeavor, but in 2002, the time was ripe to fully concentrate on his own wine making estate, the Winzerhof Gussek. Over the following years, he expanded the vineyards to 9.2 ha (about 24 acres) and he now has 3 full-time employees. 66% of his vineyards are planted with white grape varietals and 34% with Pinot Noir and Zweigelt, a flagship red varietal of Austria. His red wines are stunning and among the finest in Germany.

The Gussek Wine Portfolio

The Gussek wine list comprises more than 50 (!) wines grouped according to the new VDP classification, although Winzerhof Gussek is not (yet) a member of the VDP. The wine list provides information on the alcohol content, the acidity level, the remaining sugar level and the Oechsle level at which the grapes were harvested for each of the wines.

André Gussek is member of the 51. Breitengrad winemakers group. The currently 7 members (all non-VDP) sell their top dry wines under the Breitengrad 51 label, which are in practically terms their GG (Grosses Gewächs – Grand Cru) wines.

What André Gussek Poured


Weisswein

2013 Silvaner trocken (Gutswein)
2013 Naumburger Steinmeister Silvaner trocken (Lagenwein)
2013 Kaatschener Dachsberg Silvaner trocken Bin 87 (Lagenwein)


2013 Grauburgunder Muchelkalk trocken (Ortswein)
2013 Naumburger Göttersitz Grauburgunder trocken (Lagenwein)
2013 Kaatschener Dachsberg Grauburgunder trocken (Breitengrad 51)


2011 Winzerhof Gussek


2013 Spätburgunder Muschelkalk Holzfass trocken (Ortswein)
2011 Kaatschener Dachsberg Spätburgunder Barrique trocken (Lagenwein)
2011 Naumburger Göttersitz Spätburgunder Kleines Holzfass trocken


2011 Naumburger Steinmeister Müller Thurgau TBA Holzfass


Bye-bye

Thank you André for an highly entertaining and educational tasting.


schiller-wine: Related Postings

4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Weingut Pawis (Saale Unstrut): Estate Tour and Wine Tasting with Kerstin Pawis– Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Weingut Kloster Pforta: Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Tasting with Managing Director Christian Kloss – Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Visiting Cantina Kopp von der Crone Visini and Tasting with Barbara von der Crone and Paolo Visini in Barbengo, Ticino, Switzerland

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Picture: Barbara von der Crone and Paolo Visini in Barbengo, Ticino, Switzerland

Cantina Kopp von der Crone Visini is a small and fine Ticino winery run by Anna Barbara von der Crone and Paolo Visini in Ticino, the Italian speaking part of Switzerland. Cantina Kopp von der Crone Visini produces 4 white wines and 7 red wines at the highest level.

Pictures: Cantina Kopp von der Crone Visini in Barbengo, Ticino

As part of the 2014 Digitul Wine Communications Conference in Montreux, Switzerland, I explored the wines of Ticino during a post-conference press trip. This posting is the fourth of a series of postings (see below) emanating from my visit of Ticino.

Exploring the Wines of Ticino in Ticino, the Italian Speaking Part of Switzerland
Touring (and Tasting the Wines of) Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA in Mendrisio, Ticono, with Guido Brivio, Switzerland
Polenta and Ticino Wine at Grotto Bundi in Ticino, Switzerland
Visiting Cantina Kopp von der Crone Visini and Tasting with Barbara von der Crone and Paolo Visini in Barbengo, Ticino, Switzerland
Tasting the Wines of Tamborini Carlo SA and Lunch with Valentina Tamborini, Switzerland
Touring and Tasting the Wines of Vini e Distillati Angelo Delea SA, with David Delea, Switzerland
Touring an Tasting the Wines of Agriloro SA and Diner with Owner Meinrad Perler, Switzerland
Touring and Tasting the Wines of Vinattieri Ticinesi, Switzerland
Lunch at Ristorante Montalbano in Stabio, Switzerland

Wine Producer Switzerland

Switzerland is a small wine producer with about 15 000 hectares of vineyards only. This is about 15 percent of Germany’s total winegrowing area and a bit more than 1 percent of that of Spain. Only less than 2% of the wine is exported, mainly to Germany.

Switzerland's particular situation - in between four wine-producing nations (France, Italy, Germany and Austria) and itself divided into four different areas with different languages and traditions - has resulted in an extreme diversity of its wines.

Picture: Map of Switzerland

Switzerland has an extensive range of grape varieties. Among the white grapes, the Chasselas is the most widespread. Müller-Thurgau, cultivated above all in the German speaking part of Switzerland, and Sylvaner are also popular. The main red grape varieties are Pinot Noir, which can be found in all the wine-producing regions of Switzerland, and Gamay, which predominates in the Valais; Merlot has found a second home in the Italian speaking part of Switzerland, the Ticino.

Ticino

Ticino is a quite distinct winemaking zone in Switzerland, totaling 1000 hectares. The canton Ticino (and the wine region Tecino) is divided into two regions by the dividing line of the Monte Ceneri Pass: Sopraceneri in the north and Sottoceneri in the south. The Sopraceneri soils are rather stony with a full complement of silt and sand, while the Sottoceneri soils are limestone and deep, rich clays. Ticino's climate is Mediterranean.

Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasy PR and WineTours, and Christian G.E. Schiller in Lugano

There are a total of about 3600 grape growers in Ticino and 200 or so winemakers, including a co-operative. The 200 or so winemakers range from pure negociant-type producer (who buy all the grapes the use for their wine) to winemakers that only use their own grapes for making wine. Vineyards are generally small, steep plots of between 3 ha and 6 ha and yields are at 70 hl/ha. 15 winemakers account for about 80% of the total production. The co-op produces 1 million bottles annually.

Merlot is the dominant grape variety. The Ticino Merlot ranges from easy drinking, including white, Merlots to ultra-premium Merlots that can compete with the best in the world (including Bordeaux) and cost US$50 to US$150 per bottle.

Cantina Kopp von der Crone Visini

The name of the Cantina comes from 3 persons (Kopp + von der Crone + Visini) that are responsible for what the winery is today: Ueli Kopp and his wife Anna Barbara von der Crone, both agronomy graduates of the ETH Zurich, moved in 1994 to Ticino with the intention of making first class wines. They found what they were searching for (vineyards) in Gorla and Sementina and established a winery in Melide. In the beginning, the couple made only one wine (Baliño), first produced in 1995. The winemaking operation grew steadily and Ueli and Anna Barbara soon were part of the elite of Ticino winemakers.

Pictures: Barbara von der Crone and Paolo Visini in Barbengo, Ticino, Switzerland

The idyll was destroyed in 2002 when Ueli was killed in an avalanche. For Anna Barbara and their 4 children this was kind of the end of the world. Fortunately, help came from family, friends and acquaintances, and especially from Paolo Visini, a passionate winemaker colleague, who owned a small winery himself. Paolo Visini founded his winery in 1997. Since the philosophy of both was very similar, Anna Barbara and Paolo decided to work together (in 2002) and merge (in 2006) the two operations. The professional partnership led soon to a private partnership. The new building at the outskirts of Barbengo, which we visited, is family home and winery at the same time.

Pictures: Cantina Kopp von der Crone Visini

Today, Cantina Kopp von der Crone Visini has 8 hectares of vines in 8 different municipalities. 4 hectares are owned and 4 hectares are long-term leased: the Obino and Gorla vineyards in Castel San Pietro (near Chiasso), in Pedrinate and in Sementina (near Bellinzona), as well as vineyards surrounding the winery in Barbengo. The total annual production is around 3500 cases.

Pictures: The Vineyards of Cantina Kopp von der Crone Visini

Paolo and Barbaro work in the vineyard according to the principles of integrated production. They support biodiversity. The grapes from each vineyard are vinified separately, all in stainless steel tanks, preferably with spontaneous fermentation. All red wines age in wood.

Pictures: Christian Schiller, Annette Schiller, ombiasy PR and WineTours, Barbara von der Crone and Paolo Visini in Barbengo

See also:
4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

The Wines Barbara and Paolo Poured


MERIDIO 2012
US$ 25
IGT Svizzera Italiana
60% Merlot and 40% Chardonnay
Aged 10 months in oak barrels, of which 1/3 new and 2/3 of the 2nd, 3rd and 4th passage
Annual production: 5000 bottles


GOTA 2012
US$ 27
IGT Svizzera Italiana
100% Merlot
Aged for a year, partly in barriques and partly in large barrels of 500 liters
Annual production: 4500 bottles

TINELLO 2012
US$ 29
IGT Svizzera Italiana
Merlot 100%
Aged for a year, partly in barriques and partly in large barrels of 500 liters
Annual production: 2500 bottles

BALIN 2012
US$ 52
BALIN 2007
IGT Svizzera Italiana
Merlot 95%, Cabernet Sauvignon and Arinarnoa
Fermentation and long maceration in stainless steel tanks for a month
Aged for 18 months in new oak barrels (50%) and second passage (50%)
Annual production: from 8000 to 10000 bottles


Thanks

Thanks Barbara and Paolo for a great event.


schiller-wine: Related Posting

4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Bordeaux Wine Tour 2013 by ombiasy

The 2014 Digital Wine Communications Conference (DWCC) in Switzerland 

The Wines of Weingut Saxer, a Winemaker in the German-speaking part of Switzerland

The Wines of Switzerland– Grand Tasting with (and Introduction to Swiss Wines by) Jancis Robinson and José Vouillamoz

Weingut Zähringer in Baden: Cellar Tour and Tasting with Winemaker Paulin Köpfer – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombasy (2014)

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Picture: Annette Schiller and Paulin Köpfer

The first day of the Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014), which took place from September 14 – 20, ended at Weingut Zähringer in Heitersheim, Markgräflerland, Baden. Heitersheim is very much in the South of Germany, close to Switzerland. We were hosted by winemaker Paulin Köpfer.

The day began in Frankfurt am Main, where the Germany-South Wine Tour by ombasy (2014) started. After a couple of hours drive, we reached Schloss Neuweier in the small village of Neuweier in Baden, close to the spa-town Baden Baden, halfway between Frankfurt am Main and Heitersheim. We had a wine tasting luncheon at the 1-star Michelin restaurant of Chef Armin Röttele with the owner and winemaker of Weingut Schloss Neuweier, Robert Schätzle. Before lunch, Robert showed us around in the vineyards and the cellar.

See also:
4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux
Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

In the Vineyard and the Wine Cellar (and Lunch) with Robert Schätzle, Owner and Winemaker, Weingut Schloss Neuweier in Baden – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)
Wine Tasting Luncheon at 1 Star Michelin Röttele's Restaurant im Schloss Neuweier in Baden, with Winemaker Robert Schätzle and his Weingut Schloss Neuweier Wines – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Picture: Arriving at Weingut Zähringer

Organic Wine Producer Weingut Zähringer

Weingut Zähringer in Heitersheim in the Markgräflerland in southern Germany right across the Rhine River from the Alsace region is one of the leading organic wine producers in Germany. It was founded by Wilhelm I. and his brother Josef Zähringer in 1844, the great-great-grandfather of the current owner Wolfgang (and Marlies) Zähringer.

Picture: Reception with a Glass of Zähringer Sekt

Walter Zähringer and his winemaker Paulin Köpfer count among the pioneers of organic wine in Germany.

The vineyard area totals 10 hectares in the single vineyards Maltesergarten and Sonnhohle (Heitersheim). Pinot Noir accounts for half of the production. We also tasted Chardonnay, Gutedel, Sauvignon Blanc and Grauburgunder. Weingut Zähringer does not produce any Riesling wines. “Riesling is not a tradition in our area” said Paulin Köpfer. The wines are fermented in stainless steel tanks, large wooden barrels (Vierlig – 600 liter barrel) and barriques.

Pictures: Cellar Tour

Weingut Zähringer also produces Sekt, brandies, and oil, all organically and is a member of ECOVIN, the association of organic wine producers in Germany.

Weingut Zähringer sells 95% of its output in Germany and the rest in Switzerland.

Pictures: Tasting

What Paulin Poured


2011 Vierling Sekt Brut Chardonnay Euro
2013 Heitersheimer Maltesergarten Gutedel trocken
2013 Heitersheimer Sonnhohle Sauvignon Blanc trocken
2013 Heitersheimer Maltesergarten Grauburgunder trocken
2012 Zähringer Edition SZ Grauburgunder trocken
2011 Zähringer Vierlig Spätburgunder trocken
2011 Zähringer Edition SZ Spätburgunder trocken
2011 Zähringer SR Pinot Noir trocken
2009 Zähringer Löwe Nr.45 Grauburgunder Beerenauslese

Bye-bye

We left late. Thanks Paulin Köpfer for a wonderful afternoon/evening.


schiller-wine: Related Postings

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013 

In the Vineyard and the Wine Cellar (and Lunch) with Robert Schätzle, Owner and Winemaker, Weingut Schloss Neuweier in Baden – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Wine Tasting Luncheon at 1 Star Michelin Röttele's Restaurant im Schloss Neuweier in Baden, with Winemaker Robert Schätzle and his Weingut Schloss Neuweier Wines – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Weinfeder Edition #45: Wein in Madagaskar

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Picture: Wein aus Madagaskar

This article is the German translation of a box that I prepared for the 11th edition of the Bradt Travel Guide “Madagascar” (first published in 1988), published in July 2014.

Picture: Bradt Travel Guide Madagascar

Initially, the German translation was published in Weinfeder Edition #45 (Ausgabe Nr. 4/2014). Weinfeder Journal is the quarterly on-line journal of the Weinfeder - the association of German wine writers.

Pictures: Weinfeder Edition #45 (Ausgabe Nr. 4/2014)

Dass Madagaskar im Indischen Ozean Wein produziert, ist im Rest der Welt wenig bekannt. Typischerweise sind die madagassischen Weine gute Tischweine, nicht mehr. Die wichtigsten Rebsorten sind traditionell Petit Bouchet, Villardin, Chambourcin und Varousset für Vin rouge (Rotwein) und die Couderc Blanc für Vin blanc (Weißwein). Wenig in der Welt der feinen Weine bekannt, haben diese sogenannten französisch-amerikanischen Hybrid-Rebsorten den Vorteil, robust zu sein, können aber nicht mit den Vitis vinifera Sorten - wie Riesling, Chardonnay, Merlot und Pinot Noir – konkurrieren, wenn es um Eleganz und Raffinesse geht. Vitis vinifera Sorten dominieren weltweit den Weinkonsum, aber es gibt ein zunehmendes Interesse an französisch-amerikanischen Hybriden, etwa in der Biobewegung oder auch in Ländern wie Holland. Der Weinbau an der Ostküste der USA war bis vor kurzem von diesen Rebsorten dominiert.

Derzeit gibt es sieben Herstellern in Madagaskar, die Wein mit französisch-amerikanischen Hybrid-Trauben machen. Jeder Winzer produziert eine oder mehr Marken, von denen jede in der Regel als Vin rouge, Vin gris (Weißwein aus roten Trauben), Vin rosé und Vin blanc auf den Markt kommt. Darüber hinaus finden man Vin blanc moelleux, einen Weißwein mit spürbarer Restsüße . Alle diese Weine sind üblicherweise ohne Jahrgangsbezeichnun.

Antsirabe Viticulteur-Encaveur Chan Tong Fao, ein “Erste Welle” chinesischer Winzer, produziert derzeit Madagaskar’s besten (und teuersten) Wein aus Hybriden: NV Grand Cru d'Antsirabe. Er kommt als Rouge Alicante (mittlerer Körper), Rouge Seyve Villard (erdig), Rose Viala (guter Sommerwein), Gris de Gris (gut zu madagassischem Essen) und Blanc Couderc (mittlerer Körper, trocken) in die Läden und Restaurants.

Ein weiter interessanter Weinproduzent ist Lazan'i Betsilio, eine große Genossenschaft in Fianarantsoa, die im Jahr 1971, unterstützt vom Schweizer Entwicklungshilfe ins Leben gerufen worden ist, mit dem Ziel, den besten Wein des Landes zu machen. Als die Schweizer sich zurückzogen, hat die Qualität ersteinmal gelitten. Aber jetzt ist die Winzergenossenschaft wieder auf dem besten Weg, an frühere Erfolge anzuknüpfen. Lazan'i Betsilio bietet einen Wein an, NV Haute Matsiatra, der als Rouge (mittlerer Körper), Rouge Primeur, Gris (trinke ich sehr gerne zu Madagassischem Essne), Blanc (trocken, fruchtig) und Blanc Moelleux (lieblich) auf den Markt kommt .

Seit kurzem gibt es einen neuen Weinproduzenten in Madagaskar – Clos Nomena – der es gewagt hat, Vitis-vinifera Reben in Madagaskar anzubauen. Und das mit grossem Erfolg. Die Clos Nomena Weine sind wie eine Bombe in Antananarivo, der Hauptstadt von Madagaskar, eingeschlagen. Clos Nomena gehört und wird geleitet von Pâquerette und Jean Allimant. Seit 2001 experimentieren sie in ihren Weinbergen in Ambalavao mit verschiedenen vitis vinfera Rebsorten. Der erste Jahrgang, mit dem Clos Nomena auf den Markt kam, war 2011. Das Clos Nomena Portfolio umfasst jetzt einen Blanc Sec (trocken, fruchtig, klar), einen Rose (Groß Aperitif Wein), und einen Rouge (mittlerer Körper, elegant, lang anhaltenden Abgang). Diese Weine sind in Antananarivo’s besten Restaurants und einigen Geschäften erhältlich, aber zu deutlich höheren Preisen als traditionelle madagassische Weine.

Der Artikel ist ursprünglich in der 11. Ausgabe des Reiseführers "Bradt Travel Guide Madagascar" im Juli 2014 auf Englisch erschienen. Dr. Christian Schiller war für 3 Jahre der Repräsentant des Internationalen Währungsfonds in Madagaskar und besucht das Land seitdem regelmässig. 

Frühere Weinfeder Journal Beiträge

Die Deutsche Weinprinzessin Sabine Wagner auf Ostküsten Tour in den USA, Weinfeder Journal Oktober 2014, Edition #44, Seite 19, siehe hier auf schiller-wine

Die “Digital Wine Communications Conference 2013” in Rioja, Spanien, Weinfeder Journal Februar 2014, Edition #42, Seite 25, siehe hier auf schiller-wine

Amerikanische Whiskey-Hersteller in Deutschland, Weinfeder Journal Dezember 2013, Edition #41, Seiten 33ff.. siehe hier auf schiller-wine

Riesling Rendezvous in Seattle, Weinfeder Journal September 2013, Edition #40, Seite 30, siehe hier auf schiller-wine

schiller-wine: Related Postings (Madagascar)

Schiller's Favorite Wines of Madagascar

Choosing Malagasy Wine, in: Bradt Travel Guide Madagascar (Author: Christian G.E. Schiller)

Schiller’s 12 Favorite Restaurants of Antananarivo, the Capital of Madagascar

A Comprehensive Guide - in Alphabetical Order - to the Restaurants of Antananarivo, the Capital of Madagascar

A Comprehensive Guide – Ordered by the Number of Stars - to the Restaurants of Antananarivo, the Capital of Madagascar

The Wines of Madagascar

Wining and Dining in Antananarivo, the Capital of Madagascar – Christian G.E. Schiller’s Private List of Restaurants in Antananarivo

The Wines of Madagascar - Good and Interesting Table Wines

Christian G.E.Schiller’s Private List of Restaurants in Antananarivo That Serve Malagasy Wine

Clos Nomena: Taking the Wine of Madagascar to New Heights

Fine Wine and Fine Oysters in Madagascar: Oysters from Fort Dauphin and Wine from Clos Nomena

Restaurant and Hotel AKOA– An Oasis of Tranquility in the Buzzing Third World City Antananarivo in Madagascar

Tsiky– Charming Restaurant in Antananarivo, Madagascar, Serving Good Food and Malagasy Wines

Sea, Sand, Soul and Sakafo, and Whales and Wine – At Princesse Bora Lodge on Ile Sainte Marie in the Indian Ocean

Foie Gras and Lazan’i Betsileo at Restaurant Villa Vanille in Antananarivo, Madagascar

Foie Gras in Madagascar

Tour and Tasting at the Historic Weingut Juliusspital in Würzburg, Franken – Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

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Picture: The Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014) Group at Weingut Juliusspital

The Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014) took us to 2 exceptional winemakers in the Franken region. One of them was the historic Weingut Juliusspital in Würzburg.

See also:
4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux
Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

Franken

Franken, located in the northern part of Bavaria, is boasting a long tradition and some fine terroirs (mostly shell limestone and Keuper, a kind of marl). Its two leading grape varieties are Riesling and Silvaner. Typically, Franken wine comes in the distinctive, dumpily-rounded Franken “Bocksbeutel” wine bottle. The bottle’s unusual shape dates back to at least the 16th century. The Bocksbeutel may only be used for Franken wines. In Germany, it is a sign of excellence, while in the US, many consumers link this kind of bottle shape to lower quality wine.

Juliusspital Foundation

Weingut Juliusspital is Germany’s second largest winery with 177 hectares under vines in the most renowned sites of Franken, and one of the always top rated wineries. Weingut Juliusspital is a member of the VDP – the association of about 200 German elite winemakers.

Weingut Juliusspital is a very special winery in that it is owned by and part of the charitable Juliusspital Foundation, which was founded in 1576 by the Prince-Bishop of Würzburg, Julius Echter von Mespelbrunn.

At the center of the Juliusspital Foundation are a hospital, an assisted living home for elderly people and a hospice. This has been so for more than 400 years. Today, the buildings of the Juliusspital Foundation comprise many modern buildings but also very impressive and well maintained historical buildings.

Pictures: Juliusspital Foundation

As to the latter, the Fürstenbau, a palatial building, designed by the architect Antonio Petrini built in the Barock style with its historical cellar vaults, its garden pavilion and the fountain statues of Jacob van der Auvera, make the Juliusspital a unique monument of art and culture at the heart of the city of Würzburg. The historical cellars, which we had the opportunity to visit, with the old traditional wooden casks, are still in use for fermentation and aging.

Pictures: The Fürstenbau

Weingut Juliusspital

Since its establishment, the profits of the Weingut Juliusspital have contributed to the financing of the social services of the Juliusspital Foundation. In addition to the vineyard land, the Juliusspital Foundation also owns farm land and forests.

Vineyards: 177 ha (437 acres) all over Franken
Annual production: 1.4 million bottles - all screwcap
Average yield: 63 hl per ha (25 hl per acre)
10% export
60% Bocksbeutel bottles
Grape Varieties: 40 % Silvaner, 25 % Riesling, 6 % Müller-Thurgau

Pictures: In the Cellar

Vineyards and Soil Types

Muschelkalk (shelly limestone): Wines from our sites in Würzburg, Randersacker, Thüngersheim, Volkach and Escherndorf are influenced by medium and upper Muschelkalk. They are elegant, have a fine fruity taste and intense minerality.

Keuper: The deep, dark, fine-grained gypsum Keuper soil around Iphofen and Rödelsee produces a well-defined wine with a herbaceous character and long cellar life.

Red Sandstone: Near Bürgstadt on the Lower Main, the soils are shallow and stony. They are characterised as “fervid”. Fruity, elegant red wines with a pleasant tannin level are produced from the vines grown here.

The top sitesof Weingut Juliusspital are: Würzburger Stein, Iphöfer Julius-Echter-Berg, Volkacher Karthäuser, Randersackerer Pfülben, Rödelseer Küchenmeister and Escherndorfer Lump.

10 percent of the Weingut Juliusspital vineyards are organic.

Tasting

Pictures: Tasting

Here are the wines we tasted:

2013 Juliusspital Riesling trocken VDP.Gutswein Euro 8
2013 WürzburgerMüller-Thurgau trocken VDP.Ortswein Euro 8.50
2013 Würzburger Abtsleite Silvaner trocken VDP.Erste Lage Euro 12
2013 Iphöfer Kronsberg Silvaner trocken VDP.Erste Lage Euro 12
2013 Würzburger Stein Silvaner trocken VDP.Erste Lage Euro 13
2013 Iphöfer Julius-Echter-Berg Silvaner trocken VDP.Grosse Lage GG Euro 25
2013 Volkacher Karthäuser Weisser Burgunder trocken VDP.Grosse Lage GG Euro 30

schiller-wine: Related Postings

4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Weingut Pawis (Saale Unstrut): Estate Tour and Wine Tasting with Kerstin Pawis– Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Weingut Kloster Pforta: Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Tasting with Managing Director Christian Kloss – Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Winzerhof Gussek in the Saale Unstrut Region: Cellar Tour, Vineyard Tour and Tasting with Owner and Winemaker André Gussek – Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Coming up: Rieslingfeier 2015 in New York City, USA

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Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller, Annette Schiller, ombiasyPR and WineTours, Johannes Leitz and his Wife at Kloster Eberbach, Germany

Rieslingfeier 2015 is coming up on Saturday, January 31, in New York City. This is an extraordinary annual wine event – now in its third year – centered on German Riesling, with an impressive line-up of world-famous winemakers from Germany participating. This year, 11 winemakers will attend, all belonging to the elite of German winemakers, including Klaus Peter Keller, Egon Müller and Johannes Leitz, to name a few. Rieslingfeier is orchestrated by Stephen Bitterolf of the vom Boden wine importing company.

Picture: New York City

Joining in

Annette Schiller, ombiasyPR and WineTours, and Christian Schiller, schiller-wine, are looking forward to this celebration of German Riesling. We will be at the Rieslingfeier Dinner, at one or two seminars, and the Riesling Crawl. We are looking forward to meeting the participating German elite winemakers. Many of them we know personally. Some of them we call our friends.

The visit of Weingut Selbach-Oster was one of the highlights of the Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014). The 3 forthcoming Germany Wine Tours in 2015 include tastings with Johannes Leitz, Weingut Josef Leitz, Klaus Peter and Julia Keller, Weingut Keller and Roman Niewodniczanski, Weingut Van Volxem, in addition to many other elite wine producers, including some not yet well known outside of Germany.

Picture: The Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014) at Weingut Selbach-Oster with Johannes Selbach

See:
4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux
Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

Rieslingfeier Dinner

The cornerstone event is the Rieslingfeier Dinner. Inspired by Daniel Johnnes’s famous Burgundy fête “La Paulée,” it is very likely the greatest German wine “BYOB” dinner in the world, with both producers and guests bringing special bottles from their cellars to share.

This year, the Rieslingfeier Dinner will take place at the Reynard, Wythe Hotel, 80 Wythe Avenue, Brooklyn, NY. There will be 11 tables with 1 winemaker and 10 guests at each table. The five course meal will be customized by Reynard’s Chef Sean Rembold to pair with dry and off-dry Riesling; wine service will be presided over by Rieslingfeier Chef Sommelier Raj Vaidya along with a group of the country's top sommeliers.

Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller with Eva Fricke in Rüdesheim, Germany

Rieslingfeier Seminars

Leading up to the 2015 Rieslingfeier Dinner, the day will be filled by interesting seminars and tastings in wine stores.

All Rieslingfeier seminars will take place at The Modern, 9 West 53rd Street, New York, NY. There will be 4 seminars:

10:00 am to 11:30 pm Terroir, Riesling and the Rhein, Eva Fricke, Keller, Leitz. Moderator: David Schildknecht

11:00 am to 12:30 am What is a Kabinett? Karthäuserhof, Egon Müller, Selbach-Oster. Moderators: John Gilman and Stephen Bitterolf

12:30 am to 2:00 pm Riesling Reborn Immich-Betterieberg, Van Volxem, Von Winning. Moderator: David Schildknecht

1:30 pm to 3:00 pm Saar Diversity, Hofgut Falkenstein, Van Volxem, Zilliken. Moderator: David Schildknecht

Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasyPR and WineTours, with Roman Niewodniczanski, Weingut Van Volxem, in Frankfurt, Germany

Riesling Crawl

The Riesling Crawl is a free and open-to-the-public tasting, pairing the attending German winemakers with several of New York’s top German wine retailers. These tastings will focus largely on current-vintage releases but there will likely be a surprise or two along the way. So break out your NYC subway map and get ready.

12:30-2:30pm: Egon Müller IV & Hanno Zilliken
Astor Wines & Spirits, 399 Lafayette Street

12:30-2:30pm: Johannes Weber (Hofgut Falkenstein)
Chambers Street Wines, 148 Chambers Street

12:30-2:30pm: Johannes Selbach (Selbach-Oster) & Christian Vogt (Karthäuserhof)
Flatiron Wines & Spirits, 929 Broadway

2:30-4:30pm: Roman Niewodniczanski
Back Label Wine Merchants, 111 West 20th Street

2:30-4:30pm: Andreas Hütwohl (Von Winning) & Gernot Kollmann (Immich-Batterieberg)
Crush Wines & Spirits, 153 East 57th Street

2:30-4:30pm: Klaus Peter Keller
Moore Brothers Wine Company, 33 East 20th Street

2:30-4:30pm: Eva Fricke & Johannes Leitz
To be announced...

Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller and Johannes Selbach in New York City

Attending Winemakers

Johannes Weber, Hofgut Falkenstein, Mosel (Saar)
Eva Fricke, Weingut Eva Fricke, Rheingau
Gernot Kollmann, Weingut Immich-Batterieberg, Mosel
Christian Vogt, Weingut Karthäuserhof, Mosel(Ruwer)
Klaus Peter and Julia Keller, Weingut Keller, Rheinhessen
Johannes Leitz, Weingut Josef Leitz, Rheingau
Egon Müller, Weingut Egon Müller, Mosel (Saar)
Johannes and Barbara Selbach, Weingut Selbach-Oster, Mosel
Roman Niewodniczanski, Weingut Van Volxem, Mosel (Saar)
Andreas Hütwohl, Weingut Von Winning, Pfalz
Hanno Zilliken, Weingut Forstmeister Geltz Zilliken, Mosel (Saar)

Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasyPR and WineTours, and Johannes Leitz, Weingut Josef Leitz, at Kloster Eberbach, Germany

Eric Asimov (New York Times) on Riesling

Eric Asimov: Burgundy and Bordeaux are historic benchmark wines. Barolo is rapidly achieving that status. But German Riesling? In fact, in the 19th century, German Riesling was considered one of the world’s great wines. Then wars, Prohibition and changing tastes turned Riesling from a mainstay into something of a pariah, notwithstanding the beauty and delicacy of the wines. Through the 1980s and ’90s, though Riesling was the darling of wine writers and sommeliers, consumers were unmoved, until the first decade of the new century. Then, in the United States at least, Riesling took off. No, it has not become the new Chardonnay or Pinot Grigio, wines so popular that they became generic terms among mass-market drinkers. Instead, the rising popularity of Riesling signals, to me, the increasing sophistication of Americans who have fallen in love with wine.

Stephen Bitterolf

Rieslingfeier was founded in 2012 by Stephen Bitterolf, a passionate advocate for Germany's culture of winemaking. He was the Wine Director at Crush Wine & Spirits in New York where he helped develop one of the largest German wine programs in the country before founding his own import company, vom Boden.

schiller-wine: Related Postings

4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Weingut Pawis (Saale Unstrut): Estate Tour and Wine Tasting with Kerstin Pawis– Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Visiting (and Tasting the Wines of) Tamborini SA and Lunch with Valentina Tamborini, Ticino, Switzerland

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Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller and Valentia Tamborini

As part of the 2014 Digitul Wine Communications Conference in Montreux, Switzerland, I explored the wines of Ticino during a post-conference press trip. This posting - Visiting (and Tasting the Wines of) Tamborini SA and Lunch with Valentina Tamborini, Switzerland - is the fifth in a series of postings (see below) emanating from my visit of Ticino. Valentina is a trained winemaker and will eventually take over the winery - the next generation.

Tamborini SA is a large negociant/grower producer, with a portfolio of 32 different wines - from its own vineyards (30 hectares) as well as from grapes produced by about 100 producers who sell the grapes they produce to Tamborini SA. We were received by Valentia Tamborini, who also joined us for lunch, and were briefly greeted by her father Claudio Tamborini.

Pictures: Tamborini SA

See also:
Exploring the Wines of Ticino in Ticino, the Italian Speaking Part of Switzerland
Touring (and Tasting the Wines of) Brivio Vini SA and Gialdi Vini SA in Mendrisio, Ticono, with Guido Brivio, Switzerland
Polenta and Ticino Wine at Grotto Bundi in Ticino, Switzerland
Visiting Cantina Kopp von der Crone Visini and Tasting with Barbara von der Crone and Paolo Visini in Barbengo, Ticino, Switzerland
Visiting (and Tasting the Wines of) Tamborini SA and Lunch with Valentina Tamborini, Ticino, Switzerland
Touring and Tasting the Wines of Vini e Distillati Angelo Delea SA, with David Delea, Switzerland
Touring an Tasting the Wines of Agriloro SA and Diner with Owner Meinrad Perler, Switzerland
Touring and Tasting the Wines of Vinattieri Ticinesi, Switzerland
Lunch at Ristorante Montalbano in Stabio, Switzerland

Wine Producer Switzerland

Switzerland is a small wine producer with about 15 000 hectares of vineyards only. This is about 15 percent of Germany’s total winegrowing area and a bit more than 1 percent of that of Spain. Only less than 2% of the wine is exported, mainly to Germany.

Switzerland's particular situation - in between four wine-producing nations (France, Italy, Germany and Austria) and itself divided into four different areas with different languages and traditions - has resulted in an extreme diversity of its wines.

Picture: Map of Switzerland

Switzerland has an extensive range of grape varieties. Among the white grapes, the Chasselas is the most widespread. Müller-Thurgau, cultivated above all in the German speaking part of Switzerland, and Sylvaner are also popular. The main red grape varieties are Pinot Noir, which can be found in all the wine-producing regions of Switzerland, and Gamay, which predominates in the Valais; Merlot has found a second home in the Italian speaking part of Switzerland, the Ticino.

Ticino

Ticino is a quite distinct winemaking zone in Switzerland, totaling 1000 hectares. The canton Ticino (and the wine region Tecino) is divided into two regions by the dividing line of the Monte Ceneri Pass: Sopraceneri in the north and Sottoceneri in the south. The Sopraceneri soils are rather stony with a full complement of silt and sand, while the Sottoceneri soils are limestone and deep, rich clays. Ticino's climate is Mediterranean.

Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasy PR and WineTours, and Christian G.E. Schiller in Lugano

There are a total of about 3600 grape growers in Ticino and 200 or so winemakers, including a co-operative. The 200 or so winemakers range from pure negociant-type producer (who buy all the grapes the use for their wine) to winemakers that only use their own grapes for making wine. Vineyards are generally small, steep plots of between 3 ha and 6 ha and yields are at 70 hl/ha. 15 winemakers account for about 80% of the total production. The co-op produces 1 million bottles annually.

Merlot is the dominant grape variety. The Ticino Merlot ranges from easy drinking, including white, Merlots to ultra-premium Merlots that can compete with the best in the world (including Bordeaux) and cost US$50 to US$150 per bottle.

Tamborini SA

Tamborini SA was founded in 1944 by Carlo Tamborini in Lemone, Ticino, Switzerland. In 1968, Carlo’s son, Claudio Tamborini, took over. Under Claudio Tamborini, the company evolved from primarily being a wine merchant to primarily being a winemaker.

Today, the wine portfolio of Tamborini SA includes 32 wines. The vineyard area totals 32 hectares. Claudio Tamborini also buys grapes from about 100 producers who do not make their own wine but sell the grapes they produce to Tamborini SA (about the same amount he grows himself).

Pictures: Tamborini SA Wine Portfolio

Total production is about 70.000 cases. Tamborini SA accounts for 7% of the total wine output of Ticino. Half of the production is sold in Ticino, 45% is sold in the French speaking and German speaking parts of Switzerland and 5% is exported – a lot of it to Germany.

In addition to wine, Tamborini SA also produces honey, olive oil and grappa. The olive oil production started in 1990, when Claudio Tamborini decided to press the olives of his Colle degli Ulivi Estate to extract olive oil.

Grappa is now a protected name in the European Union. To be called grappa, the brandy needs to be produced in Italy, or in the Italian part of Switzerland. There are about 500 grappa produces in Ticino, of which 10 produce grappa on a larger scale.

Pictures: Annette Schiller, ombiasy PR and WineTours, Christian G.E. Schiller and Claudio Tamborini, Swiss Winemaker of the Year 2012

Tasting

Valentia Tamborini poured the following wines for us.

Pictures: Tasting

TERRE DI GUDO WHITE
Ticino DOC
White Merlot
Vineyard: Gudo
Vinification: Stainless steel vats
The vineyard Terre di Gudo is located in the municipality of Gudo, near Bellinzona. It consists of several parcels of over 7 ha of land planted with Merlot and Carminoir. It produces a white wine and a red wine under the brand "Terre di Gudo".

SANZENO MOSAICO
Ticino Doc
Chardonnay (60%, aged for 12 months in new oak), Sauvignon Blanc (20%) and Merlot (20%)
Tenuta San Zeno is located in the municipality of Lamone, 5 km north of Lugano. It consists of 5 ha of vineyards planted with Merlot, Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc, along with an accommodation facility with cellars. A specific parcel is dedicated to the premium wine "Costamagna", produced only in the very best years. Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc are planted in the hill facing east for the production of white "Mosaico".

SAN ZENO RESERVE
Ticino Doc
Merlot

Reserve indicates that the wine was for 18 months in the cellar, in a barrel, tank or bottle; 30% was aged in second year barrique

CASTELROTTO
Ticino Doc
Merlot
Seducing tannins. A wine of great elegance.

COMANO
Ticino DOC
Merlot
Vineyard of about 1.5 hectares called 'the Brughi' in the municipality of Comano.
Maceration on the skins for 20 days and Aged in new oak barrels for 12-18 months.

Lunch

After the tasting we were treated to a fabulous lunch by Valentia Tamborini. We had a choice of a white and a red wine from Tamborini SA to go with a simple and delicious 3 course menu of Ticino specialities.

Pictures: Lunch at Grotto Ticinese dal 1888 with Valentia Tamborini

VALLOMBROSA Bianco di Ticino
Ticino DOC
Chardonnay and Merlot
Vinification: In stainless steel vats

SAN DOMENICO
Ticino DOC
Merlot
Tenuta San Domenico, in the town of Neggio, Malcantone
Vinification: In stainless steel vats

schiller-wine: Related Posting

4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Bordeaux Wine Tour 2013 by ombiasy

The 2014 Digital Wine Communications Conference (DWCC) in Switzerland 

The Wines of Weingut Saxer, a Winemaker in the German-speaking part of Switzerland

The Wines of Switzerland– Grand Tasting with (and Introduction to Swiss Wines by) Jancis Robinson and José Vouillamoz

Weingut Freiherr von Gleichenstein in Baden: Tour and Tasting with Baron Johannes von Gleichenstein – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014), Germany

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Picture: Vintage 2014 Grapes Just Harvested

The Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014) took us to 4 exceptional winemakers in the Kaiserstuhl region. One of them was Weingut Freiherr von Gleichenstein, owned by Baron (Freiherr) Johannes and Baroness Christina von Gleichenstein. Baron Johannes von Gleichenstein toured with us the winery and led a tasting of his outstanding wines.

See also:
4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux
Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014
German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

Weingut Freiherr von Gleichenstein

Since 1634, this estate has been in the hands of the family of the Baron von Gleichenstein. The estate comprises 75 acres of the finest vineyards exclusively planted with the classic Burgundy grapes. Baron Johannes and Baroness Christina von Gleichenstein manage the estate in the 11th generation. They aim at producing top level wines, as Johannes explained to us: through consistent yield reduction and other measures to optimize quality, they produce wines that have won several awards, in particular the spectacular Pinot Noir.

Pictures: Welcome at Weingut Freiherr von Gleichenstein

In recent years, Weingut Freiherr von Gleichenstein has seen a remarkable rise, under the leadership of Baron Johannes von Gleichenstein. In 2010, Baron Johannes von Gleichenstein was named Germany’s Rising Star of the Year (Gault Millau). "Increasingly, he uses the great potential of the prime locations in Oberrotweil for excellent Burgundy,” Editor Joel Payne of the Gault Millau praised his wines.

Soils: Volcanic Rocks and Lösslehmboden

Weingut Freiherr von Gleichenstein is located in the Kaiserstuhl region in Baden, the most southerly German wine-growing area, across Rhine River from Alsace.

The Vocanic Rocks

On the western side of the Kaiserstuhl the loess layer of the volcanic rock is no longer available, particularly on the steeper slopes, so that the vines are rooted right in the volcanic rock. It is usually reddish brown, or the weathered gray rock in the topsoil is visible. Volcanic rock heats up quickly, is well-ventilated, and subsequently an optimum delivery of plant nutrients, which is an advantage over the loess soil. However, the volcanic rock barely saves water.

The Loesslehmboden

The Kaiserstuhl is largely covered by a loess clay layer. Loess is an unconsolidated sediment that evolves from the erosion of other rocks and is transported by wind to its deposition site. Loess was built up in the entire peripheral region of the upper Rhine Plain during the last vegetation-less glacial period through deflation out of Rhine muds. At the Kaiserstuhl the thickness of the loess layer is between 10 and 40 meters, but there are also places in the southwest, where no loess was sedimented. Especially the loess soil of the Kaiserstuhl is intensively used for agriculture because of good ventilation, high water holding capacity and good mechanical properties. Additionally, in the course of agricultural use, so-called “Loesshohlwege” emerged.

Pictures: In the Cellar

Vineyards

On 50 hectares of vineyard classic Burgundy varieties, such as Pinot Gris, Pinot Blanc and Pinot Noir are being grown as well as Muscat, Chardonnay and Müller-Thurgau.

Oberrotweiler Eichberg

This is the home mountain of the winery. In German "Eichberg" is a traditional name for vineyard locations that had oak tress standing on the top of the hills. The vineyards face southwest over a “Südkessel” to the southeast allowing these slopes to be in a completely sun-exposed position with gradients up to 45%. The ground consists of weathered volcanic rocks. In this special ash- and tuff-holding soil and rocky earth the vines roots grow very deep thereby providing the wine with a soft body.

Oberrotweiler Henkenberg

The Henkenberg is like a paradise for the Pinot Gris late harvest, because it has the best conditions to produce complex and dense white wines. The name is derived from the former site of the manorial gallows. A small section of it is called Galgenbuck. Henkenberg is settled between “Burkheim” and “Oberrotweil”. The south-east facing vineyard area has a total of 53 hectares of vineyards on volcanic weathering soils (ash and tuff) with basalt layers.

Pictures: Processing the Just Harvested Grapes

Oberbergener Bassgeige

From a bird’s perspective the mountain looks like a double bass therefor giving this well-known location in Oberbergen its name. The mostly layered volcanic stone, overlaid with a powerful loess layer, produces well-matured and noble vineyard wines on its terraces.

Ihringer Winklerberg

Ihringer Winklerberg is one of the most famous and above all warmest vineyards in all of Germany with its almost subtropical climate. The volcanic rock and high support walls of the small terraces retain the suns heat during the day and cool quickly again through the night. It receives the optimal amount of sunlight and great ventilation. This vineyard area produces top German wines that are elegant with complimenting mineral notes.

Tasting

Pictures: Tasting with Baron von Gleichenstein

2013 Pinot Blanc & Chardonnay, Hofgarten, dry Euro 8
2013 Pinot Blanc, Hofgarten, dry Euro 8
2013 Pinot Gris, Hofgarten, dry Euro 8
2011 Pinot Gris Baron Louis, Henkenberg, dry Euro 30
2012 Pinot Noir, Eichberg, dry Euro 30
2008 Pinot Noir Baron Philipp, Eichberg, dry Euro 50

The first 3 wines were very pleasant easy drinking wines, while the last 3 wines showed what Weingut Freiherr von Gleichenstein is able to produce in terms of premium wines. In particular the 2008 Pinot Noir Baron Philipp, Eichberg, reminded us of Bourgogne Pinot Noir wines that easily couldcost Euro 100 or more.

Bye-bye

Many thanks for a wonderful event.


Picture: The Next Generation

schiller-wine: Related Postings

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013 

In the Vineyard and the Wine Cellar (and Lunch) with Robert Schätzle, Owner and Winemaker, Weingut Schloss Neuweier in Baden – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Wine Tasting Luncheon at 1 Star Michelin Röttele's Restaurant im Schloss Neuweier in Baden, with Winemaker Robert Schätzle and his Weingut Schloss Neuweier Wines – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Weingut Zähringer in Baden: Cellar Tour and Tasting with Winemaker Paulin Köpfer– Germany-South Wine Tour by ombasy (2014)
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