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Cellar Tour and Wine Tasting at Weingut Von Hövel in Konz, Saar Valley, Mosel, with Owner and Winemaker Max von Kunow - Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

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Picture: Stephen Kent from the German Wine Society USA (Washington DC Chapter) Enjoying Weingut von Hövel Wines

At Weingut Von Hövel in Konz, Saar Valley, we were received by the energetic Maximilan von Kunow, who took over from his father in 2010. Max showed us the 1100 year old barrel cellar where still today the wine matures in wooden vats, some of them several hundred years old, to become ripe, spicy, elegant Rieslings, and led an impressive wine tasting.

Weingut von Hövel

In this region wine was already produced in Roman times. There is evidence that wine was produced at the site of the Von Hövel estate as early as 1150. In those days, the vineyards and the winery belonged to the Monastery of Saint Maximin in Trier.

Picture: Welcome

Emmerich Grach (1753–1826) from the well-established Grach family in Trier bought several wineries, including in 1803 the winery of the Monastery of Saint Maximin, which had been secularized under Napoleon. In 1902, the estate was passed on to the great-granddaughter of the founder, who was married to Balduin von Hövel. Eberhard von Kunow, the father of Maximilian von Kunow and the great-grandson of Balduin von Hövel, was the proprietor of Weingut Von Hövel from 1973 until 2010. Under his leadership, Weingut Von Hövel became one of the top wine producers in Germany.

The manor house, completed in the 12th century, was initially an abbey retreat for the monastery. The old cellar is today as it was over 800 years ago.

Pictures: Maximilian von Hövel, Christian Schiller and Annette Schiller

The current owner, Maximilian von Kunow, is the 7th Graf family generation and 3rd von Kunow family generation producing outstanding wines at this estate. Max graduated from the prestigious Geisenheim University and spent a number of years consulting in Luxembourg before he returned home in 2010. While his father produced mostly fruity style wines, Max wants to produce more dry styled Rieslings. He also started the estate on the road of organic production. His 2011 Scharzhofberger Grosses Gewächs, (93 points), was one of the highest scored dry wines in the Wein-Plus, a German newsletter.

Weingut Von Hövel produces 5,000 cases and is a founding member of the Mosel VDP. Max’s father Eberhard was for many years the auctioneer for the annual VDP auction in Trier. Recently, Max took over that function.

Pictures: Corkscrew Collection of Eberhard von Kunow

Vineyards

The wines of Weingut Von Hövel say “Mosel” on their labels. Yet, the Von Hövel wines do not come from the Mosel Valley, but from the Saar Valley. Before 2007, the region was called Mosel-Saar-Ruwer, but changed to a name - Mosel - considered more consumer-friendly. The Mosel wine region is Germany's third largest in terms of production but is the leading region in terms of international prestige. The area is known for the steep slopes of the region's vineyards overlooking the river.

Pictures: Visit of the 800 Years Old Cellar

Weingut Von Hövel has ownership in the following vineyards; all planted 100% to Riesling:

Oberemmeler Hütte – (17.5 acres) a monopole of the estate – very light soil, weathered slate, it produces some of the most delicate, subtle, yet steely Rieslings in Germany.

Scharzhofberg – (7.5 acres) deeper, heavier soil, strong weathered grey slate with high proportion of rocks and gravel (70%), it produces more masculine wines.

Oberemmeler Rosenberg – the estate owns over 6 acres of the “filet” piece also known as the Rosenkamm, which has many old vine scattered throughout. For example, the 2011 Riesling Estate Spätlese “R” was selected from only those old vines with a yield of only 10hl/ha!

Kanzemer Hörecker – (barely 1 acre) monopole – one of the smallest yet greatest vineyards in the Saar, grey green slate with a proportion clay and red soil.

The estate also owns small portions of the heavy soiled Oberemmeler Karlsberg.

The Wines Max Poured


2010 Weingut Von Hövel Scharzhofberg Riesling trocken GG
2011 Weingut Von Hövel Kanzem Riesling trocken GG
2013 Weingut Von Hövel Oberemmeler Riesling feinherb
2013 Weingut Von Hövel Hütte Oberemmel Riesling Kabinett
2010 Weingut Von Hövel Hütte Oberemmel Riesling Spätlese
2011 Weingut Von Hövel Scharzhofberg Riesling Auslese
2011 Weingut Von Hövel Scharzhofberg Riesling Auslese #33
2012 Weingut Von Hövel Hütte Oberemmel Riesling Eiswein
2012 Weingut Von Hövel Scharzhofberg Riesling Eiswein

Pictures: Tasting

In the USA: Rudi Wiest

Rudi Wiest Selection is the US Importer of Weingut Von Hövel. David Bowler Wine in New York is a good source for Weingut Von Hövel wines: Baron Eberhard “Adt” von Kunow is the owner and proprietor of the small but wonderful von Hovel estate. He made the wines there from 1973 to 2010; however, after a debilitating stroke (from which we are pleased to report he has largely recovered), his son Maximilian (the 7th generation) took charge of the winemaking. Max runs the estate along increasingly organic methods, and like many in his generation, also seeks to create great dry wines. But von Hovel remains a haven for the hauntingly delicate style of fruity Rieslings unique to the Saar river valley, the coolest growing area in Germany. These are crystalline, low alcohol wines from the “old school,” teeming with minerals and flowers in their youth, and often petrolly in their later years. They represent some of the finest values in the Rudi Wiest portfolio.

Picture: Annette Schiller, Ombiasy PR and WineTours, Max von Kunow, Johannes Hasselbach (Weingut Gunderloch), Alwin Jurtschitsch (Weingut Jurtschitsch) and Christian G.E. Schiller at BToo in Washington DC, USA. Max studied with Alwin and Alwin's wife, Stephanie Jurtschitsch, who is Johannes' sister.

Kabinett Estate 2011

”Redolent of ripe peaches and cream, this features lightly spiced notes of dried apricot and pear. Pastry accents grace the soft finish. Drink now.” -WS

Plump, easy-going and friendly, like a puppy that wants to play with you and your food. Sourced from across von Hovel’s 13ha+ of estate holdings, it offers peaches, floral notes and a whiff of slate with the gentle sweetness typical of 2011 Kabs.

Kabinett Oberemmeler Hutte 2011

Springy and precisely mineral-driven with gorgeous yellow plum fruit and some exotic character. Approximately 55-60g RS, a vivid 8.5g acid and 94 degrees oechsle (practically Auslese ripeness)! How does this remain so light and ethereal in the mouth with those numbers? This is benchmark Saar wine from a great year, a bottling with a long future and a glorious present.

Review: Ripe, offering open-textured flavors of apple, green peach and baked pear, with savory accents and a spicy finish. Drink now through 2018. 1,000 cases made. 88pts Wine Spectator, Kim Marcus April 30, 2013

Spätlese Dry "R" 2012

A connoisseur’s choice. One risks sounding pompous saying that, but the fact is, this is a big, crunchy, bone-dry wine in a developing stage, teeming with perfumey aromatics like rose hips and talcum, and structured in a clean and refreshing style like cold mineral water with a slice of lemon. The giveaway of the terroir is the incredibly dense, almost tactile sense of slate that coats the mouth at the finish—and JUST WON’T LET GO! An attention-grabbing wine that displays Max von Kunow’s promise as a young winemaker who wants to explore the potential of dry wines at his estate.

Bye-bye

Thank you very much Maximilian for a wonderful tasting.


schiller-wine: Related Postings

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

Coming-up: Wine & Art Tour to Saale-Unstrut - Saxony - Franken - Württemberg: Germany-East Tour by ombiasy WineTours (June 11 - June 20, 2015)

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)

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

Weingut Bickel-Stumpf in Franken: Vineyard Walk and Wine Tasting with Reimund Stumpf, Matthias Stumpf and Melanie Stumpf-Kröger - Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Kiedrich: Visit of the Basilica of Saint Valentine and of Weingut Robert Weil - Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Kloster Eberbach in the Rheingau: Tour and Wine Tasting - Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Wining in the Steinberg Vineyard– Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Visit: Winzerhof Thörle in Saulheim, Rheinhessen – Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Wine Tasting at Weingut Kühling-Gillot in Bodenheim: Kühling-Gillot and Battenfeld-Spanier Wines– Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Vineyard Walk, Cellar Tour and Wine Tasting at Weingut Künstler– Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

One of the Bio-dynamic Stars in Germany: Weingut Peter Jakob Kühn in Östrich, Winkel– Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

In the Mittelrhein Valley, an UNESCO World Heritage Region – Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Vineyard Tour and Wine Tasting at Weingut Clemens Busch– Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

Cellar Tour and Wine Tasting at Weingut Selbach-Oster in Zeltingen, Mosel, with Johannes Selbach – Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

schiller-wine: Related Postings (Weingut von Hövel)

Special Wine Event on March 18, 2014, in Washington DC with "Wurzelwerk": 3 Terroirs, 3 Winemakers and 9 Wines

"Wurzelwerk" Goes America: 3 Vineyards, 3 Winemakers and 9 Wines

Weingut von Hoevel – The New Generation: Max von Kunow in Washington DC, US

Best German Winemakers - Falstaff Deutschland Wine Trophies 2015

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Picture: Hans Wirsching, Caroline Spanier-Gillot, Tobias Knewitz and Michael Noak

For the fifth time, the Falstaff Trophies Deutschland were awarded. The wine/food/travel journal Falstaff has been around for a number of years, issued in Vienna, Austria, and reporting about wine, food and travel from an Austrian perspective, for Austria-based readers. Five years ago, Falstaff expanded into the German wine and food scene and started to issue a German version of Falstaff in addition to the well established Austrian version. As part of its expansion, Falstaff has created the annual Falstaff Deutschland Wine Trophies, to be awarded to 4 German wine personalities.

For previous years, see:
Best German Winemakers - Falstaff Deutschland Wine Trophies 2014
Best German Winemakers - Falstaff Deutschland Wine Trophies 2013
Best German Wines and Winemakers - Falstaff Deutschland Wine Trophies 2012
Falstaff Deutschland Wine Trophies 2011


Carolin Spanier-Gillot, Weingut Kühling-Gillot and Weingut Battenfeldt-Spanier is Winemaker of the Year

Falstaff (my translation): She was 24 years old, when she took over Weingut Kühling-Gillot from her father in 2002, after finishing her studies at the Geisenheim wine college. In a male dominated wine world, this was indeed a challenge which she very successfully mastered, right from the beginning. Today, she and her Hans-Oliver Spanier (Weingut Battenfeld-Spanier) are the dream couple in the German wine scene.

Picture: Caroline Spanier-Gillot and Christian Schiller

See also:
Wine Tasting at Weingut Kühling-Gillot in Bodenheim: Kühling-Gillot and Battenfeld-Spanier Wines– Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

The Runners-up were Klaus Zimmerling (Weingut Zimmerling in Sachsen) und Nik Weis (St. Urbanshof in the Mosel Valley – his wife Daniela Weis came to the ceremony)

Picture: Falstaff Editor-in-Chief Ulrich Sautter, Klaus Zimmerling, Caroline Sapnier-Gillot and Daniela Weis

Pictures: At Weingut Klaus Zimmerling, Saxony

See:
Preview: Germany-East Wine and Art Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)
Coming-up: Wine & Art Tour to Saale-Unstrut - Saxony - Franken - Württemberg: Germany-East Tour by ombiasy WineTours (June 11 - June 20, 2015)

Picture: Nik Weis and his Wife, Weingut Sankt Urbans-Hof, with Annette and Christian Schiller, see: Germany’s Top 19 Winemakers - Der Feinschmecker WeinGuide 2014

Tobias Knewitz, Weingut Knewitz, is Newcomer of the Year

Falsstaff (my translation) When you see Tobias Knewitz in action, with his enthusiasm and conviction, you will be surprised to learn the age of this committed winemaker from the northern part of Rheinhessen: Just 24 years. And his Rieslings are already the talk of the town. Tobias Knewitz “lives” his wines and loves them. The start of a great carrier?

The runners-up were  Sven Nieger (Baden, on the left) und Marcel Idler (Württemberg, on the right)

Picture: Falstaff Editor-in-Chief Ulrich Sautter, Sven Nieger, Tobias Knewitz, Marcel Idler and Astrid Zieglmeier 

Michael Noack from Victorian in Düsseldorf is Sommelier of the Year

Falstaff (my translation): In a wine world, were many sommeliers present themselves like pop stars, a “grand seigneurs” wine sommelier like Michael Noack, Restaurant Victorian in Düsseldorf, is very welcome contrast. You can call it old school, when Michael Noack takes care of his guests with charm, style and vinophile empathie.

Runners-up were Jan Bimboes (Landgasthof Adler, Rammingen, on the left) und Frank Glüer (EssZimmer, München, on the right).

Picture: Falstaff Editor.in Chief Ulrich Sautter, Jan Bimboes (Landgasthof Adler, Rammingen),  Michael Noack (Restaurant Victorian in Düsseldorf) and Frank Glüer (EssZimmer, München)

Lifetime Achievement: Heinrich Wirsching

Falstaff (my translation): He only wrote a dissertation, because he thought he would have a career in the bankig sector, says Dr. Heinrich Wirsching. But luckily, things went in a different direction. When his father retired in 1964, he and his brother took over the family estate. Over the years, the winery grew from 12 to now 75 hectares and became a center of great Franconian viticulture.

Picture: Falstaff-Editor Christoph Teuner, Hans Wirsching and Jens-Jürgen Böckel (Tengelmann)

Pictures: Weingut Wirsching in Iphofen, Franken.

See:
Preview: Germany-East Wine and Art Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)
Coming-up: Wine & Art Tour to Saale-Unstrut - Saxony - Franken - Württemberg: Germany-East Tour by ombiasy WineTours (June 11 - June 20, 2015)

schiller-wine: Related Postings

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

Coming-up: Wine & Art Tour to Saale-Unstrut - Saxony - Franken - Württemberg: Germany-East Tour by ombiasy WineTours (June 11 - June 20, 2015)

Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Prowein 2015 in Düsseldorf, Germany – Schiller’s Impressions

Wine Tasting at Weingut Kühling-Gillot in Bodenheim: Kühling-Gillot and Battenfeld-Spanier Wines– Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Preview: Germany-East Wine and Art Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

Preview: Bourgogne Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2016

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Picture: Annette Schiller in Gevry-Chambertin, Bourgogne

When you check the ombiasy web site for wine tours to the Bourgogne region, you will not find any. But, there will be a wine tour to Bourgogne organized by Annette Schiller pretty soon this year (from May 31 to June 6, 2015) and there will be one in 2016. The Bourgogne tour in 2015 is organized for a special group, the Wine Brotherhood of Hochheim, Germany. The 2016 tour has not yet be announced but will be on the ombiasy web site shortly.

The 2015 Bourgogne tour, for the Wine Brotherhood of Hochheim, will begin and end in Hochheim, which is close to Frankfurt: Frankfurt, Champagne, Chablis, Mâconnais, Côte Chalonnaise, Beaune, Côte de Beaune, Côte de Nuits, Frankfurt.

The 2016 Bourgogne tour will begin in Lyon and end in Paris. Presumably, we will all fly into Paris and take the TGV to Lyon, the culinary capital of the world. We will move northwards from there (by coach), back to Paris: Lyon, Beaujolais, Mâconnais, Côte Chalonnaise, Beaune, Côte de Beaune, Côte de Nuits, Chablis, Champagne, Paris. While in 2015, we will just pass through the Champagne Region, with lunch and one tasting there, in 2016, we will spend more time in the Champagne Region.

A couple of weeks ago, Annette and I did a test run of the 2015 Bourgogne Tour, with an eye on the 2016 Bourgogne Tour. Thus, for example, we went all the way to Lyon and, inter alia, took a look at the prestigious restaurant of Chef Paul Bocuse.

The following provides you with photo impressions from our Bourgogne trip, although I have also added a few older photos.

Pictures: In Lyon at the Restaurant of Paul Bocuse, Auberge du Pont de Collonges

Pictures: In Fleurie, Beaujolais

Bourgogne Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

Day 1 - Sunday, March 31: From Hochheim (Germany) to Tonerre (Chablis) via the Champagne Region

12:00 Restaurant Les Berges de l’Ource in Essoyes, Champagne

Pictures: Essoyes - the City of Renoir in the Southern Part of the Champagne

14:15 Champagne Josselin in Gyé-sur-Seine

Pictures: Champagne Josselin is a "Grower-Champagne" Producer in Gyé-sur-Seine, close to the Chablis Region

18:00 Hotel Auberge de Bourgogne in Tonnerre

19:00 Dinner: Auberge de Bourgogne

Day 2 - Monday June 2, Chablis

Picture: In Chablis

10:00 Domaine Séguinot-Bordet in Maligny, Chablis

Pictures: Jean-François Bordet, Owner of Domaine Séguinot-Bordet, in Washington DC

See also:
Pure Chablis – A tête-à-tête Dinner in Washington DC at Marcel’s with Chablis Wine Board President and Winemaker Jean-François Bordet, Domaine Séguinot-Bordet, USA/France

12:30 Lunch at Domaine Brocard in Chablis, followed by Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Wine Tasting

Pictures: Domaine Brocard in Chablis - Julien Brocard is in the Process of taking over the 100 hectares Estate from his Father Jean-Marc

18:30 Hotel Hostellerie - Château de la Barge in Crêches-sur- Saône, Mâconnais

20:00 Dinner: Restaurant Hostellerie - Château de la Barge in Crêches-sur- Saône, Mâconnais

See:
Dinner at Restaurant Chateau de la Barge in Creches sur Saone in Burgundy, France

Pictures: Menu Gourmand (10 Courses, Euro 83) at Hostellerie des Clos (Michel Vignaud) in Chablis

Day 3 - Tuesday, June 2: Mâconnais and Côte Chalonnaise

09:30 Domaine Ferret in Fuissé, Poully-Fuissé, Mâconnais

Pictures: At Domaine Ferret in Fuissé

See also:
In the Most Prestigious AOC in the Mâconnais: Pouilly-Fuissé, France

12:15 Restaurant Hostellerie d’Héloïse in Cluny

Pictures: At Restaurant Hostellerie d’Héloïse in Cluny

14:00 Visit: Cluny Abbey

Picture: At Cluny Abbey

17:00 Domaine Émile Juillot in Mercurey, Côte Chalonnaise

Pictures: At Domaine Émile Juillot in Mercurey - one of the top Producers in Mercurey (12 hectares)

19:45 Hotel Belle Époque in Beaune

20:15 Restaurant L’Air du Temps in Beaune

Pictures: Dinner at Restaurant L’Air du Temps in Beaune

Day 4 - Wednesday, June 3: Côte de Beaune (South)

09:45 Maison Olivier Leflaive in Puligny-Montrachet, followed by Lunch with Wine Tasting at Restaurant La Table d’Olivier Leflaive

Picture: Maison Olivier Leflaive in Puligny-Montrachet - one of the top Producers in the Bourgogne

Pictures: Puligny-Montrachet - in the Vineyards

14:00 Domaine Mestre Père & Fils in Santenay

Pictures: At Domaine Mestre Père & Fils in Santenay - A family-owned Producer with 18 hectares

16:45 Domaine Bouchard Père & Fils in Beaune

Pictures: Domaine Bouchard Père & Fils in Beaune - one of the oldest and best Producers in the Bourgogne with an amazing Portfolio of Grands Crus and Premiers Crus Vineyards

See:
Vintage 2012 Bouchard Père et Fils Tasting at Ripple in Washington DC, USA – With Tasting Notes by Annette Schiller
Tasting Vintage 2010 Bouchard Père et Fils Wines with Panos Kakaviatos in Washington DC, USA

20:00 Dinner in Beaune

Pictures: There is a large number of exciting Restaurants, Brasseries, Auberges and Bistros in Beaune

Day 5 - Thursday, June 4: Beaune and Côte de Beaune (North)

10:15 Musée de l’Hospices de Beaune

Pictures: The Hospices de Beaune

12:00 Brasserie le Carnot in Beaune

Pictures: Lunch in a typical Brasserie

14:00 Group 1: Domaine A-F Gros in Beaune

Pictures: Domaine A-F Gros - The Domaine A-F Gros came about through the Marriage of Anne-Francoise Gros and Francoise Parent and has become one of the top Producers in the Bourgogne. With: Caroline Parent-Gros

See:
Caroline Parent-Gros Presented the Wines of Domaine A-F Gros in the Bourgogne at Chef Bryan Voltaggio’s Range in Washington DC

14:00 Group 2: Maison Joseph Drouhin in Beaune

Picture: Maison Joseph Drouhin in Beaune - highly regarded top Producer

16:00 Group 1: Maison Joseph Drouhin in Beaune

16:00 Group 2: Domaine A-F Gros in Beaune

20:00 Dinner in Beaune

Pictures: There are also a lot of interesting Winebars in Beaune

Day 6 - Friday, June 5: Côte de Nuits

09:00 Domaine Faiveley in Nuits-Saint-George

Picture: Domaine Faiveley in Nuits-Saint-George - one of the absolute top Producers in Bourgogne

11:15 Domaine du Château de Prémeaux in Prémeaux-Prissey Faiveley

Pictures: Domaine du Château de Prémeaux in Prémeaux-Prissey Faiveley

13:30 Restaurant La Gentilhommière in Nuits-Saint-George

Pictures: Restaurant La Gentilhommière in Nuits-Saint-George

15:45 Domaine Armelle et Bernard Rion in Vosne-Romanée

Pictures: In the famous Vineyards

18:15 Hotel Les Grands Crus in Gevrey Chambertin


20:00 Restaurant Chez Guy in Gevry Chambertin

Pictures: At Chez Guy in Gevry-Chambertin

Day 7 - Saturday, June 6: Côte de Nuits and Return to Hochheim via the Lorraine Region

09:00 Domaine Guillon & Fils in Gevrey Chambertin

Pictures: At Domaine Guillon & Fils in Gevrey Chambertin - a relatively new Producer in the Bourgogne with 15 hectares

11:30 Château du Clos de Vougeot

Pictures: Visit of Château du Clos de Vougeot

12:45 Restaurant Clos de la Vouge in Vougeot

Picture: Last Meal in the Bourgogne

19:00 Hôtel-Restaurant La Bergerie in Rugy, Metz

24:00 Arrival in Hochheim

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

Tasting Vintage 2010 Bouchard Père et Fils Wines with Panos Kakaviatos in Washington DC, USA

Vintage 2012 Bouchard Père et Fils Tasting at Ripple in Washington DC, USA – With Tasting Notes by Annette Schiller  

Pure Chablis – A tête-à-tête Dinner in Washington DC at Marcel’s with Chablis Wine Board President and Winemaker Jean-François Bordet, Domaine Séguinot-Bordet, USA/France

Caroline Parent-Gros Presented the Wines of Domaine A-F Gros in the Bourgogne at Chef Bryan Voltaggio’s Range in Washington DC

Dinner at Restaurant Chateau de la Barge in Creches sur Saone in Burgundy, France

In the Most Prestigious AOC in the Mâconnais: Pouilly-Fuissé, France

Winery Tour and Wine Tasting at Weingut A. Christmann, with Steffen Christmann – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

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Picture: Harvest at Weingut A. Christmann, with Steffen Christmann

Steffen Christmann: Charismatic wines driven by great passion. Noble growths that achieve top ratings. Precious drops for bon vivants, with nature’s blessing. These are the hallmarks of Weingut A. Christmann. For generations, our family has lived for its passion – wines that are at once pure, authentic, and outstanding. Complacency is taboo. Ever striving to be a little bit better. Zeal that can be felt and tasted with every glass. Be it a simple Gutswein (basic house wine) or a Grosses Gewächs (great growth). With these pages, you can learn more about our estate and our portfolio. And the wines? That’s up to you…you’ll have to taste them for yourself. We wish you an enjoyable journey of discovery.

Steffen Christmann not only heads one of the top wineries in Germany, but also the Verband Deutscher Deutscher Prädikats- und Qualitätsweingüter (VDP), the association of about 200 elite winemakers in Germany. The VDP is in the process of introducing a new wine classification in Germany, which represents a radical break with the past. Naturally, when Steffen Christmann joined us during the cellar tour, we spent some time discussing with him the main issues of the new classification.

Pictures: Arriving at Weingut A. Christmann

History

In 1845 Prof. Dr. Ludwig Häusser and his cousin Johann Martin founded a small winery as a hobby. During the next generations, the winery operations turned into a business. In 1894, Eduard Christmann married Henriette Häusser, the granddaughter of the founder. The estate bears the name of their son Arnold.

To this today, the estate has been in the hands of the Christmann family, now in the 7th generation, and the name still stands for top growths that are second to none.

Steffen Christmann

Steffen Christmann was born in Neustadt an der Weinstrasse/Pfalz in 1965. He grew up in Gimmeldingen at Weingut A. Christmann. After completing his basic education and military service, Steffen Christmann studied law in Heidelberg and Speyer. He was admitted to the bar as an attorney at law in 1994 and since 1995, has been a partner at Hofmann & Kollegen, where he focuses on agricultural and wine law. Parallel to his legal studies, he completed his viticultural education at the DLR Rheinpfalz. In 1996, he took over the family estate, which he has continuously developed ever since. He converted to biodynamic viticulture, for example; opened a chic wine bar and restaurant at the estate; and built new production facilities.

Weingut A. Christmann

Weingut A. Christmann is in Gimmeldingen in the Pfalz. The vineyard area totals 20 hectares in several villages: Biengarten, Kapellenberg and Mandelgarten in Gimmeldingen, Eselshaut in Mußbach, Idig and Ölberg in Königsbach, Linsenbusch and Reiterpfad in Ruppertsberg as well as Hohenmorgen, Langenmorgen, Mäushöhle and Paradiesgarten in Deidesheim. Riesling accounts for 2/3 of the output, with Spätburgunder, Weißburgunder, Grauburgunder, Gewürztraminer and St. Laurent accounting for the remainder. Production: 10.000 cases.

Pictures: At Weigut A. Christmann - Harvest Time

Biodynamic Viticulture

Steffen Christmann: As wine-growers, we’re closely connected with nature and seek to intensify this relationship and treat nature with respect in all that we do. This is all the more important for those who cultivate their vines biodynamically. We make certain that our soils are rich in vital humus, and encourage biodiversity in our vineyards to avoid the negative impact of monoculture. We rely upon our vines’ innate immune defense and natural plant protection measures. In addition, our work is geared to the phases of the moon. Our goal is to produce the finest, highly individualistic, and most authentic wines possible by bringing vine/site/climate/soil into harmony with one another.

The Vineyard

Steffen Christmann: The vineyard is the key to a high-quality wine. As winemakers, we feel it’s of the utmost importance to bring out the authentic character of our vineyards in such a way that it can be tasted in a wine. Equally important is a harmonious balance between man and nature. As such, we use natural viticultural methods that foster biodiversity in our vineyards. It goes without saying that herbicides, insecticides, and synthetic fungicides are taboo. Above all, we believe in working by hand. Canopy management and picking are done manually. Fine wines with character are hand-crafted, not mass-produced. In short: we strive to achieve the highest quality possible by using the vineyard’s natural resources

Our Cellar

Steffen Christmann: Passion, attention to detail, and time are indispensable to making a good wine. Things like transporting whole clusters in small containers; gentle, slow pressing under low pressure; preliminary clarification through natural sedimentation; slow fermentation with natural yeasts in traditional oak casks or stainless steel tanks. In addition, young wines do not undergo any treatments and we filter our finest wines only once. Procedures for red wines include traditional fermentation on the skins and lengthy aging in cask. They are not filtered prior to bottling. Although this all entails time, remember the race between the tortoise and the hare…we’re way out front with wine enthusiasts and critics alike. For years, our wines have numbered among the best of the Pfalz or all of Germany, year for year.

Pictures: In the Cellar with Steffen Christmann

VDP Classification

Although many people think that there is only one wine classification system in Germany – the classification system of the Law of 1971 – this is not correct. True, the classification system of the Law of 1971 with its pyramid of ripeness of the grapes at harvest (Qualitaetswein, Kabinett, Spaetlese, Auslese …) at the center is the standard classification system in Germany and the vast majority of winemakers in Germany use this approach. A large number of winemakers, however, have moved away from the standard, in particular the producers of premium and ultra-premium wines. Importantly, the powerful group of German elite winemakers – the VDP (Verband Deutscher Praedikatswein Produzenten) – has conceived its own classification system and is developing it further. The latest modifications are those that came into effect with the vintage of 2012.

The VDP Wine Classification Matrix

The new VDP Wine Classification System is basically a matrix classification. On one axis you find the different quality levels of the wines, along the Burgundian terroir approach, with estate wines, village wines, first growth (premier cru) wines and great growth (grand cru) wines.

Following their colleagues in the Bourgogne, the terroir principle has taken center stage in the VDP classification. Effective with the 2012 harvest, the VDP classification has the following 4 quality layers (In brackets, the equivalent quality classes in the classification system of the Bourgogne):

• VDP.Grosse Lage (Grand Cru in Burgundy)
• VDP.Erste Lage (Premier Cru in Burgundy)
• VDP.Ortswein (Village level in Burgundy)
• VDP.Gutswein (Bourgogne régional in Burgundy)

Note that for some legal reasons, the VDP has started to use the terms Grosse Lage, Erste Lage, Ortswein and Gutswein with the pre-fix VDP.

On the other axis, you find the sweetness levels: Trocken, Kabinett, Spaetlese, Auslese, Beerenauslese and Trockenbeerenauslese as well as Eiswein. Please note that in the new VDP classification system the Prädikats have lost their critical importance that they have in the traditional classification system of 1971 and that they have changed their meaning. In the VDP classification system, they have become an indicator for the sweetness range of the finished wine, while in the traditional classification they are an indicator of the sugar content of the grapes at harvest. Generally, in the new VDP classification system, the Prädikats are to be used exclusively for wines with residual sweetness, “thereby enabling the Prädikats to resume their traditional meaning”, as stated by the VDP.

Pictures: Karl-Friedrich Christmann, Steffen Christmann's Father

VDP.Grosse Lage - The Peak of the Pyramid

VDP.Grosse Lage is the peak of the terroir-based pyramid, equivalent to Grand Cru in the Bourgogne. These are the very best vineyards of Germany. Note: For a Grosse Lage vineyard, like in the Bourgogne, you don’t use the village name on the label, just the name of the vineyard.

Maximum yield is at 50hl/ha. The grapes have to be harvested by hand while the sugar content of the grapes at harvest has to be at least at Spätlese level. The grapes can be fermented in a dry, fruity-sweet and noble-sweet style.

A dry wine from a VDP.Grosse Lage is designated VDP.Grosses Gewaechs and labeled Qualitätswein Trocken. A Grosses Gewaechs wine is from 2012 on the ultra premium dry wine made from a Grosse Lage vineyard.

A fruity or noble sweet wine from a VDP.Grosse Lage is labeled with one of the traditional Prädikats: Kabinett, Spätlese, Auslese, Beerenauslese, Eiswein or Trockenbeerenauslese.

VDP.Erste Lage - First Class

VDP.Erste Lage designates first-class vineyards with distinctive characteristics, equivalent to Premier Cru in the Bourgogne. Erste Lage vineyards provide optimal growing conditions, as evidenced over a long period of time.

They are planted with traditional varieties. Maximum yield is at 60hl/ha. The grapes have to be harvested by hand while the sugar content of the grapes at harvest has to be at least at Spätlese level.
A dry wine from a VDP.Erste Lage is labeled Qualitätswein trocken. Note that there is no “VDP.Erstes Gewaechs” designation.

A fruity or noble sweet wine from a VDP.Erste Lage is labeled with one of the traditional Prädikats: Kabinett, Spätlese, Auslese, Beerenauslese, Eiswein or Trockenbeerenauslese.

Third: VDP.Ortswein - Sourced from Superior Soils

A VDP.Ortswein originates from a village's best vineyards that are planted with grape varieties typical of their region, equivalent to a village wine in the Bourgogne. Maximum yield is at 75hl/ha.
A dry VDP.Ortswein is labeled Qualitätswein Trocken.

A VDP.Ortswein with residual sweetness is labeled with one of the traditional Prädikats.

Fourth: VDP.Gutswein – Entry Level

VDP.Gutsweine are the entry-level wines in the VDP's hierarchy.

Generall, the Prädikats are to be used exclusively for wines with residual sweetness. Gutsweine, however, are excluded from this general rule as it applies only to the top 3 quality categories. Thus, we might see Gutswein Kabinett trocken and Gutswein Spaetlese trocken in the shelves.

Pictures: Tasting at Weingut A. Christmann

The Wines we Tasted

Gimmeldingen Weissburgunder 2013 VDP.Ortswein
Pfalz Riesling 2013 VDP.Gutswein
Königsbach Riesling 2013 VDP.Ortswein
Könisbacher Ölberg Riesling 2012 VDP.ErsteLage
Mandelgarten Riesling GG 2011 VDP.GrosseLage
Spätburgunder SC 2010 VDP.Ortswein

Bye-bye

Thank you very much Steffen for the very informative conversation and the wonderful tasting.

Picture: Annette Schiller, Christian Schiller and Steffen Christmann at the 2. Internationale Riesling Symposium in Hattenheim, Germany

schiller-wine: Related Postings

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

Coming-up: Wine & Art Tour to Saale-Unstrut - Saxony - Franken - Württemberg: Germany-East Tour by ombiasy WineTours (June 11 - June 20, 2015)

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)

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

Weingut Franz Keller in Oberbergen, Kaiserstuhl, Baden: Cellar Tour and Tasting with Fritz Keller– Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Lunch at Restaurant Schwarzer Adler in Oberbergen, with Weingut Franz Keller Wines – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Wine Tasting at Weingut Bernhard Huber– Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Visit: Weingut Dr. Heger in Baden – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Weingut Karl-Heinz Johner in Baden: Cellar Tour and Tasting with Karl-Heinz and Patrick Johner – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

At Maison Trimbach in Alsace with Hubert Trimbach – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Wine Tasting at Weingut Friedrich Becker – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Lunch, Wine Tasting and Winery Tour at Weingut Jülg in Schweigen, Pfalz with the Jülg Family – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

Wine Tasting at Weingut Ökonomierat Rebholz in Siebeldingen, Pfalz – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

Cellar Tour and Wine Tasting at Weingut Geheimer Rat Dr. von Bassermann-Jordan in Deidesheim with General Manager Gunther Hauck – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

schiller-wine: Related Postings (VDP)

The new (VDP) Wine Classification in Germany: Tasting Weingut Robert Weil Wines from Gutswein to Grosse Lage Wine

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

Approaches to Classifying German Wine: The Standard Approach (the Law of 1971), the VDP Approach and the Zero Classification Approach

Stepping up: From 3 … to 4 Quality Levels - The New Classification of the VDP, Germany
German Wine Basics: Grosse Lage and Grosslage (and Grosses Gewaechs)

VDP.Grosses Gewaechs, Erstes Gewaechs, Spaetlese/Auslese Trocken, … Labeling Dry Ultra-Premium Wines in Germany

The VDP - the Powerful Group of German Elite Winemakers - Refines its Classification System, Germany 

Lunch at Momofuku Ssäm Bar in New York City, USA

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Picture: Momofuku Ssäm Bar

Following a long evening at the Gala Dinner of the Rieslingfeier 2015 (see below) und ahead of driving back home to Washington DC, we had lunch at Momofuku Ssäm Bar.

Pictures: Heading Home

The Momofuku Ssäm Bar belongs to the empire of David Chang. Every year between 2009 and 2013, it was on the prestigious San Pellegrino World's 50 Best Restaurants list. Also on the San Pellegrino list was Momofuku Ko (in 2011, 2012 and 2013), which currently has 2 stars in the New York Michelin Guide. While the Momofuku Ssäm Bar does not take reservations (except for large groups and special meals), you need to make a reservation for the Momofuku Ko (12 seats). Reservations can only be made online starting at 10 am 10 days before your dinner. The seats are gone within a few seconds. By contrast, at Momofuku Ssäm, we just walked in and there were plenty of seats to choose from.

See:
The World's 50 Best Restaurants (2014) - San Pellegrino

Momofuko and David Chang

Momofuku is a group of restaurants owned by Virginia-borne (in 1977) and Virginia-raised Korean-American chef and entrepreneur David Chang. Momofuku could be translated from Japanese as "lucky peach", though Chef David Chang has written that the name is "an indirect nod" to Momofuku Ando, the Taiwanese-Japanese inventor of instant ramen.

David Chang grew up in Alexandria (VA). After attended Trinity College, where he majored in religious studies, David Chang pursued a variety of jobs, both in Japan and the US, including teaching English in Japan, holding finance positions in New York City, working in a small soba shop in Japan and working at Café Boulud in New York City. He also attended the French Culinary Institute in New York City, before opening his first restaurant, Momofuku Noodle Bar in the East Village in 2004 (at age 27).

Pictures: Momofuku Ssäm Bar

Vanity Fair: That place, whose optimized versions of ramen and pork buns electrified the burgeoning food blogosphere of the mid-aughts, has since begotten nine further New York City establishments (if you count his fast-proliferating Milk Bar dessert shops), five more Chang-branded places in Toronto, and a restaurant in Sydney, not to mention a Wonka-esque culinary lab in Brooklyn. Chang is also a guiding force behind Lucky Peach, a gorgeous, high-production-value literary food quarterly published under the aegis of Dave Eggers’s McSweeney’s imprint. Chang impressed himself upon the food world as a profane, gonzo, emotionally volatile enfant terrible. But now, at the age of 36, he is après-enfant and pas si terrible, a dialed-down and more reflective man—if still as complicated and self-flagellatory as ever.

Lunch at Momofuku Ssäm Bar

Picture: Liver Mousse - maraschino, green papaya, toast US$ 11

Picture: Rotisserie Duck Over Rice - duck scallion, ssäm sauce, crispy shallot US$ 15

Picture: O.G. Momofuku Ssäm or Bowl - pork shoulder, black beans, kimichi, poached egg US$ 14

Picture: Köhler-Ruprecht Riesling Kabinett Trocken

Rieslingfeier 

Rieslingfeier is an annual two-day event in New York City that celebrates German Riesling. The cornerstone event is the Rieslingfeier Gala Dinner.

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

Picture: Christian Schiller, Annette Schiller and Sommelier Paul Grieco (Terroir, Summer of Riesling) at the 2015 Rieslingfeier in New York City, USA

Side events, specialized seminars and retail tastings round out the yearly Rieslingfeier program. Rieslingfeier is orchestrated by Stephen Bitterolf of the vom Boden wine importing company.

This year, Rieslingfeier took place on the Friday, January 30 and Saturday, January 31. 11 winemakers attended, all belonging to the elite of German winemakers, including world stars like Klaus Peter Keller, Egon Müller and Johannes Leitz.

This posting is part of a series covering the 2015 Rieslingfeier; it focuses on the Gala Dinner.

Here is a list of all postings:

Coming-up: Rieslingfeier 2015 in New York City, USA
A German Riesling Feast in New York City: Rieslingfeier 2015, USA
The 11 Winemakers: Rieslingfeier 2015 in New York City, USA
Riesling Crawl in New York City– Or, Where to Buy German Wine in Manhattan: Schiller's Favorite Wine Stores, USA
The Gala Dinner of the Rieslingfeier 2015 in New York City, USA
Lunch at Momofuku Ssäm Bar in New York City, USA

Weingut Wittmann now with Dr. Loosen Imports in the USA

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Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasy WineTours, and Christian Schiller with Philipp Wittmann and Eva Clüsserath-Wittmann at Prowein 2015, see:  Prowein 2015 in Düsseldorf, Germany – Schiller’s Impressions

A few months ago, Loosen Bros. USA announced that German star producer Weingut Wittmann from the Rheinhessen region had joined the portfolio of Dr. Loosen Imports.

Dr. Loosen Imports Adds Weingut Wittmann

Announcement by Loosen Bros. USA: Loosen Bros. USA is delighted to announce the addition of yet another great producer to the Dr. Loosen Imports portfolio.

Weingut Wittmann is a biodynamic family estate in Germany’s Rheinhessen region. They are pioneers in developing the dynamic, full-bodied, and well-balanced style of dry wines for which the Rheinhessen region has become known.

Winemaker Philipp Wittmann is Germany’s 2014 Winemaker of the Year. (For that honor he joined Ernst Loosen, Wilhelm Haag, Carl von Schubert, and Wilhelm Weil, all part of our portfolio.)

The Wittmann family has developed a deep bond with the land they cultivate. They have been growing grapes and producing wine since 1663. In 1990 they became completely organic, and in 2004, biodynamic.

The estate is known for balanced wines that have tension, depth and intensity, but at the same time are fresh and elegant. Philipp Wittmann looks for natural balance in the vineyards, in order to slow the ripening process and harvest grapes that have fully developed flavors, but are not overripe.

Loosen Bros. USA

Loosen Bros. USA is owned and managed by Ernst Loosen. Day to day management is in the hands of Kirke Wille, based in Oregon. The portfolio has grown quite a bit over the years and includes now:

Picture: Loosen Bros. CEO Kirk Wille and Riesling Guru Stuart Pigott

Dr. Loosen - Located in the heart of the Mosel valley, Dr. Loosen is consistently ranked among the top 10 wine estates in Germany and among the best Riesling producers in the world.

J.L. Wolf - Owned by Ernst Loosen, Villa Wolf is located in the Pfalz region along the Rhine in Southern Germany. Here, Ernst makes drier Rieslings, as well as wines from other grape varieties.

J. Christopher - Located in Oregon’s Willamette Valley, J. Christopher specializes in hand-crafted Pinot Noir made in the traditional style of Burgundy.

Robert Weil - One of Germany’s most elite producers, Weingut Robert Weil produces vividly intense, distinguished Rieslings from its first-rate vineyard sites in the Rheingau. Robert Weil is also among the perennial top 10 wine estates of Germany, along with Dr. Loosen.

C. von Schubert/Maximin Grunhaus (Ruwer) - A legendary producer from the tiny Ruwer valley in the Mosel region, the Maximin Grünhaus estate dates back to the 10th century. Fifth-generation owner, Carl von Schubert makes stellar wines from his monopole vineyards.

Fritz Haag (Mosel) - A historic estate in the Middle Mosel that is consistently ranked among the finest producers in the world. The wines are revered for their focused purity and intense expression of the slate soils of their Brauneberg (“Brown mountain”) vineyards.

Nicola Potel - The well-known and highly respected Burgundy winemaker, Nicolas Potel, has founded a new estate (Domaine de Bellene), as well as this new négociant house, Maison Roche de Bellene. He produces wines of extraordinary quality from excellent vineyards throughout the region.

Weingut Gantenbein - Widely considered to be one of the finest wine estates of Switzerland, Weingut Gantenbein makes very small quantities of stunning Chardonnay and Pinot Noir — a rare and unforgettable glory.

Pictures: Ernst Loosen, Annette Schiller and Christian Schiller at Weingut Dr. Ernst Loosen in Bernkastel-Kues, see:  German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

Weingut Wittmann

For several centuries the Wittmanns have been wine farmers in the town of Westhofen, in the southern part of Rheinhessen. Today, Philipp Wittmann and Eva Clüsserath-Wittmann (who herself is a gifted winemaker who also owns and runs her own winery in the Mosel valley) and Philipp’s parents Günter and Elisabeth Wittmann divide the tasks running the 25 hectare estate.

Philipp Wittmann: The Wittmanns and their ancestors have been wine-growers in the old market town of Westhofen, in southern Rheinhessen, where the first documented of viticulture in the family dates from 1663. Today’s estate developed from this long tradition over the course of centuries. The length of an estate’s viticultural tradition really says nothing about the quality of an estate’s wines. Perhaps, though, it does say something about the bond one has with the piece of land that one cultivates. Since 1990, we have cultivated our vineyards according to controlled ecological guidelines, and since 2004, biodynamically. By doing so, our soil will remain healthy for future generations, too

Rheinhessen

Rheinhessen is the largest viticultural region in Germany. Every fourth bottle of German wine comes from Rheinhessen. About one third of Rheinhessen’s agricultural area is cultivated with vines, more than 26000 hectares. The high-yielder Mueller-Thurgau accounts for about 1/5 of the vineyards, and Silvaner and Dornfelder both for 1/10. Overall, Riesling is on the backburner. Unlike in other German wine regions, where monoculture of the vine is the norm, here the many rolling hills are host to a wide variety of crops grown alongside the grape. Rheinhessen also has the rather dubious honor of being considered the birthplace of Liebfraumilch.

At the same time, Rheinhessen is at this time among Germany’s most interesting wine regions. A lot is happening there. There is an amazing group of young, ambitious and dynamic winemakers, led by star winemakers like Klaus Peter Keller, Philipp Wittmann and H.O. Spanier, who want to produce and indeed do produce outstanding wine and not wines in large quantities.

Pictures: Annette and Christian Schiller with Philipp Wittmann and Eva Clüsserath-Wittmann at Weingut Wittmann, see:  Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Weingut Wittman Vineyards

Riesling is the dominant grape of choice but also the Pinot varietals (Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris) and Silvaner have a long tradition in Westhofen. Philipp makes many wines, but the estate is famous for its 4 Grosse Lage sites and the Grosses Gewächs wines it produces there: Morstein, Kirchspie, Brunnenhäuschen and Aulerde. Morstein GG is seen as Phillip Wittmann’s his greatest wine but each of them is special in their own way.

Phillip Wittmann: Aulerde is our warmest site. Westhofen's southern to southeastern vineyard slopes rise from the glacial valley of the Rhine to the rim of a high plateau. The Aulerde vineyard lies at the foot of the protective eastern and southeastern slopes of the Kirchspiel site. The vines here are facing slightly south. The upper layers of a small portion of Aulerde are heavy clayish marl with only a very small amount of limestone. The subsoil contains clayish or gravelly sand (it is only here that we grow our Riesling vines). However, most of the site consists of meter-high layers of loess.

The Kirchspiel site opens toward the Rhine like an amphitheater. Its southern and southeastern exposure protects the vines from cold westerly winds – and accounts for the excellent microclimate of the vineyard. The soil structure is similar to that of the Morstein site, marked by clayish marl interspersed with limestone. Limestone is the predominant component of the subsoil, too.

The Brunnenhäuschen site is situated east of Morstein and above the Steingrube site. Due to its altitude, grapes ripen slowly and harvesting usually takes place after a very long growing season. The finest portion of Brunnenhäuschen is in the old parcel known as “Abtserde.” We cultivate half a hectare (1.2 acres) of Riesling here. This site is marked by clayish marl that is rich in limestone. Due to a high iron oxide content, parts of the soil are reddish in color, also referred to as “terra rossa.” The subsoil is interspersed with large limestone rocks.

Morstein is situated on the south-facing slope that stretches from Gundersheim to Westhofen. The subsoil consists of massive limestone rocks. The first documented mention of the site dates from 1282. Today, we own about 4 ha (10 acres) in the best (southeastern exposure) parcel of this vineyard. The upper layer of soil is primarily heavy clayish marl interspersed with limestone. The subsoil is also heavy and marked by layers of limestone that help circulate water. This ensures that the vines are well supplied with nutrients and minerals, and accounts for the mineral character of our Morstein wines.

schiller-wine: Related Postings

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

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Prowein 2015 in Düsseldorf, Germany – Schiller’s Impressions

The Doctor Made a House Call - A Tasting with Ernst Loosen, Weingut Dr. Loosen, at MacArthur Beverages in Washington DC, USA

Visiting Wilhelm Weil at his Weingut Robert Weil in Kiedrich, Germany

A Riesling Guru and a Killer Guitarist cum Cult Winemaker: Ernst Loosen and Jay Somers and their J. Christopher Winery in Newberg, Oregon

Art Exhibition and Wine Tasting with Susan Levin and Annette Schiller, Washington DC, USA

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Picture: Susan Levin and Annette Schiller

Thank You

Thank you all for coming to this past weekends Art and Wine Event. It was a pleasure for us to meet new people and to partake in the Wine, Art, Food and exceptional company. Art and Wine really do compliment each other! The way in which we met may seem so unusual and random to most, but we connected immediately and we are so glad we did. We will keep you informed about upcoming events and we hope to hear from you or to see you again very soon. Please keep a lookout for more information about us and our future solo and/or joint events.

Hope to see you soon…

Annette and Susan

Pictures: Susan Levin and Annette Schiller Welcoming their Guests

The Event

Please join us on April 18th from 4pm - 6pm for a Wine-Tasting & Art Exhibit at the North Bethesda, Maryland home of Susan Levin where we will taste a selection of our favorite wines while we enjoy viewing the Abstract Expressionist paintings & Digital Art of Susan Levin and a Wine Tasting led by Annette Schiller of Ombiasy PR & Wine Tours.

There is no charge to attend the event. But we do ask that you bring a bottle of your favorite Pinot Gris or Pinot Noir wine.

Pictures: Art and Wine

Art: Susan Levin

As a painter and digital photographer, I work hard to create pieces that evoke emotion and conversation. While my paintings and photographs are an expression of my moods, they are also an abstract interpretation of real life experiences. I interpret my dreams and often paint what I dream and I embellish my photos with the use of the computer.

Creating new work is a form of playing and designing what is often clearly before my eyes and sometimes what is simply perceived through the lens. It is that combination of being acutely aware and having the ability to clarify what is right before me that makes me passionate about art and love what I do.

For more information: Susan Levin Art: http://www.artbysusanlevin.co... 

Picture: Susan Levin and Annette Schiller

Wine: Annette Schiller

We offer:

Expert, all-inclusive tours to wine regions in France and Germany. In Germany we are the pioneers of the concept to visit all 13 German wine regions with international wine friends.

Custom tailored tours to wine regions in France, Germany, and other wine regions around the world.
Planning and implementation of wine pairing dinners in the Washington DC area and Germany for wineries / châteaux.

Educational presentations on the wines of France and Germany (with and without accompanying tastings).

Conceptualization and organization of promotional events for the food and beverage industry.

Wine Tours in 2015

France: Bourgogne (May) and Bordeaux (September)
Germany: Germany-East (June), Germany-South (September) and Germany-North (September)

For more information: Ombiasy PR & Wine Tours: https://ombiasypr.com/

Picture: Susan Levin and Annette Schiller

Lunch and Wine Tasting at Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt in Morscheid, Mosel with Owner Annegret Reh-Gartner – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

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Picture: Wine Tasting at Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt in Morscheid

Following the morning event at Weingut von Hövel with owner and winemaker Maximilian von Kunow, we drove over to Morscheid to have lunch cum wine tasting with Annegret Reh-Gartner, the owner of the prestigious Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt.

Annegret Reh-Gartner is married to Gerhard Gartner, who was a top chef in Aachen, Germany. His restaurant Gala was a 2 star Michelin restaurant for over 10 years. After taking his final curtain call on the gourmet stage, he devoted himself to his second passion – wine.

Picture: Christian Schiller and  Chef Gerhard Gartner

The lunch cum tasting with Annegret Reh-Gartner was the final event in the Mosel area and we moved on the Nahe Valley, where we had events at Weingut Dönnhoff, Schlossgut Diel and Weingut Kruger-Rumpf.

Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt

First documented in 1349, Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt is one of the most traditional estates in the Mosel region. The von Kesselstatt dynasty immigrated to the electorate of Trier in the 14th century.

Following secularization by Napoleon in 1802, the von Kesselstadt family purchased between 1854 and 1889 four monasteries of St. Maximin Abbey and their vineyard holdings.

Pictures: Arriving at Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt in Morscheid, Mosel

Since 1983, Annegret Reh-Gartner’s has directed the estate, which her father Günther Reh acquired in 1978.

Today, the estate today cultivates 36 hectares of vineyard land, consecrated exclusively to Riesling. Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt is unique in that its vineyards are equally divided among the three river valleys that form the Mosel appellation: the Mosel River valley itself, and the valleys of its two contributories, the Saar and Ruwer Rivers.

From 1746 until 1999, estate headquarters were in Palais Kesselstatt in Trier, one of the most beautiful baroque palaces north of the Alps. It was built between 1740 and 1746 by Johann Valentin Thomann, a student of Balthasar Neumann. Palais Kesselstatt, with its historical vaulted cellars and idyllic courtyard, was lovingly renovated by Günther Reh. Today, it is the site of the estate’s wine pub, Weinstube Kesselstatt.

In 1987, after extensive reconstruction and building, the estate moved its winemaking facilities to Schloss Marienlay in the Ruwer Valley (where we had lunch with Annegret Reh-Gartner and Gerhard Gartner), which has also has served as the estate’s headquarters since 1999.

Achieving high quality has always been the focal point of Annegret Reh-Gartner’s endeavors, just as her wines have always been subject to high standards. The conscious decision to reduce the size of the estate to 36 hectares was an important step, for it enabled the estate to work more selectively in its vineyards and further improve quality.

In the cellar, Annegret Reh-Gartner’s approach is to interfere as little as possible at the winemaking stage, underscoring the individuality of the terroir of each valley. Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt is one of the region’s first estates to successfully offer Grosse Gewächse wines, the new category of ultra-premium dry wines.

Pictures: Wine Tasting at Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt in Morscheid

The Vineyards

Mosel: Josephshof in Graach with 8 ha (20 acres) of vines (acquired by the von Kesselstatt family in 1858) and Domklausenhof in Piesport with 8 ha (20 acres) of vines (acquired in 1858).

Saar: Abteihof in Oberemmel with 21 ha (52 acres) of vines in (acquired in 1889).

Ruwer: St. Irminenhof in Kasel with 8.5 ha (21 acres) of vines (acquired in 1854).

The Wines Annegret Reh-Gartner Poured

Annegret poured a most-interesting selection of wines for us, ranging from Trocken, including a GG (the ultra-premium dry wines of the VDP members) to a delicious 2002 Scharzhofberger Auslese.

Dry

2013 Graacher Riesling Trocken
2012 Wehlen Sonnenuhr Riesling GG Trocken


Harmoniously dry to fruity

2013 Josephshöfer Riesling Kabinett
2013 Scharzhofberger Riesling Kabinett
2013 Piesport Goldtröpfchen Riesling Kabinett


Fruity-sweet of 2 different vintages – ripeness is beautiful

2013 Scharzhofberger Riesling Spätlese
2008 Scharzhofberger Riesling Spätlese


A great wine of a great vintage

2002 Scharzhofberger Riesling Auslese Long Goldcapsule #10


Lunch

Following the wine tasting, we had lunch, with more Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt wines.


Bye-bye

Thank you very much Annegret and Gerhard for a wonderful tasting and lunch.


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Virginia Wine Chat “Live” with Frank Morgan at Breaux Vineyards, Virginia, USA

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Picture: Virginia Wine Chat “Live” with Frank Morgan at Breaux Vineyards, Virginia, USA

Virginia Wine Chat is a monthly virtual gathering to discuss the wines, winemakers, wineries and regions of Virginia, the up and coming wine region at US East Coast.

Founder and Moderator is Frank Morgan, who introduces himself on his twitter account as follows: “Aerospace industry by day, proud parents, chronic traveler, wine enthusiast & vinous bloggers by night, reader, observer, kinda runner. Founder of #VAWineChat.”

I have known Frank for many years. Funny: Although we are both based in Virginia, we met the first time we met in person in Italy during the European Wine Bloggers Conference (now Digital Wine Communications Conference) 2011.

Pictures: Christian Schiller and Frank Morgan in Brescia, Italy, see: Blogging,Wining and Dining at the European Wine Bloggers Conference (#EWBC)October 2011 in Brescia, Italy – A Tour D’ Horizont)

About a year ago, Frank created Virginia Wine Chat. It is a monthly one hour talk show at a Virginia winery with the winemaker and/or owner, via UStream and twitter. People watch the talk show online and interact with Frank and his guest(s) during the show via twitter. A few people, like my wife Annette Schiller and me this time, have the privilege of seeing the show “live”. You can also watch the show later at any time via the Virginia Wine Chat UStream channel.

Pictures: Arriving at Breaux Vineyards

There were about a dozen people sitting in the show, including Mark and Vicky Fedor from North Gate Vineyards, Kathy Lang Wiedemann and Kimberly B. Richardson.

I have participated in previous shows online, sometimes being far away from Virginia. This time, was the first time for me to be at the show and watch the show “live”.

Breaux Vineyards

Breaux Vineyards is owned by Paul Breaux, who made his money with a real estate company specializing in sales and property management on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, and is managed by Jennifer Breaux Blosser, Paul’s daughter, and her husband Christopher M. Blosser.

Pictures: Frank Morgan and Jen Breaux Blosser getting ready for the Show

What began as a small hobby in the carriage house of the original 1750's Log Cabin on the far side of the property, has grown into what the Washington Post describes as "Loudoun County's most impressive wine undertaking."

Today, the 404 acre estate has over 100 acres planted in 18 different grape varieties. Breaux Vineyards produces 10.000 to 12.000 cases per year. 90% of it is sold on the premises.

Pictures: Virginia Wine Chat at Breaux Vineyards

Breaux Vineyards has been voted Virginia’s “Favorite Winery” consecutively for the past three years. It is located only an hour from metropolitan DC, Dulles and BWI airports and a short distance from historic Harpers Ferry, WV.

See also:
Visiting Jennifer Breaux Blosser and Breaux Vineyards in Virginia, USA

Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller and Jennifer Breaux Blosser in the Breaux Wine Cellar

Winemaker Heather Munden

Heather Munden has been in charge of winemaking at Breaux Vineyards for about a year. She grew up in the Bay Area of California. Her education background includes a hotel and restaurant management degree from San Francisco City College and a Viticulture and Enology degree from the University of California, Davis.

Pictures: Following the Show

Heather began her career in wine after a meeting with Robert Mondavi. “His passion for wine was infectious…and I was hooked,” she recalls. “I grew up on a large ranch and loved raising and cooking my food. The passion I found for flavor naturally led me to a passion for great wine.”

Heather, who most recently held the prestigious title of Artisan Winemaker at St. Francis Winery & Vineyards in Sonoma, CA, brings with her more than 20 years’ experience producing ultra-premium wines around the world. After graduating from UC Davis, Munden spent three years crossing the globe working as a harvest intern, consultant, and winemaker in Italy, New Zealand, Chile and Western Australia. Since earning her degree at the University of California, Davis she has garnered critical acclaim for her wines, with nearly 20 wines ranging from 90 to 95 points from Robert Parker, Wine Spectator, Wine Enthusiast, and Wine and Spirits magazines.

Pictures: Annette Schiller, Ombiasy PR and WineTours, and Christian Schiller tasting the 2013 Breauxmance Sparkler with Winemaker Heather Munden

See:
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“Heather’s skill in extracting the best from a single-vineyard environment and in small lots is what makes her unique.” says General Manager of Breaux Vineyards, Christopher Blosser. “As a 100% estate-grown farm winery it’s important to have someone who is passionate about the care of the land and who works as part of our team to build upon the world-class wines people have come to expect from Breaux.” Her passion for flavor extends beyond wine grapes and into making charcuterie, bee keeping and even building her own brick oven.

Virginia Wine Chat at Breaux Vineyards

We tasted 4 wines during the show. Frank posed 2 kinds of questions – they were either related to the 4 wines we tasted or to the 2 persons that he interviewed. As to the latter, Jenn provided a bit of background with regard to herself and the winery and Heather talked about about who she is and what brought her to Virginia from California.

Picture: The Red Wines we Tasted

NV Breauxmance – a delicious Vidal Blanc based sparkler, with 1% Chambourcain

2013 Lafoyotte – Cabernet Franc (100%). Heather Munden: Cabernet Franc is a blender in California, but a stand-alone variety in Virginia. Ripens early. Has great potential in Virginia. Virginia is a bridge between the old world and the new world style.

2007 Meritage – Cabernet Sauvignon (42%), Merlot (25%), Malbec (18%), Cabernet Franc (5%). Jen Breaux: 2007 was a fantastic year with high sugar level at harvest and thus high alcohol level in the finished wine. This one has 15,2% alc., but it is well integrated.

2002 Merlot Reserve – is holding up nicely, with a light sherry tone.

Picture: Post-Show Chat - Christian Schiller and Mark Fedor from North Gate Vineyards, see: North Gate Vineyard in Virginia, USA – A Profile

Virginia Wine Chat at Breaux and Upcoming Chats

You can watch the show at any time via the Virginia Wine Chat UStream channel here.

In April, Frank said, he will take a break and go on vacation. The May Virginia Wine Chat will deal with the Wines of the Northern Neck. Frank also mentioned that he is working on a show with a Virginia beer brewery.

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Beer at Prowein in Düsseldorf? Yes: Altbier at Zum Uerige, Germany

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Pictures: At Zum Uerige, Düsseldorf

Prowein in Düsseldorf, Germany, which I attended with Annette Schiller, ombiasy WineTours, earlier this year, is arguably the most important wine fair in the world. You would expect a wine fair to take place in a wine region. But there is no wine made in the Düsseldorf area. To the contrary, there is lots of beer produced and consumed in the Düsseldorf area. Düsseldorf is one of the beer centers in Germany. They make and drink a special type of beer there – Altbier - and no visit of the Prowein is complete without at least a few hours in one of the traditional beer taverns of Düsseldorf. We chose the Zum Uerige.

Picture: General Manager Christian Witte, Weingut Domäne Schloss Johannisberg, and Annette Schiller, ombiasy WineTours, at Prowein

See:
Prowein 2015 in Düsseldorf, Germany – Schiller’s Impressions 
4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

Altbier

Beers have been brewed in Germany for 3,000 years. Altbier (Old Beer) is the beer that defines Düsseldorf. Its name comes from its production using the technique of top fermentation, an older method than bottom fermentation characteristic of lager styles of beer.

Altbier has a dark copper color. It is brewed at a moderate temperature using a top-fermenting yeast which gives its flavor some fruitiness, but matured at a cooler temperature, which gives it a clean and crisp taste.

Picture: Altbier

Altbier Taverns in Düsseldorf

Today, there are 5 beer taverns (there used to be many more) in Düsseldorf which brew Altbier on the premises: (1) Füchschen, (2) Zum Uerige, (3) Schlüssel and (4) Kürzer are all located in the Altstadt (Old Town). (5) Schumacher is located between the Altstadt and the main train station (Hauptbahnhof), although it also has a tavern in the Altstadt, Goldener Kessel, directly across the street from Schlüssel.

There is no fuss over what to drink; patrons make their selections when they walk into these old public houses.

At Zum Uerige

Zum Uerige has been brewing Altbier in the heart of Düsseldorf's Altstadt since 1862. A front door brings you in off the street past a narrow room on the right stuffed with tables. Down the hall, rooms jut out on the left and some tables cling to wall space along the passageway. Each of the rooms has its own name. The need for places to seat customers has led brewery owners to carve out rooms of all shapes and sizes in the cramped buildings they occupy. You can also stand outside and drink, and the overhead heaters will keep you warm even on a frigid November evening.

Pictures: Zum Uerige in Düsseldorf

The beer is poured straight out of polished oak barrels and served with hearty local food by busy waiters in long blue aprons. Once you have been served an Altbier, the coaster under the glass serves as a tally for the number of beers consumed. The only way to stop your glass from being filled is to place the coaster on top of the glass, which tells the waiter that you do not want any beer any more.

Pictures: Zum Uerige in Düsseldorf

The waiters carry revolving trays of Altbier while collecting empty glasses on the fly. The waiters will occasionally pause to enjoy an Altbier at the customer’s expense, usually finishing it in one or two gulps.

Zum Uerige serves homemade snacks and daily specials that vary according to the season. Their famous pea soup on Saturday is a tradition. I had a “Solei mit Senf” (Pickled Egg with Mustard).

Pictures: Zum Uerige in Düsseldorf

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Vincent’s Wine Club: Winemaker Dinner with Eric Baugher and his Stunning Ridge Vineyards Wines, USA

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Picture: Winemaker Dinner with Eric Baugher and his Stunning Ridge Vineyards Wines

Ridge Vineyards is an iconic American wine producer. It has been under the direction of winemaker Paul Draper - the philosophical Grand Master of the California wine scene - since 1969. Ridge Vineyards’ international reputation was established when its 1971 Monte Bello Cabernet Sauvignon Blend achieved fifth place in the Judgment of Paris in 1976.

I had the pleasure to drink three older vintages of the Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello wine (as well as other Ridge Vineyards wines) with Eric Baugher, the # 2 in the Ridge Vineyards winemaker team. The dinner was part of the Wine Club series of Vincent Feraud, renowned Sommelier and Wine Director at the Entyse Wine Bar and Lounge of the Ritz-Carlton at Tysons Corner in the Washington DC area. Executive Chef Chris Johnson prepared a wonderful menu.

My wife Annette Schiller, ombiasyPR and WineTours, provided the tasting notes below. Annette organizes wine tours to Germany, Bordeaux and Bourgogne. Check out the ombiasy website!

Pictures: Annette and Christian Schiller with Vincent Feraud

Ridge Vineyards’ History

Ridge Vineyards dates back to 1885, when Osea Perrone, a doctor who became a prominent member of San Francisco's Italian community, bought 180 acres near the top of Monte Bello Ridge. Monte Bello Ridge is in the Santa Cruz Mountains south of San Francisco. He terraced the slopes and planted vineyards. Using native limestone, he constructed the Monte Bello Winery and produced the first vintage in 1892. This unique cellar, located at an elevation of 2,300 feet (700 m) and built into the mountainside on three levels, is Ridge Vineyard's production facility today.

The estate was abandoned during Prohibition and went through the hands of several owners until 1959, when 3 Stanford scientists pooled their money to purchase the estate. This marked the beginning of the modern area of Ridge Vineyards.

Pictures: Vincent Feraud Checking the Wines

A new winery was built out of the remains of the cellars of Osea Perrone, constructed in 1886. Ridge Vineyards produced its first commercial wine from the 1962 vintage. In 1964, Ridge Vineyards produced its first Zinfandel. Beginning in 1966, the winery began sourcing grapes for its Geyserville Zinfandel and other wines from vineyards in Sonoma County.

The modern area of Ridge Vineyards is intrinsically intertwined with the name of Paul Draper, who was hired to run Ridge Vineyards in 1969. He was in his early 30s. His devotion to old-fashioned methods provided “this balance to the world that was developing below us in Silicon Valley”, one of the owners said. Paul Draper, who studied philosophy at Stanford University, had short stints at wineries in France and California, and made wine for a couple of years in Chile. He was and still is fascinated by traditional winemaking -- he calls it "preindustrial." It is essentially due to him that Ridge Vineyards today is probably the most prestigious producer in the USA.

The 1971 Monte Bello was among the California Cabernet Sauvignons competing against Bordeaux in the famed Paris Tasting of 1976, where it placed fifth. It was the second-ranked California wine; the 1973 Stag's Leap Wine Cellars cab placed first overall.

In 1986, Ridge Vineyards was bought by a Japanese pharmaceutical company; Paul Draper stayed with Ridge Vineyards.

Ridge Vineyards shifted to organic farming in 1999.

Pictures: A Long Table.

Ridge Vineyards

Today, Ridge Vineyards produces a range of wines at two winery locations and operates tasting rooms open to the public at both. In total, Ridge Vineyards produces close to 100,000 cases of wine per vintage.

In addition to the original winery facilities on Monte Bello Ridge in the Santa Cruz Mountains AVA, a second winery is at Lytton Springs in the Dry Creek Valley AVA of Sonoma County. Ridge Vineyards purchased the Lytton Springs vineyard in the Dry Creek Valley AVA in 1991.

The Lytton Springs winery was constructed according to the principles of sustainability. It is entirely built out of presses rice straw. All energy used is solar energy and the CO2 balance sheet is very favorable.

Starting with the 2011 vintage, Ridge Vineyards adopted ingredient labeling for all its wines. Ridge Vineyards is one of only a handful of wineries that list ingredients; Bonny Doon is another. The list includes items like; indigenous yeast, naturally occurring malolactic bacteria, oak, calcium carbonate, sulfur dioxide, tartaric acid, minimum effective SO2 and egg whites.

Picture: Christian Schiller and Eric Baugher

Eric Baugher

Ridge Vineyards: Eric Baugher is Director of Winemaking at Ridge Vineyards' Monte Bello Winery in California's Santa Cruz Mountains. Eric heads the winemaking team at Ridge with Paul Draper and is involved in all winemaking decisions. A native Californian, Eric grew up on a small ranch in the Santa Cruz Mountains where he raised animals, planted gardens and orchards, and rode horses. His love of the area kept him there for college; he attended UC Santa Cruz, receiving undergraduate degrees in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. In 1994 he joined Ridge and in his first year, he organized the laboratory and developed new, sophisticated analytical tests to support Ridge's traditional winemaking practices. In 1995, he took on production management and now oversees all day-to-day winemaking activities. His passion for wine and the stimulating juxtaposition of low-tech winemaking and high-tech analytic techniques keeps him totally involved and constantly inspired.

Winemaker Dinner

Champagne Reception

Champagne and Hors d'Oeuvres


Welcome

Pictures: Vincent Feraud and Eric Baugher Welcoming us

1st Course

Crab Salad - Avocado Mousse - Tobiko Caviar - Ruby Red Grapefruit.

Ridge – Chardonnay – Santa Cruz 2012 - Wine-searcher average price in US$: 49


Whole-cluster pressed, held on its lees for close to 11 months, barrel fermented in 100% American oak, unfiltered.

Annette Schiller’s tasting notes: This is a rich, well-balanced Chardonnay, but not overly buttery and creamy. The beautiful nose shows melon, some spices, anise. It will benefit from more ageing and will become even more impeccable.

2nd Course

Paparadelle with braised Beef Shank Ragu - Spring Morels - Crispy Shank - Rosemary and Mint Pesto.

Zinfandel - Ridge Geyserville 2013 - Wine-searcher average price in US$: 38

Zinfandel - Ridge Lytton Spring 2012 - Wine-searcher average price in US$: 38

Ridge Vineyards is also famous for its Zinfandels. Many say they are the best made in the USA.

Ridge Vineyards' Zinfandels constitute the bulk of its production. Ridge Vineyards uses grapes from selected sites from all over California. We had the 2 best known Ridge Vineyards Zinfandels, from the Alexander Valley (Geyserville) (long-term leased) und the Dry Creek Valley (Lytton Springs) (owned).


Annette Schiller’s tasting notes:

2012 Zinfandel, Geyserville: This wine was made from grapes growing in the ancient deep root Alexander valley river bed. On the nose there is beautiful blackberry fruit, a hint of mint. The body is well-structured, and solid due to the addition of some Carignane, Petit Sirah, and Mouvèdre. There is noted minerality and acidity which will let this wine age for a long time.

2012 Zinfandel, Lytton Spring: Plum, dark fruit on the nose, and a bit of vanilla and mint. This wine is medium-bodied with a lot of depths, even a bit unruly, which gives it tension. It is made from 70% Zinfandel, 21% Petite Sirah, 7% Carignane and 4% Mataro (Mourvèdre). The finish is wonderful. The wine will develop its full potential in a few years.

Pictures: A Great Chef - Executive Chef Chris Johnson

3rd Course

Veal a la Rossini - Sous Vide Lamb Loin and Goat Cheese Polenta - Roasted Pork Belly - White Bean and Duck Crackling Stew.

Cabernet Sauvignon - Ridge Monte Bello – Santa Cruz Mountain 1999 - Wine-searcher average price in US$: 164

Cabernet Sauvignon - Ridge Monte Bello – Santa Cruz Mountain 1997 - Wine-searcher average price in US$: 213

Cabernet Sauvignon - Ridge Monte Bello – Santa Cruz Mountain 1995 - Wine-searcher average price in US$: 249

The signature wine of Ridge is its Monte Bello, a field blend of Cabernet Sauvignon mixed with varying percentages of other grapes grown in the same location, usually including Merlot, Petit Verdot, and occasionally Cabernet Franc. The wine is aged in a combination of 95% American Oak and 5% French oak.

There is also a second wine for Ridge Monte Bello.

Laurie Daniel: The Monte Bello style has changed little over the years, even as many California Cabernets have gotten bigger, riper and higher in alcohol. Ridge Monte Bello -- which used to be all Cabernet, but now is a Cab-dominant blend -- has remained elegant and graceful, with modest alcohol, yet the wine is remarkably concentrated and ages extremely well. Much of that is undoubtedly the result of Paul Draper, who has been in charge of winemaking at Ridge since 1969.

Monte Bello's style is also a reflection of the site where the grapes are grown. The Monte Bello vineyard is a cool one for Cabernet Sauvignon: 15 miles from the Pacific and with elevation that climbs from 1,400 feet to around 2,700. Cool nights help the grapes retain their acidity. Flavors are concentrated because the yields are naturally low. A bigger crop wouldn't get ripe because of the climate and poor soils and because most of the vines are dry-farmed.


Annette Schiller’s tasting notes:

Cabernet Sauvignon Monte Bello Santa Cruz Mountain - all three wines in this flight were impeccable, absolutely delicious, and classic Bordeaux style.

1999: This was a cool year and tannins were low at the point of harvest. Now, after 8 years, the wines showed beautiful pronounced cassis, dark fruit, minerality, some earthy tones on the nose. It was perfectly balanced, and very elegant. The finish was long lasting and let you wish for more.

1997: This was a very early ripening vintage, the earliest of the century. The nose was stunning: cassis, herbs, tobacco. A perfect wine with lots of depth, intensity and well integrated tannins. A never ending finish.

1995: This wine was the knock off for me. It was a mature wine but had aged slowly, and very gracefully: it still had a zest of youth. This 20 year old wine had it all: gorgeous nose of cassis, herbs, spices, which had come together in perfect harmony over the years. A very structured, intense, yet lean, almost athletic body. The pronounced tannins were well integrated and it had an intense, gripping finish. This was a very cool vintage which resulted in a relatively low alcohol wine. This wine only has 12.5% alcohol. I guess that was part of the reason why I liked it so much. I am more the “cool vintage”, less jammy wine lover.


Dessert

Warm Chocolate Tart - Sour Cherry Jam - Vanilla Ice Cream Brownie

Late Harvest Zinfandel – Ridge - Essence 2007


Annette Schiller’s tasting notes: A blend of 77% Zinfandel and 23% Petit Sirah. To even look at a glass of dessert wine with the color “red” made me cringe: Growing up in Germany, red sweet wines were the most horrible drinking experience you could have come across in those days. But this was a surprise: this sweet wine was a pleasant finale to a great tasting and meal. Eric Baugher explained that they harvested the grapes (not raisins as is the case in the German Beerenauslese / Trockenbeerenauslese and Sauternes) at 40 Brix and let the juice ferment on the skin for seven days. The slow fermentation continued and stopped automatically at 13.3 % Alcohol and 16.95% RS.

After-Dinner Drink

After-dinner drink at the bar with Eric Baugher.


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Germany’s Top 20 Winemakers - Der Feinschmecker WeinGuide 2015

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Picture: Winemaker Bob Berteau, Chateau Ste. Michelle in Washington State, Annette Schiller, ombiasy WineTours, Ernst Loosen, Weingut Dr. Ernst Loosen, and Christian Schiller at the Der Feinschmecker Booth in Düsseldorf at Prowein 2015

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

Der Feinschmecker, the leading German wine and food journal, presented its new ranking of the German wine scene in the Der Feinschmecker WeinGuide 2015.

The Der Feinschmecker Weinguide 2015 includes the 300 top winemakers of Germany, down from 900 last year. 20 of them (up by one from last year are in the top category of 5 F’s. The Der Feinschmecker uses a scale of 1 to 5 F’s.

For previous years see:

Germany’s Top 19 Winemakers - Der Feinschmecker WeinGuide 2014
Germany's Top 18 Winemakers - Feinschmecker WeinGuide 2013
Germany's Top 16 Winemakers - Feinschmecker WeinGuide 2012 
Germany's Top 16 Winemakers - Feinschmecker WeinGuide 2011
Germany's 15 Top Winemakers - The Feinschmecker WeinGuide 2010

Promotions and Demotions

1 winemaker was promoted to 5 F's: Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt in the Mosel Region. Nobody was demoted.

Top 20 Winemakers

Here are those winemakers that got in the Feinschmecker Weinguide 2015 the maximum number of 5 F's, grouped by wine region.

Ahr

Weingut Meyer Näkel

Weingut Meyer Näkel was established by the marriage of Paula Meyer and Willibald Näkel. Although Willibald Näkel only cultivated 1.5 hectares of vines he was already a pioneer for the then rather unusual dry red wines from the Ahr valley. Today’s 15 hectares estate is managed by his son Werner Näkel, his wife Claudia and their daughters Meike and Dőrte.

We will visit Weingut Meyer Näkel, for the first time, on the upcoming Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015) - see: 4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

Picture: Dörte Näkel and Christian Schiller in Hattenheim, Rheingau

See:
Kuenstler, Meyer-Naekel, Wirsching – Winemaker Dinner at Kronenschlösschen in Hattenheim, Rheingau, Germany

Baden

None

Franken

Rudolf Fürst

Weingut Rudolf Fürst has the reputation of being a specialist for red wines, Spätburgunder and Frühburgunder, which account for 60% of the production; but brilliant dry wines are also produced. 18.6 hectares.

We will visit Weingut Rudolf Fürst, for the first time, on the upcoming Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015) - see: 4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

Picture: Paul Fürst, Annette Schiller and Guiseppe Lauria (Gault Millau) at the 2nd International Riesling Symposium in the Rheingau (2014)

Horst Sauer

Weingut Horst Sauer is well known for his noble-sweet wines, but the Sauers also produces top dry wines, from Silvaner and Riesling. 16.5 hectares.

Hessische Bergstrasse

None

Mittelrhein

None

Mosel

Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt

First documented in 1349, Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt is one of the most traditional estates in the Mosel region. The von Kesselstatt dynasty immigrated to the electorate of Trier in the 14th century. Following secularization by Napoleon in 1802, the von Kesselstadt family purchased between 1854 and 1889 four monasteries of St. Maximin Abbey and their vineyard holdings.

Today, the estate today cultivates 36 hectares of vineyard land, consecrated exclusively to Riesling. Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt is unique in that its vineyards are equally divided among the three river valleys that form the Mosel appellation: the Mosel River valley itself, and the valleys of its two contributories, the Saar and Ruwer Rivers.

Picture: At Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt in Morscheid with Annegret Reh-Gartner

See:
Lunch and Wine Tasting at Weingut Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt in Morscheid, Mosel with Owner Annegret Reh-Gartner – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

Fritz Haag

Weingut Fritz Haag produces a broad range of styles, from dry to lusciously noble sweet wines. Weingut Fritz Haag is owned and run by Oliver Haag. In the US, it is available through Loosen Bros. (Ernst Loosen). 16.5 hectares.

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

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

Kartäuserhof

A wine estate in the Ruwer Valley, with a long tradition and an exciting history, until recently led by Christoph Tyrell; he focused on carefully crafted dry wines. A year or so ago Christoph Tyrell, who has no children and who is on his mid-60s, arranged the succession of the Karthaeuserhof with his cousin Albert Behler. Albert Behler lives in New York City, where he is President and CEO of the Paramount Group, one of the largest privately-owned real estate companies in New York City. 19 hectares.

Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller with Christoph Tyrell, Karthäuserhof, in Mainz, Germany.

For more, see:
The Karthäuserhof in the Mosel Valley: An Eventful History – From Grenoble in France to New York City in the US

Dr. Loosen

Run and owned by one of the most entrepreneurial German winemakers, Ernst Loosen; in addition to producing outstanding wines in Germany, he makes the famous Eroica in Washington State (jointly with Chateau Ste. Michelle) and has started to produce wine, notably Pinot Noir, in Oregon. 22 hectares.

Pictures: Ernst Loosen, Annette Schiller and Christian G.E.Schiller at the Tasting at Weingut Dr. Loosen

See:
Riesling, Pinot Noir and Indian Cuisine: A tête-à-tête Dinner with Winemaker Ernst Loosen, Weingut Dr. Loosen, at Rasika in Washington DC, USA
The Doctor Made a House Call - A Tasting with Ernst Loosen, Weingut Dr. Loosen, at MacArthur Beverages in Washington DC, USA

Egon Müller - Scharzhof

The legendary Scharzhof lies on the Saar River. Egon Mueller’s fruity sweet and noble sweet, low alcohol wines are a legend. 16 hectares.

Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasyPR and WineTours, and Egon Müller, Weingut Egon Müller, at the Gala Dinner of the Rieslingfeier 2015 in New York City, USA

Joh. Jos. Prüm

For decades now, one of the really exceptional winemakers in Germany. The aging potential of the Weingut J.J. Prüm wines is legendary. Katharina Prüm is in the process of taking over from her father Manfred Pruem. 21 hectares.

I met Manfred's daughter Katharina Pruem in Washington DC recently and wrote about Weingut JJ Pruem: JJ Pruem Goes Supermarket: Meeting Katharina Pruem and Tasting the Incredible JJ Pruem Wines at Wegmans

We will visit Weingut J.J. Prüm on the upcoming Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015) - see: 4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux

Picture: Annette Schiller, Ombiasy PR and WineTours, with Manfred Pruem, Weingut JJ Pruem.

Sankt Urbans-Hof

A rather young wine estate that was established about 50 years ago. It is now owned and run by the founder’s grandson, Nik Weis. Most of the elegant, fine and light wines are exported. 33 hectares.

We will visit Weingut Sankt Urbans-Hof on the upcoming Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015) - see: 4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux 

Picture: Nik and Daniela Weis and Annette and Christian Schiller at Prowein 2014

Maximin Grünhaus - Von Schubert

The historic Maximin Grünhaus estate lies at the foot of a long, steep south-facing slope on the left bank of the Ruwer river and is divided into three separate but contiguous vineyards: Abtsberg, Herrenberg, and Bruderberg. The estate belongs to the family of Carl von Schubert. The estate was first documented in 966. The Schubert family purchased it in 1882.

Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller and Carl von Schubert in Washington DC

See:
Carl von Schubert from the Maximin Gruenhaus Estate Returned a Favor: With his Wines in Washington DC (and in Seattle), USA

Schloss Lieser

The village Lieser is located next to Bernkastel-Kues. The village’s landmark is the mighty castle “Schloss Lieser”, built in 1875 and inhabited by the Baron of Schorlemer. In 1904 the winery of Schloss Lieser was constructed. Over the years, several changes of ownership led to a decline in quality. In 1992, Thomas Haag, son of Wilhelm Haag, former proprietor of Weingut Fritz Haag, became the General Manager, bought the estate in 1997 and brought the estate of Schloss Lieser back to the top of the Riesling estates in Germany. 10 hectares.

Picture: Thomas Haag, Weingut Schloss Lieser, and Christian G.E. Schiller in Mainz. Thomas Haag, Weingut Schloss Lieser, is the 2015 Gault Millau Deutschland Winemaker of the Year

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

Nahe

Herrmann Dönnhoff

Owner and winemaker Helmut Doennhoff is a Grand Seigneur of German wine. His son Cornelius is in the process of taking over. 25 hectares.

Picture: Tasting with Helmut Doennhoff

See:
An Afternoon with Riesling Star Winemaker Helmut Doennhoff at Weingut Doennhoff in Oberhausen in the Nahe Valley, Germany

Emrich-Schönleber

Werner Schönleber has invested a great deal of personal dedication and his promotion to the top rank is definitely warranted. His wines are known to be rich in character and highly esteemed worldwide. 17 hectares.

Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller and Werner Schönleber, Weingut Emrich-Schönleber at the 2013 Riesling Gala at Kloster Eberbach, Germany

Schäfer - Fröhlich

Tim Fröhlich took over Weingut Schäfer-Fröhlich in 1995 and has since then impressed the wine world with his dry, fruity -sweet and noble sweet white wines. 15 hectares.

Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller with Tim Froehlich, Weingut Schaefer-Froehlich, in Wiesbaden

Pfalz

Knipser

A world class producer of both dry white and red wines. Werner Knipser has been experimenting with international red grape varieties for some years. Virtually all wines are fermented in a dry style. 57 hectares.

Rheingau

Künstler

As a founding member of the Weinfreundeskreis Hochheim, I have watched Weingut Kuenstler in Hochheim ising from a small winery to one of the world leaders of German wine. The wine growing tradition of the Künstler family can be traced back to Southern Moravia in 1648. I remember very well the small row house in Hochheim that was the initial home of the Kuenstler winery in Hochheim. 42 hectares.

Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller with Gunter Kuenstler at Schloss Johnnisberg. Weingut Kuenstler was founded by my the late Franz Kuenstler. We were both founding members of the Weinfreundeskreis Hochheim: The Wines of Franz Kuenstler from Hochheim, Rheingau, Germany

See:
Vineyard Walk, Cellar Tour and Wine Tasting at Weingut Künstler– Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Robert Weil

A top producer of Riesling wines, in particular fruity sweet and noble sweet wines, well presented in the major wine markets in the world. Now co-owned by the Japanese Suntory company and General Manager Wilhelm Weil, the fourth generation of the founding family. 80 hectares.

Picture: Christian G.E.Schiller, Martina Weil, Annette Schiller, Wilhelm Weil at the 2013 Rheingau Riesling Gala

See:
Kiedrich: Visit of the Basilica of Saint Valentine and of Weingut Robert Weil - Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)
Visiting Wilhelm Weil at his Weingut Robert Weil in Kiedrich, Germany

Rheinhessen

Keller

Leader of the Rheinhessen wine renaissance. Has a broad wine portfolio with 60 % accounted for by Riesling and also including the lesser known autochthon Silvaner as well as Spaetburgunder. 15 hectares.

Picture: At the Rieslingfeier Gala Dinner 2015 in New York, with Julia and Klaus Peter Keller

Wittmann

Leader of the Rheinhessen wine renaissance. Since 2003 only biodynamic wine growing. A broad portfolio with 60% Riesling and also Silvaner and Spaetburgunder. Known for his outstanding dry wines. 25 hectares.

Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasy WineTours, and Christian Schiller with Philipp Wittmann and Eva Clüsserath-Wittmann at Prowein 2015

See:
Weingut Wittmann now with Dr. Loosen Imports in the USA

Saale-Unstrut

None

Sachsen

None

Wüerttemberg

None

schiller-wine: Related Postings

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Wine Tasting at Weingut Weegmüller with Stephanie and Gabriele Weegmüller – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

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Pictures: Annette Schiller at Weingut Weegmüller

“Die Welt trifft sich bei Weegmüllers” – “The World Meets at the Weegmüllers”. This is the slogan of Weingut Weegmüller in the Pfalz, Germany, headed by a female winemaker, Stephanie Weegmüller, with the help of her sister, Gabriele Weegmüller. The Weegmüller girls sell most of their wine in the region and in Germany, but have quite an impressive presence in New York City, where they are represented by the Moore Brothers.

Like the year before, we sat down in the courtyard of Weingut Weegmüller and had a lovely tasting with Stephanie and Gabriele Weegmüller.

Pictures: Arriving at Weingut Weegmüller

Feinschmecker Riesling Cup 2014

The Feinschmecker Riesling Cup 2014, an annual contest that aims at identifying the best dry Riesling of the vintage, went to Weingut Weegmüller 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.

See: Germany’s Best Dry Rieslings – Feinschmecker Riesling Cup 2014

Pictures: Welcome

Weingut Weegmüller

The Weegmüller family can look back to more than 300 years of winemaking in the Pfalz. The origins of the Weegmüller family, an old dynasty of council members of the free town of Zuerich, lies in Switzerland. In 1657, the Weegmüllers came to the village of Haardt, today a part of the city of Neustadt an der Weinstrasse, and started to make wine in 1685.

One of the first women in the field, Stefanie Weegmueller, is at the helm of the estate. She was among the first women in Germany to set foot in the male-dominated winemaking industry. Today, Stefanie Weegmüller is one of Germany’s leading winemakers, representing the 12th generation of her family’s ownership of the estate. She consistently produces classic wines that are eloquent in their expression of the unique terroir of the Mittelhaardt.

Until a few years ago, Stefanie's ex-husband Richard Scherr was in charge of the vineyard. Today, Rainer Klein und Fabian Krämer are responsible for the vineyard work. They practice what they call ecological viticulture and yields are kept low.

The dominating grape variety is Riesling. 15 hectares of best vineyards around Haardt - Haardter Herrenletten, Haardter Gimmeldingen and Haardter Mussbach - belong to the estate. Though dominated by Riesling, Weingut Weegmueller also makes Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, Scheurebe and Gewuerztraminer. The wine portfolio is complemented by Pinot Noir, Merlot and Dornfelder.


Tasting

We went through 13 Weegmüller wines.


2012 Weegmüller Rose
2013 Weegmüller Weisser Burgunder
2013 Weegmüller Blanc de Noir - Tiny bit of Merlot, mostly Pinot Noir
2013 Weegmüller Scheurebe – lots of grapefruit notes, pear, other yellow fruits
2013 Weegmüller Cuvee 3 Schwestern - 1/3 Scheurebe, 1/3 Pinot Gris, 1/3 Pinot Blanc
2013 Weegmüller Cuvee Fleur – 20% Gewürztraminer, 5% Silvaner, 75% Riesling
2013 Weegmüller Cuvee Grüner Veltliner
2013 Weegmüller Der Mineralische - Limestone
2012 Weegmüller Bürgergarten Gewürztraminer
2012 Weegmüller Herrenletten Grauer Burgunder
2012 Weegmüller Herrenletten Riesling
2012 Weegmüller Märchenzauber Scheurebe Spätlese – 7.5% alc., 80gr. rs
2013 Weegmüller Von den 14 Zeilen Auslese

Pictures: Checking the Sugar Level in the Grape Juice with a Refractometer

Weingut Weegmüller in the USA: Moore Brothers

Weingut Weegmüller wines are available in the USA through Moore Brothers on the US East Coast: Founded in 1685, Weingut Weegmüller is the oldest winegrowing estate in the Pfalz, older even than the big “three Bs” (von Bassermann-Jordan, von Buhl, and Bürklin-Wolf). Gaby and Stefanie Weegmüller represent the eleventh generation of winegrowing Weegmüllers in Neustadt. There are sixteen hectares of vines, with parcels in all of the best vineyards in the villages of Haardt, Gimmelding, Neustadt, and Mußbach. When Steffi took over winemaking responsibility from her father in 1984, she had an enviable advantage: a close, familial friendship with Hans-Günther Schwarz, the long-time general manager of Weingut Müller-Catoir, and the godfather of an entire generation of the best young German winegrowers. It helped that Müller-Catoir is directly next door to Weegmüller, so it was easy for Hans-Günther to walk across the courtyard to taste and offer advice, and sometimes to lend a hand.

Picture: Gabriele Weegmüller and Christian G.E. Schiller in New York City

See:
Schiller’s Favorites at the 2013 Riesling and Co Tasting in New York City, USA

Moore Brothers currently offers 3 Weegmüller wines:

Haardter Herrenletten Alte Reben Riesling Spatlese Trocken Weingut Weegmüller 2012
While the Herrenletten - a first class vineyard just a half kilometer north of Neustadt, comprises a mere thirtieth of Stefanie's production, its excellent southern exposure and its soil (sand and clay over deep slate) has produced some of her most memorable wines. This Spätlese trocken from the Alte Reben (vines 30 and 40 years old) is no exception. Rich and textured, it displays the complex aromatics of classic Pfalz wine: dried apricot, nut, smoke and spice.

2012 Weingut Weegmuller Riesling Vom Gelben Fels
“Vom Gelben Fels, a special selection of dry, spätlese grapes from Mandelring, Herrenletten, and Herzog -- the three greatest vineyards in all of the Haardt -- may be Steffi's most exclusive dry Riesling. This wine "from the yellow rocks" is marked by fresh, forward, peach and citrus aromas and a bright, vibrant finish.” Greg Moore, Moore Brothers Wine Company, June 26, 2013.

2012 Weingut Weegmuller Pfalz Scheurebe Trocken
Her Scheurebe Trocken is aromatically intense (redolent of apricots and lemongrass) with a fine, vibrant core of acid.

Bye-bye

Thank you Stefanie and Gabriele Weegmüller for a wonderful tasting.


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From Millésime Bio in Montpellier, France, to Bistro Bis in Washington DC, USA: Gérard Dupuy and his Château Beausejour in AOC Puisseguin-Saint-Emilion

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Picture:  Gérard Dupuy and Annette Schiller at Bistro Bis in Washington DC, USA

This is a posting by Annette Schiller, ombiasyPR and WineTours.

Gérard Dupuy and his Château Beausejour

Ever heard of Gérard Dupuy and his Château Beausejour in AOC Puisseguin-Saint-Emilion? Probably not. Unless, perhaps, you are into organic wines.

Château Beauséjour does not belong to the roughly 300 classified Bordeaux Châteaux, where the wines sell en primeur for 50 to 500 Euros per bottle. Château Beauséjour is one of the other 30,0000 producers that are not in the limelight and that make so called Petits Bordeaux wines. These producers have to struggle against the competition of wines from all over the world, including the New World. Many of these Petits Bordeaux producers are hidden gems and make excellent wines with an extremely good price/quality ratio.

One fantastic winemaker is Gérard Dupuy. I first met Gérard in 2010 at the Millésime Bio in Montpellier. The Millésime Bio is the world’s largest trade fair for organic and biodynamic wines, held annually at the end of January in Montpellier, in the south of France.

I tasted Gérard’s wines, was immediately impressed, and somehow his and my philosophy clicked. His wines impressed me so much that I included him in my wine tour to Bordeaux, which I organized in 2012 for a German Winebrotherhood. This group of true wine connoisseurs was as fond of his wines as I was and ever since the yearly ombiasy PR Wine Tour to Bordeaux includes a stop at Château Beauséjour. Besides visiting top classified Châteaux I insist of showing the group a broader perspective of Bordeaux and that there are gorgeous wines out there that everybody can afford. When I do my yearly visit to Château Beauséjour with my wine tour group Gérard and Claire not just show us the vineyards and cellars, they also organize a fantastic multi course luncheon deliciously matched to their wines – the group always loves it and very much appreciates Gérard’s wines. Cyril Mercier, a friend of Claire and Gérard is a gifted chef and prepares the meal.

Now, I was thrilled to meet Gérard at Bistro Bis in Washington DC, where he participated in a wine tasting to launch his wines on the American market.

Picture:  Gérard Dupuy and Annette and Christian Schiller at Bistro Bis in Washington DC, USA

Millésime Bio in 2010 

It has been five years since I met Gérard and my account about the Millésime Bio in 2010 still holds true today:” … after the workshop on my stop at the Château Beauséjour table, a heated discussion arose on the subject of how to preserve wines. Gérard Dupuy, the owner defended the European tradition allowing a limited amount of added sulfites in organic and biodynamic wines. He pointed to the challenge for small wineries wanting to become organic by having to bow to rules that require certain technical procedures.

Picture: Annette Schiller at Millésime Bio in 2010in Montepellier, France

The Château Beauséjour in Puisseguin in the Saint-Emilion region of Bordeaux has always refused to use chemical treatment on soil, vines and in the cellar since Alain Dupuy, Gérard’s father adopted a winemaking procedure respectful of protecting nature in 1947. For fermentation autochthonous yeast strains for many centuries adapted to the environment are used. The vineyards are planted with 75% Merlot, 25% Cabernet Franc and 5% Cabernet Sauvignon. I loved the wines; they clearly were children of the terroir with a typical Merlot bouquet, a hearty soul reflecting the chalky soil, a substantial body and a lingering finish.”

Château Beauséjour

Gérard Dupuy is owner of Château Beauséjour, located on the fringes of the village of Puisseguin, where his mother still lives, and Château Langlais where Claire and he live. Both properties belong to the AOC Puisseguin-Saint-Emilion. He owns vineyards in Castillon where he produces the Domaine de la Grande Courraye, AOC Castillon-Côtes de Bordeaux (red)), and in 2010 he bought vineyards in Bergerac, where he produces the Clos du Moulin – AOC Bergerac (red and white). The winemaking facilities are at Château Beauséjour and all wines are made here. All vineyards are farmed biodynamically and he has a hands-off, natural approach in the cellar. I quote Gérard: “The refusal of chemical treatments at our winery dates back to their appearance on the market after 1945. We practice the total grass cover. This method allows regulating the ecosystem in a monoculture, while limiting soil erosion. In our vineyards, wild tulips thrive in the vineyard rows in the spring. In the cellar, we use a minimalist approach. Our wines are aged for a period of 12 to 24 months in oak barrels.”

All wines are certified organic by ECOCERT. Ecocert is an inspection and certification body established in France in 1991. Ecocert has developed its own international network. With 23 offices and subsidiaries, Ecocert operates and offers its services in over 80 countries.

Gérard owns a total of 47 ha of vineyards, which amounts to about 115 acres. In 2015 he produced:
Château Langlais: 70,000 btl, Château Beauséjour: 90,000 btl, Domaine de la Grande Courraye: 25,000 btl, Clos du Moulin: 30,000 btl red, 8,000 btl white

Pictures:  With ombiasy WineTours at Château Beauséjour in 2012

See:
Lunch at Château Beauséjour (AOC Puisseguin-St. Emilion)– a Vin Bio de Bordeaux - with Owner and Wine Maker Gerard Dupuy, France 
Bordeaux Trip September 2012, France

Some Background Information on the AOCs

There are 4 so called satellites of the AOC Saint-Emilion, which do not have the classification system of the AOC Saint-Emilion. They are all located to the north of the town of Saint-Emilion. The 4 satellites are:

AOC Puisseguin-Saint-Emilion; AOC Saint-Georges-Saint-Emilion; AOC Montagne-Saint-Emilion; AOC Lussac-Saint-Emilion.

The AOC Puisseguin-Saint-Emilion lies at the heart of the four satellite titles of the Saint-Emilion appellation. The grape varieties permitted are Merlot, Malbec, Cabernet Franc, and Cabernet Sauvignon. Thus, Puisseguin-Saint-Emilion produces only red wines. Merlot is predominant, most often partnered with Cabernet Franc.

To qualify for the Puisseguin-St. Emilion appellation, wines must contain a minimum of 11% alcohol and come from vineyards planted to a density of less than 5500 vines per hectare. Puisseguin-Saint-Emilion was granted AOC status in 1936. 753 hectares of vine planted areas belong to the appellation.

AOC Castillon-Côtes de Bordeaux lies east of the village of Saint-Emilion and north of the town of Castillon. Castillon-Côtes de Bordeaux is an appellation for red wines only.

The dominant grape variety is Merlot (70%). Cabernet-Franc (20%) and Cabernet-Sauvignon (10%) account for the rest.

Castillon-Côtes de Bordeaux was recognized AOC only recently (1989). For a long time the wines of Castillon were only used as complementary alternatives to enhance Saint-Emilion blendings in poor years. Until 2009, these wines were sold as Côtes de Castillon. In 2009, the Côtes de Castillon appellation was merged with several other Bordeaux Côtes to form the new Côtes de Bordeaux title.

Gérard Dupuy’s mother and his sister joined us for the reception. Claire joined us for the reception and lunch, and guided us through the wine tasting.

Pictures: With ombiasy WineTours at Château Beauséjour in 2013

See:
Tour, Tasting and Lunch at Organic Château Beausejour in AOC Puisseguin-St.Emilion, France
Bordeaux Wine Tour 2013 by ombiasy

Castillon has grown from around 2,450 hectares in 1982 to 3,250 today. During the last 25 years, several growers of Saint-Emilion, Pomerol, and other famous areas have recognized the Castillon-Côtes de Bordeaux’s potential and invested in local vineyards. One of them is Count Stephan von Neipperg, owner of the classified Château Canon-La Gaffelière in Saint-Emilion, (whom we also visit on the ombiasy PR Wine Tour to Bordeaux) who acquired Château d'Aiguilhe.

AOC Bergerac borders the Bordeaux wine region to the east and is situated around the town of Bergerac. There are about 30,000 acres of vineyards and the Bergerac area contains 13 AOCs for red, white and rosé wines. Red grape varieties planted are: Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot, a little bit of Côt, Fer Servadou, Mérille. The main white grape varieties are: Sémillon, Sauvignon Blanc, Sauvignon Gris, Muscadelle. Some Ugni Blanc, Ondenc, and Chenin Blanc can also be found here.

The Wines Gérard Poured in Washington DC

Pictures: Tasting in Washington DC

1) Clos du Moulin – AOC Bergerac (white) 2011

When I came to Puisseguin in 2012, Gérard offered some oysters and a white wine. I liked the wine and asked, where the wine was from. With a mischievous grin he said: from here. That took me by surprise since he could only produce red wines from his vineyards as far as I knew. Then he explained with his dry humor that he loves oysters and that he simply wants a good wine in his cellar to go with his oysters. So, he bought vineyards in the AOC Bergerac to make his own white wine for his oysters.

This Clos du Moulin white is a blend of 40% Sémillon 40% Muscadelle 20% Sauvignon Blanc. It was aged one year in new barrique, but the wood was already very well integrated at this point. The Muscadelle gave it a floral note on the nose, which was surprisingly restrained and never overbearing. This wine had a lot of character with volume in the mouth, a nice integrated acidity and lots of potential to age beautifully.

2) Clos du Moulin – AOC Bergerac 2012

This entry level red is a blend of 65% Merlot and 35% Cabernet Sauvignon. 2012 was a good vintage in the Bergerac and this wine is a pleasant every day wine, hearty but with a certain softness, ready to drink now. The nose of dark cherry, plum was beautiful, the finish lingering on.


3) Domaine de la Grande Courraye – AOC Castillon - Côtes de Bordeaux 2012

This wine was a tough cookie to taste. The nose was gorgeous: dark berries, cassis, leather, wet leaves, but this blend of 70% Merlot and 30% Cabernet Franc was unruly on the palate. It had not come together yet and the pronounced tannins left your mouth dry. However this wine will benefit from age, the tannins will soften, the good structure will harmonize, and it will be a wonderful, bold wine with a lot of character after a couple more years in the cellar.

4) Château Langlais – AOC Puisseguin Saint-Emilion 2012

This beautiful blend of 70% Merlot, 25% Cabernet Franc, 5% Cabernet Sauvignon was gorgeous on the nose: fruity, red berries, herbs, only a hint of spice. This medium-bodied wine was already very balanced, round, with the soft tannins well integrated. It already developed a beautiful ripeness and was good to drink now. However this wine also has a great ageing potential and will give you even more pleasure after a couple of years in the cellar.


5) Château Beauséjour - Cuvée Spéciale - AOC Puisseguin Saint-Emilion 2012

This wine was a very nice interpretation of the terroir of weathered rock and chalky clay where the grapes were sourced from. The unusual blend of 70% Merlot and 30% Cabernet Franc made this wine robust, but at the same time the tannins were already very well integrated, and the wine was very elegant and well balanced on the palate. The nose was expressive with plum, dark cherries, a hint of chocolate.

6) Château Beauséjour – Old Vines - AOC Puisseguin Saint-Emilion 2010

This wine was the knock off for me. The color in the glass was pitch dark, the nose of dark berries, spices, herbal notes was bewitching. This wine is a blend of 50% Merlot and 50% Cabernet Franc. On the palate the wine had tension, but at the same time was gloriously harmonious with an endless finish. It was matured for 24 months in new oak and produced with almost no intervention. It was a very authentic wine reflecting at its best what is called ‘terroir’. The grapes came from 80 year old vines, planted in 1936 by Gérard’s grandfather. Harvest was at a very low yield of 30 hl / ha, and only 9,000 btl were produced.


7) Château Langlais – AOC Puisseguin Saint-Emilion 2000

This wine is the same blend and from the same terroir than #4: only - it is 12 years older, and shows the potential of the Dupuy wines. In a nut shell: a gorgeous well aged, but still youth full example of a right bank Saint-Emilion wine.

Gérard Dupuy's Wines in the US

All Dupuy wines show the script of Gérard’s philosophy of winemaking: biodynamic viticulture practices in the vineyard to be able to interpret the terroir as closely as possible and as little intervention as possible in the cellar to create wonderful authentic wines.

I am very much looking forward to be able to buy these great wines here in the US instead of schlepping a few precious bottles back in my suitcase.

Pictures: With Marcel's Sommelier Moez Ben Achour and Chef Paul Stearman. Marcel ist one of the top Restaurants in Washington DC.

schiller-wine: Related Postings

Bordeaux Trip September 2012, France

Bordeaux Wine Tour 2013 by ombiasy

Lunch at Place de L’Eglise Monolithe in Saint Emilion and Visits of 3 Châteaux: Tertre Roteboeuf, Figeac and Beausejour

Vin Bio de Bordeaux - At Château Beauséjour in AOC Puisseguin-St.Emilion, France

Lunch at Château Beauséjour (AOC Puisseguin-St. Emilion)– a Vin Bio de Bordeaux - with Owner and Wine Maker Gerard Dupuy, France

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

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Vintage 2012 Bouchard Père et Fils Tasting at Ripple in Washington DC, USA – With Tasting Notes by Annette Schiller  

Pure Chablis – A tête-à-tête Dinner in Washington DC at Marcel’s with Chablis Wine Board President and Winemaker Jean-François Bordet, Domaine Séguinot-Bordet, USA/France

Dinner at Restaurant Chateau de la Barge in Creches sur Saone in Burgundy, France

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

WeinKulturBar in Dresden, Saxony: One of the Best Wine Bars in Germany

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Picture: Host Silvio Nitzsche WeinKulturBar in Dresden

“Dresden Is the New Unlikely Place for Fine Barolo Wine” is the title of a Newsweek article that appeared on April 17, 2015 about a Saxon Barolo made by Martin Schwarz: Until recently, Nebbiolo grapes grew only in regions like Piedmont in northern Italy. Saxony, bordering Poland and the Czech Republic, is Germany’s smallest wine region, and for eight centuries vintners here have mostly planted Müller-Thurgau and Riesling, earning a well-deserved reputation for excellent dry whites. But with climate change pushing temperatures up, Schwarz decided to try out the red Italian Nebbiolo grape here in Radebeul outside Dresden.

Few people have Dresden on their map, when they talk about Nebbiolo. And few people have Dresden on their map, when they talk about wine bars. But: On its web site, the German sparkling water producers Gerolsteiner provides a list of the 18 best wine places in Germany; one of the 18 is the WeinKulturBar in Dresden, owned and run by the former Sommelier Silvio Nitzsche. Not only that, but you also find the WeinKulturBar on Stuart Pigott’s list of his 2013 favorites published in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung; the WeinKulturBar is the #1 in the category wine bars.

Picture: Annette Schiller, ombiasy WineTours, in front of the Semper Opera House

Although I was borne in Dresden, it is not a city where I have spent much time in my life. A few weeks ago, I was there to assist my wife Annette Schiller to prepare her Germany-East Art and Wine Tour by ombiasy WineTours. We visited the 3 Saxon wineries that will be part of the tour – Weingut Zimmerling, Weingut Karl Aust, and Weingut Schloss Poschwitz. In the process, we had an impromptu late afternoon bite at WeinKulturBar and a chance to meet the owner Silvio Nitzsche.

See:
Coming-up: Wine & Art Tour to Saale-Unstrut - Saxony - Franken - Württemberg: Germany-East Tour by ombiasy WineTours (June 11 - June 20, 2015)
Preview: Germany-East Wine and Art Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

WeinKulturBar

WeinKulturBar has about 20 seats. This is not much, but enough for host Sivio Nitzsche. He spends a lot of time with his guest, talking about the food and the wine he serves, guiding them through the evening.

My American friends would say, service is unpleasantly slow. My German friends would very much appreciate the relaxed atmosphere at WeinKulturbar and the complete absence of any pressure often found in American bars and restaurants to push up the turn-over.

Pictures: WeinKulturBar

We arrived early, at 4 pm and left at 5:30 pm, as we had an appointment with Winemaker Karl Friedrich Aust, Weingut Aust in Radebeul. One other table was taken. Silvio Nitzsche says he is pretty much booked out in the evening for the rest of the year and far into 2016.

Pictures: After our Visit of the WeinKulturBar at Weingut Karl Friedrich Aust

The wine list is not the usual kind of list with say 10 or 20 sheets and 50 to 100 wines you often find in other wine bars. It is a book with 250 pages and about 1000 wines. With wines from Germany but also from around the world up to the 4 digit (in Euro) price category. Clients are invited to comment on the wines in the wine list/book. The wine list/book is a piece of art.

Pictures: Silvio Nitzsche and Annette Schiller

Silvio Nitzsche also gives you a green sheet on which you find:

First, one one site, you find 25 wines by the glass, with detailed descriptions. When we were there, 5 wines were from Germany, including 1 wine from Saxony. I chose a Weingut Leitz Riesling. Annette chose a Müller-Thurgau from Weingut Martin Schwartz (see Newsweek article above).

Second, one the other site, there is a column with 8 different flights of 3 wines. One was a flight of 3 Grosses Gewächs wines, Germany’s ultra-premium dry grand cru wines. Another flight were 3 Robert Mondavi Cabernet Sauvignons from 1995, 1992 and 1998. You could also choose a flight from one grape variety, but different wine styles. Finally, in the “Wundertüten” flight you get 3 wine served in black glasses; Silvio will then conduct a blind tasting with you and steer you to the 3 wines you have in the glasses.

Pictures: Slivio Nitzsche and Christian Schiller

Third, there is another column divided into 2 parts: In the upper half a look back at important events in world history of the day of your visit (remember that the green sheet changes daily) and in the lower half a short list of small dishes, including a few soups and cakes.

Finally, for those who do not want to drink wine, Silvio Nitzsche also carries an interesting selection teas and fruit juices.

Vast Cheese Selection

In addition to an amazing choice of wines, there is a vast selection of cheeses. You can choose among up to 100 different cheeses from around the world: Small plate with 4 to 6 g pieces for Euro 7,50; normal plate with 8 to 10 pieces for Euro 13 and large plate with 20 pieces for Euro 25. Responsible for the cheese is Jana Weiske.

We ordered a normal plate and let Silvio make the selection. When he served the cheese, he gave a long talk about which cheeses he had selected and why, and in which order we should eat the cheeses and why. Before the cheese, other little plates arrived. Silvio invited us to try the different cheeses with different accompagnements.

Pictures: Cheese

Silvio Nitzsche

Silvio Nitzsche was borne in Altdöbern near Berlin. After earning the degree of an Hotelfachmann in 1994, he moved around in Germany and the world. In 1998, he took a job as sommelier at the Elderberry House in Oakhurst/CA. After the stint in the USA, he was for 5 years the Head-Sommelier of Dieter Müller’s 3 star Michelin restaurant at the Schlosshotel Lerbach. Eventually, he returned to his roots and opened in 2007 WeinKulturBar in Dresden, his dream! Very soon, his WeinKulturBar became one of the hotspots of the region and the whole of Germany, when it comes to wine.

Roswitha Nitzsche and Genussmensch

Silvio Nitzsche is married to Roswitha Nitzsche, also a Sommelier and also from the region (she was borne in Halle). They have a little son togather. She also owns and runs a wine bar in Dresden. Just recently, she moved to a new location (Bischofsweg 17). I have not yet been there but I believe the idea behind her “Genussmensch” is not too different from the idea behind her husband’s WeinKulturBar. She offers 400 wines from around the world. The Genussmensch is open from Thursday to Saturday from 11 am to 10 pm and serves lunch. Roswitha Nitzsche also runs a wine school at Genussmensch.

Annette Schiller: Best Wine Bar in the World

Above I mentioned that WeinKulturBar is one of the best wine bars in Germany. Annette Schiller goes one step further: This is the best wine bar in the world. I have visited quite a number of wine bars around the globe but I have never encountered such a perfect harmony between cheese and wine in any other place. The cheese selection is broad and deep as is the wine portfolio. Coupled with Silvio’s profound knowledge of them and his charm, he guides you skillfully and relaxed through the exciting world of wine and cheese.

schiller-wine: Related Postings

Coming-up: Wine & Art Tour to Saale-Unstrut - Saxony - Franken - Württemberg: Germany-East Tour by ombiasy WineTours (June 11 - June 20, 2015)

Preview: Germany-East Wine and Art Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

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

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Taverns in Trier, Germany

Schiller's Favorite (Wine-) Restaurants in Deidesheim in the Pfalz, Germany

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Bars in Frankfurt am Main, Germany

Schiller's Favorite Wine Bars in Berlin, Germany

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Bordeaux Rendezvous in Washington DC: Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015

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Picture: Christian Schiller with Pierre Lurton, Château Cheval Blanc and Château d’Yquem, and Alfred Tesseron, Château Pontet-Canet, at Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015

Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction is an annual four-day celebration in Washington DC, USA, bringing together winemakers, celebrity chefs, gourmands, and wine enthusiasts to raise money for the American Heart Association. It is very much Bordeaux-centered, although American winemakers also participate.

Pictures:  Christian and Annette Schiller at Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015. Hopefully, next year we will have a German Riesling producer participating in the event.

The events are not cheap, but high-class and tax deductible (partly). Over the past 13 years, the events have raised over $11 million for the American Heart Association, helping to support research into the number one cause of death in the United States.

Pictures: Item #508 - Seven Day WineTour to German Wine Country, Donated by Annette Schiller and ombiasyPR and WineTours

See: Seven Day Wine Tour to German Wine Country: Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction (2015), Washington DC, USA 

This year, Heart’s Delight took place from Wednesday, April 22 to Saturday, April 25, 2015. As in previous years, there were exciting dinners with celebrity chefs and winemakers at embassies, private homes and top restaurants, tastings, receptions, after-dinner-parties as well as auctions.

A dozen or so wine top producers from Bordeaux are always at the center of Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction. This year, Pierre Lurton of Château Cheval Blanc and Château d’Yquem was the star of the Heart’s Delight Vintners Dinner. But there was also a group of American wine producers, including Michael Silacci from Opus One in Oakville, California.

Program

Wednesday April 22 was the United States of Wine celebration showcasing American wine. A range of American wines were presented by owners and winemakers (see below). It included a silent and live auction featuring wine from participating winemakers and exciting trips. This was followed by a byo - style Collectors Dinner celebration. Each guest shared a bottle from his/her cellar in an attempt to impress and outdo their fellow diners. In this friendly competition, there are no losers.

Thursday April 23 offered a series of intimate wine dinners with an international flair in homes, restaurants and Embassies with a host, chef and winemaker at each.

 Pictures: Impressions from Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015 (Source: Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015)

Friday April 24 featured an exclusive Vintners Dinner and highlighting the wines of Château Cheval Blanc and Château d’Yquem, presented by Pierre Lurton. The dinner was followed by a live auction led by Sotheby’s Jamie Ritchie featuring wine directly from the cellars of the Bordeaux producers in grand format.

Saturday April 25 began with a virtual tour of Bordeaux including a unique Master Class tasting of the 2012 vintage and an older vintage selected by the visiting Château owners and wine directors. The adventure continued with exciting seminars and food prepared by some of the nation’s top chefs, making Heart’s Delight the place to discover the latest in epicurean trends and new talent.

During the Grand Tasting Reception guests had the opportunity to bid on exclusive travel packages, dining experiences and rare and exceptional wines during the spirited silent and live auctions.

The Wine Makers: Bordeaux

Château Cheval Blanc and Château d’Yquem, Pierre Lurton

Picture: Christian Schiller and Pierre Lurton, Château Cheval Blanc and Château d’Yquem, at Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015

Château Clerc Milon, Pauillac, Jean-Emmanuel Danjoy

Château Cos d’Estournel, Saint-Estèphe, Aymeric de Gironde

Château Coutet, Barsac-Sauternes, Dominique Baly

Picture: Dominique Baly, Château Coutet, and Bernard Burtschy, Le Figaro, Paris, at Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015

Château Guiraud, Sauternes, David Ornon

Château Haut-Bailly, Pessac-Léognan, Daina Paulin

Picture: Daina Paulin, Haut-Bailly, Pessac-Léognan,at Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015

Picture: With Daina Paulin at Château Haut-Bailly in 2013

See also:
Wine Dinner at Château Haut-Bailly, Cru Classé de Graves, France

Château Lafon-Rochet, Saint-Estèphe, Lucas Leclercq

Picture: Lucas Leclercq, Château Lafon-Rochet, at Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015

Picture: With Owner Basile Tesseron and Winemaker Lucas Leclercq at Château Lafon-Rochet in 2013

See also:
A Tour and Tasting at Château Lafon-Rochet in Saint-Estèphe, Bordeaux, with Winemaker and Owner Basile Tesseron (2013), France

Château Lynch-Bages, Pauillac, Kinou Cazes-Hachemian

Picture: Christian Schiller and Kinou Cazes-Hachemian, Château Lynch-Bages, at Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015

Picture: Christian Schiller with Jean-Charles Cazes, Owner of Lynch-Bages, at Château Lynch-Bages in Bages in 2013

See also:
Tour and Tasting at Château Lynch-Bages in Bages, Bordeaux, France

Château Malartic-Lagravière, Pessac-Léognan, Bruno Laplane

Picture: Bruno Laplane, Château Malartic-Lagravière, Pessac-Léognan, at Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015

Château Phélan Ségur, Saint-Estèphe, Véronique Dausse

Picture: Véronique Dausse, Château Phélan Ségur, Saint-Estèphe, at Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015

Château Pontet-Canet, Pauillac, Alfred Tesseron

Picture: Alfred Tesseron, Château Pontet-Canet, Pauillac, at Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015

Pictures: Tasting and Chatting with Alfred Tesseron at Château Pontet-Canet, Pauillac, in 2013

See also:
Tour and Tasting at Château Pontet-Canet, with Owner Alfred Tesseron, Bordeaux

Château Troplong Mondot, Saint-Emilion, Myriam Ruer

The Wine Makers: US

Addax Wines, Napa, California, Brian Kearnes

Banshee Wines, Sonoma County, California, Noah Dorrance

Domain Drouhin Oregon, Willamette Valley, Oregon, David Millan

Early Mountain Vineyards, Madison, Virginia, Steve Monson

Fisher Vineyards, Napa and Sonoma, California, Rob Fisher

George Wine Company, Russian River Valley, California, George Levkoff

Hourglass Wine Company, Napa Valley, California, Samantha Shaw

Opus One, Oakville, California, Michael Silacci

Pictures: Michael Silacci, Opus One, Oakville, California, with Rudger de Vink, RdV Vineyards, Virginia, and Christian Schiller at Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction 2015

Parry Cellars, Saint Helena, California, Stephen Parry

Peay Vineyards, West Sonoma Coast, California, Andy Peay

Plumplack Estate Winery, Napa, California, John Conover

Quintessa, Rutherford, California, Larry Stone

Ridge Vineyards, Cupertino and Healdsburg, California, Eric Baugher

Picture: Christian Schiller and Eric Baugher in 2015

See:
Vincent’s Wine Club: Winemaker Dinner with Eric Baugher and his Stunning Ridge Vineyards Wines, USA

Soliste, Sonoma Coast, California, Claude Koeberle

Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller and Claude Koeberle at Bazin's on Church in Vienna, Virginia, in 2013

See also:
The Premium Soliste Wines of Former Famous Chef and Now Famous Winemaker Claude Koeberle and the Great Food of Chef Patrick Bazin at Bazin’s on Church in Northern Virginia, USA

Tablas Creek Vineyard, Paso Robles, California, Jason Haas

Pictures: Christian Schiller and Tablas Creek's Jason Haas in 2011

See also:
Tablas Creek Wines from Paso Robles and Belgian Food at Brasserie Beck with Tablas Greek GM Jason Haas and Chef Robert Wiedmaier in Washington DC, USA

Thibaut-Janisson Winery, Monticello, Virginia, Claude Thibaut


Pictures Christian Schiller with Claude Thibaut in 2011

See also:
As Close as You Can Get to (French) Champagne at the US East Coast – Claude Thibaut and His Virginia Thibaut Janisson Sparklers at screwtop Wine Bar

Young Inglewood Vineyards, Saint Helena, California, Scott Young

schiller-wine: Related Postings

Seven Day Wine Tour to German Wine Country: Heart’s Delight Wine Tasting and Auction (2015), Washington DC, USA

Bordeaux Trip September 2012, France

Bordeaux Wine Tour 2013 by ombiasy

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

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

An Afternoon at Château Pape-Clément (in 2013), Appellation Pessac-Léognan, Bordeaux

Dinner at Château Canon La Gaffeliere, Appellation Saint-Emilion, Premier Grand Cru Classé, France

Visiting a “Holy” Construction Site: Château Angélus in Saint-Emilion, France

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

Tour, Tasting and Lunch at Château Beausejour in AOC Puisseguin-St.Emilion, France

Visit of an Ultra-premium Non-mainstream Bordeaux Producer: Tertre Rôteboeuf, with Owner and Winemaker François Mitjavile

Visiting and Tasting at Château Climens, with Owner Bérénice Lurton, Bordeaux, France 

Lunch, Tour and Tasting with Owner Catherine Thibault d'Halluin (nee Boyer) and Winemaker Julien Noel - Château du Cros, Château Mayne du Cros, Château Courbon and Clos Bourbon, Bordeaux, France

Visiting an Oyster Farm at Arcachon Bay, Bordeaux: Raphael Doerfler at Earl Ostrea Chanca , France

Tour and Tasting at Château Pontet-Canet, with Owner Alfred Tesseron, Bordeaux

Tour, Tasting and Lunch at Château Léoville-Poyferré, with Didier Cuvelier and Anne Cuvelier, France  

A Tour and Tasting at Château Lafon-Rochet in Saint-Estèphe, Bordeaux, with Winemaker and Owner Basile Tesseron (2013), France

A Tour and Tasting at Château Coufran, Haut-Médoc, with Co-owner Frédéric Vicaire, France

Tour and Tasting at Château Lynch-Bages in Bages, Bordeaux, France

Tour at Tonnellerie Berger and Fils: How is a Barrique Made? Bordeaux, France

Wine Dinner at Château Haut-Bailly, Cru Classé de Graves, France

As Close as You Can Get to (French) Champagne at the US East Coast – Claude Thibaut and His Virginia Thibaut Janisson Sparklers at screwtop Wine Bar 

Tablas Creek Wines from Paso Robles and Belgian Food at Brasserie Beck with Tablas Greek GM Jason Haas and Chef Robert Wiedmaier in Washington DC, USA

Vincent’s Wine Club: Winemaker Dinner with Eric Baugher and his Stunning Ridge Vineyards Wines, USA

The Premium Soliste Wines of Former Famous Chef and Now Famous Winemaker Claude Koeberle and the Great Food of Chef Patrick Bazin at Bazin’s on Church in Northern Virginia, USA

Wine Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Dönnhoff with Christina Dönnhoff – Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

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Picture: Tasting with Christina Dönnhoff at Weingut Dönnhoff

In the Nahe region, we visited three producers: Dönnhoff, Kruger-Rumpf and Diel. We started out with Weingut Dönnhoff, where we were hosted by Christina Dönnhoff, Cornelius Dönnhoff’s sister.

Pictures: In the Nahe Valley

The Dönnhoff family has been making wines for more than 250 years, but a new era started when Helmut Dönnhoff began making wine in 1971. Helmut Dönnhoff has become a living legend of German wine and is celebrated as one of Germany’s very best producers. While Helmut Dönnhoff is still fully involved in all aspects of Weingut Dönnhoff, his son Cornelius has officially taken over from his father a couple of years ago.

 Picture: Arriving at Weingut Dönnhoff

Weingut Dönnhoff

The Dönnhoff family first came to the Nahe Valley over 200 years ago. The Dönnhoffs were a mixed farm up until the 20th century, with cereal crops, vegetables, fruit and livestock in addition to grapes. Helmut's grandfather Hermann made the transition from mixed farm to focus entirely on winegrowing. Helmut Dönnhoff took over day-to-day responsibility from his father in 1971. From the initial 4 hectares of land Helmut Dönnhoff expanded the estate to now 25 hectares. Today, Helmut’s son Cornelius Dönnhoff is responsible for the wines.

In terms of Riesling, Weingut Dönnhoff splits its production between the dry and sweet styles. “Riesling has 2 faces – it has a good reputation for dry wines and it has a good reputation for fruity sweet wines. We used to use the best grapes for the sweet style wines, but the fashion has shifted to dry wines. Now high class dry wines are being made. Global warming has helped. Acidity is lower now and the grapes are riper, so the quality of wines has improved” says Helmut Dönnhoff.

Pictures: Cellar Tour with Christina Dönnhoff

Vineyards

Weingut Dönnhoff’s holdings represent some of the best in the Nahe and all of Germany:

The Schlossböckelheimer Felsenberg is a very old site with porphyry soil.

The Oberhäuser Leistenberg, the oldest vineyard held by the family, has slate soils and produces fruity wines with elegant acidity.

The Oberhäuser Brücke, the smallest vineyard in the Nahe, is a tiny parcel saddled on the Nahe River that Dönnhoff owns in entirety. The Brücke has grey slate covered by loess-clay and the vines ripen even later here than in the Hermannshöhle due to large diurnal temperature swings along the river.

Picture: Christian Schiller with Helmut Dönnhoff and his Wife and Steffen Christmann in Seattle

The Niederhäuser Hermannshöhle, perhaps the most famous of all the Nahe vineyards, is a slate vineyard with many conglomerates of volcanic rocks, mostly porphyry and melaphyr.

The Norheimer Dellchen is a steep terraced vineyard in a rocky hollow with porphyry and slate soil.
Norheimer Kirscheck sits on a steep south slope of slate soil and produces delicately fruity wines with spice and race.

The Norheimer Kahlenberg: Southern slopes with quartzite and loam soils.

The Kreuznacher Krötenpfuhl vineyard has perfect drainage due its topsoil of pebbles over loam soil; characteristic are wines with a mineralic elegance. Due to the water table that flows beneath the vineyard’s soil the Krötenpfhul has always been farmed organically, even before it was purchased by Weingut Dönnhoff.

The Roxheimer Höllenpfad: steep, south-facing site with weathered red and stone soil.

Pictures: Helmut Dönnhoff receiving the Ombiasy Group in 2013

Although the Nahe is a dry region, the vineyards are not watered as to encourage deep rooted vines. The soil is covered with organic material like straw and compost to preserve water and to avoid evaporation and erosion in heavy rains. The vines are all grown on wire frames, low to the ground to benefit from the warmth of the stoney topsoil, and at a density of approx. 6000 vines per hectare.

"We do not irrigate at all. We irrigated in the 1950s. My father and his colleagues did it for frost protection. After 10 or 15 years of doing it we realized that the wines were not better. In particular we saw that in places we did not irrigate, the wines were better. The roots went deeper, the wines were more intense. So we stopped irrigation 25 years ago” says Helmut Dönnhoff.

Cornelius Dönnhoff is Stuart Pigott’s Winemaker of the Year

A few months ago, German wine journalist Stuart Pigott published in the Frankfurter Allgemeine

Sonntagszeitung his favorite German wines and favorite German winemakers of the year – in German (Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung, 23. November 2014, Nr.47, Seite 54-55). Stuart Pigott’s Winemaker of the Year 2014 is: Cornelius Dönnhoff.

At first sight, this award should not come as a surprise. Snooth, for example, recently listed Weingut Dönnhoff as one of the top 10 Riesling producers in the world. At the same time, however, the highly regarded Gault Millau WeinGuide Deutschland deleted Weingut Dönnhoff from the prestigious 5/5 grapes group in its 2015 edition. The rumor was that the demotion was triggered by the handing over of the primary responsibility for the wines from father Hellmut Dönnhoff to son Cornelius Dönnhoff.

Stuart Pigott argues – and I fully agree with him - that the demotion was completely unjustified: "To make a winery famous is a great job, but to take over a world-famous wine estate from his father and keep it at the highest level is much more difficult. And this is exactly what Cornelius Dönnhoff has achieved to do in an impressive way. His dry and sweet Riesling wines are among the best white wines in the world.”

Picture: Cornelius Dönnhoff and Stuart Pigott at the Frankfurter Allgemeine Awards Ceremony (Photo: Cornelius Dönnhoff)

The Wines Christina Dönnhoff Poured

Christina Dönnhoff: “Grapes are always picked by hand over 2-3 passes through each vineyard. The grapes are pressed as soon as possible – within 3 hours of picking – and fermented in large wooden casks as well as stainless steel”. Wines fermented in wooden casks typically spend 2–3 months in cask and then go to stainless steel.

Pictures: Tasting with Christina Dönnhoff

Dry

2013 Dönnhoff Tonschiefer Riesling dry
2013 Dönnhoff Roxheimer Höllenpfad Riesling dry
2013 Dönnhoff Felsenberg “Felsentürmchen” Riesling dry GG
2013 Dönnhoff Hermannshöhle Riesling dry GG

Fruity

2013 Dönnhoff Krötenpfuhl Riesling Kabinett
2013 Dönnhoff Oberhäuser Leistenberg Riesling Kabinett
2013 Dönnhoff Norheimer Kirschheck Riesling Spätlese
2013 Dönnhoff Oberhäuser Brücke (Monopole) Riesling Spätlese
2013 Dönnhoff Niederhäuser Hermannshöhle Riesling Auslese Goldkapsel
2012 Dönnhoff Niederhäuser Hermannshöhle Riesling Auslese Goldkapsel
2013 Dönnhoff 2013 Dönnhoff Oberhäuser Brücke (Monopole) Riesling Eiswein

Bye-bye

Thanks Christina for a wonderful event.

Pictures: Bye-bye

schiller-wine: Related Postings

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

Coming-up: Wine & Art Tour to Saale-Unstrut - Saxony - Franken - Württemberg: Germany-East Tour by ombiasy WineTours (June 11 - June 20, 2015)

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)

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

Weingut Franz Keller in Oberbergen, Kaiserstuhl, Baden: Cellar Tour and Tasting with Fritz Keller– Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Lunch at Restaurant Schwarzer Adler in Oberbergen, with Weingut Franz Keller Wines – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Wine Tasting at Weingut Bernhard Huber– Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Visit: Weingut Dr. Heger in Baden – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Weingut Karl-Heinz Johner in Baden: Cellar Tour and Tasting with Karl-Heinz and Patrick Johner – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

At Maison Trimbach in Alsace with Hubert Trimbach – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Wine Tasting at Weingut Friedrich Becker – Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Lunch, Wine Tasting and Winery Tour at Weingut Jülg in Schweigen, Pfalz with the Jülg Family – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

Wine Tasting at Weingut Ökonomierat Rebholz in Siebeldingen, Pfalz – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

Cellar Tour and Wine Tasting at Weingut Geheimer Rat Dr. von Bassermann-Jordan in Deidesheim with General Manager Gunther Hauck – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

Winery Tour and Wine Tasting at Weingut A. Christmann, with Steffen Christmann– Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

Wine Tasting at Weingut Weegmüller with Stephanie and Gabriele Weegmüller – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

schiller-wine - Related Postings (Weingut Dönnhoff)

Top 10 Riesling Producers in the World– Snooth 2012

An Afternoon with Riesling Star Winemaker Helmut Doennhoff at Weingut Doennhoff in Oberhausen in the Nahe Valley, Germany

New Generation – The 111 Best Young German Winemakers (A Listing by Stuart Pigott)

Cornelius Dönnhoff, Weingut Dönnhoff: Stuart Pigott’s Winemaker of the Year, Germany

Winemaker Dinner with Santiago Vivanco of Bodegas Dinastía Vivanco in Rioja at Taberna del Alabardero in Washington DC

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Picture: Annette Schiller (ombiasyPR and WineTours) and Christian Schiller with Santiago Vivanco of Bodegas Dinastía Vivanco in Rioja at Taberna del Alabardero in Washington DC

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

In 2013, the annual Digital Wine Communications Conference (DWCC), formerly the European Wine Bloggers Conference, took place in Rioja. The first event of the DWCC in Rioja was at the Vivanco Winery: Reception, Cellar Tour including wine tasting, vineyard tour and tapas party. Santiago Vivanco and his brother Rafael Vivanco were the hosts and stars of this lovely event. So, I was very happy to meet Santiago Vivanco again, this time on the other side of the Atlantic, at the Taberna del Alabardero in Washington DC, one of the best, if not the best Spanish restaurant in the USA.

Pictures: Santiago and Annette: Good to see you!

See also:
A Winery, a Foundation and a Museum: Dinastía Vivanco– Tasting, Tapas and a Tour with Santiago and Rafael Vivanco, Rioja, Spain

Invitation

Executive Chef Javier Romero, in collaboration with Sommeliers Gustavo Iniesta & Jorge Olias, invites you to a unique Wine Tasting experience.

Vivanco Winery is well known all around the world because of its Wine Culture Museum, but also for its marvelous wines.

Featuring: Santiago Vivanco, Owner and Wine Culture Ambassador, Vivanco Foundation, and Hugo Urquiza, Vivanco National Export Manager.

Wednesday, April 29th 2015, Reception 6:30pm Dinner 7:00pm

Pictures: Welcome -  Sommelier Gustavo Iniesta, Santiago Vivanco, Owner and Wine Culture Ambassador, Vivanco Foundation, and Hugo Urquiza, Vivanco National Export Manager

Dinastía Vivanco

Bodegas Dinastía Vivanco is a winery in Briones, La Rioja, established by the Vivanco family. It also includes the Museum of the Culture of Wine and the Dinastía Vivanco Foundation. This triumvirate was built by Pedro Vivanco, one of Spain’s first enologists and the third generation of Vivancos in the wine business. It is now run by Pedro Vivanco’s sons, Santiago and Rafael Vivanco.

Pictures:  Christian G.E. Schiller with Santiago and Rafael Vivanco at Bodegas Dinastía Vivanco in Briones, La Rioja, Spain.

Dinastía Vivanco Foundation

The Dinastía Vivanco Foundation is a foundation set up with the objective of researching and sharing the culture of wine around the world. One of the foundation’s most recent acquisitions, for example, is a book in Latin, which was printed in 1491 in Venice; the book refers to wine as beneficial to the body if consumed in moderation.

Dinastía Vivanco Museum

The Dinastía Vivanco Museum is a fascinating wine museum, showcasing the Vivanco family's impressive personal collection. It is one of the best in the world, if not the best. Pedro Vivanco started the collection and his sons are continuing it. Part of it is Baccus Garden, where the Vivanco family has gathered together over 200 varieties of grapes to form one of the most important private ampelographic collections in the world.

Bodegas Dinastía Vivanco

The focal point of course is the Bodegas Dinastía Vivanco. It is in in Briones, in the foothills of the Cantabrian mountain range and on the banks of the River Ebro. The majority of the 300 hectares of vineyards that the Vivanco family own are in, or around, the municipalities of Briones and Haro in Rioja Alta.

The majority of the 300 hectares of vineyards that the Vivanco family own are in, or around, the municipalities of Briones and Haro in Rioja Alta.

Pictures: A Bodegas Dinastía Vivanco in Briones, La Rioja, Spain.

The winery - surrounded by vineyards - is impressive, boasting an underground, naturally cooled aging cellar that houses 3500 barrels. The majority of the vineyards are planted with Tempranillo, the main grape of Rioja. Other red grapes include Garnacha, Mazuelo and Graciano. The majority of the white grapes that are grown are Viura and Malvasia.

Pictures: Wine Maker Dinner with Santiago Vivanco of Bodegas Dinastía Vivanco in Rioja at Taberna del Alabardero in Washington DC

Family History

The origins of the winemaking tradition of the Vivanco family date back to 1915, to the village of Alberite, La Rioja, where Pedro Vivanco started to make wine for family use from his vineyards. In 1940 he bought a small bodega in Alberite.

Pedro Vivanco’s son, Santiago, started another bodega in the heart of the old quarter of Logroño, where they bottled and sold wine produced in the village. In 1946, Pedro Vivanco was born. He is the pivotal figure in the transformation of the Vivanco family business to what it is today.

As a teenager in the early 1960s, Pedro Vivanco started delivering his family's wine by bicycle, then rose to become a major but anonymous producer for well-known Rioja brands. He received his studies at the Requena School of Enology. In 1985, he bought land in Briones. It was there, in 1990, that he started his most ambitious project to date: Bodegas Dinastía Vivanco, with the Dinastía Vivanco Museum.

Pictures: Santiago Vivanco of Bodegas Dinastía Vivanco in Rioja at Taberna del Alabardero in Washington DC

Pedro Vivanco has two children: Santiago and Rafael. They represent the fourth generation of this winemaking family. Santiago Vivanco was born in Logroño in 1973. He has a Degree in Law and a Master’s in Business Management. Santiago manages the Dinastía Vivanco Foundation and the Dinastía Vivanco Museum. Rafael Vivanco was born in Logroño in 1975. An agronomy engineer and with a Master’s degree in business studies, he later also graduated from the Enology Faculty in Bordeaux. Rafael heads the viticulture and winemaking.

The Winemaker Dinner

Pictures: Executive Chef Javier Romero

See also:
In the Kitchen: Chef Javier Romero at Taberna del Alabardero in Washington DC, USA 

Cocktail Reception

Champiñones Rellenos de Gamba y Salsa Holandesa - Mushrooms Stuffed with Shrimp and Hollandaise Sauce

Flaspacho - Cold Tomato Soup Freeze pop

Dip de Cangrejo, Old Bay y Cítricos - Crab Dip, Old Bay and Citrus


Vivanco Viura-Malvasía-Tempranillo Blanco 2014 D.O.Ca. Rioja

2014 was a good year for white wines. There was higher than normal rainfall with low temperatures at the beginning and middle part of the growing cycle. This resulted in greater canopy growth (vigor) providing the grapes with more acidity and fresh, fruity aromas.

60% Viura, 20% Malvasía, 20% Tempranillo Blanco - Tempranillo Blanco, an indigenous, minority white grape that is exclusive to the DOCa Rioja. With this wine, Vivanco Winery pioneered the use of this grape variety, which gives this white wine a unique personality.

Vinyards: Terroirs in Briones, Rioja Alta (Viura and Malvasía) and Tudelilla, Eastern Rioja, in a vineyard at an altitude of 700 metres above sea level on the slopes of Sierra Carbonera (Tempranillo Blanco).


Vinification: Each grape variety is vinified separately. After a brief cold maceration of the whole grape clusters (between 10-12 hours), the free-run must is fermented in small stainless steel tanks at controlled temperatures (12-15 °C) to retain its full varietal expression. The wines remain in contact with their lees in stainless steel tanks for 4 months to preserve the varietal aromas against oxidation and give them greater harmony and unctuousness in mouth.

Tasting notes: Pale-yellow with green hues; clean and bright. To the nose it proves expressive, intense and complex, with aromas of citrus fruit, green apples and white peaches, underscored by elegant floral hints. Very fresh and well-balanced in the mouth, enticing one to drink and enjoy.

First Appetizer

Ensalada Crujiente de Langostino Salvaje, Bacon y Salmorejo - Crunchy Wild Prawn Salad, Bacon and Tomato Sauce


Vivanco Tempranillo-Garnacha- 2013 Rosé D.O.Ca. Rioja

80% Tempranilla, 20% Garnacha.

Vinification: Vinified following traditional free-run methods. The grape juice obtained from crushing the grapes remains in contact with the skins between 12 to 24 hours at a controlled temperature of 10 °C. After this maceration, the free-run must is placed in a different tank where it ferments at a controlled temperature of 14-16 °C to preserve the aromatic complexity of the two grape varieties.


Tasting notes: Lively, bright pink with purple hues. To the nose, it offers aromas of red liquorice, raspberries, and strawberries, all of them wrapped in a floral component of roses and violets. Fresh in the mouth, with a pleasant acidity, good balance and a refreshing fruity finish.

Second Appetizer

Tartar de Atún Marinado con Queso Valdeón, Salsa Española - Tuna Tartar marinated with Blue Cheese, Spagnole Sauce


Vivanco Reserva 2008 Tempranillo & Graciano D.O.Ca. Rioja

90% Tempranillo, 10% Graciano.

Vinification: Each grape variety is vinified separately. After mild crushing, the grapes are fed by gravity into small French oak vats where they ferment and are left to macerate for 20 days in contact with the skins at a controlled temperature of 30 °C with light pump-overs.

Malolactic fermentation: In small French oak vats.

Aging: 24 months in new and second year barrels made with French and American oak. The wine is fine-tuned for several months in French oak vats before being bottled and laid down for the next 24 months.


Tasting notes: Intense, purple-red, with a brick rim evincing barrel ageing This wine offers aromas of cinnamon and sage surrounded by fruity notes of cherries and blackberries underscored by a mineral component. Deep, and ripe on the palate, with a velvety, silky, enveloping mouthfeel.

First Course

Pochas con Boletus, Pastel de Faisán y Aire de Ajetes - White Beans with Fungi Porcini, Pheasant Pie and Tender Garlic Foam


Colección Vivanco 4 Varietales 2010 Tempranillo, Graciano, Garnacha & Mazuelo D.O.Ca. Rioja

70% Tempranillo, 15% Graciano, 10% Garnacha y 5% Mazuelo.

Vinification: Manual grape harvest of each grape variety in small, ten kilogram tubs. Cooling in cold room until the temperature of the grapes goes down to 3 °C. Double selection of clusters and grains, with mild destemming and crushing. Separate vinification of each variety. Gravity-fed into French oak vats with no pumping. Each grape variety is cold macerated and fermented individually with native yeast strains: 22 days for Tempranillo, 21 for Graciano, 23 for Garnacha and 22 for Mazuelo. Gravity racked to new and second-year French oak barrels before malolactic fermentation.


Aging: 20-month stay in barrels from different cooperages, with different toasting levels and origins, without racking. Each of the four wines remains over lees until bottled, with periodic bâtonnages during the first months. The wines are racked and bottled without filtering or fining, so a small amount of natural precipitate may appear over time.

Tasting notes: Very intense garnet-cherry red. Powerful, complex aroma, with abundant ripe red and dark fruit, and well-integrated find wood. There are also elegant mineral notes, spices, toffee and liquorice. Very expressive in the mouth, with a silky, fresh, tasty, intense mouthfeel, leaving a long aftertaste, complex and elegant.

Main Course

Entrecote de Búfalo en Salsa Ahumada de Moras y Cous-Cous de Setas - Buffalo Steak, Smoked Blackberry Sauce and Mushrooms Couscous


Coleccion Vivanco 2010 Parcelas de Garnacha D.O.Ca. Rioja

100% Garnacha.

1.497 bottles.

Vinification: Manual grape harvest of each grape variety in small ten-kilogram tubs. Cooling in cold room until the temperature of the grapes goes down to 3 °C. Double selection of clusters and grains, with mild destemming and crushing. Individual vinification of grapes from La Ladera de Zorraquín and El Recuenco. Gravity-fed into French oak vats with no pumping. Cold macerated and fermented for 19 days with native yeast strains. Gravity racked to new and second-year French 500-litre oak barrels before malolactic fermentation.


Aging: 18-month stay in barrels from different cooperages without racking. The wine remains over lees until bottled, with periodic bâtonnages during the first four months. The wine is bottled without filtering or fining, so a small amount of natural precipitate may appear over time.

Tasting notes: Very intense garnet-cherry red. Powerful, complex aroma, with abundant ripe red and dark fruit, and well-integrated find wood. There are also elegant mineral notes, spices, toffee and liquorice. Very expressive in the mouth, with a silky, fresh, tasty, intense mouthfeel, leaving a long aftertaste, complex and elegant.

Dessert

Texturas de Higo, Queso y Membrillo - Figs, Cheese and Quince Jelly


Coleccion Vivanco Dulce de Invierno 2011

Tempranillo, Graciano, Garnacha & Mazuelo D.O.Ca. Rioja

50% Tempranillo, 20% Graciano, 20% Garnacha y 10% Mazuelo.

2.342 bottles of 37,5 cl.

Harvest date: 18 January 2012

Alcohol: 14,5 % vol.

Residual Sugar: 108 g/l

Vinification: Late, winter harvest. The grapes were picked manually in small 10 kg tubs, separately by grape variety, producing tiny yields due to dehydration. After a long, mild pressing the grape must was allowed to ferment for about a month and a half in French oak barrels.


Aging: 12-month stay in French oak barrels from different cooperages, with different toasting levels and origins. Each of the wines was left in contact with its fine lees until bottling, with periodic bâtonnages during the first months. The wines were racked and bottled and subsequently aged for almost another year in the bottle.

Tasting notes: Pale-orange with green hues; clean and bright. Very pleasant intense aromas of candied fruit, dried peaches, orange confit and quince jelly, all of it enveloped in elegant floral and cocoa notes. Sensual and delicate in the mouth, with a delicate, fresh, well-integrated fruity sweetness that makes it a long, tasty and pleasant wine.

Bye-bye

Thanks to all involved at Bodegas Dinastía Vivanco in Rioja and at Taberna del Alabardero in Washington DC for a wonderful evening.

Pictures: Annette and Christian Schiller, and Darryl Priest and his Wife with Santiago Vivanco

schiller-wine: Related Posting

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

In the Kitchen: Chef Javier Romero at Taberna del Alabardero in Washington DC, USA

Alejandro Luna Beberide from Bodegas y Vinedos Luna Beberide in Spain at the Taberna del Alabardero in Washington DC

Bodegas Marqués de Murrieta Winemaker Dinner at Taberna del Alabardero in Washington DC, USA/Spain

DC Food Bloggers Happy Hour at Taberna del Alabardero in Washington DC, US

Dinner with Spanish Winemaker Antonio Jose Bleda Jimenez, Bodegas Bleda, at Taberna del Alabardero in Washington DC, USA

The 2013 Digital Wine Communications Conference (DWCC) in Logroño, Rioja

Rioja, Portugal, Austria, Italy, Turkey …. Rioja – EWBC 2013 Back in Spain

#DWCC : Comunicatore Digitale della settimana – Wine Blogger of the Week: Christian Schiller

Visiting a Stunning Winery: Bodegas Baigorri in Rioja, Spain

Bodegas Baigorri (Rioja, Spain) Wine Blog Posting Contest .... and the Winner is: Christian Schiller from schiller-wine

A Winery, a Foundation and a Museum: Dinastía Vivanco– Tasting, Tapas and a Tour with Santiago and Rafael Vivanco, Rioja, Spain

A Visit and a Tasting at Bodegas Bilbaínas in Haro with Head Winemaker Diego Pinilla Navarro, Spain

Visiting, Tasting and Eating at Bodegas Palacio, with Winemaker Roberto Rodriguez, Rioja, Spain

Schiller’s Favorite Tapas Bars in Logroño in La Rioja, Spain

Therry Theise’s Best Germany Wines and Winemakers – Vintage 2014

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Picture: Johannes and Barbara Selbach, Weingut Selbach Oster, and Annette Schiller, ombiasy WineTours, in New York at the 2015 Rieslingfeier.

See:
Coming-up: Wine & Art Tour to Saale-Unstrut - Saxony - Franken - Württemberg: Germany-East Tour by ombiasy WineTours (June 11 - June 20, 2015)
4 Wine Tours by ombiasy coming up in 2015: Germany-East, Germany-South. Germany-Nord and Bordeaux
The 11 Winemakers: Rieslingfeier 2015 in New York City, USA

Terry Theise is one of the leading experts of German Wine in the US. Among the vast number of his followers, he has gained something like a cult status. He publishes a thick catalogue once a year with extensive comments. In addition to the compendium of exciting wine reviews, the Terry Theise’s annual catalogue is a very good introduction to German wine, both to the basics and to the current trends and issues.

If you want to learn more about Terry, the Washington Post carried an excellent article about him some time ago. See here.

2008 James Beard Outstanding Wine and Spirits Professional
2005 Food & Wine Magazine Importer of the Year

His wines are imported by Michael Skurnik, an importer and distributor of fine wines based in Syosset, New York. Terry also imports Austrian wine and Champagnes, including excellent grower Champagnes.

A few comments. First, there are no red wines, although they now account for 1/3 of the German wine output. Terry is clearly focusing on Germany’s white wines. Second, nor have I seen a category for sparkling wines; for sparklers, you have to go to his excellent portfolio of Champagnes, including many grower Champagnes. Third, his list does not include any noble-sweet wines (Beerenauslese, Trockenbeerenauslese, Eiswein). Fourth, Terry is known for having a preference for sweet-style wines, although his portfolio increasingly includes also dry wines (more on this see below). Fifth, as mentioned above, this is not a list based on a comprehensive review of German wine, but is limited to Terry Theise’s portfolio of winemakers, which is large and exceptional.

For previous years, see:

Terry Theise: German 2013 Vintage Wines - Highlights and Superlatives, Germany
Terry Theise: 2012 Vintage Wines - Highlights and Superlatives, Germany
Terry Theise’s Top German Wines of the 2011 Vintage, Germany, USA
2011: Terry Theise’s Top German Wines of the 2010 Vintage
Terry Theise's Top German Wines of the 2009 Vintage

The German Wine Culture: Dry or Sweet or Both?

Terry Theise, in his most recent German wine catalogue (Vintage 2014), addresses the issue of the German wine culture: Is it a dry wine culture or a sweet wine culture or both. Let me quote Terry Theise.

Terry Theise: … What I myself see, from the growers I visit and the restaurants I go to, and the stories I am told, Germany is not only a dry-wine culture, it is militantly and obsessively so. How many letters have I gotten from travelers to Germany who were promptly dismayed to find the utter hegemony of the Trocken style? I did not set these people up. They saw what I see. And what we see gives cause for grave concerns. The wines we love are threatened. … If you were dropped from the sky and landed in Germany you would conclude it is a dry wine culture.

Outside of Germany it is a not-dry wine culture, because we in other countries can perhaps see with greater perspective that the not-dry German Rieslings are a singular and precious gift to the world and to the cause of beauty.

… So the answer to the question, in truth is: It is both a sweet and a dry wine culture, but not if the Germans themselves have anything to say about it. Other than a few token dessert-wines they would just as soon see the sweet wines go extinct.

In an earlier article “Can American Fans Save German Riesling” (Slate, October 19, 2011), Mike Steinberger argued similarly: … But in the 1970s and ’80s, German drinkers soured on sweetish Rieslings. It was during this period that Germany saw a proliferation of French-influenced restaurants, and consumers demanded dry wines. … Meanwhile, domestic demand for fruity Rieslings has effectively collapsed; German palates have been completely reoriented, and Rieslings with pronounced residual sugar are now outcasts in their own neighborhood. … The fruity style now is being kept alive, barely, by foreign consumers, and Americans in particular, which is another ironic twist to this story. … Theise told me that the only reason most of his producers continue to make sweetish Rieslings is because he keeps buying them—if he were to stop tomorrow, they would very likely cease production of these wines and turn out nothing but trocken bottlings.

And the Future in the USA?

Will this dichotomy between German and American wine consumption of German wine (sweetish here and dry there) continue?

We will have to wait and see. Interestingly, Ernst Loosen, Weingut Dr. Loosen, who only used to produce sweet wines from his grand cru vineyards, has started to also produce ultra-premium dry GG (Grosses Gewächs) wines from his top vineyards (at the expense of the ultra-premium sweet-style wine). He is currently on a tour through the USA to introduce his new GG wines to the American market. I just saw 4 of them on the shelves of a small wines store (The Vineyard) in the McLean neighborhood, for around US$ 45. More on the new project of Ernst Loosen here: A New Dr. Loosen Project Setting the Standard for Dry German Rieslings

Also, and I think this may potentially have a large impact, Robert Parker replaced David Schildknecht, who lives in America and is deeply rooted in the American market of German wines, with Stephan Reinhardt, who lives in Germany and grew up with dry German wine, in his Wine Advocate team. One of Germany's most distinguished experts of German dry wines is now Robert Paker's man for German wine. See: Robert Parker’s Wine Advocate – David Schildknecht Leaves and Stephan Reinhardt Joins the Team

Therry Theise’s Best Germany Wines and Winemakers – Vintage 2014

Here is Terry Theise in o-tone. I have added a couple of pictures of the winemakers I have met personally, including references to relevant postings on schiller-wine.

HIGHLIGHTS AND SUPERLATIVES

I need to ask Cornelius Dönnhoff if he minds my having “retired his number,” because I think it’s a given that he’ll have made the most profoundly beautiful wines in any vintage, but maybe he’d like an actual kudo once in a while. In any case, can you and I agree that his estate would basically constitute hors classe?

Pictures: Helmut Dönnhoff receiving the Ombiasy Group in 2013

See:
German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

THE WINERY OF THE VINTAGE IS:

Oh, wonderfully, SELBACH-OSTER, for having risen to every challenge and soared above what was a good, honorable group of wines in 2013. As always at Selbach it is not only the strength of individual wines but the strength across the range, and the way the wines accumulate into something of meaning, power and dignity and beauty. Not only are the wines themselves moving and stirring, but Johannes Selbach’s skill, perspective and intelligence are almost viscerally tactile. And bless him, he knows it. “Do you know how superb these are” I asked him more than once. “Yup, I do,” he replied, without a hint of strut or smugness, because after ’13 he knew what to do, and just did it. There have been many stellar Selbach vintages of late; 2005, 2007 and 2012 spring to mind. But those were relatively easy years in which to make great wines. 2014 is most decidedly not! And so the achievement is even greater, and I am very moved to have the privilege to show these lovely, lovely wines to you.

Picture: Wine Tasting at Weingut Selbach-Oster in Zeltingen, Mosel, with Johannes Selbach - Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

See:
Cellar Tour and Wine Tasting at Weingut Selbach-Oster in Zeltingen, Mosel, with Johannes Selbach – Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

OTHER MARKED SUCCESSES:

(In the order in which I tasted them)…Spreitzer was polished to a brilliant gleam across the whole range, and it’s that consistency rather than the presence of any single supernal wine that impressed me most. Kruger-Rumpf continued their upward trajectory, especially among the wines-with-sweetness, and among those especially the Scheurebe. Künstler showed a splendid group of wines spanning ’14 and ’13; these wines have the fit-and-finish of a beautifully engineered vehicle yet they are anything but cold. He only makes it look easy….

Minges was another estate with superb consistency over the whole range. Müller-Catoir was steadily, almost serenely fine, and reached a new level with their GG. Von Winning’s wines were curiously less evolved than usual – I was there two weeks before my normal rendezvous – but they showed me the very best wine I tasted outside of Selbach or Dönnhoff, and another performance of sustained excellence. Finally I have to recognize the really stunning vintage had by Vols, and again, while there’s no single great wine, there is an entire series of good, perfect, can’t-imagine-more-archetypal Saar Rieslings.

THE WINE OF THE VINTAGE IS:

Selbach-Oster Zeltinger Sonnenuhr Riesling Spätlese 1-star, which will stand proudly among all the many great wines Johannes has made, and which is brilliant in a classically Selbach way, not a fruit-bomb, not markedly sweet, just depth upon depth upon depth, as though to penetrate to the very core of honesty.

THE WINE OF THE ENTIRE OFFERING IS:

I never thought these words would come onto the page, but friend, I can’t resist, because Von Winning’s 2013 Sauvignon Blanc “1” is a masterpiece, both profoundly complex and insanely lovely and even with its endless unfolding depth all you want to do is suck it the hell down. I can’t wait to stage a tasting where y’all bring what you feel are the world’s best SBs and we’ll line ‘em up and watch this critter just shine and shine.

Picture: Christian Schiller with Armin and Caroline Diel at Schlossgut Diel

See:
New Vintage Tasting at Schlossgut Diel, with Armin and Caroline Diel, Germany, 2014
Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

RUNNERS UP INCLUDE:

Strub’s Niersteiner Hipping Spätlese “Flächenhahl” which is the best wine they’ve made for a good long while.
Kruger-Rumpf’s Münsterer Dautenpflänzer Riesling Spätlese
Künstler Domdechaney Riesling Trocken
Diel Dorsheimer Pittermännchen Riesling Spätlese
Müller-Catoir Breumel in den Mauern “GG”
Von Winning Grainhübel “GG”
Adam In der Sängerei Riesling Feinherb
Loewen Leiwener Laurentiuslay Riesling Spätlese

Pictures: In the Vineyard with Georg Rumpf, Weingut Kruger-Rumpf

See:
Cellar Tour, Vineyard Tour, Tasting and Lunch with Georg Rumpf, Weingut Kruger-Rumpf, Nahe Valley, Germany
Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

A NOD TO TWO GREAT RIESLANERS:

Meßmer and Müller-Catoir each made extraordinary Auslese from this most rare and precious grape.

THE KABINETTS OF THE VINTAGE ARE:

Jakob Schneider in LITERS!
Selbach-Oster Wehlener Sonnenuhr Riesling Kabinett

THE GREATEST DRY WINES ARE:
(previously cited wines are in brackets)

Geil Riesling Rosengarten “GG” (a new high-water mark for this producer)
Künstler Domdechaney Riesling Trocken
Müller-Catoir Breumel in den Mauern Riesling GG
Von Winning Pechstein Riesling GG (though one could also cite Kieselberg, Langenmorgen and Kirchenstück among the very top dry Rieslings)
Selbach-Oster Zeltinger Sonnenuhr Riesling Spätlese Trocken

Picture: Gunter Künstler, Weingut Künstler, with Christian Schiller

See:
Vineyard Walk, Cellar Tour and Wine Tasting at Weingut Künstler– Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

THE GREATEST INEXPENSIVE DRY WINES ARE:

Künstler estate Riesling Trocken
Minges Scheurebe Trocken

THE GREATEST VERSATILE DRY-ENOUGH WINES ARE:

Geil Bechtheimer Riesling Feinherb
Weingart Bopparder Hamm Engelstein Riesling Kabinett Feinherb
Spreitzer Engelmannsberg Riesling Feinherb
Schneider Niederhäuser Kertz Riesling Feinherb
Diel Riesling Feinherb (custom-made for us, and just outstanding!)
Minges Scheurebe Feinherb
Müller-Catoir estate Riesling Feinherb
Vols “United Slates” Riesling
Adam Im Pfarrgarten Feinherb
-And the utter best in this category, a masterpiece in any vintage, is the simply great Selbach-Oster Zeltinger Sonnenuhr Riesling Spätlese Uralte Reben.

Picture: Christian Schiller with Andreas Spreitzer, Weingut Spreitzer

THE ABSOLUTE TOP VALUE:

Von Winning “Winnings,” a new wine being made for us under the guidance of the greatest living cellarmaster in Germany, Hans-Günter Schwarz, a wine jammed with charm and character and costing next to nothing!

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Dinner at the Hostellerie des Clos in Chablis (Chef: Michel Vignaud), France

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Picture: Cheese Course - Hostellerie des Clos

On the preparation tour of the Bourgogne Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015) we stayed at the Hostellerie des Clos in Chablis for one night and had dinner there. Our assessment: Excellent, at 1 Star Michelin level. The Hostellerie des Clos lost its Michelin star a couple of years ago.

See:
Preview: Bourgogne Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2016)

Clive Coates (My Favorite Burgundies, 2013): For those travelling in the region: The Hostellerie des Clos has always been the place to stay. One Michelin star food and simple but perfectly adequate and modestly priced bedrooms. I dined there twice on my recent visit. The food was even finer than I have found it to be in the past. Bravo to Mr. Vignaud and his team.



 Pictures: Hostellerie des Clos

Trip Adviser: Return the Star - Michel Vignaud used to have one Michelin star when he ran the restaurant a few years back. He then turned over the restaurant to become manager of the hotel, and the restaurant lost its star. Michel Vignaud is back in the kitchen, and the dinner showed it. The depth of the wine cellar and fair pricing is staggering. We have been to this hotel and restaurant 12 times. Our tables have ranged in size from three to 12 guests. We always have great meals, superb wines, and great service. Our last visit included 8 folks that had a wide range of menu items. Everyone was totally pleased with everything that was served. At the end of the meal, the chef came out and visited. He remembered us from earlier visits and told us that hotel was going to be renovated soon. We will always make an effort to stay and eat at this place whenever we are near Chablis.

Apperitif




Menu Gourmand for Euro 83




Dinner

Our judgement: Excellent - 1 star Michelin.
















Le Bistro des Grands Crus

Just next to the Hostelleries des Clos is Le Bistro des Grands Crus, its little sister.

Trip advisor: Very friendly owner and staff. Food unfussy but good. Good value for money. This restaurant is attached to the Hostellerie Le Clos, so bill can be added to your hotel bill. It is a nice alternative to the more sumptuous restaurant in the hotel.

Picture: Bistro des Grand Crus

Next Day

Bye-bye.


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