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Visit and Tasting: Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte, Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé – Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2017), France

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Picture: Visit and Tasting: Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte, Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé

Overall, Bordeaux is a rather sleepy area, not well prepared to receive wine lovers from all over the world to experience the wines they love so much in the area, where the wines are made. But things are changing. Wine tourism has caught up with Bordeaux. One producer that clearly is a leader in this wine-tourism movement is Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte.

We visited Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte in the morning. Following the visit and tasting we enjoyed lunch at the 2 Michelin starred Restaurant La Grand' Vigne, prepared by Chef Nicolas Masse. The restaurant is part of the Les Sources de Caudalie, a complex comprising a hotel, several restaurants and a health spa, which the owners of Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte constructed next to the Château.

This posting focuses on the visit of Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte. A separate posting covers the outstanding wine lunch at Restaurant La Grande Vigne.

Pictures: Touring Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte, Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé

Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte and Florence and Daniel Cathiard

The noble Bosq family started growing grapes here as early as 1365. The property was purchased in the 18th century by Scotsman George Smith, who gave the estate its present name. He also built the manor house and exported his – by now famous – wine to England on his own ships. Current owners are Florence and Daniel Cathiard.

Both Florence and Daniel were professional skiers belonging to the French Olympic ski team in the mid-1960s (with triple gold medal legend at the 1968 Winter Olympics Jean-Claude Killy). After their career in sports, Daniel built a supermarket and sporting goods store imperium and Florence an advertising agency. In 1990 they bought Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte with the wealth generated by the sale of all their assets. They brought the quality of Smith-Haut-Lafitte wines to the level for which they were once renowned.

Château Smith Haut Lafitte

Château Smith Haut Lafitte is a Bordeaux producer from the Pessac-Léognan appellation, ranked among the Grands Crus Classé for red wine in the Classification of Graves wine of 1953 and 1959. The winery and vineyards are located south of the city of Bordeaux, in the commune of Martillac.

The estate originates in the 14th century with the house of Verrier Du Boscq who planted vines on a gravelly plateau named Lafitte already in 1365. In 1720 it was bought by the Scotsman Georges Smith who added his name to the lieu-dit and who built the manor house of the property.

Pictures: At Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte, Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé

The Louis Eschenauer Company bought the estate in 1958, after having already distributed the wine from the early 20th century. In 1990, Florence and Daniel Cathiard bought Smith Haut Lafitte and embarked on a major renovation and investment program.

The vineyard area consists of 67 hectares, 56 hectares of which are planted with red grape varieties (55% Cabernet Sauvignon, 35% Merlot and 10% Cabernet Franc). The remaining 11 hectares are cultivated with white varieties (90% Sauvignon Blanc, 5% Sémillon and 5% Sauvignon Gris). The vineyards are located on a gravel ridge to the east of Château Haut-Bailly.

The grapes are fermented in stainless steel vats and the wine is then matured in oak barrels (50% new) for 15-18 months. The wines are bottled unfined and unfiltered.

Pictures: In the Red Wine Cellar of Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte, Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé

The Grand vin, Château Smith Haut Lafitte, is annually produced in 10,000 cases of the red wine and 2,500 cases of the dry white. The second wine, Les Hauts de Smith, has a production of 5,500 cases, and exists in red, white and rosé versions. The rosé is produced as a Bordeaux AOC.

Château Smith-Haut-Lafite has been transformed during the last decade from being a perennial underachiever to being one of the leading estates in the Graves region. Before the arrival of the Cathiard Family, Château Smith Haut Lafitte - though a Classified Growth of the Graves region - bore the nickname of Sleeping Beauty.

Pictures: In the White Wine Cellar of Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte, Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé

Daniel and Florence Cathiard invested heavily, restored buildings, replaced vats, constructed a new barrel cellar, converted vineyard practices to sustainable farming and paid detailed attention to hand picking, sorting, and practices in the cellar. The proportion of new oak barrels used in the maturation process was increased and a trio of eminent oenologists (including Michel Rolland) was hired as consultants.

Pictures: Harvest at Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte, Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé - From Collection Baskets to Fermentation Tank

Having raised the wine of Smith to the highest level of quality, Daniel and Florence Cathiard were not happy to leave it at that: they also restored the 16th-century tower, renovated the 18th-century chartreuse, refurbished two underground cellars and started up a cooperage on the premises.

Private Cellar

Before finishing the visit with a tasting, we spent some time in the private cellar of Daniel and Florence Cathiard.

Pictures: In the Private Cellar of Daniel and Florence Cathiard

Tasting

We ended the tour with a tasting.

Pictures: Tasting at Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte, Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé

Lunch at Restaurant La Grand' Vigne, Prepared by Chef Nicolas Masse (2 stars Michelin)

Not this time, but last time we were at Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte, following the tour, we went over to the Restaurant La Grand' Vigne for an outstanding wine lunch, prepared by Chef Nicolas Masse, who got his second Michelin star in 2014. 

Pictures: Lunch at Restaurant La Grand' Vigne

Total Immersion in Bordeaux: World Class Wines and Exquisite French Gourmet Cuisine - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France (Published and Forthcoming Postings)

Total Immersion in Bordeaux: World Class Wines and Exquisite French Gourmet Cuisine - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2016, France

Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015), France

Bordeaux Wine Tour 2013 by ombiasy

Bordeaux Wines and their Classifications: The Basics

Tour and Tasting at Château La Mission Haut-Brion, Appellation Pessac-Léognan, Cru Classé de Grave - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Dinner with a View: At Restaurant L’Estacade in Bordeaux City - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2016, France

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Bars in Bordeaux City - An Update

Schiller’s Favorite Seafood Places in Bordeaux City, France - An Update

Bordeaux - En Primeur, Negociants, Courtiers, the Quai de Chartons and the Place de Bordeaux– A Short Introduction

How Does the Negociant System in Bordeaux Work? Tour and Tasting at Millésima - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2016, France

Saint Emilion Wines and their Classification, Bordeaux, France

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Bars in St. Emilion, France

Bio in Bordeaux: Cellar Tour, Vineyard Tour and Winepairing Lunch at Chateau Beauséjour and Château Langais, AOC Puisseguin-St.Emilion, with Owner/ Winemaker Gérard Dupuy - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tour and Tasting at Château Cheval Blanc, Appellation Saint-Emilion, Premier Grand Cru Classé A - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Tour and Tasting at Château La Conseillante, Appellation Pomerol, with GM/ Winemaker Marielle Cazaux - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tour with Dany Rolland: Château Le Bon Pasteur in Pomerol– Bordeaux Tour 2016 by ombiasy WineTours

Lunch at Château Le Bon Pasteur, Pomerol, with Dany Rolland and Benoit Prévot - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Tasting with Joël and Sandrine Duffau at Château La Mothe du Barry and Château Les Arromans in the Heart of the Entre-Deux-Mers Region - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Visiting and Tasting at Château Climens, Barsac-Sauternes, Première Grand Cru Classé en 1855 - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Lunch at Restaurant Claude Darroze, 1 Star Michelin, in Langon, with Jean-Charles Darroze - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Visit: Château de Chantegrive, Appellation Grave, with Owner Marie-Hélène Lévêque - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2016, France

Schiller's Favorite Seafood Restaurants in Arcachon and Cap Ferret (Bassin d'Arcachon/ Bordeaux)

Oysters in Bordeaux: Visiting the Oyster Farmer Raphael Doerfler and his Earl Ostrea Chanca Oyster Farm in Grand Piquey/ Bassin d'Arcachon - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Lunch at Pinasse Café, Cap Ferret, Bassin d'Arcachon - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

The 5 Premiers Grands Crus Chateaux en 1855 of Bordeaux, France

What is a Bordeaux Cru Bourgeois? France

Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Tasting at Château Brane-Cantenac with Henri Luston, Owner - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Lunch, Tasting and Tour at Château Kirwan, Appellation Margaux, 3ième Grand Cru Classé, with Owner Natalie Schyler - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Visit and Tasting at Château Poujeaux, Appellation Moulis-en-Médoc, Cru Bourgeois, with Winemaker Christophe Labenne - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

How a Barrel is Made: Visit of the Cooperage Berger & Fils in Vertheuil– Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Tour and Tasting at Château Lafon-Rochet, 4ème Grand Cru Classé St-Estèphe, with Vineyard Manager Anaïs Maillet - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Tour and Tasting at Château Montrose, Appellation Saint-Estèphe, 2ième Grand Cru Classé - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Tour, Barrel Tasting and Family Dinner with Stefan and Heike Paeffgen, Château Le Reysse and Château Lassus, Vignobles Paeffgen, Appellation Médoc - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Tour and Tasting at Château Léoville Poyferré, Saint-Julien, 2ième Grand Cru Classé, with Anne Cuvelier - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Tour and Tasting at Château Pichon Longueville Baron in Pauillac - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017 France

Wine-Pairing Lunch at Château Pichon Longueville Baron in Pauillac - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017 France

Tour and Tasting at Château Beychevelle, Appellation Saint-Julien, 4ième Grand Cru Classé, with General Manager Philippe Blanc - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Visit and Tasting: Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte, Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé– Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015), France

Lunch and Tour at Château Malartic-Lagravière, Graves, Appellation Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Tour and Wine Dinner at Château Haut-Bailly, Graves, Appellation Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Travel: Vineyard Hopping in Germany's East - Article by Annette (Text) and Christian Schiller (Photos) in GW German World (Summer 2017 New York & East Edition), USA/ Germany

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Pictures: Travel: Vineyard Hopping in Germany's East - GW German World (Summer 2017 New York & East Edition)

The GW German World is a bilangual magazine, published in Los Angelos. In tne travel section, the summer 2017 edition carries an article on "Vineyard Hopping in Germany's East". The article was written by Jenny Peters, Senior Editor/ English Language Editor of GW German World. Petra Schürmann, Publisher of GW German World was responsible for the German text. Annette Schiller of ombiasyPR&WineTours, with Christian Schiller, contributed substantially to the article. The article is based on the Germany-East tour by ombiasy WineTours.

Annette Schiller: Discover Germany's internationally rather unknown wine regions east of Frankfurt, Saale-Unstrut, Sachsen, Württemberg, Franken, expect gorgeous Pinot-Blancs, Silvaner, Lemberger, attend performances at world-renowned theater houses, delve deep into the unique culture and history of the once divided Germany.

See:
Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours: Wine, Art, Culture, History
Germany-East Tour 2016 by ombiasy WineTours: Wine, Art, Culture and History
Germany-East Wine and Art Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

The Article - Travel: Vineyard Hopping in Germany's East

The article is 4 pages long, with a focus on recommendations for hotels, restaurants/ wine bars (culinary tips)and winemakers.

Pictures: Travel: Vineyard Hopping in Germany's East

Hotel Recommendations

The hotel recommendations are:

Hotel Zur Alten Schmiede in Naumburg
Hotel INNSIDE in Leipzig
Hotel INNSIDE in Dresden
Welcome Parkhotel in Meissen

Picture: Where to Stay

Culinary Tips

The article lists 5 culinary tips:

Don't miss the fantastic small dishes with matching wines at the Weinzentrale in Dresden-Neustadt. See: Wine and Opera in Dresden: Mozart at Semper Opera and the Best Wines of Sachsen at Wine Bar Weinzentrale in Dresden-Neustadt, with Owner/ Sommelier Jens Pietzonka – Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Enjoy a meal at the Wintergarten Café in Schlosshotel Pillnitz in Dresden

Enjoy a meal at Restaurant Zufriedenheit in Naumburg

Treat yourself to lunch at the Restauant of Winery Vincenz Richter in Meissen. See: Wine and Music:"Martin Luther Lunch" at the Historic Vincenz Richter Restaurant, Weingut Vincenz Richter, in Meissen with Senior Boss Gottfried Herrlich and the Music of Bach, Mozart and Beethoven – Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Don't miss a wine-pairing dinner at Lippe'sches Gutshaus, Schloss Proschwitz. See: Dining with Prinz zur Lippe, Owner of Weingut Schloss Proschwitz, at the Lippe’sches Gutshaus - Germany-East Wine and Art Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

Picture: Culinary Tips

Winemaker Recommendations

There are 8 winemaker recommendations, 4 for the Saale-Unstrut Region and 4 for the Sachsen Region.

Winery Pawis in Freyburg-Zscheiplitz, Saale-Unstrut. See: Weingut Pawis in the Saale Unstrut Region: Tour and Wine Tasting with Marcus Pawis – Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Winery Lützkendorf in Naumburg, Saale-Unstrut. See: Tasting at Weingut Uwe Lützkendorf, with Uwe Lützkendorf, in Bad Kösen, Saale-Unstrut– Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Winery Landesweingut Kloster Pforta in Naumburg, Saale-Unstrut. See: Weingut Kloster Pforta: Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Tasting with Managing Director Christian Kloss – Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Winery Hey in Naumburg, Saale-Unstrut. See:  Vineyard Visit and Wine Tasting Lunch at Weingut Hey in Naumburg, Saale-Unstrut, with Matthias Hey – Germany-East Tour 2016 by ombiasy WineTours

Winery Drei Herren in Radebeul, Sachsen. See: Lunch with Wine Pairing at Weingut Drei Herren in Radebeul, Sachsen, with Restaurant Manager/ Sommelier Dirk Brauer - Germany-East Tour 2016 by ombiasy WineTours

Winery Klaus Zimmermann in Oberpoyritz, Sachsen. See: Visit of Weingut Klaus Zimmerling: The Wines of Klaus Zimmerling and the Art of his Wife Malgorzata Chodakoska - Germany-East Wine and Art Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

Winery Sächsisches Staatseingut Schloss Wackerbarth, Sachsen

Winery Schloss Proschwitz, Prinz zur Lippe, in Zadel, Sachsen. See: Tour and Dinner at Weingut Schloss Proschwitz - Prinz zur Lippe in Zadel, Sachsen, with Georg Prinz zur Lippe - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

See also:
Schiller's Favorite Winemakers in the Saale Unstrut Region, Germany
Schiller's Favorite Winemakers in Sachsen (Saxony), Germany

Pictures: Winery Recommendations

schiller-wine: Related Postings

UPCOMING Tours/ Wine Dinners/ Tastings - Annette and Christian Schiller/ ombiasyPR & WineTours/ schiller-wine, Germany, France, USA (Issued: May 1, 2018)

Ombiasy Wine Tours 2018: 3 x France and 3 x Germany - Ombiasy Newsletter December 2017

UPCOMING Ombiasy Wine Tours in 2018 to Germany and Alsace (May/ June) and to Bordeaux and Burgundy-Champagne (September)

Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours: Wine, Art, Culture, History

Germany-East Tour 2016 by ombiasy WineTours: Wine, Art, Culture and History

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

Wine and Opera in Dresden: Mozart at Semper Opera and the Best Wines of Sachsen at Wine Bar Weinzentrale in Dresden-Neustadt, with Owner/ Sommelier Jens Pietzonka – Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Dining with Prinz zur Lippe, Owner of Weingut Schloss Proschwitz, at the Lippe’sches Gutshaus - Germany-East Wine and Art Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

Weingut Pawis in the Saale Unstrut Region: Tour and Wine Tasting with Marcus Pawis – Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting at Weingut Uwe Lützkendorf, with Uwe Lützkendorf, in Bad Kösen, Saale-Unstrut– Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

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

Vineyard Visit and Wine Tasting Lunch at Weingut Hey in Naumburg, Saale-Unstrut, with Matthias Hey – Germany-East Tour 2016 by ombiasy WineTours

Lunch with Wine Pairing at Weingut Drei Herren in Radebeul, Sachsen, with Restaurant Manager/ Sommelier Dirk Brauer - Germany-East Tour 2016 by ombiasy WineTours

Visit of Weingut Klaus Zimmerling: The Wines of Klaus Zimmerling and the Art of his Wife Malgorzata Chodakoska - Germany-East Wine and Art Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

Tour and Dinner at Weingut Schloss Proschwitz - Prinz zur Lippe in Zadel, Sachsen, with Georg Prinz zur Lippe - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Schiller's Favorite Winemakers in the Saale Unstrut Region, Germany

Schiller's Favorite Winemakers in Sachsen (Saxony), Germany










ombiasy WineTours 2017: Germany-East, Germany-North, Bordeaux, Germany-South/ Alsace - All Postings

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Picture: Annette and Christian Schiller at the 2017 American Wine Society (AWS) National Conference in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania, USA. See: The 2017 American Wine Society National Conference in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania, USA: Seen Through Christian Schiller's Camera Lens

This posting provides listings of all postings that I issued concerning the 4 ombiasy WineTours that took place in 2017, all lead by Annette Schiller: Germany-East, Germany-North, Bordeaux and Germany-South/ Alsace.

Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours: Wine, Art, Culture, History

Picture: In the Cellar of Weingut Herzog von Württemberg at Schloss Monrepos in Ludwigsburg, Württemberg, with Andrea Ritz, the Wine Queen of Württemberg

The Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours: "Wine, Art, Culture and History - Germany's Undiscovered Wine Regions and World-renowned Art Centers" took place from June 9 to June 18, 2017.

This tour allowed wine lovers and aficionados of the arts to experience what the statement “wine is a form of art” entails. We lived the profound relationship between wine, music, visual arts, history by visiting Germany’s beautiful, lesser known wine regions, and the region which is the cradle of German culture, and intellectual thinking. We met winemakers who embody the "wine and art" approach right at their wineries, and we attended world-class concert and opera performances.

We visited a total of 16 wineries (the majority are members of the VDP, the German association of elite wine makers) in 4 different wine regions:

Saale-Unstrut, the northernmost German wine region and former GDR territory. It is situated on the hillsides lining the Saale and Unstrut rivers and produces racy white wines from many white grape varieties; (see also: Schiller's Favorite Winemakers in the Saale Unstrut Region, Germany)

Sachsen, also located in the former GDR, is the easternmost German wine region and extends some 35 miles north and south of Dresden along the Elbe river. This region tickles all your senses with its unique voluptuous baroque architecture, a rich history, its wealth of art, and love of all the good things in life; (see also: Schiller's Favorite Winemakers in Sachsen (Saxony), Germany)

Franken with its Bavarian charm and gorgeous, crisp, crystal clear wines from their signature grape Silvaner; and

Württemberg, Germany’s premier red wine region with hearty, bold wines made from grapes like Lemberger (Blaufränkisch in Austria), and Trollinger. This is the region where wine is ingrained in daily life like nowhere else. The Württemberg region has the highest per capita consumption of wine in Germany.

Germany with its roughly 250,000 acres under vine belongs today to one of the smaller wine producing countries in the world. However, viticulture in Germany has a long tradition, going back to Roman times 2,000 years ago. In the 15th century, the area under vine was four times larger than it is today. Wars, subsequent loss of territory, diseases, overproduction, and competition from beer brewing resulted in land turned over to other agricultural uses. In the 19th century, concentration on terroir and technological progress fostered a tremendous improvement of quality and the prestige of German wines, in particular from the Mosel, Rheingau, and Pfalz regions, resulting in prices above those for first growth Bordeaux wines. Today, all thirteen wine regions in Germany produce outstanding wines. However, the two regions in the former GDR had a lot of catching up to do. During the communist times from 1945 until reunification in 1989, wine production was nationalized, and winemaking took place in huge VEB (volkseigener Betrieb / company owned by the people) wineries. The output, the bottle count was imposed on the VEB by the State, and therefore quality could not play a major role. The winemaking process was deprived of modern farming and cellar techniques. The majority of wine produced was for the consumption of the communist party members. After the iron curtain came down, family wineries were founded, and the winemakers pursued quality with a vengeance. Some of Germany’s finest Pinot Blanc and Pinot Gris today come from the Saale-Unstrut and Sachsen regions.

Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours: Wine, Art, Culture and History

Wine Tasting Lunch at Weingut Frölich-Hake in Naumburg-Rossbach, Saale-Unstrut, Germany, with Sandra Hake – Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Weingut Pawis in the Saale Unstrut Region: Tour and Wine Tasting with Marcus Pawis – Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting at Weingut Uwe Lützkendorf, with Uwe Lützkendorf, in Bad Kösen, Saale-Unstrut– Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Schiller's Favorite Winemakers in the Saale Unstrut Region, Germany

Wine and Music:"Martin Luther Lunch" at the Historic Vincenz Richter Restaurant, Weingut Vincenz Richter, in Meissen with Senior Boss Gottfried Herrlich and the Music of Bach, Mozart and Beethoven – Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Visit of Weingut Klaus Zimmerling: The Wines of Klaus Zimmerling and the Art of his Wife Malgorzata Chodakoska - Germany-East Wine and Art Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

Wine and Opera in Dresden: Mozart at Semper Opera and the Best Wines of Sachsen at Wine Bar Weinzentrale in Dresden-Neustadt, with Owner/ Sommelier Jens Pietzonka – Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Dresden is the New Unlikely Place for Fine Barolo Wine: Weingut Martin Schwarz– Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tour and Dinner at Weingut Schloss Proschwitz - Prinz zur Lippe in Zadel, Sachsen, with Georg Prinz zur Lippe - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Schiller's Favorite Winemakers in Sachsen (Saxony), Germany

Vinyard Tour and Tasting at Weingut Horst Sauer in Eschendorf, Franken, with Horst Sauer - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Fürstlich Castell’sches Domänenamt in Castell, Franken, with General Manager and Winemaker Björn Probst - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Lunch with Christian L. Stahl, Winzerhof Stahl, Franken: Not only a Gifted Winemaker but also a Gifted Chef - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tour and Tasting at the Historic Weingut Juliusspital in Würzburg, Franken - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Schiller’s Favorites: 2 Legendary Wine Taverns in Würzburg – Juliusspital and Bürgerspital

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Taverns in Würzburg

Cellar Visit and Tasting at Weingut Fürst Hohenlohe Öhringen in Öhringen–Verrenberg, Württemberg, with General Manager and Winemaker Joachim Brand - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tour and Tasting at Weingut Wachstetter in Pfaffenhofen, Württemberg, with Rainer Wachtstetter– Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Lunch at the 1 Star Michelin Restaurant Gutsschenke Schlosshotel Monrepos, with Chef Ben Benasr - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Herzog von Württemberg at Schloss Monrepos, with Andrea Ritz, Wine Queen of Württemberg (2016/17) - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour, Tasting and Dinner with Kilian Graf von Bentzel-Sturmfeder, Weingut Graf von Bentzel-Sturmfeder in Schozach, Württemberg - Germany-East Tour 2016 by ombiasy WineTours

Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours: Quintessential German Riesling and the Northernmost Pinot Noir

Picture: With Oliver Haag, Weingut Fritz Haag, Brauneberg, Mosel, in the Brauneberger Sonnenuhr Vineyard - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours: Quintessential German Riesling and the Northernmost Pinot Noir

We spent 7 days (Thursday, June 19, 2017 to June 25, 2017) touring 5 German wine regions (Rheingau, Mittelrhein, Ahr, Mosel and Nahe), tasting fabulous wines, meeting world-renowned wine makers, and delving deep into German history and culture.

The group was small - there were 4 of us, including Annette and Christian Schiller. This posting provides an overview.

On the Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, we visited a total of 18 wineries in 5 different wine regions: Rheingau, the jewel in the crown, with its perfect, fuller bodied, racy Rieslings; Mittelrhein where the Rieslings grow on the steep slopes of the fortress- and castle-ribboned banks of the Rhine river; Ahr with its sun collecting canyons perfect for the finicky Pinot Noir grape; Mosel with its dizzying steep vineyards and famous elegant Rieslings; Nahe and its serene, peaceful valley where perfect harmonious wines reflect their roots.

Annette Schiller: Our way of traveling allows wine lovers to fully experience authentic Germany. Drawing on our love and deep knowledge of Germany and close personal ties to many personalities in the wine scene, our small group visits many of the hidden gems that other tours pass by, but which are essential to comprehend what German wine is all about

Germany with its roughly 250,000 acres under vine belongs today to one of the smaller wine producing countries in the world. However, viticulture in Germany has a long tradition, going back to Roman times 2,000 years ago. In the 15th century, the area under vine was four times larger than it is today. Wars, subsequent loss of territory, diseases, overproduction, and competition from beer brewing resulted in land turned over to other agricultural uses. In the 19th century, concentration on terroir and technological progress fostered a tremendous improvement of quality and the prestige of German wines, in particular from the Mosel, Rheingau, and Pfalz regions, resulting in prices above those for first growth Bordeaux wines. Today, all thirteen wine regions in Germany produce outstanding wines, and German Rieslings belong to the best white wines in the world.

Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours: Quintessential German Riesling and the Northernmost Pinot Noir

Weingut Georg Müller Stiftung in Hattenheim, Rheingau: Cellar Tour, Art Tour, Tasting and Vineyard Tour with Winemaker Tim Lilienström - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Kloster Eberbach in the Rheingau: Lunch, Tour of the Abbey, the Steinberg and the Steinbergkeller, with Tasting - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Schloss Vollrads in the Rheingau: Tour and Tasting - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Leitz in Rüdesheim, with Cellar Master Manfred Zuffer– Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Vineyard Tour and Tasting at Weingut Ratzenberger, Mittelrhein, with Jochen Ratzenberger - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Rhine River Cruise in the Mittelrhein Valley, an UNESCO World Heritage Region - Germany-North Tour 2016 by ombiasy WineTours

Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Heymann-Löwenstein in Winningen, Mosel, with Reinhard Löwenstein - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting at Weingut H.J. Kreuzberg in Dernau, Ahr, with Technical Director Albert Schamaun– Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Jean Stodden, Ahr, with Alexander Stodden - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting with Markus Molitor at Weingut Markus Molitor in Haus Klosterberg, Mosel - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting and Vineyard Visit at Weingut Immich-Batterieberg in Enkirch, Mosel, with Gernot Kollmann - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

The Wines of the Berncasteler Doctor, Bernkastel-Kues in the Mosel Valley, Germany

Wining in Bernkastel-Kues in the Mosel Valley: Wine Tavern “Spitzhaeuschen”, Germany

Tasting and Vineyard Walk with Oliver Haag, Weingut Fritz Haag – Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Dinner at Restaurant Schanz, 2 Stars Michelin, Piesport, Mosel– Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Taverns in Trier, Germany

Cellar Visit, Vineyard Walk and Tasting at Weingut Maximin Grünhaus in Mertersdorf, Ruwer, with Owner Dr. Carl von Schubert – Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut von Hövel, Saar, with Owner/ Winemaker Maximilian von Kunow - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting at Weingut Emrich-Schönleber in Monzingen, Nahe, with Owner/ Winemaker Frank Schönleber - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Wine Pairing Lunch at Landgasthof Zur Traube in Meddersheim, Nahe, with Petra Hexamer and the Wines of Weingut Hexamer - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tour, Tasting, Dinner and Overnight Stay at Weingut Kruger Rumpf, Nahe, with Stefan, Cornelia and Georg Rumpf– Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting at Weingut J.B. Becker in Walluf, Rheingau, with Hajo Becker– Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Total Immersion in Bordeaux: World Class Wines and Exquisite French Gourmet Cuisine - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Picture: Tour at the Cooperage Berger & Fils in the Village of Vertheuil, with Simon Grelier, Managing Director

Led by Annette Schiller, the Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours took place from September 6 to 15, 2017. The group comprised 6 wine lovers from the United States, including Annette and Christian Schiller.







Annette Schiller: Our way of traveling allows wine lovers to fully experience authentic Bordeaux. "Bordeaux" embodies not only "wine": The interplay of wine and food is very important. Therefore our tour has a strong culinary component, with exquisite wine pairing lunches and dinners at the Châteaux playing a daily part of our journey through the Bordeaux wine region. Drawing on our love and deep knowledge of the region and close personal ties to many of the Château owners/ managers/ winemakers, our small group visits many of the hidden gems that other tours pass by, but which are essential to feel what Bordeaux is all about. In a nutshell: this is an on ground wine class on Bordeaux!

Picture: Annette Schiller in Bordeaux Before the Tour

Total Immersion in Bordeaux: World Class Wines and Exquisite French Gourmet Cuisine - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2016, France

Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015), France

Bordeaux Wine Tour 2013 by ombiasy

Bordeaux Wines and their Classifications: The Basics

Tour and Tasting at Château La Mission Haut-Brion, Appellation Pessac-Léognan, Cru Classé de Grave - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Dinner with a View: At Restaurant L’Estacade in Bordeaux City - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2016, France

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Bars in Bordeaux City - An Update

Schiller’s Favorite Seafood Places in Bordeaux City, France - An Update

Bordeaux - En Primeur, Negociants, Courtiers, the Quai de Chartons and the Place de Bordeaux– A Short Introduction

How Does the Negociant System in Bordeaux Work? Tour and Tasting at Millésima - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2016, France

Saint Emilion Wines and their Classification, Bordeaux, France

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Bars in St. Emilion, France

Bio in Bordeaux: Cellar Tour, Vineyard Tour and Winepairing Lunch at Chateau Beauséjour and Château Langais, AOC Puisseguin-St.Emilion, with Owner/ Winemaker Gérard Dupuy - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tour and Tasting at Château Cheval Blanc, Appellation Saint-Emilion, Premier Grand Cru Classé A - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Tour and Tasting at Château La Conseillante, Appellation Pomerol, with GM/ Winemaker Marielle Cazaux - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Tour with Dany Rolland: Château Le Bon Pasteur in Pomerol– Bordeaux Tour 2016 by ombiasy WineTours

Lunch at Château Le Bon Pasteur, Pomerol, with Dany Rolland and Benoit Prévot - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Tasting with Joël and Sandrine Duffau at Château La Mothe du Barry and Château Les Arromans in the Heart of the Entre-Deux-Mers Region - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Visiting and Tasting at Château Climens, Barsac-Sauternes, Première Grand Cru Classé en 1855 - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Lunch at Restaurant Claude Darroze, 1 Star Michelin, in Langon, with Jean-Charles Darroze - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Visit: Château de Chantegrive, Appellation Grave, with Owner Marie-Hélène Lévêque - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2016, France

Schiller's Favorite Seafood Restaurants in Arcachon and Cap Ferret (Bassin d'Arcachon/ Bordeaux)

Oysters in Bordeaux: Visiting the Oyster Farmer Raphael Doerfler and his Earl Ostrea Chanca Oyster Farm in Grand Piquey/ Bassin d'Arcachon - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Lunch at Pinasse Café, Cap Ferret, Bassin d'Arcachon - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

The 5 Premiers Grands Crus Chateaux en 1855 of Bordeaux, France

What is a Bordeaux Cru Bourgeois? France

Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Tasting at Château Brane-Cantenac with Henri Luston, Owner - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Lunch, Tasting and Tour at Château Kirwan, Appellation Margaux, 3ième Grand Cru Classé, with Owner Natalie Schyler - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Visit and Tasting at Château Poujeaux, Appellation Moulis-en-Médoc, Cru Bourgeois, with Winemaker Christophe Labenne - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

How a Barrel is Made: Visit of the Cooperage Berger & Fils in Vertheuil– Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Tour and Tasting at Château Lafon-Rochet, 4ème Grand Cru Classé St-Estèphe, with Vineyard Manager Anaïs Maillet - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Tour and Tasting at Château Montrose, Appellation Saint-Estèphe, 2ième Grand Cru Classé - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Tour, Barrel Tasting and Family Dinner with Stefan and Heike Paeffgen, Château Le Reysse and Château Lassus, Vignobles Paeffgen, Appellation Médoc - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Tour and Tasting at Château Léoville Poyferré, Saint-Julien, 2ième Grand Cru Classé, with Anne Cuvelier - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Tour and Tasting at Château Pichon Longueville Baron in Pauillac - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017 France

Wine-Pairing Lunch at Château Pichon Longueville Baron in Pauillac - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017 France

Tour and Tasting at Château Beychevelle, Appellation Saint-Julien, 4ième Grand Cru Classé, with General Manager Philippe Blanc - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Visit and Tasting: Château Smith-Haut-Lafitte, Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé– Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2017), France

Lunch and Tour at Château Malartic-Lagravière, Graves, Appellation Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France

Tour and Wine Dinner at Château Haut-Bailly, Graves, Appellation Pessac-Léognan, Grand Cru Classé - Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours 2017, France

Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Pictures: Tasting with Jean-Frederic Hugel at Domaine Hugel in Riquewhir, Alsace, including a Vintage 1945 Domaine Hugel Wine

The Germany-South and Alsace Tour by ombiasy WineTours took place from October 1 - 8, 2017. The group was small - there were 4 of us, including Annette and Christian Schiller.

We visited a total of 19 wineries in Alsace in France and 3 different German wine regions where predominantly grapes other than Riesling are planted: Baden, the most southern German wine region and Germany’s answer to Burgundy; Pfalz with its almost Mediterranean climate and voluptuous whites and reds; Southern Rheinhessen where a variety of white grapes and also Pinot-Noir grow.

Annette Schiller in her announcement: Discover Germany’s southern wine regions and red wine. Explore Baden, the southernmost and internationally fairly unknown region that produces outstanding Pinot Noirs (in German: Spätburgunder), and whites from Burgundy grapes and other varietals. Visit wineries on the shore of Lake Constance, the largest body of water in Germany bordering Switzerland. Take a look at medieval monasteries and other cultural heritage sites. We will spend one night in an epicurean's dream destination in the Kaiserstuhl to indulge in true southern German hospitality and 1-Michelin star gourmet food. We will step across the Rhine River to compare the very different wines of the eastern (German) and western (French) Rhine valley and we will get a feel for beautiful, quaint Alsace with its picturesque wine villages dotted with half-timbered century old buildings. Enjoy a great dinner at a 1-Michelin star restaurant in Kaysersberg, the birth place of Albert Schweitzer. Enjoy the Pfalz and Rheinhessen with its gently rolling hills, sumptuous red and white wines, and a generation of young, ambitious, up and coming winemakers.

Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour (and Lunch) with Robert Schätzle, Owner/ Winemaker, Weingut Schloss Neuweier in Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

La Cucina della Passione and Weingut Schloss Neuweier Wines: Wine Pairing Lunch at Röttele’s Restaurant (1 Star Michelin) at Schloss Neuweier, with Owner and Winemaker Robert Schätzle, Weingut Schloss Neuweier - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

The Music of the A Cappella Ensemble "Männer und Tenöre" and the Wines of Weingut Aufricht, Lake Constance, Baden, with Manfred Aufricht - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

The Evolving Structure of the Wine Industry in Germany– The Case of the Lake Constance Region

Schloss Salem at Lake Constance in Germany: A Museum, a School and a Wine Estate

Visit of Schloss Salem, Kirche Birnau and Weingut Markgraf von Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

The Wines of the Markgräflerland (Baden): Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Löffler - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Stigler, Baden, with Andreas, Regina and Max Stigler - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Dinner at Restaurant Schwarzer Adler, 1 Star Michelin, Oberbergen, Kaiserstuhl, Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Bars and Wine Taverns in Freiburg, Baden, Germany

The World Class Wines of Alsace

In the world class white wine region Alsace

Tasting at Domaine Marcel Deiss in Bergheim, Alsace - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Lunch in Alsace: Wistube du Sommelier in Bergheim and L’Epicurien in Colmar - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting at Domaine Dirler-Cadé with Jean Pierre Dirler and Ludevine Dirler-Cadé - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Tour and Tasting at Domaines Schlumberger in Guebwiller, Alsace - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Tour and Tasting at Hugel in Riquewhir, Alsace, with Jean Frédéric Hugel - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Dinner at the 1 Michelin Star Restaurant L’Achémille in Kaysersberg, with Owner/ Chef Jérome Jaegle - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Wine Lunch at Weingut Jülg with Johannes Jülg– Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

Tasting at Maison Jülg in Seebach, Alsace, with Peter Jülg - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

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

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Ökonomierat Rebholz in Siebeldingen, Pfalz, with Hansjörg and Valentin Rebholz and Sabine Wagner - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Münzberg/ Gunter Kessler in Landau-Godramstein, Pfalz, with Owner/ Winemaker Gunter Kessler - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Rings in Freinsheim, Pfalz, with Andreas Rings - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting at Weingut Krebs in Freinsheim, Pfalz, with Jürgen Krebs and Ann-Kathrin Müller - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting at Sekthaus Raumland in Flörsheim-Dalsheim, Rheinhessen, with Heide-Rose and Volker Raumland - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Tour and Tasting at Weingut Wittmann in Westhofen, Rheinhessen, with Philipp Wittmann - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Visit and Tasting at Weingut Groebe in Westhofen, Rheinhessen, with Fritz Groebe - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Guntrum is Back (Stuart Pigott/ James Suckling): Wine Pairing Lunch and Tour at Weingut Louis Guntrum in Nierstein, Rheinhessen, with Owners Konstantin and Stephanie Guntrum - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

schiller-wine: Related Postings

ombiasy WineTours 2017: Germany-East, Germany-North, Bordeaux, Germany-South/ Alsace - All Postings

ombiasy WineTours 2016: Germany-North, Germany-East, Bourgogne and Bordeaux - All Postings

ombiasy WineTours 2015: Bourgogne, Germany-East Wine and Art, Germany-South, Germany-North and Bordeaux - All Postings

ombiasy WineTours 2014: Germany-North and Germany-South - All Postings

ombiasy WineTour 2013: Bordeaux and Germany - All Postings

ombiasy WineTours Newsletter May 2018 - NEWS: The Latest Hipe - Pét-Nat: Le Dernier Crie - FALL: WineTours to Bordeaux and Burgundy & Champagne

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Picture: Annette Schiller

This is the text of the ombiasy WineTours newsletter that Annette distributed on May 25, 2018. If you want to be on her distribution list, send a mail to aschiller@ombiasypr.com.

Pét-Nat: Le Dernier Crie - The Latest Hipe

Dear wine and food lover,

It's getting warmer in the northern hemisphere as summer is slowly but surely approaching. What is better after a hard day's work, or to ring in a leisurely weekend than sipping some cool fizzy stuff.

A new trendy kid on the blog is Pét-Nat, but what is Pét-Nat? Actually it is not at all a new kid – it is the oldest sparkling wine produced on planet Earth going back to the 16th century. Making Champagne according to the méthode champenoise (adding sugar to initiate a second fermentation of a fully fermented base wine) was discovered much later in 1662 by English scientist and physician Christopher Merret.

Pét-Nat stands for “Pétillant Naturel”, and is produced in the “méthode ancestral”. Still wine is basically fermented grape juice where the natural sugars in the grapes convert to alcohol, and the wine is bottled after fermentation has come to an end. “Méthode ancestral” means that the wine is bottled before the fermentation process is completed, thus keeping some carbon dioxide in the bottle, which makes the wine fizzy.

As the name Pét-Nat suggests in general producers work their vineyards according to organic or even biodynamic methods, and work mostly with spontaneous fermentation. Often, Pét-Nats are Orange Sparkling Wines, i.e. they are fermented on the mash (with the skin). There is no disgorgement or removal of the spent yeasts, and no or minimal filtration - hence Pét-Nats tend to show a somewhat cloudy appearance.

To produce a Pét-Nat requires a lot of experience and authentic craftsmanship of the wine maker. The process can be hard to control and the result is often unpredictable.

Due to the production method Pét-Nats have less pressure than other sparklers, and often show a less pronounced perlage (semi-sparkling). Their pressure in the bottle is usually 2.5-3 bar, while Champagne comes in at 5-6 bar. The alcohol content is also lower than in other sparkling wines. The packaging differs in one important detail: A Champagne is closed with the characteristic, large cork and a cage. Pét-nats, are usually closed with a cap – similar to a beer bottle cap or cider bottle cap.

So, what's the hipe about the Pét-Nats and what do they taste like?

Pét-Nats are light, fizzy bubblies low in alcohol, which makes them popular. They are lively, rustic sparklers that reflect the terroir. Pét-Nats can taste dry or can have some residual sweetness. An Orange Pét-Nat comes with a particular taste and might need a little getting used to. I suspect the Pét-Nat will never be mainstream, but with the low alcohol and less fizz it will find its followers.

Get some Pét-Nats, try and taste. Pét-Nats are perfect to celebrate the Memorial Day weekend.

Have a great Memorial Day weekend

CHEERS Annette

FALL Wine Tours 2018

The long Memoriall Day weekend is just one day away. Time to start thinking: What are we going to do in the fall? I have a suggestion: Do some fabulous wine tours to Bordeaux and Burgundy & Champagne.

The fall tours usually coincide with some aspects of the harvest season. It is always exciting to travel to wine regions during the harvest season to feel the tension: will this be a good vintage? Sometimes we only catch the preparation stage, sometimes we just see the last truck loaded with grapes pulling into the winery, sometimes -like last year- we were lucky to witness harvest season in full swing.

Annette

Bordeaux, September 04 - 13, 2018

Join me for this years wine tour to BORDEAUX.
This tour starts and ends in Bordeaux City.

Taste first-class wines in Saint-Emilion, Margaux, Saint-Julien, Pauillac, Saint-Estèphe, Pessac-Léognan, Pomerol, Sauterne, Graves. Enjoy exquisite gourmet wine pairing lunches and dinners at world-famous Châteaux. Learn about the mechanism of the “Place de Bordeaux” from an expert at a négociant house. Visit a cooper to closely witness the art of making a barrique -so important for the quality of a wine- from A to Z. Travel to the Bassin d’Arcachon to explore how an oyster is raised. Discover the vibrant and cool city of Bordeaux.

We plan to visit (in order of the scheduled itinerary): Château La Mission Haut-Brion; Château Beauséjour; Château Clos Fourtet; Château La Conseillante; Château Le Bon Pasteur; Château Villemaurine; Château Yquem; Château Climens; Vignobles Gonet-Médeville; Château Smith Haut-Lafitte; Château Lascombes; Château Pichon-Longueville-Baron; Château Lynch-Bages; Château Lafon-Rochet; Château Phélan Ségur; Château Le Reysse; Château Léoville-Barton; Château Kirwan; Château Haut-Bailly.

Once you arrive in Bordeaux you are taken care of until the tour ends. We always travel in a small goup with max 12 people (including myself, the guide) in order to be able to get a very personal behind the scene experience.

Experience a Bordeaux wine class on the ground and have lots of fun too!

For details click here.

Burgundy & Champagne, September 20 - 30, 2018

Join me for this years wine tour to BURGUNDY and CHAMPAGNE.
The tour starts in Lyon and ends in Paris.

Travel from Lyon to Paris. Discover the sophisticated city of Lyon beautifully situated at the confluence of the Saône and Rhône rivers. Travel north and visit and taste at top Domaines in the Beaujolais, the Mâconnais, the Côte Chalonnaise, the Côte de Beaune whith the Grand Cru Montrachet vineyards where the most expensive white wines of the world grow, the Côte de Nuits with it's famous red Grand Cru appellations such as La Tâche, Richebourg, Clos de Vougeot, Romannée Conti, and Chablis with its crispy Chardonnay. Cross into the Champagne region to learn how the bubbles get into the bottle and savor fantastic Champagnes. Enjoy Michelin-star restaurants as well as typicl local bistros and taverns. Get a good idea about the great history of the region through visits of important historic places. Have the farewell meal in a Paris restaurant which has become a landmark throughout time.

Once you arrive in Lyon you are taken care of until we part in Paris. The group will be a small one with max 12 people (including me, your guide) to allow us to visit small Burgundy domaines and to get a very personal behind the scene expierence.

Get the inside track of the Burgundy and Champagne regions and have lots of fun too!

For details click here.

All Upcoming Wine Tours 2018 At A Glance

Germany

Germany East - Wine, Culture, History Tour - from Berlin to Frankfurt: June 11 – 20, 2018
There is 1 - just ONE! slot available for the very late decision maker.

France

Bordeaux: September 04 – 13, 2018
Burgundy & Champagne: September 20 – 30, 2018
Rhône: October 15 – 24, 2018 (sold out)


The Sun-Kissed South: Germany’s Pinot Noir, the Other Whites, the Culinary Regions - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

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Picture: Dinner in Beautiful Riquewhir, Alsace

Germany South / Alsace
Baden • Alsace • Pfalz • Rheinhessen
May 12 - May 20, 2018

The Germany-South and Alsace Tour by ombiasy WineTours took place from May 12 - May 20, 2018. The size of the group varied during the tour between 6 and 4 members, including Annette and Christian Schiller. This posting provides an overview.

We visited a total of 18 wineries in Alsace in France and 3 different German wine regions where predominantly grapes other than Riesling are planted: Baden, the most southern German wine region and Germany’s answer to Burgundy; Pfalz with its almost Mediterranean climate and voluptuous whites and reds; Southern Rheinhessen where a variety of white grapes and also Pinot-Noir grow.


Annette Schiller in her announcement: Discover Germany’s southern wine regions and red wine country Germany. Explore Baden, the southernmost and internationally fairly unknown region that produces outstanding Pinot Noirs (in German: Spätburgunder), and whites from Burgundy grapes and other varietals. Visit wineries on the shore of Lake Constance, the largest body of water in Germany bordering Switzerland. Take a look at medieval monasteries and other cultural heritage sites. We will spend one night in an epicurean's dream destination in the Kaiserstuhl to indulge in true southern German hospitality and 1-Michelin star gourmet food. We will step across the Rhine River to compare the very different wines of the eastern (German) and western (French) Rhine valley and we will get a feel for beautiful, quaint Alsace with its incredible picturesque wine villages dotted with half-timbered century old buildings. Enjoy a 2-Michelin star dinner at a great Alsatian restaurant with truly French charme. Enjoy the Pfalz and Rheinhessen regions with its gently rolling hills, sumptuous red and white wines, and a generation of young, ambitious, up and coming winemakers. Discover Mainz, on of the ten wine capitals of the World, where wine is one of the most important part of everyday life.

ITINERARY

DAY 1: Saturday, May 12

09:00 Departure by Coach from Frankfurt am Main.

09:45 Cellar Tour and Tasting at New Superstar Sekt Producer Griesel&Compagnie in Bensheim, Hessische Bergstrasse, with Assistant Winemaker Rachele Crosara

Assistant Winemaker Rachele Crosara was our host.

We toured the winemaking facilities and had a tasting of the Griesel Sekts.

With this visit we honored the Germans affinity with the bubbly stuff. Did you know that the Germans are world champions in sparkling wine consumption? And that “Rotkäppchen” in Freyburg, in the Saale-Unstrut region is the world’s second largest sparkling wine producer after Freixenet? And that there are many top rated Sekt producers in Germany?

Our visit took us to a Sekthaus which came into existence just a few years ago and already enjoys the highest accolades. In 2013 the Eberbach Abbey winery in Bensheim moved the production to headquartes in the Rheingau and the wonderful old, vaulted cellers under the Griesel mountain became available. Sekthaus Griesel came into existence. Vintner Niko Brandner started from scratch and could configure the Sekthaus exactly according to his knowledge and ideas. The April 2018 edition of the Decanter writes about the 2014 Griesel, Blanc de Noirs Brut: “This new discovery is seriously impressive, all the more so given that it’s only this talented producer’s second vintage. Made from Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier, it has spent 24 months on lees before being disgorged……”












12:45 Lunch at 1-Michelin Star Restaurant Landhaus Feckl in Ehningen.

We had a most delicious three-course lunch.

This family-run cozy, rustic-chic Landhaus boasts of an exquisite restaurant. Chef and owner Franz Feckl is well reputed for his creative ideas to perfectly combine regional Swabian cuisine with cuisines of other regions, i.e. the Mediterranean, Asia, France. His wife Michaela is a charming host.








16.15 Guided Visit of Burg Hohenzollern.

The Hohenzollern Castle is the ancestral seat of the Hohenzollern dynasty, from which the German Emperors and kings of Prussia came. The original castle was built in the 11th century, burned down several times, and was finally restored by both branches of the Hohenzollern family in the 19th century. For almost one thousand years it serves as temporary home for the family. It is still owned by the Hohenzollern family and home of Georg Friedrich Prince of Prussia and Sophie Princess of Prussia. The castle sits on a hill high above the town of Hechingen and is visible from afar. Frederick the Great was buried here. After reunification Frederick's casket was moved to Sanssouci in Potsdam and he was finally laid to rest in the terrace of the vineyard of Sanssouci – in the still existing crypt he had built there – in accordance with his will.







19:00 Arrival at Hotel Zur Rose, Bodensee (Lake Constance), Baden.


Hotel zur Rose in Überlingen, Bodensee (Lake Constance) is a 3 star, family run historic hotel with totally modernized tastefully renovated rooms within a 3 minutes walk from the shore of Lake Constance.


After checking in, we enjoyed a walk along the lake before having dinner at a lake restaurant. From the northern shore in Germany – weather permitting – you can have a gorgeous view across the lake to the Alpes in Austria and Switzerland.





DAY 2: Sunday, May 13:

10:00 Guided Tour of Schloss/ Kloster (Castle/ Abbey) Salem, Lake Constance, Baden

Salem castle is an impressive ensemble of majestic buildings. It was founded as a Cistercian Abbey in 1134, when Bernard de Clairvaux ventured from his home base Burgundy to establish Cistercian monasteries on the eastern banks of the Rhine river.

In a very short time Salem Abbey developed into one of the leading abbeys in southern Germany. Salem experienced a second period of affluence during the Baroque era. It is fascinating to see the Gothic buildings, in particular the cathedral decorated with its unique alabaster plasterwork and the ornately Baroque style decorated rooms in the Palace. After secularization during the Napoleonic era Schloss Salem came into the possession of the Markgraf von Baden, the ruler of the Kingdom of Baden, and the ownership has not changed since then. Schloss Salem is also home of the prestigious boarding school Schule Schloss Salem. Kurt Hahn, a respected educator, who later was instrumental in establishing the International School system and the IB (International Baccaleurate) founded the school in 1920 with support of Prince Max of Baden. The student dorms are in the former monk cells and the monk’s spirit and simplicity of life can still be felt today.









12:00 Lunch at the Schloss/ Kloster Salem, Baden.




13:00 Tasting at Weingut Markgraf von Baden in Salem, Baden.

As it was customary the Cistercian monks produced wine to support themselves and the abbey. Thus this winery has a long history. This winery comprises two estates, the bigger one at Schloss Salem on the northern shore of Lake Constance and the one in the Ortenau, at Schloss Staufenberg. The two estates together with 335 acres of vineyards make for one of the largest privately owned wine estates in Germany. Owner is HRH Prince Bernhard von Baden. The aristocratic dynasty, ones the rulers of the Kingdom of Baden, can look back to more than 600 years of viticulture tradition. It was the Markgraf von Baden who as early as in the 15th century introduced the first wine law and innovative viticultural practices.




15:45 Visit of the Basilica Birnau.

The Basilica Birnau is a Baroque jewel and sits majestically on a hill high above Lake Constance. It was built in 1749 and has been a pilgrimage church since then. The interior is richly decorated in the Rococo style and the church is one of the most beautiful Baroque churches in all of Germany, not least because of its unrivalled position overlooking Lake Constance and its surrounding vineyards. The church is still in the hands of the Cistercian monks.







16:30 Cellar Tour and Tasting at Staatsweingut Meersburg in Meersburg, Bodensee.

Hanna Neuser of EcoCert and Consultant at Staatsweingut Meersburg was our host.

We toured the ancient cellar and and had a tasting of the Staatsweingut Meersburg wines.

The Staastweingut Meersburg basically never changed ownership: it has always been in the hands of the rulers of Baden. Wine production in Meersburg has been first documented in 1210. This year also marks the establishment of the Staatsweingut Meersburg. However in those days it was the winery of the Prince-Bishop of Constance who reigned over Baden. For 600 years the winery stayed in he hands of the Prince-Bishops. In 1802 Napoleon secularized all church properties and ownership changed to the Markgraf von Baden who was the ruling King of Baden in those days. The Grand Duchy of Baden remained a sovereign country until it joined the German Empire in 1871. After the revolution of 1918, and the abolishment of the monarchy in Germany, Baden became part of the Weimar Republic as the Republic of Baden. The Republic of Baden as the successor of the Grand Duchy of Baden took over the winery (but it did not take over Schloss Salem, which became the private property of the Markgraf of Baden). After 1945 Baden and Württemberg were merged to the Republic of Baden-Württemberg, which is the current owner of the Staatsweingut Meersburg.

Today the vineyard area totals 150 acres, planted with Pinot Noir, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, Chardonnay, Riesling, Müller-Thurgau, Traminer and Regent. The Staastweingut has parcels in famous vineyard sites around Lake Constane such as Bengel, Chorherrnhalde, Lerchenberg, Jungfernstieg and Rieschen (Meersburg – monopole holding), Olgaberg – highest vineyard in Germany at 520 metres above sea level (Hohentwiel), as well as Ritterhalde (Gailingen).











20:00 Dinner at Rstaurant Bürgerbräu (Chef Simon Metzler) in Überlingen.

The day ended with dinner at Restaurant Bürgerbräu - recommended by the Guide Michelin - in Überlingen. Chef Simon Metzler and his wife Katja run the place in the third generation. Chef Simon Metzler started his career with Chef Stefan Marquard, was the tour chef of the Rock Band "Die Toten Hosen" and worked for a number of years in Berlin, before returning home to Überlingen and taking over the family business.


DAY 3: Monday, May 14:

08:00 Check out of hotel and departure. We again crossed the Black Forest to arrive in the Rhine plains.

10:00 Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Ziereisen in Efringen, Markgräfler Land, Baden, with Hanspeter and Edeltraut Ziereisen.

Hanspeter and Edeltraut Ziereisen were our hosts. We started the visit with a tour of the old cellar, sat down for a massive tasting and finished the visit with a quick tour of the impressive, brand-new winemaking facilities, built into the mountain, of Weingut Ziereisen outside of the village.

The Ziereisen winery is in the Markgräfler Land, the far southwestern corner of Germany where the country borders both Switzerland and France. Winery Ziereisen sits right at the Switzerland – Germany border. Hanspeter Ziereisen and his family are now the fourth generation at the helm of the winery. This family are fanatically dedicated winemakers and are rewarded with four grapes in the 2018 Gault-Millau wine guide. They make very interesting and age worthy red wines made in Germany. Most are Pinot Noirs but their fascination with Syrah led to the production of one Syrah wine. The house wine is a Gutedel. Gutedel is more known under the name „Chasselat“ or „Fendant“ as the signature white grape varietal of Switzerland. Gutedel has also become the signature grape of its close neighbor the Markgräfler Land. It is regarded as oldest known grape variety, grown in Egypt 5000 years ago. In the late 18 hundreds the Chasselat grape was brought from Vervey, Switzerland to the Markgräfler Land.





















12:30 Lunch at Restaurant Der Löwen in Staufen, Markgräfler Land, Baden.

Staufen is an incredibly picturesque village with the romantic Schlossberg with it’s ruin on top and vineyards on the slopes. Time seems to have come to a standstill here.






15:00 Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Martin Waßmer in Bad Krozingen, Markgräfler Land, Baden.

The 2018 Gault-Millau wine guide awarded Winery Waßmer with four grapes.

The winery Martin Waßmer is also located in the Markgräfler Land. Winemaking in this region can be traced back to the late 13-hundreds. The Waßmer family have been involved in wine growing for many generations but it was only in 1997 that Martin Waßmer started to make his own wine and founded the Martin Waßmer winery. He specialises in the Burgundy grapes Pinot Noir, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris. He also grows and produces Chardonnay, Muscat, Gewürztraminer – a nod to neighboring Alsace- and of course Gutedel. Winemaking is traditional, with only natural yeasts used for the slow, long fermentations, and the wines are all aged in barrel with the top cuvées in Burgundian barriques for up to 18 months, with a minimal filtration before bottling.










17:30 Check in at Hotel Schwarzer Adler, in Oberbergen.

Hotel Schwarzer Adler in Oberbergen, Kaiserstuhl, is a 4 ½ star traditional hotel and well-known address for a refined life style. With its 1 Michelin star restaurant and top notch winery it is an epicurean’s dream destination. It is listed in the association of “Small Luxury Hotels of the World”.

This hotel and its restaurant still run by the Keller family, is epicurean's dream destination for foodies in all of Germany, as well as of neighboring Alsace and Switzerland. With the Keller family, which can trace its roots as winemakers and hoteliers back to the Thirty Year War in the early 17-hundreds, everything started with producing and offering outstanding food. Franz and his wife Irma, parents of the current owner, were among the first generation of chefs to start the German revolution in the kitchen more than forty years ago. Well beyond the immediate post WWII era, the urge to simply have enough food on the table – quantity over quality- lingered on. In 1969 Franz and Irma Keller and their restaurant Schwarzer Adler were awarded one Michelin star (the chef was Irma, the first women to get a star!), which the restaurant defends until today. For Franz Keller, the central idea of winemaking was to produce top quality wines that perfectly accompanied the creations in the kitchen. The current generation, Fritz and Bettina Keller have brought the winery to a new level. They just finished construction of a brand new winery that is an architectural landmark, beautifully integrated in the landscape. Their efforts to produce top wines, among them stunning Pinot Noirs, were acknowledged by their selection as member of the VDP in 2013.




19:00 Dinner at Restaurant Schwarzer Adler ( 1 Michelin Star) in Oberbergen, Kaiserstuhl, Baden.

This 1-Michelin star beautiful, elegant, but at the same time cosy restaurant run by Bettina and Fritz Keller offers a harmonious mix of Baden country charm and elegance. The menu is a successful marriage of French and German cuisine reflecting the frontier on the nearby Rhine River, which is the border between Germany and France. The impressive wine list boasts 2 600 different wines, including an excellent selection of bottles from Baden and a mouthwatering list of French wines, in particular top notch Bordeaux. After dinner we just need to climb the stairs to our rooms and dream about the outstanding food and gorgeous wines we had.



















DAY 4: Tuesday, May 15:

09:45 Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Hunn in Gottenheim, Tuniberg, Baden, with Kilian and Martina Hunn.

Kilian and Martina Hunn were our hosts.

We started the visit with a portfolio tasting at Weingut Hunn and then drove over to the new winemaking facilities outside of Gottenberg for a tour and good-bye drink.

Owners Kilian and Martina Hunn – once the wine queen of Baden - are both passionate winemakers. The Tuniberg and Kaiserstuhl regions are the warmest wine regions with the most sun shine hours in Germany. The Mediterranean climate offers ideal growing conditions for the Burgundy grape. Three quarters of the 60 acres of vineyards belonging to the Hunn winery are panted with Pinot Noir, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, and Chardonnay. Kilian and Martina Hunn produce powerful wines with finesse and grace that perfectly reflect the limestone soils and climate of the Tuniberg.











11:45 We left the Baden area and Germany on the right bank of the Rhine River, at the foot of the Black Forest Mountains, and crossed over the Rhine into France, into the Alsace region. The Alsace lies just across from Baden on the left bank of the Rhine at the foot of the Vosges Mountains.



12:45 Lunch at Le Jardin des Saveurs in Guebwiller-Murbach, Alsace.




14:30 Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Schlumberger in Guebwiller, Alsace, with Owner Thomas Schlumberger.

Owner Thomas Schlumberg welcomed us. We toured Domaine Schlumberger and sat down for a tasting in the cellar; the new tasting room is still under construction.

The Schlumberger family can trace its roots back to Swabia, a wine region in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. In the 16th century a branch of the family moved to Alsace to become tanners. They eventually settled in Mulhouse and became a prosperous family. In 1810 Nicolas Schlumberger moved to Guebwiller and founded a factory of fabric machines. He also bought 50 acres of vineyards and hence, the Domaine Schlumberger came into existence. Today there are two generations working at the Domaine side by side: Alain Beydon-Schlumberger (6th generation) and Severine and Thomas Schlumberger (7th generation). And today – some 200 years after the start- the vineyard area has increased to 350 acres. The vineyard is unique in Alsace: 175 acres -half of the vineyards - are classified as Grand Crus. Because of the steep hillsides (some with slopes of 50 degrees), animals are used to work the land rather than agricultural machinery. The philosophy of the Schlumbergers is to work sustainably to leave healthy soils for the future generations. 75 acres are farmed biodynamically and the conversion to biodynamic farming will continue.













16:45 Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Rieflé-Landmann in Pfaffenheim, Alsace, with Paul Rieflé.

We started the visit with a tour of the cellar, where Paul Rieflé was cleaning the barrels. We continued with a tasting of the Rieflé wines and were joined by Paul. Before leaving, we spent a few minutes in the vineyard with Paul Rieflé.

The wine estate Domaine Rieflé was founded in Pfaffenheim in 1850. Today the sixth generation, brothers Thomas, who is the vineyard manager, and Paul, who is responsible for building the business, joined the family business. The philosophy of winemaking at Domaine Rieflé is perfectly described by this quote of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry “we do not inherit the Earth from our ancestors, we only borrow it from our children”. Hence, the organic certification of the Domaine is the logic consequence. Respecting the soil, flora, fauna and health in general, organic agriculture is also a useful means of bringing out the different characteristics of Domaine Rieflé's numerous terroirs.











18:45 Arrival and Check-in at Hotel Le Schoenenbourg in Riquewhir, Alsace.

Hotel Le Schoenenbourg in Riquewhir, Alsace, is a 3 ½ star hotel with a great outdoor pool, nestled at the foot of vine-covered rolling hills just outside of the city gate of Riquewhir, a typical very charming, romantic Alsatian wine town.




20:00 Alsatian Dinner at Restaurant La Grappe d'Or in Riquewhir.

La Grappe d'Or was our second choice. Our first choice, D'Brendelstub, was closed on that day; this is a traditional restaurant serving excellent local specialities prepared under the direction of 1 Michelin star chef Jean-Luc Brendel. His Michelin starred restaurant “La Table du Gourmet” around the corner is one of my absolute favorites in all of Alsace (closed on Tuesdays and Wednesdays).








DAY 5: Wednesday, May 16

10:30 Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Domaine Rolly-Gassmann in Rorschwihr, Alsace, with Pierre Gassmann.

Pierre Gassmann was our host.

We toured the estate, followed by an exceptional portfolio tasting comprising 36 wines.

The Domain Rolly-Gassmann came into existence in 1967 with the marriage of Marie-Thérèse Rolly and Louis Gassmann. But Domaine Rolly-Gassmann is by no means a newcomer in Alsatian viticulture. The Gassmann’s can trace back their viticultural roots to 1611 and the Rolly family to 1676. Today the Domaine is managed by son Pierre Gassmann who already started to convert to biodynamic viticulture in 1997. Domaine Rolly-Gassmann has 150 acres of vineyards which is quite big for an Alsatian family domaine. There are no Grand Cru sites in and around Rorschwihr but several excellent ”lieu-dit”. The style of the Rolly-Gassmann wines is opulent, lush, ripe, and very often with a fair bit of residual sugar. The Domain’s philosophy is to wait for physiological and phenolic maturity in the fruit even with some botrytis. 10% of their production is Pinot Noir, and their Pinot Noir belongs to the best what Alsace has to offer.






















12:45 Lunch at Restaurant L’Auberge Alsacienne in Châtenois.




15:00 Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Pfister in Dahlenheim, Alsace, with Melanie Pfister.

Melanie Pfister, arising star female winemaker in Alsace, was our host.

We toured the winemaking facilities and sat down for a tasting in the tasting room with
Melanie Pfister.

Melanie Pfister is the 8th generation and the first women to head the Domaine Pfister. She trained in Bordeaux and studied oenology in Dijon before she retuned home to Dahlenberg. She intends to apply her knowledge and diverse experiences to continue to produce outstanding wines and to pursue the ongoing quest for perfection. Because of the proximity to Strasbourg – only 20 km west – the village of Dahlenheim has an exceptional wine-producing heritage. It served, first and foremost, as a veritable wine-cellar for Strasbourg's ecclesiastic institutions: the Prince-Bishop of Strasbourg as well as the Abbayes in the area, some of them also produced wine. The monks also travelled and brought back new vine varieties to Dahlenheim. In the 13-hundreds it was recorded that “noble wine” was produced. As early as 1780, the name Nicolas Pfister was recorded. He lived as a “bourgeois wine-grower” in Dahlenheim using the farm buildings that are still in place today.









17:15 Arrival and Check-in at Auberge du Cheval Blanc (2 Stars Michelin) in Lembach, Alsace.

L’Auberge du Cheval Blanc in Lembach, Alsace, is a 4 star, beautiful place with pool and spa facilities close to the German border in Wissembourg run by Monsieur et Madame Bastian. Pascal Bastian is a 2 Michelin star chef and the restaurant is known for its refined cuisine known well beyond the Alsace region.










19:00 Dinner at 2 Michelin Starred Restaurant Auberge du Cheval Blanc in Lembach, Alsace.

Chef Pascal Bastian has trained at top restaurants in Switzerland and France– among them the 2 Michelin star restaurant La Plaissance in Saint-Emilion, before he acquired the Auberge Cheval Blanc and its restaurant in 2008. It did not take him long to be awarded with 1 Michelin star and shortly after with the 2nd Mchelin star.


















DAY 6: Thursday, May 17

08:30 Check out of hotel and departure.

After an amazing breakfast, we checked out of the hotel and crossed into Germany.


10:00 Tasting at Weingut Friedrich Becker in Schweigen, Pfalz.

Weingut Friedrich Becker belongs to the handful of the best of the best Pinot Noir producers in Germany. His Heydenreich GG (Grand Cru) sells for 125 € a bottle which is an incredible price for a German wine. This is a price still very much below a wine of equal quality in Burgundy. This winery is unique. The vineyards are in two countries - Germany and France- due to the winery’s situation right on the German/French border. In this area the Rhine rift created many different soil types that presented favorable conditions for planting a wide variety of grapes. 60% of the vineyards are planted with Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, and some Pinot Blanc; 22 % with Riesling and the rest with Silvaner, Muskateller, Traminer, Gewürztraminer, Müller-Thurgau, and Portugieser. Friedrich Becker sees the wealth of nature as being the basis for his work, but more importantly, for him nature is an inspiration. He was the first of his family to distance himself from delivering the grapes to the local co-operative and decided to make his own wine. Right from the start he has been one of the best producers in the Pfalz and one of the best Pinot Noir producers in Germany. Recently his son Friedrich jr has taken over and continues to produce wines of top quality.










12:15 Lunch at Restaurant Ritterhof zur Rose in Burrweiler, Pfalz.

We had a 2013 Weingut Messmer, Riesling, Schäwer GG (imported by Terry Theise/ Skurnik Selection) for lunch. Restaurant Ritterhof zur Rose is at Weingut Messmer. I had a tradional Saumagen, the favorite dish of the late Chancellor Helmut Kohl.









15:15 Vineyard tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Siener in Birkweiler, Pfalz, with Peter Siener.

Peter Siener was our host.

The visit started with a glass of Weingut Peter Siener Sekt. Peter then took us on a tour of the famous Kastanienbusch and Mandelberg vineyards. We then sat down with Peter Siener in the courtyard of Weingut Siener for a Riesling Kastanienbusch and Pinot Noir Kastanienbusch vertical tasting comprising 5 vintages. Denise Siener served delicious local food from the Pfalz.

Peter Siener is the third generation owner and winemaker at Weingut Siener. He took over from his father in 2000 and has since stepped hard on the accelerator to pursue quality with a vengeance. He also doubled the vineyard site and has holdings in two of the best vineyard sites of the southern Pfalz: the Kastanienbusch and the Mandelberg both in Birkweiler. He belongs to the generation of the young, energetic winemakers in Germany who follow new paths to only produce the best of the best quality. Besides his passion for his wines Peter Siener also loves cooking and is passionate about food. That explains the grip and power of his wines that are perfect to match with food.




















18:00 Arrival and Check-in at Hotel Ritter von Böhl in Deidesheim, Pfalz.


Hotel Ritter von Böhl in Deidesheim, is a 3 star very unique guest house with a 7oo year old history. From its foundation over 700 years ago, it continuously served as a ‘Hotel”. Yet it was only recently that the house was converted to a hotel in our definition of modern times: to provide lodging to the traveler. Since its foundation in the 13th century it served as a “Hotel Dieu”, a hospital and home for the sick, the poor, and the elderly. Still today it caters to the handicapped, and while we are in modern times, internet connection however can sometimes be very poor because the more than 1 meter thick old 700 year old walls obstruct the signal flow.

Evening on our own. Annette had advised: Take the time and explore Deidesheim, a small, picturesque village with half-timbered houses and rustic wine taverns. Time takes on a different meaning in this part of Germany; sipping a glass of wine, savoring delicious local specialties, that’s what is important. The former German chancellor Helmut Kohl, who lived close by, made Deidesheim famous, as he took his powerful guests, such as Margaret Thatcher, the King and Queen of Spain, and Michail Gorbatschow, to Deidesheim to try the Saumagen, his favorite dish.




19:00 Dinner/ Tasting at Vinothek/ Wine Tavern Bürklin-Wolf

This was unplanned. Our plan was to do a little tour of Deidesheim with its many wine taverns. We did not get far as on the first stop - Vinothek/ Wine Tavern Bürklin-Wolf just next to our hotel - we run into the Managing Director of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, Steffen Brahner. He invited us for cheese and cold cuts and showed us the new Bürklin-Wolf collection, with Marco Gulino (Host Weinbar) and Riccardo Korner (Host Vinothek).







DAY 7: Friday, May 18

09:30 Vineyard tour and Tsting at Weingut Reichsrat von Buhl in Deidesheim, Pfalz, with Richard Grosche.

General Manager Richard Grosche was our host.

For the most part of the visit, we toured the world-renowed vineyards of Deidesheim and Forst. Following the vineyard tour, we sat down for a tasting of Weingut Reichsrat von Buhl wines.

Since it’s founding in 1849, Reichsrat von Buhl has stood for some of the noblest Riesling from the best vineyards of Mittelhaardt and has always been considered to be one of Germany’s leading wine estates. Reichsrat von Buhl always produced wines in a terroir-dominated, timeless style true to the grape’s origins in the best soils of Deidesheim and Forst. The winery Reichsrat von Buhl can look back to a rich history. It was founded in 1849 by Franz Peter Buhl. He added the vineyards inherited by his wife, a member of the Jordan dynasty. These latter vineyards came from the break-up of the original Jordan estate into three parts, with the other two parts giving rise to what is today known as Geheimer Rat Dr. von Weingut Bassermann-Jordan and Weingut von Winning - Dr. Deinhard, all also in Deidesheim. Son Franz Armand Buhl inherited the estate. He was a member of the Reichstag and a friend of Chancellor Otto von Bismarck. Chancellor Bismarck’s famous quote "Dieses Ungeheuer schmeckt mir ungeheuer" this Ungeheuer tastes monstrously good, (Ungeheuer, means “monster” in english) helped make the Forster Ungeheuer vineyard site world-famous. In 1885, Franz Armand Buhl was awarded the title “Reichsrat” der bayerischen Krone, (The Pfalz belonged to the Kingdom of Bavaria in those days) hence the name of the winery. The Buhl wines were very famous and reached the upper price brackets in those days. At the official inauguration of the Suez Canal in 1869 a Buhl Riesling was served. Recently the tradition of making Sekt at the winery has seen a renaissance. Matthieu Kauffmann, enologist at the Champagne House Bollinger was hired to make Germany’s best Riesling Sekt. The first vintage, the 2013 Reichrat von Buhl Sekt, Brut was hyped as the best Sekt ever made in Germany and as close to a grand Champagne as it could get.



















12:00 Lunch at Weinhaus Henninger in Kallstadt, Pfalz.

Weinhaus Henninger is a lovely restaurant in Kallstadt, just opposite to Weingut Koehler-Ruprecht, with an amazing wine list and excellent food.





14:00 Departure from the Pfalz wine region and drive to Rheinhessen.

14:30 Cellar Tour and Private Tasting at Weingut Battenfeld-Spanier in Hohen-Sülzen, Rheinhessen.

Carolin Spanier was our host.

We had a lovely tasting at the home of Hans-Oliver and Caolin Spanier in Hohen-Sülzen. Before leaving we toured the winery, where the wines of both Weingut Battenfeld-Spanier and Weingut Kühling-Gillot are produced.

Weingut Battenfeld-Spanier is a young winery by German standards. It was only in 1993 that Hans-Oliver Spanier founded the winery in Hohen-Sülzen at the southernmost tip of the Rheinhessen Wonnegau region. The 70 acres of vineyards are planted with 60% Riesling, 20% Pinot Noir, and the rest with Pinot Blanc and Silvaner. H.O. is an uncompromising winemaker and from early on he worked with respecting nature and the environment. In 1993 his winery became organic. Over the years he converted to biodynamic practices in the vineyards and cellar and since 2005 the winery works 100% biodynamically. The Wonnegau vineyards are transversed by thick, underground beds of limestone. For H.O. the Riesling acts best as translator that interprets the influence of the extremely lime-rich soils. I quote him: ”That’s what interests me: the spectrum of aromas of the stones and soils that lies beyond the fleeting sensation of fruit”.













17:30 Arrival in Mainz and Check-in at Hotel Hilton.

Hotel Hilton in Mainz is a modern 5 star hotel situated on the edge of old town Mainz on the picturesque banks of the mighty Rhine River.


19:00 Supper and Wine Tasting at Ladendorf’s Weinhaus in Mainz, with Roland Ladendorf.

In Mainz - one of the ten Wine Capitals of the world - wine is ubiquitous. Ladendorf's Weinhaus is the perfect place to discover a typical local wine tavern and have traditional Määnzer food such as Fleischwurst, Handkäs mit Musik, Nackesche.

Roland Ladendorf, the owner of this unassuming wine bar, is a dictionary when it comes to German wines. His knowledge is profound and the wines on his list are the best what Germany has to offer. Roland showed us 4 different wines in a blind-tasting.







DAY 8: Saturday, May 19

10:00 Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Wagner-Stempel in Siefersheim, Rheinhessen, with Winemaker Oliver Müller and Owner Cathrin Wagner.

Oliver Müller, right-hand of Daniel Wagner (who was in the vineyard) and Cathrin Wagner were our hosts.

Cathrin Wagner showed us the wine cellar and Oliver Müller conducted a tasting for us. Our visit coincided with the "Open House Weekend" of Weingut Wagner-Stempel.

Owner and winemaker Daniel Wagner is the 9th generation of this estate in Siefersheim, in the far northwestern corner of the Rheinhessen wine region.

When Daniel took over he decided to build on the tradition of classic wine production and to pay special attention to the once famous vineyard sites Höllberg and Heerkretz that were somewhat under the radar for the past fifty years. The Siefersheim sites are carved out of volcanic hills and the weathered volcanic soil brings out phenomenal, well structured wines. Daniel’s thrive for precision and quality regularly gets awarded with 4 grapes in the Gault-Millau wine guide for Germany.














12:45 Cellar Tour and Wine Lunch at Weingut Schloss Westerhaus in Ingelheim, Rheinhessen, with the Owners Countess and Count von Schönburg-Glauchau and Technical Director Toni Frank.

The Owners Countess and Count von Schönburg-Glauchau with Technical Director Toni Frank were our hosts.

Toni Frank showed us the estate. Like at Weingut Wagner-Stempel, there was a large wine festival at the estate during the weekend of our visit. We took advantage of it and enjoyed the lovely food - Flammkuchen - that was being offered, with the wines of Weingut Schloss Westerhaus.

The Westerhaus castle from the 16th and 17th century high above the “imperial city of Ingelheim” -once a very important seat of Charlemagne- is visible from afar. In 1900, a son of famous car manufacturer Adam Opel bought the castle and winery. Today it is managed by the 4th generation of the Opel family, Countess and Count von Schönburg-Glauchau. It is a beautiful, truly stunning estate, surrounded by 40 acres of vineyards including the Monopol Grand Cru site Schloss Westerhaus. The VDP Grosse Lage (GG) wines of Riesling and Pinot Noir are the crown jewels at the top of the quality pyramid and the village wines show the marked influence of the vineyard’s calcerous clay soils.















15:30 Tasting at Weingut Knewitz in Appenheim, Rheinhessen.

Laura Henrici was our host. We had a wonderful tasting of a wide selection of Weingut Knewitz wines with her, including 4 Chardonnays. Laura had just returned from an internship at a winery in Michigan.

There is hardly another winemaker as Tobias Knewitz who embodies the new generation of excellently trained, and ambitious winemakers of Rheinhessen. To describe his estate and his vision, I simply quote his website – I could not come up with something better:

“An Estate by the Sea. In Rheinhessen? Of Course! 40 million years ago, anyways. During that epoch, the northern section of Rheinhessen known today as the Mainz Basin was actually part of the Tertiary sea. It was an age in which continents shifted, mountains rose from the ground and a large coral reef took shape in the place where we now live and our grapes grow. The reef has long since disappeared, of course, but its legacy remains — especially in the high limestone content of the soil it left behind.

For us it is a true gift, with those limestone remnants serving as the distinctive foundation for our wines. Tasting their almost unbelievable life and energy, one is reminded that the greatest of Burgundian wines thrive on limestone as well. Each and every grape variety we grow at our estate flourishes in these ancient coral reefs. Riesling, as it turns out, is an unparalleled translator of this kind of soil. Appenheim serves as a confluence for those elements we love so much: our beloved limestone vineyards — Hundertgulden, Laurenziberg, and Steinacker — and our Riesling. We tend to our vines deliberately but conservatively, spending hundreds of hours in the vineyards each year. This philosophy of care and consistency ultimately helps the wines better tell their own story. A story of their origin and our obsession.”










18:15 Back in Mainz (at Wine Tavern Wilhelmi).

After a busy day with 3 tastings, some of us stayed at the hotel to watch the wedding of  Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. I also stayed at the Hilton and watched the German soccer cup finals between Eintracht Frankfurt and Bayern München. Others went to the near-by wine tavern Wilhelmi, where I joined them after the game for a glass of wine and an home-made Spundekäs.



DAY 9: Sunday, May 20

10:00 Sightseeing Tour through Mainz.

Everywhere you walk in Mainz, you step on ruins from Roman times. Every time when renovating, building, etc, construction workers stumble on Roman artifacts buried under layers of past century buildings.

Mainz is also the birth-place of Johannes Gutenberg, the man who gave the world the power to print and hence to develop our digital future. We traced Johannes Gutenberg’s steps in Mainz.

One could also have followed the recommendation of Annette - Stiftsamt in the Mainz Cathedral. If you desire to attend a very special, spiritual service every Sunday a “Stiftsamt” conducted by the Bishop with choir and organ concert takes place in the mighty, impressive 1000 year old cathedral.








12:00 Lunch at Restaurant Bootshaus in Mainz.

The Bootshaus sits right at the junction where the Main river enters the Rhine river.

It is very relaxing to watch the cargo boats travelling up- and downstream and to enjoy a wine in the lawn chairs dotting the bank of the river.

We had our last meal of the tour and were greeted by the Owner and Michelin-starred Chef Frank Buchholz.






03:00 pm Arrival at Frankfurt International Airport.

schiller-wine: Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen - All Postings (Published and Forthcoming)

The Sun-Kissed South: Germany’s Pinot Noir, the Other Whites, the Culinary Regions - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Sekt: Cellar Tour and Tasting at Griesel in Bensheim, Hessische Bergstrasse

Lunch at 1 Michelin Star Restaurant Landhaus Feckl in Ehningen

The Evolving Structure of the Wine Industry in Germany– The Case of the Lake Constance Region

Schloss Salem at Lake Constance in Germany: A Museum, a School and a Wine Estate

Visit of Schloss Salem, Kirche Birnau and Weingut Markgraf von Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Staatsweingut Meersburg in Meersburg, Bodensee

Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Ziereisen in Efringen, Markgräfler Land, Baden, with Hanspeter and Edeltraud Ziereisen

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Martin Waßmer in Bad Krozingen, Markgräfler Land, Baden

Dinner at Restaurant Schwarzer Adler, 1 Star Michelin, Oberbergen, Kaiserstuhl, Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Hunn in Gottenheim, Tuniberg, Baden, with Kilian and Martina Hunn

The World Class Wines of Alsace

In the world class white wine region Alsace

Tour and Tasting at Domaines Schlumberger in Guebwiller, Alsace - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Rieflé in Pfaffenheim, Alsace, with Paul Rieflé

Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Domaine Rolly-Gassmann in Rorschwihr, Alsace, with Pierre Gassmann

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Pfister in Dahlenheim, Alsace, with Melanie Pfister

Dinner at 2 Michelin Star Restaurant Auberge du Cheval Blanc, Alsace

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

Vineyard Tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Siener in Birkweiler, Pfalz, with Owner/ Winemaker Peter Siener

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

Dinner Tasting at the Vinothek/ Wine Tavern of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, with the Managing Director of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, Steffen Brahner

Extensive Vineyard Tour and Tasting at Weingut Reichsrat von Buhl in Deidesheim, Pfalz, with
General Manager Richard Grosche

Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Battenfeld-Spanier/ Kühling-Gillot in Hohen-Sülzen, Rheinhessen, with Carolin Spanier

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Wagner-Stempel in Siefersheim, Rheinhessen, with
Oliver Müller and Cathrin Wagner

Cellar Tour, Tasting and Lunch at Weingut Schloss Westerhaus in Ingelheim, Rheinhessen, with the Owners Countess and Count von Schönburg-Glauchau and Technical Director Toni Frank

Tasting at Weingut Knewitz in Appenheim, Rheinhessen

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Taverns in Mainz, Germany













Therry Theise’s Best German Wines and Winemakers – Vintage 2017

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Pictures: Annette Schiller, Andreas Spreitzer, David Schildknecht. See: Rieslingfeier 2018 in New York City: Gränd Tasting and Gala Dinner

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:

Therry Theise’s Best German Wines and Winemakers – Vintage 2016
Therry Theise’s Best German Wines and Winemakers – Vintage 2015
Therry Theise’s Best German Wines and Winemakers – Vintage 2014
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

Pictures: Happy Hour in New York at Paul Grieco's Terroir with Valerie Masten of Skurnik Wines and Husband and Wine Journalist Jon Bonné and Caroline and Sylvain Diel, Schlossgut Diel, with Danielle King,, Justin Christoph, Sommelier/ Wine Consultant Sabra Lewis. See: The Annual "Slaughterhouse" Riesling Feast in New York: Rieslingfeier 2017, USA

Terry Theise’s Portfolio and ombiasy WineTours

My wife Annette Schiller organizes wine tours to Germany (This year: 3 tours – Germany-North, Germany-South and Germany-East). Many of the winemakers we have visited or will visit this year, are represented in the US by Terry Theise: Diel, Dönnhoff, Spreitzer, Von Winning, Kruger-Rumpf, Künstler, Selbach-Oster, Müller-Catoir, etc. I have added pictures from some of these visits, including references to relevant postings on schiller-wine.

Picture: Deputy Managing Director Andreas Hütwohl of Weingut Von Winning, Pfalz, with Annette Schillerat the 2017 Rieslingfeier in New York. See: The Annual "Slaughterhouse" Riesling Feast in New York: Rieslingfeier 2017, USA.

Picture: At Weingut von Winning in Deidesheim, Pfalz. See: Tour and Tasting at Weingut von Winning in Deidesheim, Pfalz– Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015), Germany

Therry Theise’s Best Germany Wines and Winemakers – Vintage 2017

Here is Terry Theise in o-tone.

THE 2017 VINTAGE

After an early Spring that was too-warm too-soon, everyone worried about late frosts. And then came late frosts. Before the end of April, nearly all of northern Europe was affected, and the damage ranged from substantial to devastating. Germany was not spared.

Crop losses ranged from 25-30% to nearly 60% in the worst instances. Yet there was a curious phenomenon of second-growth (which the Germans call Verrieseln) which, while somewhat reassuring in terms of yields, made for some confusion later on because the second-growth grape bunches could not be eyeball- distinguished from the original bunches. “We really had not one but two vintages,” said Cornelius Dönnhoff, with parallel bunches ripening around two weeks apart from one another.

Frost was universal, but different regions (and even places within regions) also contended with hail and with untimely botrytis, including one luckless corner which suffered a late-August hail storm which brought mildews in its wake. It was not an easy vintage!

But it is a good one, at times a very good one, and at times perhaps a great one, which we will know in the fullness of time.

Low yields correspond to high extract, and certainly a lot of the growers were pleased with the readings. (Extract gives a mid-palate umami that registers as density, stuffed-ness, like a suitcase you have to sit upon in order to shut.) The more candid growers pointed out that botrytis (and excessive moisture) could also create high extracts, and the warning was apt. 2017 isn’t a vintage you can “read” from a lab analysis. You have to taste.

Pictures: Tour and Tasting at Weingut Spreitzer in Oestrich, Rheingau, with Bernd Spreitzer – Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015), Germany

And what do you taste? After the nearly perfect lissome and sleek 2016s, 2017 is a marked contrast; it is a serious tasting vintage, by no means unfriendly, but levity does not obtrude upon it. There are certainly some charming wines, and there are loads of delicious wines, but ’17 is a vintage of dark character whereas ’16 was lyric and bright. “Dark” can be construed either metaphorically or in some cases almost literally – ’17 has an iron-like cast, almost always smoky, like burning vine shoots. I used “shoot-smoke” quite often in my notes, and I surprised myself by writing “peppery” from time to time. Compared to the mischievous ‘16s, the new vintage seems a little earnest.

But if you’re a serious kind of person (and a taster who appreciates no-nonsense wines) you’ll be richly pleased by these 2017s. And there are many, many wines that everyone will flip over.

Pictures: At Weingut Kruger-Rumpf with Stefan and Georg Rumpf. See: Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours: Quintessential German Riesling and the Northernmost Pinot Noir

Pictures: In the Vineyard (with the ombiasy Group in 2013), see: Cellar Tour, Vineyard Tour, Tasting and Lunch with Georg Rumpf, Weingut Kruger-Rumpf, Nahe Valley, Germany

The vintage was gathered early almost everywhere, but the Pfalz was really early: Many were finished by the first few days of October (about 3-4 weeks ahead of schedule), and what they gathered should make them very very happy. If 2017 is potentially great anywhere, it’s in the Pfalz. Three of my producers showed me the best collections I’d ever tasted – Meßmer, Eugen Müller and Darting (and forget any notion you harbored that Darting makes fun little wines, because these ‘17s are lysergic), while another one presented a grand and unusual collection (Catoir!), while our pals at Von Winning continue their orbit around the Van Allen Belts (and the “GGs” won’t be offered until January 2019, and may be the best they’ve ever made…), and finally my beloved Minges made the excellent vintage they always make, only unusual in the 2017 context where everyone reached new levels whereas Theo and Regine “merely” maintained their prevailing and consistently superb level.

In any case, the smart money says to allocate more of your (mingy and pitiable) German Riesling budget to the Pfalz in 2017.

EISWEIN, ALL OF IT ASTONISHING:

Three from Hexamer and one from Selbach are as good as they get.

Pictures: Tasting at Weingut Hexamer with Harald and Petra Hexamer. See: Wine Tasting at Weingut Hexamer in Monzingen, Nahe– Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

Pictures: Wine Pairing Lunch at Landgasthof Zur Traube in Meddersheim, Nahe, with Petra Hexamer and the Wines of Weingut Hexamer - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

I found excellent wine throughout the Rheingau and Rheinhessen (and tasted from four estates in the latter region, though two were newbies under consideration).

If there’s a demarcation in 2017, it follows a frequent vein that divides Mosel and Nahe from regions south and east. The Nahe also varies within itself (as indeed it often does, encompassing so many climate and soil zones) so that you can’t generalize except to say it is always good and sometimes superb. Most fascinating for me, the two great estates (Diel and Dönnhoff) seemed to run counter to the vintage’s prevailing solemnity and made stirringly tender, lapidary wines. Don’t ask me how, or if you do ask me how, be ready for a fusillade of gibberish as I try fruitlessly to explain the inexplicable.





Pictures: Christian Schiller with Armin, Caroline and Anouk Diel at Schlossgut Diel in Germany. See: Tasting with Sylvain Taurisson Diel at Schlossgut Diel, Nahe– Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2014)

And finally to the Mosel. First, the good news: the very best wines I tasted from 2017 were Mosel wines. At times their profundity made me think of great years like 1971 or 2005, and at other times their serenely perfect harmonies stopped me in my tracks and filled me with wonder and gratitude.

But, there is also not-so-good news. The Mosel vintage has markedly present acidity. The best growers managed it. The others….did not. At times 2017 – normally a vintage of almost imposing stature and command – seemed rather small at certain Mosel estates.

But please be aware, this is my palate speaking, and I have arrived at a point whereby if I notice acidity it’s because it’s too caustic for me. The right acidity is a vibrating but silent partner. The wrong acidity is a sharpness I do not find agreeable – but that’s me, and you may well feel differently. In any case, my colleagues Valerie Masten-Bonné and Gabe Clary all agreed it was a yo-yo sort of year along the silvery Mosel.

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

Pictures: At Weingut Künstler in Hochheim am Main, Rheingau, with Stefan Traub. See:Vineyard Walk, Cellar Tour and Wine Tasting at Weingut Künstler– Germany-North Wine Tour by ombiasy (2014)

Even then I was reminded that I have the luxury of tasting only from solid producers, and there is apparently plenty of yucky wine in 2017 – but nothing I tasted was objectionable in that way (except for a few potential newbies whose wines helped me appreciate what I already have…) and such issues as I have with some ‘17s are just my querulous palate throwing a tantrum.

If 2016 is a well-told joke, 2017 is a magnificently constructed argument. If 2016 is a morning in Spring, 2017 is an evening in Autumn.

The small crop and the weakened Dollar will push prices upward, making the remaining ‘16s quite the bargains. That said, to pay a premium for wines such as the best ‘17s is a reasonable proposition, in view of the sheer concentration of the wines.

HIGHLIGHTS AND SUPERLATIVES

Bearing in mind, as always, that Selbach-Oster and Dönnhoff are always superlative, and I have struggled how to acknowledge this and still give “emerging talents” a chance. This time I shall attempt another futile means of squaring the circle, for which I invite you to tease me contemptuously, should we ever meet.

The Winery(s) Of The Vintage is (Are)

CARL LOEWEN is the estate with whom I was most profoundly impressed. They not only ascended to a hitherto undreamt-of level, they seemed to have the Midas-touch, as wine-after-wine-after-wine was almost eerily perfect, gorgeously balanced, and poised not with any great assertiveness but instead with a serene gentle perfect-pitch of the purest harmony. Possibly this is the full flowering of the father-son synergy of Karl-Josef and Christoph, and possibly it’s just one of those things. It’s also contrary to my commercial interests, because there isn’t much wine and we won’t be able to entirely fill orders. But credit where it’s due – and it is richly due here!

(Not surprisingly, the collections of both Selbach-Oster and Dönnhoff are replete with masterpieces, and I ask you to accept it as a given, that these two estates will always be “best-of” in every vintage and every category of consideration.)

Other Marked Successes

That is first, any estate who have conspicuously exceeded their usual standards, and second, estates presenting a sustained high level of excellence.

Spreitzer, for a steady hand over the whole range, and for many high points.

Pictures: Müller-Catoir, Neustadt-Haardt (Pfalz) - Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Müller Catoir – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

Goldatzel, for an almost Nigl-like perfection of focus and expressiveness, over and over, to the point it almost physically hurt to leave any wine behind.

Diel, for perhaps the first vintage where Caroline’s influence can be tangibly felt. The wines seem to be entering a new era of finesse and a quality I can only describe as melting, yielding, swooning.

Darting, who showed me simply their best-ever vintage, at least two levels above anything they’ve produced to date.

Von Winning, with the caveat that we can’t yet place the GGs into the mix as they can’t be offered before 2019. And yet, if we did….

Meßmer, my “vanity project” has made their best vintage in Gregor’s era. He himself concurs, and he is self-critical like few others I know.

Müller-Catoir, for a new departure in style or syntax, and for an insanely good group of Scheurebes.

To Be Considered

If one isn’t only taking 2017s into account, estates offering earlier vintages would lunge toward the top. Thus credit where it’s due, to Künstler and Breuer, for wonderful collections across vintages and colors.

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

Picture: Johannes and Barbara Selbach and Annette Schiller in New York at the 2015 Rieslingfeier, see: The 11 Winemakers: Rieslingfeier 2015 in New York City, USA

Pictures: Rieslingfeier 2018 in New York City: Gränd Tasting and Gala Dinner

The Wine Of The Vintage

Loewen – 1896 Riesling Feinherb (if you don’t want to be able to get any), and…..

Selbach-Oster – Zeltinger Schlossberg Riesling Spätlese (if you wish to actually have access to some).

Other Great Rieslings
(please consult the list at the front of the offering.)

The Greatest Non-Rieslings

Kruger-Rumpf Scheurebe Spätlese (for which my entire note was “Oh for crying out loud!”)

Von Winning essentially any/all the Sauvignon Blancs, especially 2017 “I” and 2016 “500.”

Meßmer Rieslaner Auslese (Burrweiler Altenforst)

Minges either Rieslaner, Spätlese or Auslese

Müller-Catoir Scheurebe Spätlese (Haardter Mandelring)

Pictures: Christian Schiller, Christoph Schaefer and Annette Schiller. See: Rieslingfeier 2018 in New York City: Gränd Tasting and Gala Dinner

The Greatest Trocken Wines

This category is being retired, as I have included the Trockens among the general scrum of great wines, where they now belong.

The Greatest Feinherb Wines

Goldatzel has TWO entries, both the Johannisberger Goldatzel Riesling Kabinett Feinherb and the Winkeler Hasensprung Riesling Spätlese Feinherb

Dönnhoff Estate Riesling

Schneider Niederhäuser Kertz Riesling Feinherb

Selbach-Oster also has TWO, the Graacher Domprobst Riesling Alte Reben Feinherb and the Zeltinger Sonnenuhr Uralte Reben Feinherb.

Picture: Christian Schiller with Helmut Dönnhoff, Weingut Hermann Dönnhoff

Picture: Annette Schiller, Helmut Dönnhoff and Daughter Christina Dönnhoff (Weingut Dönnhoff) and Didier Cuevelier (Chateau Leoville Poyferre) at Weingut Dr. Robert Weil

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

The Greatest Values (at any price)

Spreitzer Estate Riesling Trocken

Kruger-Rumpf estate Riesling Feinherb

Darting also shows us TWO: the 2017 Pinot Blanc Kabinett Trocken, and the 2017 Riesling Kabinett in LITERS.

Meßmer the Riesling Feinherb in LITERS is the best he’s ever made, and three levels above any class existing before.

Minges Scheurebe Feinherb

Müller-Catoir “MC” Scheurebe Trocken

schiller-wine: Related Postings

UPCOMING Tours/ Wine Dinners/ Tastings - Annette and Christian Schiller/ ombiasyPR & WineTours/ schiller-wine, Germany, France, USA (Issued: May 1, 2018)

Ombiasy Wine Tours 2018: 3 x France and 3 x Germany - Ombiasy Newsletter December 2017

UPCOMING Ombiasy Wine Tours in 2018 to Germany and Alsace (May/ June) and to Bordeaux and Burgundy-Champagne (September)

Tour and Tasting at Weingut von Winning in Deidesheim, Pfalz– Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015), Germany

German Wine and Culture Tour by ombiasy, 2013

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

Germany-South Wine Tour by ombiasy, 2014

Tour and Tasting at Weingut Spreitzer in Oestrich, Rheingau, with Bernd Spreitzer – Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

Wine Tasting at Weingut Hexamer in Monzingen, Nahe– Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

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

Wine Dinner with Tour at Weingut Kruger-Rumpf in Münster-Sarmsheim, Nahe, with Georg Rumpf – Germany-North Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015), Germany

Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Müller Catoir – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

The Annual "Slaughterhouse" Riesling Feast in New York: Rieslingfeier 2017, USA

Rieslingfeier 2018 in New York City: Gränd Tasting and Gala Dinner


Sekt: Cellar Tour and Tasting at Griesel&Compagnie, Sekthaus Streit, Bensheim, with Winemaker Rachele Crosara - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

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Picture: Sekt: Cellar Tour and Tasting at Griesel&Compagnie, Sekthaus Streit, Bensheim, with Winemaker Rachele Crosara - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

The first stop of the 2018 Germany-South/ Alsace wine tour of ombiasy WineTours was in Bensheim, about an hour south of Frankfurt by car, at an up-and-coming Sekt producer, Griesel&Compagnie, Sekthaus Streit.

Pictures: Arriving at Griesel&Compagnie, Sekthaus Streit, Bensheim

Not well known outside of its borders, Germany is a sparkling wine country. The Germans love the bubbly stuff. The German market for sparkling wine is the largest in the world, with 1 out of 4 bottles of sparkling wine produced in the world consumed in Germany. Rotkäppchen-Mumm in Freyburg in the Saale-Unstrut region is the world’s second largest sparkling wine producer after Freixenet? Many Champagne Houses in France were founded by Germans, such as Krug, Bollinger, Heidsick, Deutz, Mumm, to name a few. See: French Champagne Houses and German Roots

Pictures: Griesel&Compagnie, Sekthaus Streit, Bensheim, with Winemaker Niko Brandtner

Sekt ranges from inexpensive entry-level sparkling wine to ultra-premium sparklers made in the
méthode traditionnelle, like Champagne. We visited a producer of ultra-premium sparklers, Griesel&Compagnie, Sekthaus Streit. Charming Assistant Winemaker Rachele Crosara was our host. We toured the cellar and had a tasting of the Griesel Sekt Portfolio.

Pictures: Cellar Tour

Sekt in Germany

Germany is one of the largest sparkling wine markets in the world, which is not well know around the world. Germans drink lot of sparkling wines, although in general less quality-conscious than the French. One out of four bottles of sparkling wine is consumed in Germany, roughly 500 million bottles. Sekt is made in all German wine regions, both in the méthode traditionnelle and charmat method. There are three groups of Sekt makers: (i) large and (ii) smaller Sekt houses, who only make Sekt and (iii) winemakers, who make predominantly wine, but complement their wine selection by a few Sekts. The Sekts produced by large Sekt estates tend to be in the demy-sweet and sweet range, while the Sekts of smaller estates and the wine makers are mostly in the brut and extra brut range.

Pictures: Traditional Hand Riddling and Modern Gyro-palate Machines at Geisel

There is a dozen or so large Sekt houses. Most of these large Sekt houses were established in the 1800s. At that time, there was only one method known to produce Sekt, the méthode traditionnelle. But in contrast to the champagne houses, the large Sekt houses have all moved to the charmat method as main method of the second fermentation after World War II. Like the champagne houses, Sekt houses do not own vineyards, but purchase the base wine from winemakers.

The smaller Sekt houses, like the large Sekt houses, do not own vineyards, but also buy the base wine from winemakers. They also tend to have a long history and often links to the champagne region, beautiful facilities and old cellars for the second fermentation and storage. The big difference is that they typically have not gone the route of tank fermentation but continue to ferment in the méthode traditionnelle.

Pictures: Tasting with Rachele Crosara

Increasingly, there is a number of top quality winemakers, who, in addition, to their still wines, have started to include Sekts in their portfolio. These Sekts are typically vintage Sekts, from a specified vineyard, made of specific grapes, often Riesling, in the méthode champenoise and with little or not dosage (brut or extra but). While the first fermentation typically takes place at the winery, the second fermentation is often not in the cellar of the winemaker but in the cellar of a Sekt house that bottle-ferments for other wineries.

Griesel&Compagnie, Sekthaus Streit

Griesel&Compagnie, Sekthaus Streit came into existence just a few years ago and already enjoys the highest accolades. In 2013 the Eberbach Abbey winery in Bensheim moved the production to headquartes in the Rheingau and the wonderful old, vaulted cellers under the Griesel mountain became available. Sekthaus Griesel came into existence. Vintner Niko Brandner started from scratch and could configure the Sekthaus exactly according to his knowledge and ideas. 

The April 2018 edition of the Decanter writes about the 2014 Griesel, Blanc de Noirs Brut: “This new discovery is seriously impressive, all the more so given that it’s only this talented producer’s second vintage. Made from Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier, it has spent 24 months on lees before being disgorged……”

The Sekts Rachele Crosara Poured

Pictures: The Sekts Rachele Crosara Poured - Plus a Sparkling Hard Cider (Apfelwein)

Bye-bye

Thanks Rachele for a wonderful visit and tasting.

Pictures: Bye-bye

schiller-wine: Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen - All Postings (Published and Forthcoming)

The Sun-Kissed South: Germany’s Pinot Noir, the Other Whites, the Culinary Regions - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Sekt: Cellar Tour and Tasting at Griesel in Bensheim, Hessische Bergstrasse

Lunch at 1 Michelin Star Restaurant Landhaus Feckl in Ehningen

The Evolving Structure of the Wine Industry in Germany– The Case of the Lake Constance Region

Schloss Salem at Lake Constance in Germany: A Museum, a School and a Wine Estate

Visit of Schloss Salem, Kirche Birnau and Weingut Markgraf von Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Staatsweingut Meersburg in Meersburg, Bodensee

Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Ziereisen in Efringen, Markgräfler Land, Baden, with Hanspeter and Edeltraud Ziereisen

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Martin Waßmer in Bad Krozingen, Markgräfler Land, Baden

Dinner at Restaurant Schwarzer Adler, 1 Star Michelin, Oberbergen, Kaiserstuhl, Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Hunn in Gottenheim, Tuniberg, Baden, with Kilian and Martina Hunn

The World Class Wines of Alsace

In the world class white wine region Alsace

Tour and Tasting at Domaines Schlumberger in Guebwiller, Alsace - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Rieflé in Pfaffenheim, Alsace, with Paul Rieflé

Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Domaine Rolly-Gassmann in Rorschwihr, Alsace, with Pierre Gassmann

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Pfister in Dahlenheim, Alsace, with Melanie Pfister

Dinner at 2 Michelin Star Restaurant Auberge du Cheval Blanc, Alsace

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

Vineyard Tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Siener in Birkweiler, Pfalz, with Owner/ Winemaker Peter Siener

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

Dinner Tasting at the Vinothek/ Wine Tavern of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, with the Managing Director of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, Steffen Brahner

Extensive Vineyard Tour and Tasting at Weingut Reichsrat von Buhl in Deidesheim, Pfalz, with
General Manager Richard Grosche

Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Battenfeld-Spanier/ Kühling-Gillot in Hohen-Sülzen, Rheinhessen, with Carolin Spanier

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Wagner-Stempel in Siefersheim, Rheinhessen, with
Oliver Müller and Cathrin Wagner

Cellar Tour, Tasting and Lunch at Weingut Schloss Westerhaus in Ingelheim, Rheinhessen, with the Owners Countess and Count von Schönburg-Glauchau and Technical Director Toni Frank

Tasting at Weingut Knewitz in Appenheim, Rheinhessen

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Taverns in Mainz, Germany
 

UPCOMING Tours/ Wine Dinners/ Tastings - Annette and Christian Schiller/ ombiasyPR & WineTours/ schiller-wine, Germany, France, USA (Issued: June 1, 2018)

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Picture: Annette and Christian Schiller - Visiting the Conegliano Valdobbiadene DOCG Prosecco Superiore Region, Italy

Below is a list of the wine tours, wine dinners and wine tastings planned by Annette and Christian Schiller/ ombiasyPR & WineTours/ schiller-wine for the coming months.

For questions concerning the ombiasy wine tours please consult the ombiasy website.

For all other events please send me (cschiller@schiller-wine.com) or Annette (aschiller@ombiasypr.com) an e-mail.

June 2018

Germany, June 12 - June 21: 2018 Germany-East Tour by ombiasy WineTours. See: ombiasy WineTours and UPCOMING Ombiasy Wine Tours in 2018 to Germany and Alsace (May/ June) and to Bordeaux and Burgundy-Champagne (September)

July 2018

August 2018

McLean, Virginia, August 12: Annual Riesling Party at the Schiller Residence in McLean. See: Annual Riesling Party at the Schiller Residence in Washington DC, USA (2017)

September 2018

Frankfurt, Germany, September: Tasting the Best of Virginia Wines in Frankfurt - Virginia Governor's Cup Case 2017. See: Tasting the Best of Virginia Wines in Frankfurt, Germany, with Stuart Pigott: Virginia Governor's Cup Case 2016

Bordeaux, France, September 4 - 13: 2018 Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours. See: ombiasy WineTours and UPCOMING Ombiasy Wine Tours in 2018 to Germany and Alsace (May/ June) and to Bordeaux and Burgundy-Champagne (September)

Bourgogne, France, September 20 - 30: 2018 Burgundy Tour by ombiasy WineTours. See: ombiasy WineTours and UPCOMING Ombiasy Wine Tours in 2018 to Germany and Alsace (May/ June) and to Bordeaux and Burgundy-Champagne (September)

October 2018

Rhône Valley, France, October 15 - 24: 2018 Rhône Valley Tour by ombiasy WineTours. See: ombiasy WineTours and UPCOMING Ombiasy Wine Tours in 2018 to Germany and Alsace (May/ June) and to Bordeaux and Burgundy-Champagne (September)

Washington DC, Friday October 26: German Wine Basics - Tasting with the German Wine Society (Washington DC Chapter)

November 2018

Buffalo, New York State, November 1 - 4: Germany, Burgundy and Alsace Tastings at the National Conference of the American Wine Society led by Annette Schiller. See: American Wine Society and The 2017 American Wine Society National Conference in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania, USA: Seen Through Christian Schiller's Camera Lens

Session 1: A Journey through the Rhône Valley
Session 2: "Abbey Wines": The Importance of the Monasteries for the Development of Viticulture
Session 3: Pinot Noir in Burgundy/ France and Germany

Washington DC, Tuesday, November 6: German Wines in the 21st Century - Tasting at the Washington DC Wine and Cheese Seminar, led by Annette Schiller

Washington DC, Friday, November 16: Wine Tasting with Christian L. Stahl, Winzerhof Stahl, at the German Wine Society (Washington DC Chapter). See: Lunch with Christian L. Stahl, Winzerhof Stahl, Franken: Not only a Gifted Winemaker but also a Gifted Chef - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

December 2018

January 2019

Frankfurt, Germany: Tasting Aged American Red Wines (Cabernet Sauvignon/ Merlot)


schiller-wine: Related Postings

UPCOMING Ombiasy Wine Tours in 2018 to Germany and Alsace (May/ June) and to Bordeaux and Burgundy-Champagne (September)

Ombiasy Wine Tours 2018: 3 x France and 3 x Germany - Ombiasy Newsletter December 2017

Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours: Wine, Art, Culture and History

Annual Riesling Party at the Schiller Residence in Washington DC, USA (2017)

Tasting the Best of Virginia Wines in Frankfurt, Germany, with Stuart Pigott: Virginia Governor's Cup Case 2016

Total Immersion in Bordeaux: World Class Wines and Exquisite French Gourmet Cuisine - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France  

Burgundy (and Champagne) 2016 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: From Lyon to Reims - Wine, Food, Culture and History

Rhône Valley Tour December 2017: From Lyon to Avignon - Wine, Food, Culture, History

The 2017 American Wine Society National Conference in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania, USA: Seen Through Christian Schiller's Camera Lens

Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours: Quintessential German Riesling and the Northernmost Pinot Noir

Lunch with Christian L. Stahl, Winzerhof Stahl, Franken: Not only a Gifted Winemaker but also a Gifted Chef - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Lunch at 1 Michelin Star Restaurant Landhaus Feckl in Ehningen, with Chef Franz Feckl and Host Manuela Feckl - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

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Picture: Annette Schiller and Manuela Feckl at Landhaus Feckl

Our first meal at a Michelin-starred restaurant on the 2018 Germany-South/ Alsace wine tour by ombiasy WineTours was at Landhaus Feckl in Ehningen. Since 1987, for 31 years, Owner/ Chef Franz Feckl has been awarded a Michelin star every single year. In terms of comfort, Restaurant Landhaus Feckl has 3 folks in the Michelin Guide 2018, with a special reference to its excellent wine list.

We had a most delicious three-course lunch.

Restaurant Landhaus Feckl

This family-run cozy, rustic-chic Landhaus boasts of an exquisite restaurant. Chef and Owner Franz Feckl is well reputed for his creative ideas to perfectly combine regional Swabian cuisine with cuisines of other regions, i.e. the Mediterranean, Asia, France. His wife Michaela is a charming host.

Franz Feckl started his career as a chef with an apprenticeship at the Jägerhof in Mühldorf am Inn. In 1978, he joined the Tantris team in München for 2 years, first under Star Chef Eckart Witzigmann and later under Star Chef Heinz Winkler, both culinary icons. In 1985, he took over Schloss Höfingen in Leonberg as owner and chef and 2 years later was awared a Michelin star. In 2000, he moved on and opened Landhaus Feckl. There, he continued to be awarded a Michelin star every year for his outstanding cooking ...for 18 years now.

Pictures: Landhaus Feckl with Michaela and Franz Feckl

Michelin

Ein MICHELIN Stern: eine Küche voller Finesse – einen Stopp wert! Produkte von ausgesuchter Qualität, unverkennbare Finesse auf dem Teller, auf den Punkt gebrachter Geschmack, ein konstant hohes Niveau bei der Zubereitung.

The Tandem Rambler

...Landhaus Feckl, located in Ehningen, less than 30 km away from Stuttgart is an extraordinary place, not only thanks to their food. A family buisness, this place is ran by people completly devoted to their work, with great passion and commitment. Every guest is treated here not only with great respect but also with kindness which makes all the visitors feel at home. This is the feature we value the most and we are sure that we are not alienated in this opinion. It is a true skill to run such a sophosticated restaurant and serve such a refined food and at the same time make every guest feel at ease, relaxed and so very welcome.

The food served in there is prepared out of fresh, local and seasonal ingredients. The hotel has even a little herb garden on the rooftop. Fine dining at its best!

The staff and the owners of Landhaus Feckl are real professionals, they surely know how to run a buisness, what is a great service and what’s needed to make a restaurant and a hotel extraordinary. They are all very attentive and helpful. I would bet on anything that every guest leaving this place is pleased with their stay as much as we were...

3 Course Lunch 

We had a most delicious three-course lunch.


Amuse Bouche


First - Variation of Asparagus


Main - Fish or Meat


Dessert


Petits Fours


Guided Visit of Burg Hohenzollern

After lunch, en route to Lake Constance, we stopped a Burg Hohenzollern for a guided tour.

The Hohenzollern Castle is the ancestral seat of the Hohenzollern dynasty, from which the German Emperors and kings of Prussia came. The original castle was built in the 11th century, burned down several times, and was finally restored by both branches of the Hohenzollern family in the 19th century. For almost one thousand years it serves as temporary home for the family. It is still owned by the Hohenzollern family and home of Georg Friedrich Prince of Prussia and Sophie Princess of Prussia. The castle sits on a hill high above the town of Hechingen and is visible from afar. Frederick the Great was buried here. After reunification Frederick's casket was moved to Sanssouci in Potsdam and he was finally laid to rest in the terrace of the vineyard of Sanssouci – in the still existing crypt he had built there – in accordance with his will.

Pictures: Visit of Burg Hohenzollern

schiller-wine: Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen - All Postings (Published and Forthcoming)

The Sun-Kissed South: Germany’s Pinot Noir, the Other Whites, the Culinary Regions - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Sekt: Cellar Tour and Tasting at Griesel&Compagnie, Sekthaus Streit, Bensheim, with Winemaker Rachele Crosara - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Lunch at 1 Michelin Star Restaurant Landhaus Feckl in Ehningen

The Evolving Structure of the Wine Industry in Germany– The Case of the Lake Constance Region

Schloss Salem at Lake Constance in Germany: A Museum, a School and a Wine Estate

Visit of Schloss Salem, Kirche Birnau and Weingut Markgraf von Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Staatsweingut Meersburg in Meersburg, Bodensee

Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Ziereisen in Efringen, Markgräfler Land, Baden, with Hanspeter and Edeltraud Ziereisen

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Martin Waßmer in Bad Krozingen, Markgräfler Land, Baden

Dinner at Restaurant Schwarzer Adler, 1 Star Michelin, Oberbergen, Kaiserstuhl, Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Hunn in Gottenheim, Tuniberg, Baden, with Kilian and Martina Hunn

The World Class Wines of Alsace

In the world class white wine region Alsace

Tour and Tasting at Domaines Schlumberger in Guebwiller, Alsace - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Rieflé in Pfaffenheim, Alsace, with Paul Rieflé

Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Domaine Rolly-Gassmann in Rorschwihr, Alsace, with Pierre Gassmann

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Pfister in Dahlenheim, Alsace, with Melanie Pfister

Dinner at 2 Michelin Star Restaurant Auberge du Cheval Blanc, Alsace

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

Vineyard Tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Siener in Birkweiler, Pfalz, with Owner/ Winemaker Peter Siener

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

Dinner Tasting at the Vinothek/ Wine Tavern of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, with the Managing Director of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, Steffen Brahner

Extensive Vineyard Tour and Tasting at Weingut Reichsrat von Buhl in Deidesheim, Pfalz, with
General Manager Richard Grosche

Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Battenfeld-Spanier/ Kühling-Gillot in Hohen-Sülzen, Rheinhessen, with Carolin Spanier

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Wagner-Stempel in Siefersheim, Rheinhessen, with
Oliver Müller and Cathrin Wagner

Cellar Tour, Tasting and Lunch at Weingut Schloss Westerhaus in Ingelheim, Rheinhessen, with the Owners Countess and Count von Schönburg-Glauchau and Technical Director Toni Frank

Tasting at Weingut Knewitz in Appenheim, Rheinhessen

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Taverns in Mainz, Germany


Best Green Sauce (Grüne Sosse) in Frankfurt (2018), Germany

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Picture: Owner/ Chef Willi Kehr of Zum Einhorn, Winner of the Green Sauce Competition 2018

Green Sauce or Grüne Sosse, is a sauce made of 7 specific herbs: parsley, chives, cress, sorrel, chervil, borage, salad burnet, chopped fine, and mixed with a combination of sour cream, yoghurt or creme fraiche, a bit of oil, vinegar, and mustard, salt and pepper and then served over boiled potatoes with 2 hard-boiled eggs.

Grüne Sosse can be a full meal with just the potatoes and the hard-boiled eggs. Frankfurter Schnitzel is a Schnitzel topped with Grüne Sosse. I like Grüne Sosse with roast beef.

You buy the herbs in white paper packets at any food store; they are widely available during the season.

Pictures: Grüne Sosse (Photos: tegus.de and Greenpinkorange.com)

The Winners in the 2018 Contest

Grüne Sosse tastes different in every restaurant as everyone seems to have his/her own recipe for it. Some chop the herbs with a knife, others us a blender or food processor; purists argue that is has to be chopped with a knife. Some also use mayonnaise, which I like, but not the purists. It may often have chopped up eggs in the sauce itself, which I like, but not everybody agrees with me.

The annual contest takes place over the course of a week in a large tent in the center of Frankfurt am Main, Germany, during the month of May. Every day, a day winner is chosen. On the last day, the six day winners compete in the final round for the overall winner and the 2 runners-up.

See also:
Best Green Sauce (Grüne Sosse) in Frankfurt (2015), Germany
Best Green Sauce (Grüne Sosse) in Frankfurt (2014), Germany

2018 Overall Winners

Winner: Gasthaus Zum Einhorn, Frankfurt Bonames, Alt-Bonames 2

Chef Willi Kehr and his wife Barbara took over the traditional Frankfurt Apple Wine Tavern from Willi's parents in 1990. The restaurant is in a timbered house that dates from 1549.

At the 2017 Green Sauce Competition, Zum Einhorn came in as #3. Zum Einhorn was the winner in 2013, after third place in the year before.

Zum Einhorn is also one of the Apple Wine Taverns in Frankfurt that still make their own applewine on the premises. Zum Einhorn's annual apple wine production is 25000 liters. See: Schiller's Favorites: Frankfurt Apple Wine Taverns that Make their own Apple Wine - Frankfurter Apfelweinlokale die noch selbst Keltern, Germany

Pictures: At Zum Einhorn

Second Place: Zum Lahmen Esel, Frankfurt Niederursel, Krautgartenweg 1

Traditional Frankfurt Apple Wine Tavern since 1807. The restaurant is in a timbered house.

Third Place: Apfelwein Adolf Wagner, Frankfurt Sachsenhausen, Schweizer Straße 71

Popular, traditional Frankfurt Apple Wine Tavern in Frankfurt's center of apple wine taverns, Sachsenhausen.

Picture: Ralf Wagner (Apfelwein Adolf Wagner), Christian Schiller and Werner Becker at Apfelwein Wagner, the Winner of the 2015 Grüne Sosse Competition. See: Best Green Sauce (Grüne Sosse) in Frankfurt (2015), Germany

Pictures: Frankfurter Schnitzel at Apfelwein Adolf Wagner (with Grüne Sosse)

Pictures: Christian Schiller with Apfelwein Adolf Wagner Chef Nico Hoffmann

Pictures: At Apfelwein Adolf Wagner

2018 Day Winners

May 12 2018: Zum Lahmen Esel (see above)

May 13 2018: Döpfner’s, Frankfurt Sachsenhausen, Schifferstraße 38-40

Fine dining restaurant.

Pictures: Hotel im Maingau, Christian Schiller, Chef Jörg Döpfner with his Father and his Son

May 14 2018: Apfelwein Wagner (see above)

May 15 2018: Gasthaus Zum Einhorn (see above)

May 16 2018: Restaurant Kastanie, Frankfurt Fechenheim, Leinwebergasse 4-6

Restaurant.

May 17 2018: Waldgasthof Gundelhard, Hofheim am Taunus, Münsterer Straße 65

Popular country inn.

May 18 2018: SG Bockenheim

Soccer club.

schiller-wine: Related Postings

Best Green Sauce (Grüne Sosse) in Frankfurt (2015), Germany

Best Green Sauce (Grüne Sosse) in Frankfurt (2014), Germany

Schiller's Favorites: Frankfurt Apple Wine Taverns that Make their own Apple Wine - Frankfurter Apfelweinlokale die noch selbst Keltern, Germany

Wine in Frankfurt am Main? - Weingut der Stadt Frankfurt, Germany

In the Glass: Gluehwein at Frankfurt am Main Christmas Market

The Premium Apple Wines of Andreas Schneider - Obsthof am Steinberg - in Frankfurt am Main, Germany

Apple Wine Tavern Zur Buchscheer in Frankfurt am Main, Germany – The Traditional Way: Apple Wine Made on the Premises

Apple Wine in Frankfurt am Main, Germany and Cider in the World

Schiller's Favorite Apple Wine Taverns in Frankfurt am Main, Germany

An Apple Wine Tavern as Traditional as can be in Frankfurt am Main: “Zu den 3 Steubern” of Wolfgang Wagner, Germany

Mainlust “Desche Otto”– an Ultra Traditional Apple Wine Tavern, with an Innovative Twist, off the Beaten Track in Schwanheim, Frankfurt am Main, Germany

Handkäs’ mit Musik – Hand Cheese with Music - A Greater Frankfurt Region Speciality, Germany

Schiller's Favorite Apple Wine Taverns in Frankfurt am Main, Germany





Cellar Tour and Tasting at Staatsweingut Meersburg in Meersburg, Baden, Lake Constance (Bodensee) - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

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Picture: At Staatsweingut Meersburg in Meersburg, Baden, Lake Constance (Bodensee)

We toured the ancient cellar and and had a tasting of the Staatsweingut Meersburg wines. Hanna Neuser of EcoCert and Consultant at Staatsweingut Meersburg was our host.

Picture: Lake Constance (Bodensee)

Staatsweingut Meersburg

Staatsweingut Meersburg is located in the small town of Meersburg just above the port of Meersburg on Lake Constance in the Baden wine-growing region in Germany.

Staastweingut Meersburg basically never changed ownership: it has always been in the hands of the rulers of Baden.

Wine production in Meersburg has been first documented in 1210. This year also marks the establishment of the Staatsweingut Meersburg. However in those days it was the winery of the Prince-Bishop of Constance who reigned over Baden. For 600 years the winery stayed in he hands of the Prince-Bishops.

A Prince-Bishop is a bishop who is a territorial Prince of the Church on account of one or more secular principalities, usually pre-existent titles of nobility held concurrently with their inherent clerical office. Thus the principality ruled politically by a prince-bishop could be wholly or largely overlap with his diocesan jurisdiction, but not necessarily.

Pictures: At Staatsweingut Meersburg

In 1802 Napoleon secularized all church properties and ownership changed to the Markgraf von Baden who was the ruling King of Baden in those days.

The Grand Duchy of Baden remained a sovereign country until it joined the German Empire in 1871. After the revolution of 1918, and the abolishment of the monarchy in Germany, Baden became part of the Weimar Republic as the Republic of Baden. The Republic of Baden as the successor of the Grand Duchy of Baden took over the winery (but it did not take over Schloss Salem, which became the private property of the Markgraf of Baden).

After 1945 Baden and Württemberg were merged to the Republic of Baden-Württemberg, which is the current owner of the Staatsweingut Meersburg.

The so-called Reithof complex today houses the sales office, the cellars and the estate administration. Also available on site is a restaurant and wine bar with a view of the lake and the Alps.

The beautiful wine cellar of the Staatsweingut Meersburg was built in 1720, when the Prince-Bishop of Stauffenberg (1658-1740) owned the castle. The white wines and blanc de noirs are slowly fermented at cool temeperatures, in order to retain their natural light, fruity character. The red wines are amtured in large oak barrels or in French barriques.

Pictures: Cellar Tour at Staatsweingut Meersburg

The vineyard area totals 62 hectares with holdings in the following sites: Bengel, Chorherrnhalde, Lerchenberg, Jungfernstieg and Rieschen (Meersburg – monopole holding), Olgaberg – highest vineyard in Germany at 520 metres above sea level (Hohentwiel), as well as Ritterhalde (Gailingen). The area is planted with Pinot Noir, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, Chardonnay, Riesling, Müller-Thurgau, Traminer and Regent.

Pictures: Tasting

Dinner at Restaurant Bürgerbräu (Chef Simon Metzler) in Überlingen

The day ended with dinner at Restaurant Bürgerbräu - recommended by the Guide Michelin - in Überlingen. Chef Simon Metzler and his wife Katja run the place in the third generation. Chef Simon Metzler started his career with Chef Stefan Marquard, was the tour chef of the Rock Band "Die Toten Hosen" and worked for a number of years in Berlin, before returning home to Überlingen and taking over the family business.

We took one "final drink for the road" at Überlingen's in-place Zum Galgen.

Pictures: At Restaurant Bürgerbräu (Chef Simon Metzler) and Zum Galgen in Überlingen

schiller-wine: Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen - All Postings (Published and Forthcoming)

The Sun-Kissed South: Germany’s Pinot Noir, the Other Whites, the Culinary Regions - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Sekt: Cellar Tour and Tasting at Griesel&Compagnie, Sekthaus Streit, Bensheim, with Winemaker Rachele Crosara - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Lunch at 1 Michelin Star Restaurant Landhaus Feckl in Ehningen, with Chef Franz Feckl and Host Manuela Feckl - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

The Evolving Structure of the Wine Industry in Germany– The Case of the Lake Constance Region

Schloss Salem at Lake Constance in Germany: A Museum, a School and a Wine Estate

Visit of Schloss Salem, Kirche Birnau and Weingut Markgraf von Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Staatsweingut Meersburg in Meersburg, Bodensee

Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Ziereisen in Efringen, Markgräfler Land, Baden, with Hanspeter and Edeltraud Ziereisen

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Martin Waßmer in Bad Krozingen, Markgräfler Land, Baden

Dinner at Restaurant Schwarzer Adler, 1 Star Michelin, Oberbergen, Kaiserstuhl, Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Hunn in Gottenheim, Tuniberg, Baden, with Kilian and Martina Hunn

The World Class Wines of Alsace

In the world class white wine region Alsace

Tour and Tasting at Domaines Schlumberger in Guebwiller, Alsace - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Rieflé in Pfaffenheim, Alsace, with Paul Rieflé

Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Domaine Rolly-Gassmann in Rorschwihr, Alsace, with Pierre Gassmann

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Pfister in Dahlenheim, Alsace, with Melanie Pfister

Dinner at 2 Michelin Star Restaurant Auberge du Cheval Blanc, Alsace

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

Vineyard Tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Siener in Birkweiler, Pfalz, with Owner/ Winemaker Peter Siener

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

Dinner Tasting at the Vinothek/ Wine Tavern of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, with the Managing Director of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, Steffen Brahner

Extensive Vineyard Tour and Tasting at Weingut Reichsrat von Buhl in Deidesheim, Pfalz, with General Manager Richard Grosche

Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Battenfeld-Spanier/ Kühling-Gillot in Hohen-Sülzen, Rheinhessen, with Carolin Spanier

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Wagner-Stempel in Siefersheim, Rheinhessen, with Oliver Müller and Cathrin Wagner

Cellar Tour, Tasting and Lunch at Weingut Schloss Westerhaus in Ingelheim, Rheinhessen, with the Owners Countess and Count von Schönburg-Glauchau and Technical Director Toni Frank

Tasting at Weingut Knewitz in Appenheim, Rheinhessen

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Taverns in Mainz, Germany

2 Cellar Tours and 1 Tasting at Weingut Ziereisen in Efringen, Markgräfler Land, Baden, with Hanspeter and Edel Ziereisen - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

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Pictures: Massive Tasting at Weingut Ziereisen, with Hanspeter and Edeltraud Ziereisen

"The man is a superstar, whose Pinots are up there with the very best."
Tim Atkin, Master of Wine and award-winning wine journalist, broadcaster and commentator

"Ziereisen is a little bit like Bayern Munich. Another dimension of complexity and expression." Stephan Reinhardt, The Wine Advocate German Reviewer 11/6/15 (Facebook)

We started the visit with a tour of the old cellar, then sat down for a massive tasting in the cosy tasting room of Weingut Ziereisen with Edeltraud and Hanspeter Zieresien and finished the visit with a quick tour of the impressive, brand-new winemaking facilities, built into the mountain, of Weingut Ziereisen outside of the village.

Weingut Ziereisen exports 40 percent of its production. It is available in the US through Fass Selections. I have quoted extensively from Lyle Fass's recent Ziereisen offers.

Pictures: At Weingut Ziereisen

Weingut Ziereisen

Weingut Ziereisen is in the Markgräfler Land, the far southwestern corner of Germany where the country borders both Switzerland and France. Weingut Ziereisen sits right at the Switzerland – Germany border.

The estate is a mixed farming operation, run by the Ziereisen family with Hanspeter Ziereisen at the lead and un charge of the wine portfolio. In spring, asparagus is harvested and supplied to the leading restaurants in the Markgräflerland region, in summer and autumn various vegetables and fruit are produced.

Picture: The Ziereisen Family

The vineyard area totals 8 hectares, with holdings in the Hardt, Rhini, Schulen and Tschuppen sites. They are planted with Pinot Noir (50%), Chasselas (25%), Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, Chardonnay, Gewürztraminer and Regent. The top wines are not filtered, in order to retain their individual character, and aged for 22 months in wood.

Weingut Ziereisen has 4 (out of 5) grapes in the 2018 Gault-Millau wine guide.

Hanspeter and Edeltraud Ziereisen make very interesting and age worthy red wines - "Made in Germany". Most are Pinot Noirs but their fascination with Syrah led to the production of one Syrah wine. The house wine is a Gutedel. Gutedel is more known under the name „Chasselat“ or „Fendant“ as the signature white grape varietal of Switzerland. Gutedel has also become the signature grape of its close neighbor the Markgräfler Land. It is regarded as oldest known grape variety, grown in Egypt 5000 years ago. In the late 18 hundreds the Chasselat grape was brought from Vervey, Switzerland to the Markgräfler Land.

Pictures: Arriving at Weingut Ziereisen, with Annette Schiller and Hanspeter Ziereisen

Weingut Ziereisen (Savio Soares Selections)
1140 Broadway Suite 1506, New York, NY 10001, USA

Savio Soares Selections: It is not only Edeltraud and Hanspeter that make up Weingut Ziereisen but, with all included, there are 4 generations working side by side, it has been this way for 30 years. Wonderfully they all toil to achieve the same goal: working with utmost care to reach the potential that the vineyards can express, with little interference by man in the winery. The goal is to reflect the power of the vineyards but, as Hanspeter says, “Not sumo wrestlers but decathletes; smooth, elegant, strong, and athletic.” To achieve this, the property is managed naturally, without chemicals. The unique micro-climate and pure limestone soils provide a growing environment similar to Burgundy, and so similar clones do very well. They are worked by hand every day and, come harvest time, are swept for only the best grapes. Another selection process before pressing assures only the best fruit are entered into the process. They want wines that reflect the vintage as well, so the correct moment of picking is calculated after watching the entire season pass.

Pictures: Weingut Ziereisen - Mixed Farming Operations

Gutedel (Chassalas) is the local grape and champion of the family. Hanspeter believes that by working these vines hard, he can revitalize the noble nature of this varietal. The cellar work is described by Hanspeter controlled idleness, allowing for long macerations and up to 20 months of lees contact. Both old and new wood may be used but assuredly it is not frivolous. Nothing is done but nothing goes unattended, as it has been for centuries here with cellars dating back 734 C.E. Luckily time is on their side, as they believe only with patience can they create pure wine. Centuries before, it was realized that this was perfect ground for grapes and the Ziereisen family has no intention, no matter how long it takes, of letting that greatness fade. All wines are vegan friendly.

Pictures: Touring the Old Cellar of Weingut Ziereisen

Ziereisen, the Master of German Pinot Noir (Fass Selections)

Hanspeter Ziereisen is one of the world's greatest winemakers and everything he makes is just brilliant. There is a rare beauty in Hanspeter's wines. Each one is an exhilarating experience. He is a true artist. His inspiration is Burgundy but the wines are so uniquely of where they come from as well. You have a Burgundian sensibility with a Baden soul. Each time I open one I am at a loss for words. I am spoiled to have a nice stash of his wines. Each one is just an artist at peak. The quality is so high for every bottle I am in awe. They drink so much higher than what I charge. They are values of the highest degree. He gets stunning fruit. The fruit in these wines is dense, so pure and vibrant and explosive. Truly extraordinary. There is a purity to the fruit in the Baden Pinots that cannot be reproduced anywhere. Hanspeter is the Daddy of it all. He is Baden Pinot Noir. They all look up to him. He is the Aubert de Villaine of Germany. Every producer I have met in Germany not only knows Hanspeter Ziereisen, but has an immense respect for him.

Pictures: Tasting with Hanspeter and Edeltraud Ziereisen

The Wines we Tasted

The Ziereisen Hierachy

Weingut Ziereisen classifies its wines in 4 groups:

First, Gutsweine - Entry-level wines.

Second, Rebsorten Weine - Basic single grape variety wines.

Third, Premium Weine - premium wines, all unfiltered and for 22 months aged in wood. All premium wines are single-vineyard wines  - Steingrüble, Lügle, Musbrugger, Hard, Tschuppen, Talrein, Schulen, Rhini, Gestad.

Fourth Jaspis Weine - ultra-premium wines, all unfiltered, some are old vines, all 22 months aged in wood, no single-vineyard wines.

Picture: Ziereisen Jaspis

The Ziereisen Hierarchy (Spätburgunder) Explained by Lyle Fass

1) The Blauer Spätburgunder which is like Bourgogne Rouge level, but like the most extraordinary one you have ever had.
2) Then you have Tschuppen next which is like like a very high quality regional wine, like a Côte de Nuits Villages.
3) Next up there is Schulen which is like a high quality village wine from Chambolle or Volnay.
4) Now we come to Rhini which is like a high quality elite 1er Cru. Like a Clos St. Jacques or a Les Petit Monts.
5) Above that is Jaspis which is like a 2nd tier Grand Cru. Think Echezeaux or Corton.
6) Then the top of the line (more on that below) is Jaspis Alte Reben which is like an elite Grand Cru like Richebourg or Romanee St. Vivant.

Pictures: Edeltraud Ziereisen

The Wines Edeltraud and Hanspeter Poured

2016 Heugumber, Gutedel, Gutswein
2016 Viviser, Gutedel, Rebsorten Wein
2016 Grauer Burgunder, Rebsorten Wein
2015 Steingrüble unfiltiert, Gutwedel, Premium Wein
2015 Lügle unfiltiert, Weisser Burgunder Premium Wein
2015 Hard unfiltiert, Chardonnay, Premium Wein


2015 Grauer Burgunder Alte Reben unfiltriert, Jaspis Wein

Lyle Fass: I was out to dinner with The Greek's son in late December a few years ago and I brought a bottle of the 2013 Ziereisen Jaspis Alte Reben Grauerburgunder. He brought 2009 Francois Raveneau 1er Cru "Butteaux." The 13 Grauer Burgunder was $49.99 and the Raveneau was $175 a bottle. By now I'm sure you all know where this story is going. The Ziereisen absolutely ate that Raveneau for breakfast. It was not even a fair fight. The Ziereisen was an eye-opening wine that night and the fact that it went with the food better than the Raveneau and also showed up the more expensive sexy label-chasing wine was all the more satisfying.

So why am I offering a $57 pinot gris (2015 Ziereisen Grauer Burgunder Alte Reben for $56.99 on a 3-bottle pack)? Because it's made from the best vineyards from one of the best winemakers in Europe and from 60 year old vines. This is a Grand Cru/Grosses Gewachs quality wine. But it's even more. It is a wine that will change the way you think about Pinot Gris. It is also one of the greatest food wines in the world. Every time I open a bottle it is the best white wine that I've had in however many years. It is uncanny how world class this bottle is. Here is a link to an Instagram video of me tasting the 2014.

The nose is just stunningly elegant. It has fruit complexity with the best of them. Stunning nuanced stone fruits all over this nose. Citrus. Bergamot. Really something you can get lost in with mineral and light citrus overtones combined with it opening and opening. It has that 15 power and detail.

The palate is where the fireworks really happen. A rare wine where the palate over delivers what the nose promises. This is one of the most explosive wines I've ever had from Germany. It is like a suitcase nuke in 2015. Ridiculously intense but contained. Huge, and I mean huge freshness from acid and so much limestone combined with delicious juicy stone fruits. A massive fruit soak and such insane fruit complexity again. I know I don't talk often about fruit complexity but this is exhibit A. When you recover from that, there are incredible internal aromatics floating above with a firm mineral core. This is as graceful as 1er Cru White Burgundy from one of the big three (Chassagne / Meursault / Puligny). The wine is completely delicious (my tasting note says, "WOW, YUM") but this wine also has some serious eye-popping complexity. It is as serious a white wine as I sell. I had the 2015 at a pop and pour at the estate and it was amazing but then again over a four hour meal where it truly blew my mind - it will get better with some serious air or bottle age. I'd open and follow over the course of an evening - this is a special, special wine from a remarkable producer. It also got 94 from Stephane Reinhardt for the 13. His review is below. I know he tasted the 15 which is even better.

"The 2013 Grauer Burgunder Alte Reben Jaspis is a selection from two parcels; the vines were planted in 1958 and 1962 on Jurassic chalk soils with an iron-rich layer of clay. The wine has an apricot color and an intense, aromatic bouquet of ripe (stone) fruits and some lovely lime flavors. The wine is creamy and elegant on the palate, but full of tension, power and intense, juicy fruit. The finish is very long and expresses the old vines. This has great purity, freshness and salinity in the finish. Great aging potential. This is a fascinating Pinot Gris for the next 8-10 years." 94 Points, Stephan Reinhardt The Wine Advocate (2013)

2015 Chardonnay unfiltriert, Jaspis Wein
2015 Gutedel 10/4 Alte Reben unfiltriert, Jaspis Wein


More widely known as Chasselas, Gutedel has a reputation for producing at best, neutral early-drinking quaffers. But not here. The grape is one of the world's oldest, and a classic of southern Baden. The estate already produces excellent versions, but with this wine Hanspeter Ziereisen wished to show that it can hold its own with the world's best whites: precisely because of its neutrality, he believes it reflects the vineyard character better than any other white varietal.

2014 Schulen unfiltriert, Blauer Spätburgunder, Premium Wein
2015 Schulen unfiltriert, Blauer Spätburgunder, Premium Wein


The grapes are handpicked from Ziereisen’s 25-35 year old ‘Schulen’ parcel, which has very pure limestone soils, leading to a complex minerality in the wines. They then undergo a six week maceration period, after which they are pressed and moved to age to a combination of 20% new and 80% used barriques for about eighteen months. Yields about 50 hL/ha.

2014 Rhini unfiltriert, Blauer Spätburgunder, Premium Wein
2015 Rhini unfiltriert, Blauer Spätburgunder, Premium Wein


2015 Pinot Noir unfiltriert, Jaspis Wein

Lyle Fass: Up first is the 2015 Zieriesen Spätburgunder "Rhini" for $39.99 a bottle on a 4-Pack is so extraordinary. I mean I cannot think of a $40 bottle of Pinot Noir I'd rather have in the world of wine than the 2015 Rhini. It is just a marvel. Below the Rhini you have three wines. So back to the Rhini. This wine is $39.99. It's just stupid. The 2015 Rhini reminds me most of a high quality Vosne Romanee 1er Cru. The nose is hugely expressive when I had it and it was bottled 3 days before. That is just incredible as travel bottle shock is a bad thing and bottling is like that, so I was shocked how good it was (it will be much better this Fall).

Big nose. Iron, red fruits, like small intense berries. Dark plums. There is so much dense fruit on the nose one can get lost. Spices. A compelling earthiness. Almost like an earthy perfume. Big cherries as well. Just a kaleidoscope of aromas. I got lost in this nose. I was shocked it was bottled so recently.

The Palate. The wine takes over your palate. This wine is in like 4D it is so complex. There is a purity to the tiny berry fruit that just explodes in your mouth and gently dissipates over minutes. Amazing tension. It is just amazing this wine is $40. It's actually obscene. There are big tannins, but they are oh so sweet, but also noble and suggesting of a long life. Huge huge fruit. Stunning purity and freshness. The most incredible acids. Thunderous. So concentrated and almost bruiser-like, yet so elegant. How do they do that? So dense. So deep. It is a masterpiece. It's a Rhini that has 15-20 years of evolution in it. It's that complex and good and ageworthy. The palate is just fantastic and will be one of your wines of the year. Very masculine and intense versus the more elegant ballerina like Schulen.

It is 100% whole cluster fermentation which is very rare at Ziereisen or in Germany. Sometimes he will do 50%, sometimes none, sometimes 15%. The man is an artist. He has got it down. It's aged in 20% new and 80% old barriques.

2013 Spätburgunder Alte Reben unfiltriert, Jaspis Wein


Lyle Fass: Up next is the 2013 Ziereisen Spatburgunder Jaspis Alte Reben for $74.99 each on a 3 pack). This is like the top Grand Cru at Zieriesen. The wine is lights out in 2013 which is an extraordinary vintage in its own right. This is the third vintage I've sold and for the clients that buy this wine, they know the genius that is the Jaspis Alte Reben. The regular 2013 Jaspis (#5) got 93 from Stephan Rheinhardt and this is, imho, at least a 96-98 based on that score, which would make it one of the highest scoring German Pinots ever. Fewer than 800 bottles are made and it stays in barrel for four years. It's the oldest and best vines of Jaspis. There is nothing like it in the world. It's Grand Cru Baden all the way. When I first sipped this wine, the aromatics were so powerful my head literally snapped back like I had been hit on the forehead with a sledgehammer. It is so deeply aromatic due to the high levels of dry extract. The internal aromatics are really off the charts.

The nose is a wonderful combination of licorice, penetrating minerality and super sweet fruit. But it also shifts so many times over the course of many hours. At certain points it has so much sous-bois it can be mistaken for top Burgundy blind. There is an intense herbal element that is woven in and out of the perfectly ripe cherries. It's something else.

The palate is plummy with incredible licorice overtones and it is juicy like few other Pinot Noirs in the world and has that texture that Pinot drinkers crave. There is just the biggest mass explosion of red/black cherry and plummy licorice that is it is almost too intense except for the fact it is wrapped in silk and velvet. The texture of this wine is what separates it from the pack. This is what you are paying for. It is so big and intense and flavorful but it's all silk and velvet anyway. The tannins are as fine as you will get in a Pinot Noir.

The finish is so mineral despite the huge levels of fruit. Sap City. Amazing inner mouth aromas. This is a significant step up from the 2012 and 2011 which were both great, but 2013 is legendary. This is a legend. A wine that really speaks of a place. Your mouth is literally overflowing with fruit and licorice aromatics. The structure is significant as is the density. Again this is is the best red wine Hanspeter makes and is on par with top Grand Cru Burgundy. It is so special. The finish stays with you for a minute. This is, as expected, limited.

2015 Syrah unfiltriert, Jaspis Wein

Lyle Fass: But Hanspeter Ziereisen is at the very southern tip of Germany, he has the terroir to grow great Syrah and he is, I can say without any hesitation, one of the great winemakers in the world. Hanspeter is making world class wine from 6 grapes: Pinot Noir, Grauburgunder, Weissburgunder, Chardonnay, Chasselas (aka Gutedel in Baden) and today's grape, Syrah. I'd put these against the Northern Rhone Syrahs I've sold at both price levels today. And these are by far the most Northern Rhone like Syrahs I've had from ANYWHERE that is not the Northern Rhone. They have the aromatics and flavors of Northern Rhone Syrah but the wines are really more about balance and tension between fruit, richness acidity and secondary flavors, almost more the way a Burgundian would make Syrah.


The first wine is the Grand Vin, the Hermitage Of Baden, the 2015 Zieriesen Jaspis Syrah for $52.99 a bottle on a 3-pack.There is almost no Syrah I'd rather drink right now. It is as distinctive as it is unique. This is at the quality level of a great Hermitage. It's $50. What Hermitage is $50! None! The wine has an umami character that is just so alluring. The nose is so expansive and complex. Nuance after nuance. Only 600 bottles made. Even with it being bottled 4 days before I tasted it the wine stunned me. This is the finest Syrah released in Germany every year and the 2013 did get 93 pts from Stephane Rheinhardt of the Wine Advocate. This must be a 95 at least. This wine blew my mind. There is no other way to describe it. It comes from jurassic chalk soils and then was aged in 50% new and 50% used barriques for 20 months, before it was bottled without fining and filtration. The vines are only 16 years old. That is ridiculous. Huge floral nose and I mean really really floral. Also, meaty and gamey. Some olives. It is an pungent and full if fruit and wonderful minerality. What a mouthfeel with complexity, that 2015 intense power and concentration and stunning freshness with amazing acidity and length. It has that 2015 thunder that all the top N. Rhônes have. Super gamey and meaty with such depth and poise. It has a wonderful earthy sweetness. My god the fruit is so sweet and intense. The finish just goes on an on and so so finely etched and delineated. Very floral on the palate and so juicy with those super fine super elegant and super precise Jaspis like tannins. The tannins are so ripe and rich. Just stunning juiciness and depth. But the freshness and minerals are like a clap back on the finish.

2014 Unterirdisch Gutedel in der Amphore unfiltriert, Jaspis Wein


Second Cellar Tour (in the new Cellar)

We finished the visit with a quick tour of the impressive, brand-new winemaking facilities, built into the mountain, of Weingut Ziereisen outside of the village. Hanspeter took us there with his bike.

Pictures: Touring the New Cellar of Weingut Ziereisen

Bye-bye

Thanks Hanspeter and Edel for a most fascinating winery visit and wine tasting.

Picture: Annette Schiller, Hanspeter Ziereisen, Christian Schiller

schiller-wine: Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen - All Postings (Published and Forthcoming)

The Sun-Kissed South: Germany’s Pinot Noir, the Other Whites, the Culinary Regions - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

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Lunch at 1 Michelin Star Restaurant Landhaus Feckl in Ehningen, with Chef Franz Feckl and Host Manuela Feckl - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

The Evolving Structure of the Wine Industry in Germany– The Case of the Lake Constance Region

Schloss Salem at Lake Constance in Germany: A Museum, a School and a Wine Estate

Visit of Schloss Salem, Kirche Birnau and Weingut Markgraf von Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Staatsweingut Meersburg in Meersburg, Baden, Lake Constance (Bodensee) - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Ziereisen in Efringen, Markgräfler Land, Baden, with Hanspeter and Edeltraud Ziereisen

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Martin Waßmer in Bad Krozingen, Markgräfler Land, Baden

Dinner at Restaurant Schwarzer Adler, 1 Star Michelin, Oberbergen, Kaiserstuhl, Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Hunn in Gottenheim, Tuniberg, Baden, with Kilian and Martina Hunn

The World Class Wines of Alsace

In the world class white wine region Alsace

Tour and Tasting at Domaines Schlumberger in Guebwiller, Alsace - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Rieflé in Pfaffenheim, Alsace, with Paul Rieflé

Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Domaine Rolly-Gassmann in Rorschwihr, Alsace, with Pierre Gassmann

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Pfister in Dahlenheim, Alsace, with Melanie Pfister

Dinner at 2 Michelin Star Restaurant Auberge du Cheval Blanc, Alsace

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

Vineyard Tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Siener in Birkweiler, Pfalz, with Owner/ Winemaker Peter Siener

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

Dinner Tasting at the Vinothek/ Wine Tavern of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, with the Managing Director of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, Steffen Brahner

Extensive Vineyard Tour and Tasting at Weingut Reichsrat von Buhl in Deidesheim, Pfalz, with
General Manager Richard Grosche

Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Battenfeld-Spanier/ Kühling-Gillot in Hohen-Sülzen, Rheinhessen, with Carolin Spanier

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Wagner-Stempel in Siefersheim, Rheinhessen, with
Oliver Müller and Cathrin Wagner

Cellar Tour, Tasting and Lunch at Weingut Schloss Westerhaus in Ingelheim, Rheinhessen, with the Owners Countess and Count von Schönburg-Glauchau and Technical Director Toni Frank

Tasting at Weingut Knewitz in Appenheim, Rheinhessen

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Taverns in Mainz, Germany



UPCOMING Tours/ Wine Dinners/ Tastings - Annette and Christian Schiller/ ombiasyPR & WineTours/ schiller-wine, Germany, France, USA (Issued: July 2, 2018)

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Picture: Annette and Christian Schiller in London

Below is a list of the wine tours, wine dinners and wine tastings planned by Annette and Christian Schiller/ ombiasyPR & WineTours/ schiller-wine for the coming months.

For questions concerning the ombiasy wine tours please consult the ombiasy website.

For all other events please send me (cschiller@schiller-wine.com) or Annette (aschiller@ombiasypr.com) an e-mail.

July 2018

August 2018

McLean, Virginia, August 12: Annual Riesling Party at the Schiller Residence in McLean. See: Annual Riesling Party at the Schiller Residence in Washington DC, USA (2017)

September 2018

Frankfurt, Germany, September: Tasting the Best of Virginia Wines in Frankfurt - Virginia Governor's Cup Case 2017. See: Tasting the Best of Virginia Wines in Frankfurt, Germany, with Stuart Pigott: Virginia Governor's Cup Case 2016

Bordeaux, France, September 4 - 13: 2018 Bordeaux Tour by ombiasy WineTours. See: ombiasy WineTours and UPCOMING Ombiasy Wine Tours in 2018 to Germany and Alsace (May/ June) and to Bordeaux and Burgundy-Champagne (September)

Bourgogne, France, September 20 - 30: 2018 Burgundy Tour by ombiasy WineTours. See: ombiasy WineTours and UPCOMING Ombiasy Wine Tours in 2018 to Germany and Alsace (May/ June) and to Bordeaux and Burgundy-Champagne (September)

October 2018

Rhône Valley, France, October 15 - 24: 2018 Rhône Valley Tour by ombiasy WineTours. See: ombiasy WineTours and UPCOMING Ombiasy Wine Tours in 2018 to Germany and Alsace (May/ June) and to Bordeaux and Burgundy-Champagne (September)

Washington DC, Friday October 26: German Wine Basics - Tasting with the German Wine Society (Washington DC Chapter)

November 2018

Buffalo, New York State, November 1 - 4: Germany, Burgundy and Alsace Tastings at the National Conference of the American Wine Society led by Annette Schiller. See: American Wine Society and The 2017 American Wine Society National Conference in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania, USA: Seen Through Christian Schiller's Camera Lens

Session 1: A Journey through the Rhône Valley
Session 2: "Abbey Wines": The Importance of the Monasteries for the Development of Viticulture
Session 3: Pinot Noir in Burgundy/ France and Germany

Washington DC, Tuesday, November 6: German Wines in the 21st Century - Tasting at the Washington DC Wine and Cheese Seminar, led by Annette Schiller

Washington DC, Friday, November 16: Wine Tasting with Christian L. Stahl, Winzerhof Stahl, at the German Wine Society (Washington DC Chapter). See: Lunch with Christian L. Stahl, Winzerhof Stahl, Franken: Not only a Gifted Winemaker but also a Gifted Chef - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

December 2018

January 2019

Frankfurt, Germany: Tasting Aged American Red Wines (Cabernet Sauvignon/ Merlot)


schiller-wine: Related Postings

Ombiasy Wine Tours 2018: 3 x France and 3 x Germany - Ombiasy Newsletter December 2017

Annual Riesling Party at the Schiller Residence in Washington DC, USA (2017)

Tasting the Best of Virginia Wines in Frankfurt, Germany, with Stuart Pigott: Virginia Governor's Cup Case 2016

Total Immersion in Bordeaux: World Class Wines and Exquisite French Gourmet Cuisine - Bordeaux Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours, France  

Burgundy (and Champagne) 2016 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: From Lyon to Reims - Wine, Food, Culture and History

Rhône Valley Tour December 2017: From Lyon to Avignon - Wine, Food, Culture, History

The 2017 American Wine Society National Conference in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania, USA: Seen Through Christian Schiller's Camera Lens

Lunch with Christian L. Stahl, Winzerhof Stahl, Franken: Not only a Gifted Winemaker but also a Gifted Chef - Germany-East Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

Remembering the Iconic Restaurant Schweizer Stuben: Exceptional Wine Dinner at Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller, with Chef Burkhard Schork and Host Regine Schork

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Picture: Remembering the Iconic Restaurant Schweizer Stuben: Exceptional Wine Dinner at Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller, with Chef Burkhard Schork and Host Regine Schork

At the occasion of Annette's recent birthday, we enjoyed an outstanding wine dinner at Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller in Bietingheim-Bissingen. Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller is a charming restaurant half an hour away from Stuttgart in Württemberg.

Owner/ Chef Burkhard Schork is well-established in the German wine and food scene. Earlier in his career, he worked as a chef at the iconic restaurant Schweizer Stuben, which put, along with the Tantris in Munich, the Ente vom Lehel in Wiesbaden, Schwarzer Adler in Oberbergen and the Schwarzwaldstuben in Baiersbronn, German cooking on the map with the German Nouvelle Cuisine.

His wife Regine Schork is a lovely host. She also worked for a few years at the Schweizer Stuben.

Pictures: World Class Chefs Egbert Engelhardt, Johannn Lafer, Jörg Müller, Dieter Müller, Burkhard Schork, Hans Stefan Steinheuer - All previously Schweizer Stuben. See: Riesling Gala 2017 at Eberbach Monastery in the Rheingau: A Riesling Feast in a Breathtaking Historic Setting, Germany

Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller has an Assiette Michelin and 2 forks in the Michelin Guide, whith a reference to the exceptional wine list. Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller has 13 points in the Gault Millau Guide.

Burkhard and Regine Schork

I first heard about Hotel Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller through my cousin Professor Dr. Karlheinz Herrmann, who is a cardiologist in Stuttgart and likes good food and wine. He has been a regular there for many years. Stuttgart is about 30 km away from Bietigheim. At some point, Karlheinz presented me with a case of my beloved Schillerwein, made by Weingut Dautel for Hotel/Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller. Good and dry Schillerwein, a specialty from Württemberg (originally a dry field blend of red and white grapes) has become difficult to find. I loved the special bottling of Weingut Dautel for Hotel Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller.

More recently, we have run into Regine and Burkhard Schork at various wine/food events in Germany, including the Riesling Gala at Kloster Eberbach, arguably the most amazing Riesling event in the world, and have spent a number of evenings together at common friends.

Pictures: Ernst Loosen, Weingut Dr. Loosen and Regine Schork, Hotel Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller at the 2015 Riesling Gala in the Rheingau. See: Riesling Gala 2015 at Kloster Eberbach in the Rheingau, Germany

Burkhard Schork always liked the smell of sausage and already was a “Metzgermeister” (Master Butcher) when he started an apprenticeship as Chef at the legendary “Schweizer Stuben” under the world-class Chefs Jörg Müller and Dieter Müller. He continued his apprenticeship with Chef Steinheuer in Bad Neuenahr and also did internships with Stucki in Basel, George Blanc in Vonnas and Alain Ducasse in Paris (Hotel Plaza Athene). He was Sous-Chef at the Schweizer Stuben, before taking over the Hotel Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller in Bietigheim-Bissingen in 1988. The Hotel Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller has been family-owned and family-run since 1921. Regine and Burkhard Schork are the 4th generation.

Pictures: Welcome - Annette Schiller, Regine and Burkhard Schork

Before moving back to Bietigheim-Bissingen in 1988 to take over the family’s hotel and restaurant with her husband, Regine Schork was the Chef de Rang at Schweizer Stuben in Wertheim-Bettingen (where her husband was the Sous-Chef) and the Maitre d’Hotel at Steinheuers Restaurant Zur Alten Post in Bad Neuenahr.

Burkhard Schork is a cook book author. He has contributed to the following cookbooks: Dieter Müller Kochbuch, Heine Verlag; Das Friedrich von Schiller Kochbuch, Schnell Verlag; Das Schlachtfest von Burkhard Schork, Tre Torri Verlag; Die 100 besten Wildrezepte, Tre Torri Verlag; Baden Württemberg kocht, Rolling Pin.

Hotel Friedrich von Schiller

Hotel Friedrich von Schiller in Bietigheim-Bissingen is a beautiful, upscale hotel which emphasizes the essence of German "Gemütlichkeit". You experience the warm Swabian hospitality at its best. There are 15 individually, charmingly presented, elegant rooms and themed suites.

Hotel Friedrich von Schiller is part of the "Romantik Hotels & Restaurants" network.

Pictures: Hotel Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller in Bietigheim-Bissingen in Württemberg

Alternative: Hotel Eberhard

Unfortunately, when we decided to celebrate Annette's birthday at Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller, all rooms of the Friedrich von Schiller were already booked. We stayed at Hotel Eberhard, which is at about the same level in terms of comfort and price as the Friedrich von Schiller, in walking distance (10 minutes).


Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller

Michelin 2016: Classic regional and aromatic fresh cuisine of the season and from the region write the menu of Chef and Master Bucher Burkhard Schork. The experience from the best restaurants in Germany is passed on to employees and guests.

A more beautiful place could hardly have arisen from the centuries-old house in the Old Town! That one here really feels comfortable is due to the Schork family. 100 Percent commitment also in the kitchen: regional, classic, tasty! To stay: charming rooms, named after theater plays of Friedrich von Schiller.

The Dinner

Annette had given Burkhard a free hand in terms of composing the dinner. He pulled out all the stops. Chef Burkhard Schork and Regine Schork joined us towards the end of the dinner to talk with us about the food, the wines and everything else we were interested in. An outstanding evening! Thank you Regine and Burkhard.

Picture: Dinner Table

Aperitif

We had the aperitif on the sidewalk in front of the hotel/ restaurant.

Pictures: Aperitif

Dinner

The dinner was wonderful. Annette chose the wines from Restaurant Friedrich von Schiller's extensive wine list, which also includes an amazing number of older vintages. In addition, we brought 2 old wines from our wine cellar in Frankfurt:

1952 Weingut Domdechant Werner, Riesling, Hochheimer Kirchenstück, Auslese
1953 Château Canon La Gaffelière, Bordeaux

Pictures: The Dinner

After Dinner Chat with Burkhard and Regine Schork

Chef Burkhard Schork and Regine Schork joined us towards the end of the dinner to talk with us about the food, the wines and everything else we were interested in.

Pictures: After Dinner Chat with Regine and Chef Burkhard Schork

Bye-bye

An outstanding evening! Thanks Burkhard and Regine.

Pictures: Bye-bye

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Cellar Tour and Tasting at Pinot Noir Star Producer Weingut Martin Waßmer in Bad Krozingen, Markgräfler Land, Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

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Pictures: Cellar Tour and Tasting at Pinot Noir Star Producer Weingut Martin Waßmer in Bad Krozingen, Markgräfler Land, Baden

Weingut Martin Wassmer in Bad Krotzingen-Schlatt has 4 (out of 5) grapes in the Gault Millau WeinGuide Deutschland 2018 and belongs to the group of the top 100 wine producers in Germany. Weingut Martin Wassmer is not a member of the VDP, the association of about 200 elite winemakers in Germany. Interestingly, there is another Weingut Wassmer, owned and run by Martin's brother Fritz Wassmer, which also has 4 (out of 5) grapes in the Gault Millau WeinGuide Deutschland 2018 and which belongs to the group of the top 100 wine producers in Germany.

Picture: Martin Wassmer

We got into contact with Weingut Martin Wassmer through the German Embassy in Washington DC. Weingut Martin Wassmer does not yet but would very much like to export to the US. Our friend, the Agricultural Minister at the German Embassy contacted asked us if we knew an importer that might be interested in the wine portfolio of Weingut Martin Wassmer.

Jürgen Maier, Sales and Export, was our host. Martin Wassmer was pouring his wines at an event in Hamburg.

 Pictures: Weingut Martin Wassmer

Weingut Martin Wassmer

Weingut Martin Waßmer is located in the Markgräfler Land, close to the Swiss border.

Martin Wassmer, like his brother Fritz, is a large and successful asparagus producer. The Waßmer family has been involved in winemaking for many generations but it was only in 1997 that Martin Waßmer founded Weingut Martin Waßmer and started to make his own wine. Martin Wassmer is a trained chef. He did not have any formal training as winemaker. He attended seminars and gained practical experience at other wine estates.

Weingut Martin Wassmer specialises in Pinot Noir, which accounts for 80% of the output. Weingut Martin Wassmer also grows Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, Chardonnay, Muscat, Gewürztraminer – a nod to neighboring Alsace - and of course Gutedel.

The vineyard area totals 35 hectares, with holdings in Auggen, Laufen and Schlatt (Altenberg, Maltesergarten and Steingrüble sites), including some parcels with extremely old vines.

In terms of Martin Wassmer's winemaking philosophy, all the wines are fermented dry, where possible, natural yeasts are used, and the wines are kept on the lees for as long as possible. Maturation takes place in the tradition and style of Burgundian wines. All the red wines are matured in oak barrels, the best batches are matured in barriques. The wines remain in barrel for 15 to 18 months, during which time all the solids are deposited at the bottom of the barrel, and the wines are not filtered before bottling, wherever possible. The exclusive wines matured in barriques carry the designations „SW” and „R”, the Pinot Noir is labelled „GC”. Bottle-fermented sparkling wines are also produced.

Pictures: Cellar Tour at Weingut Martin Wassmer

Sue Style on Martin Wassmer

Sue Style: Baden wines are in the news... As a follow-up to my earlier posts on Ziereisen and Fritz Wassmer, Baden for Beginners and Baden for Intermediates – and at the risk of ruining the market even further – it’s time to spill the beans on another top grower: Martin Wassmer in Schlatt, near Bad Krozingen, in the Markgräflerland.

In this stunning sub-region, which stretches from Basel up to Freiburg, the vineyards – most of them planted at the foot of the Black Forest, and forming a mirror image of Alsace’s vineyards in the Vosges foothills across the Rhine – share the space with orchards and asparagus fields. This is novice territory, distinguished by a handful of talented, often self-taught winemakers. Many of them – even those who have recently shot to stardom – have only planted vines and started making wine in the past 20 years.

Martin Wassmer is a classic example. His wines are present on all the top wine lists in Baden-Württemberg (and farther afield) and he’s been on my radar for a while. Earlier this year he scored a Platinum Best in Show award in the 2016 Decanter World Wine Awards for one of his Pinot Noirs. Time for a visit (I love that we live astride 3 borders and can – and do – visit winegrowers in Alsace, Baden and Basel at the drop of a hat).

Like his brother Fritz, he only started adding wine to the asparagus and strawberry portfolio in 1997. Since when he’s been quietly buying up some of the best slopes that no-one else wanted to work any longer because they were too steep. He now owns 35 hectares (87 acres) and has recently built a spanking new winery and tasting room in Schlatt, just across the street from the farm shop. It’s astonishing what a reputation he’s built up for himself and his wines in such a short time.

Tasting


Weingut Martin Wassmer classifies its wines into:

Gutsweine (entry-level wines),
Selektions- & Lagenweine (special selection and single vineyard wines)
Spitzemlagen & GC-Weine (top vineyards and grand cru wines)

SW indicates a yield of less than 25 hectoliters/ hectar.
GC indicates a yield of less than 20 hectoliters/ hectar.

Sekt

2014 Weingut Martin Wassmer Sekt Pinot Rosé


Weiss

Gutsweine

2017 Weingut Martin Wassmer Marktgräflerland Gutedel
2016 Weingut Martin Wassmer Weisser Burgunder
2017 Weingut Martin Wassmer Marktgräflerland Grauer Burgunder

Selektions- & Lagenweine

2016 Weingut Martin Wassmer Schlatter Maltesergarten SW Weisser Burgunder
2016 Weingut Martin Wassmer Marktgräflerland SW Grauer Burgunder
2015 Weingut Martin Wassmer Dottinger Castellberg GC Chardonnay

Sue Style: His Weissburgunder (Pinot Blanc) Maltesergarten is a demonstration of what you can do with an unpretentious grape if you really put your heart (and a discreet dose of oak) into it. “Pinot Blanc is a bit of a diva,” he says affectionately, “if you overdo the oak, she flounces out in a fit of pique!” [I’m left wondering why producers across the Rhine don’t try something similar with their Pinot Blanc, a grape which in Alsace is mostly undistinguished, often underripe and destined for Crémant. Maybe some do….note to self to find out.]

His SW Chardonnay from Dottinger Castellberg, Wassmer’s prime site (he calls it a Grand Cru), is broad-shouldered from the hot 2015 vintage, and a little leaner from 2014 (a cool year). His mastery of oak (for whites and reds alike) is impressive for someone who’s only been making wine for 20-odd years – it seems all too easy to overdo the wood it at the beginning of your winemaking career.

Spitzemlagen & GC-Weine

2015 Weingut Martin Wassmer Staufener Schlossberg Weisser Burgunder
2015 Weingut Martin Wassmer Dottinger Castellberg GC Weisser Burgunder
2015 Weingut Martin Wassmer Dottinger Castellberg GC Grauer Burgunder
2015 Weingut Martin Wassmer Auggener Letten GC Grauer Burgunder
2016 Weingut Martin Wassmer Achkarrer Schlossberg GC Grauer Burgunder
2015 Weingut Martin Wassmer Dottinger Castellberg GC Chardonnay


Rot

Gutswein

2015 Weingut Martin Wassmer Marktgräflerland Spätburgunder


Selektions- & Lagenweine

2013 Weingut Martin Wassmer Schlatter Maltesergarten Spätburgunder
2014 Weingut Martin Wassmer Schlatter SW Spätburgunder


Spitzemlagen & GC-Weine

2015 Weingut Martin Wassmer Ehrenstetter Ölberg GC Spätburgunder
2015 Weingut Martin Wassmer Glottertäler Roter Bur GC Spätburgunder
2014 Weingut Martin Wassmer Schlatter Maltesergarten GC Pinot Noir
2014 Weingut Martin Wassmer Dottinger Castellberg GC Pinot Noir


Sue Style: Wassmer’s trump card is Spätburgunder (Pinot Noir), which makes up 55% of his total production. Yields are low (30-35hl/ha), grapes are hand-harvested into 10-kilo boxes and fermented at low temperatures, with punching down three times a day. The results range from the deliciously quaffable, unoaked, entry-level Markgräfler Spätburgunder, his bestseller in the UK (The Wine Society has it at around £13, or find it at the winery at €8.90), via various named vineyard sites and on up to what he calls his Grands Crus. Among the named sites, I loved the Schlatter Spätburgunder SW (the DWWA award-winner, €15.50 ex-cellar) but found the Roter Bur from the Glottertal (€45) lacking in charm and a little too austere for my taste. Oelberg tempts with its sweetly spicy nose (€45) while at the top of the tree GC Maltesergarten and GC Dottinger Castellberg (€49 and €68 respectively) are beautifully balanced and gloriously expressive. All, in varying degrees, have the haunting perfume and sweet fruit of good Pinot Noir.

He clearly loves his Spätburgunder and relishes the challenge of coaxing the best from this demanding grape. While the Burgundian influence is freely acknowledged, Wassmer’s wines have a distinctly Badisch character of their own (and sell at prices that are competitive with Burgundy of comparable quality – not hard nowadays). Beat a path to Schlatt if you’re in the neighbourhood: vaut le détour.

2015 Weingut Martin Wassmer Ehrenstetter Ölberg Rotwein Cuvée CHAPELLE

This wine sells for Euro 66 ex-winery.


Martin Wassmer
Am Sportplatz 3 | 79189 Bad Krozingen-Schlatt
Tel.: +49 (0) 76 33 – 15 29 2
Email: info@weingut-wassmer.com
www.weingut-wassmer.de

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Winemaker Dinner with Chef/ King of Spices Ingo Holland and Sebastian Fürst (Weingut Rudolf Fürst, Franken), Julian Huber (Weingut Bernhard Huber, Baden) and Jérôme Legras (Champagne Legras & Haas )

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Picture: Winemaker Dinner with Chef/ King of Spices Ingo Holland and Paul and Sebastian Fürst, Weingut Rudolf Fürst, Franken, Julian Huber, Weingut Bernhard Huber, Baden, Jérôme Legras, Champagne Legras & Haas

Weingut Rudolf Fürst, Franken, is one of the 14 wine producers in Germany that are listed in the 5 (out of 5 grapes) group in the Vinum WeinGuide 2018 - Germany's top producers. On June 23 and 24, Weingut Rudolf Fürst opened its doors for its new vintage presentation. Also present as guests were Weingut Bernhard Huber, Baden, (also a 5/5 grapes producer)and Legras & Haas Champagne.

Pictures: Klingenberg/ Franken

As highlight of the tasting weekend, Paul and Sebastian Fürst, Julian Huber and Jérôme Legras presented their wines at a winemaker dinner with Chef Ingo Holland at the Alte Gewürzamt in Klingenberg. Annette and I were very happy to be able to attend the winemaker winner. It was spectacular.

Pictures: Welcome

Paul and Sebastian Fürst - Weingut Rudolf Fürst

The Miltenberg basin in the western tip of Franken between the forested hills of the Odenwald and the Spessart, where Bürgstadt is located, provides ideal climatic conditions for first-class viticulture. The weathered colored sandstone of the Centgrafenberg vineyard in Bürgstadt and the extremely steep slopes of the Schlossberg vineyard in Klingenberg are home to the most extraordinary Frühburgunder and Spätburgunder (Pinot Noir Précos and Pinot Noir) produced by Paul and Sebastian Fürst.

Frühburgunder (also known as Pinot Madeleine) is an old variety, autochthonous to this region, which yields full bodied wines and has attracted more and more attention over the last years. Roughly 60% of the wine produced is red.

In addition to the reds, brilliant white wines, such as Riesling, Weissburgunder and Franken’s signature wine, Silvaner, are also produced here.

Pictures: Sebastian Fürst

The Fürst family has been producing wine in this area since 1638. In 1979 Paul and Monika Fürst built the new estate amidst the vineyards and in 2007 they were joined by their son Sebastian.

For the Fürsts the vineyards are the biggest asset in the production of high qualitiy wines. Whether it's the high density of planting, best rootstocks and scions, low trellises, optimal humus content, plant protection and selective picking, all aspects are regarded as equally essential and from pruning to picking all the most important work in the vineyards is done by hand.

Altogether Weingut Fürst has 20 hectares of vines, with 13 hectares of the Centgrafenberg vineyard the biggest block.

Centgrafenberg: Bürgstadt, 11 ha. As a result of the practice of gavelkind over centuries, the vineyards are split into 20 plots, creating a broad spectrum of soil composition. The higher the content of fertile loam, the better the soils are suited for growing white wines, whereas the more stony plots are perfect for the reds.

Hundsrück: Bürgstadt, 2.5 ha, partially terraced, Großes Gewächs since 2003, primary rock covered by 0.5-2m of warm, well drained and aerated surface soil The ideal vineyard soil, though quite unforgiving when it comes to mistakes in husbandry. Each year the Hundsrück makes for the most powerful and spicy Pinot in our portfolio.

Schlossberg: Klingenberg, 1.3 ha, steep terraces, red sandstone, one of Germany's famous historical pinot sites, In 2004 Paul and Sebastian bought 3 plots on this impressive slope, including the one between the wing walls of Clingenburg castle . Between 2004 and 2006 they were planted with the best Pinot vines and hundreds of yards of dry stone wall were restored.

Karthäuser: Volkach, shell limestone, Chardonnay ,Pinot Blanc, Silvaner, named for the adjacent charterhouse of Astheim.

After fermentation on the skins in open vats, the red varieties are left in french oak barrels for 12 to 20 months to mature and settle. All red wines are bottled unfiltered. White wines are pressed gently, fermented and aged in both barrels and stainless steel tanks for 6 - 12 months. Lowtech vinification assures each wine gets the necessary time to develop.

Julian Huber - Weingut Bernhard Huber

Germany has established itself as a serious red wine country during the past 30 years. One of the father's of the German red wine revolution is Bernhard Huber. Bernhard Huber, only 53 years old, died in June 2014 after a battle with cancer. His son Julian Huber, assisted by his mother Barbara Huber, has taken over.

Weingut Bernhard Huber is located in Malterdingen in the Breisgau area. More than 700 years ago, Cistercian monks came to Malterdingen, and found the same terroir as in Burgundy and thus started to plant Pinot Noir grapes. Still today, in many reference books on grape varieties, “Malterdinger” is used as a synonym for Pinot Noir.

Pictures: Julian Huber

Although the vineyard has been in the family for several generations, Bernhard and Barbara first began estate bottling, when they took control in 1987 from his father. Before that, grapes and wine were sold to a local cooperative.

In 2004 Bernhard Huber started “Reserve” wines bottled from vineyards individually. Before that, his top wine was a mix of vineyard sites.

The vineyard area totals 26 hectares, with holdings in the Bienenberg (Malterdingen), Schlossberg (Hecklingen) and Sommerhalde (Bombach) sites. 70 % is planted with Pinot Noir, the rest with Chardonnay, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, Auxerrois, Freisamer, Muskateller, Müller-Thurgau, Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot.

The red wines always ferment on the skin and lay in the oak barrel for up to 18 months before bottling. Weingut Huber has about 600 barrique barrels and replaces about 150 barrels each year.

Pictures: Our Table

Jérôme Legras and Champagne Legras & Haas

Doctor Wine: In Côte des Blancs there is a village with just over a thousand inhabitants where almost everyone has at least one small vineyard parcel, a precious treasure passed down from one generation to another for over 100 years. It is the Grand Cru village Chouilly and its Chardonnay is one of the most after.

Chouilly is home to the Legras & Haas family Maison that only began producing its own Champagne in 1991 but has been growing grapes there for almost six generations, 200 years, in vineyards situated on the northern side of the Côte des Blancs. Today the estate is run by brothers Jerôme, Olivier and Rémi and has 37 hectares, 17 of which are in Chouilly. The estate’s expansion was thanks to Brigitte Haas and her husband François Legras, both the children of winemakers who in the 1960s began enlarging the family’s vineyard land.

And it is the vineyard that dictates everything, with each parcel vinified separately which allows for the creation of new cuvée, starting with the tasting of the vins clair. A case in point, Jerôme said, was the birth of the Champagne Les Sillons, a lieux-dits that they have had from the beginning, which began when he and his brothers tasted its wine in 1995 and recognized its traits of being tonic and complex.

Pictures: Jérôme Legras

Aside from the grapes from their own vineyards, wine is made with grapes from other vigneron with whom the family has had a consolidated relationship of trust for over 20 years and whose grapes are used for the non-vintage blends. The first step in winemaking is the harvest, also because making wine using the bunch as a whole means the grapes have to be perfectly intact so they maintain after pressing – which is done as delicately as possible – the particular characteristics of a specific area. The stabilization of the must is done in a natural way within 24 hours of the pressing after which slow fermentation begins under a controlled temperature between 17 and 18°C to best preserve the fruit aromas.

For stylistic reasons, malolactic fermentation is carried out in full, after which they wait until spring to create the cuvée, and this is the only moment the whole family is on hand to take part in. And when asked what his favorite dosage was, Jerôme reply was simple: “a good dosage is one you forget about”, and this whether it is high or low because there must never be the sensation that the balance is lacking.

The decision by Legras & Haas to following each step of the vinification parcel by parcel allows them to express the tradition of the land create a Champagne with a decidedly personal style composed of precision, purity and complexity. The Legras & Hass line of wines includes one that is not a Blanc de Blancs, Exigence n. 8, a very limited production made from vielles vignes (old vines), an equal blend of Grand Cru Chouilly Chardonnay and Pinot Noir from Aÿ. The number in the wine represents that of the versions that have been made. Thus this is the eighth edition of this intense and compelling Champagne.

Ingo and Kilian Holland - Altes Gewürzamt

Ingo Holland is a well-known German cook. He is considered an expert in spices.

Ingo Holland completed an apprenticeship as a chef at the Hotel Frankfurter Hof. Afterwards he worked at the Parkhotel Crombach in Rosenheim, at the Hilton Hotel in Munich, in the Swiss Stuben in Wertheim and in the Hotel Baur au Lac in Zurich. His teachers include Dieter Müller and Harald Wohlfahrt.

Pictures: Open Kitchen

In 1997 he took over the restaurant "Zum Alten Rentamt" in the old town of Klingenberg, where he served as head chef until 2007. During that period he was awarded one Michelin star and 18 Gault Millau points in 2007.

Because of his dissatisfaction with the spices available in the market, he founded in 2001 the company "Altes Gewürzamt“. There he trades in spices and develops new spice blends. In 2007 he handed over the restaurant to his pupil Ludger Helbig to focus on the spicy company, jointly with his son Kilian Holland.

Pictures: Ingo and Kilian Holland

The Dinner


2015 Riesling Pur Mineral Weingut Rudolf Fürst


Sauerrahmmousse mit geräuchertem Lachs und rohmariniertem Kohlrabi mit Ducca
Gegrillter Aal auf Sushireis mit Feige
Melonensalat mit Mini-Mozzarella und Katenschinken


2008 Blanc de Blancs Grand Cru Millésime Champagne Legras & Haas
2012 Riesling Centgrafenberg GG Weingut Rudolf Fürst

Gelierte Geflügelessenz mit mariniertem Lachskaviar, gekühlter Erbsencreme und gebackener Geflügelkirsche


2015 Chardonnay Alte Reben Weingut Bernhard Huber

Seezungen-Krustentier-Rouladee auf Artischocken à la barigoule und beurre blanc mit Wakame-Algen


2004 Sonnenhalde Spätburgunder GG Weingut Bernhard Huber
2003 Spätburgunder R Centgrafenberg Weingut Rudolf Fürst

Kalbshaxe mit schwarzem Pfefferlack auf Totentrompeten-Kartoffelpüree mit wildem Brokkoli und Mark-Crostini


Champagner Brut Rosé Champagne Legras & Haas

Mille feuille von Brillat-Savarin und Blätterteig mit Waldbeerencoulis


Bye-bye

Many thanks for a most delightful evening.


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Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Hunn in Gottenheim, Tuniberg, Baden, with Kilian and Martina Hunn - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

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Picture: Annette Schiller, Kilian Hunn, Christian Schiller: Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Hunn in Gottenheim, Tuniberg, Baden, with Kilian and Martina Hunn

We started the visit with a portfolio tasting at Weingut Hunn and then drove over to the new winemaking facilities outside of Gottenberg for a tour and a good-bye drink.

Kilian and Martina Hunn were our hosts.

"It is an ardent type of dedication that compels Gottenheim-based winemakers Kilian and Martina Hunn to cultivate those uncomplicated, clear, fruity and fresh wines of Tuniberg hill. No matter how uncompromisingly edgy and clear-cut the labels on the bottles, they are still the most open, pleasantly self-confident and welcoming folks. We have arrived in their lovingly-furbished small tasting room on their estate in Gottenheim (…)" (Badische Zeitung: Aufmachen und Genießen)

Pictures: Arriving at Weingut Kilian Hunn

Weingut Hunn

Weingut Hunn is in Gottenheim in the Tuniberg area in Baden. It is run by Kilian Hunn and his wife Martina. The vineyard area totals 16 hectares, mostly in the Gottenheimer Kirchberg. They are planted with the varieties Pinot Noir, Pinot Gris, Muller-Thurgau, Pinot Blanc, Chardonnay and Riesling.

Kilian and Martina Hunn – once the wine queen of Baden - are both passionate winemakers. The Tuniberg and Kaiserstuhl regions are very warm wine regions with the most sun shine hours in Germany. The Mediterranean climate offers ideal growing conditions for the Burgundy grape. Three quarters of total vineyard area are panted with Pinot Noir, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, and Chardonnay.

In the vineyard, Kilian and Martina Hunnfollow the philosophy of environmentally friendly viticulture. In the cellar, the red wines are aged in large oak barrels and partly in barriques. The white wines are fermented slowly and cool in steel tanks. The wines are fermented to full dryness.

Kilian and Martina Hunn produce powerful wines with finesse and grace that perfectly reflect the limestone soils and climate of the Tuniberg.

Kilian, Martina, Jonas, Patrick, Felix and Gudrun Hunn

Kilian Hunn: Committed to wine since the age of 16. The zeal is still there, and he’s in it with heart and soul, always. His ´domain´ on the estate is the vineyard and the cellar. “The secret of a unique wine is so much more than just meticulous work. It’s humility and love, passion and devotion. It’s alert attention and the constant care for the soil, the vine and the grape“, says Kilian.

Martina Hunn: A passionate winemaker. She’s found her starring role in marketing. Once a Weinkönigin, a wine queen of Baden, she now represents the family-owned wine estate at home and abroad. She’s also an active member of VINISSIMA, the German Association for Women in the Wine Business. Be it a wine tasting at the estate, an international presentation, sales, or the “Hunne-Strauße“, a seasonal wine tavern typical of the region - Martina can handle it. Along the way, she raises her two adolescent boys JONAS & PATRICK and keeps them on track … and every now and then she even finds the time for the trombone part in a band.

Felix Hunn: Father Felix Hunn founded the wine estate and the wine tavern in 1982, together with his wife Gudrun. They showed a loving eye for detail when they furbished the interior with old staves. Felix helps in the vineyards and in the “Strauße“, and in the kitchen he is responsible for preparing home-made potato salad à la Grandma Hedwig.

Gudrun Hunn: Gudrun is the heart and soul of the estate, helping whereever she can with the housekeeping, the vines, the Strauße, the office.

Pictures: At the New Winemaking Facility of Weingut Kilian Hunn

KILIANHUNN ...

KILIANHUNN goes for loess!

And the results prove us right. We only cultivate vines that grow and mature especially well on the fertile loess soils of the Tuniberg vinyards. And because the vines like the soil so much, they reward us with juicy grapes of extraordinary aromas. Grapes from which we create wines that each and every one shines with its uniqueness.

KILIANHUNN has set out to bottle the pure aromatic diversity that nature provides. We combine traditional processes with modern technology. Nature-oriented cultivation of the vineyards and skilful diligence in winemaking are the basis for tapping into so many fascinating facets. But only our great passion, a bit of humility and our constant attention in the vineyard and in the cellar make our wines what they really are.

KILIANHUNN looks after the varieties and the cellar.

With vines growing on 145-million-year-old limestone, the range of varieties to be cultivated is almost predetermined: This is the perfect place for Pinot! A Tuniberg tradition of 2000 years. Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, Chardonnay and Pinot Noir represent the lion’s share of the estate. Add the white varieties of Sauvignon Blanc, Gutedel and Müller-Thurgau.

Our grapes mature on the vine for as long as possible before they are harvested and gently pressed. With the white wines, sedimentation is used to naturally clarify the must. The fermentation, however, is not left to itself. Here KILIANHUNN intervenes: the fermenting wine is cooled using modern cooling equipment; the fermentation takes place in a controlled environment. The result are wines with a multifaceted fruity bouquet. Depending on the category, the wines are left to age in stainless steel tanks or in oak barrels. Pinot Noir, after a clearly defined fermentation on the skins, will mature exclusively in large or small oak barrels.

 Pictures: Tasting from Tank at Weingut Kilian Hunn

KILIANHUNN structures consistently!

As early as January a warm wind from the Mediterranean starts blowing towards us through the Belfort Gap between the Vosges and the Swiss Jura. It allows the vines to mature particularly well on the unique fertile loess-covered limestone of the Jura.

In this singularly mild microclimate of the manifold small Tuniberg vineyard parcels, it takes a sure instinct to bring out the very best of each vine. Depending on the desired character of the wine, some may have an elegant lightness while others may express the loess terroir quite intensely. This generates three consistently structured wine profiles: “Junge Frische” (meaning young and fresh), “Junge Wilde” (meaning young and wild) and “Selection“.

KILIANHUNN distils on the estate.

Our region is known for its particularly aromatic fruit. For decades our family, too, has cultivated its own orchards. KILIANHUNN feels bound to this family tradition. In the in-house distillery, we produce a variety of the finest spirits.

Harvested in the moment of ultimate ripeness, the still turns them into brandies of cherry or Williams Pear, of mirabelle or of the local specialty, a wild plum called Zibarte.

A fine lees brandy and a pure Chardonnay pomace brandy are our flagship spirits.

Pictures: At the In-house Distillery of Weingut Kilian Hunn

Tasting

There are 4 groups of wines at Weingut Kilian Hunn.

Junge Frische: Young and fresh whites which are enjoyable and characterized by an ideal combination of lightness and elegance. Uncomplicated company for every day. The lightness of wine-being.

Junge Wilde: Distinctive wines full of character which bring home an impression of the potential of the loess terroir of the Tuniberg. Fine scents and a multi-faceted bouquet turn each sip into an inimitable experience. A strong food companion and a stimulating “Maul voll Wein“, a mouth full of wine after a long day.

Rotweine: Expressive Pinot Noirs with the typical Pinot aromas and the classical style of the Tuniberg loess soil. Ranging from the basic Pinot level, which, lightly cooled, is enjoyable even in summer, to the complex barrique classics with enticing notes of smoke and ripe berries, as well as to the exotic Pinot-Cabernet cuvée.

RESERVE: Our best, most refined and most concentrated wines! Even the label expresses the concentration to the essence: We do not mention the designation Prädikat, the appellation or the taste - only the variety and the vintage. Our wines of the categorie RESERVE mature in the classic oak barrel and display robust, spicy notes. They are concentrated and will impress you with their high complexity.

Pictures: Tasting at Weingut Hunn with Kilian and Martina Hunn

We tasted the following wines:

Junge Frische

2017 Weingut Kilian Hunn Rivaner trocken
2017 Weingut Kilian Hunn Weisser Burgunder Kabinett trocken
2017 Weingut Kilian Hunn Spätburgunder Rosé Kabinett trocken
2017 Weingut Kilian Hunn Weisser Burgunder Kabinett trocken


Junge Wilde and RESERVE

2016 Weingut Kilian Hunn Grauer Burgunder trocken
2015 Weingut Kilian Hunn Grauer Burgunder RESERVE trocken
2017 Weingut Kilian Hunn Chardonnay Kabinett trocken
2015 Weingut Kilian Hunn Chardonnay RESERVE trocken
2015 Weingut Kilian Hunn Viognier RESERVE trocken


Rotweine

2013 Weingut Kilian Hunn Spätburgunder trocken
2014 Weingut Kilian Hunn Pinot Noir trocken


Bye-bye

Thanks Kilian and Martina for a wonderful tasting and cellar tour.

Pictures: Bye-bye

schiller-wine: Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen - All Postings (Published and Forthcoming)

The Sun-Kissed South: Germany’s Pinot Noir, the Other Whites, the Culinary Regions - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Sekt: Cellar Tour and Tasting at Griesel&Compagnie, Sekthaus Streit, Bensheim, with Winemaker Rachele Crosara - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Lunch at 1 Michelin Star Restaurant Landhaus Feckl in Ehningen, with Chef Franz Feckl and Host Manuela Feckl - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

The Evolving Structure of the Wine Industry in Germany– The Case of the Lake Constance Region

Schloss Salem at Lake Constance in Germany: A Museum, a School and a Wine Estate

Visit of Schloss Salem, Kirche Birnau and Weingut Markgraf von Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Staatsweingut Meersburg in Meersburg, Baden, Lake Constance (Bodensee) - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

2 Cellar Tours and 1 Tasting at Weingut Ziereisen in Efringen, Markgräfler Land, Baden, with Hanspeter and Edel Ziereisen - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Pinot Noir Star Producer Weingut Martin Waßmer in Bad Krozingen, Markgräfler Land, Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Dinner at Restaurant Schwarzer Adler, 1 Star Michelin, Oberbergen, Kaiserstuhl, Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Hunn in Gottenheim, Tuniberg, Baden, with Kilian and Martina Hunn

The World Class Wines of Alsace

In the world class white wine region Alsace

Tour and Tasting at Domaines Schlumberger in Guebwiller, Alsace - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Rieflé in Pfaffenheim, Alsace, with Paul Rieflé

Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Domaine Rolly-Gassmann in Rorschwihr, Alsace, with Pierre Gassmann

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Pfister in Dahlenheim, Alsace, with Melanie Pfister

Dinner at 2 Michelin Star Restaurant Auberge du Cheval Blanc, Alsace

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

Vineyard Tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Siener in Birkweiler, Pfalz, with Owner/ Winemaker Peter Siener

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

Dinner Tasting at the Vinothek/ Wine Tavern of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, with the Managing Director of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, Steffen Brahner

Extensive Vineyard Tour and Tasting at Weingut Reichsrat von Buhl in Deidesheim, Pfalz, with
General Manager Richard Grosche

Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Battenfeld-Spanier/ Kühling-Gillot in Hohen-Sülzen, Rheinhessen, with Carolin Spanier

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Wagner-Stempel in Siefersheim, Rheinhessen, with Oliver Müller and Cathrin Wagner

Cellar Tour, Tasting and Lunch at Weingut Schloss Westerhaus in Ingelheim, Rheinhessen, with the Owners Countess and Count von Schönburg-Glauchau and Technical Director Toni Frank

Tasting at Weingut Knewitz in Appenheim, Rheinhessen

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Taverns in Mainz, Germany








Ombiasy Fall 2018 Wine Tours: Bordeaux and Bourgogne/ Champagne ... and Rhône Valley (Full)

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Pictures: Annette Schiller in Bordeaux

Dear Wine Lovers,

hope you had a fantastic July 4th celebration and I guess many of you are heading towards the beach and other summer vacation spots.

But fall is not that far away and maybe you are thinking of what to do in the fall. Visiting vineyards in the northern hemisphere is always a very good idea since fall is harvest time and during my tours in September harvest is around the corner or already under way. It is fascinating to visit wineries during the hustle and bustle of harvest.

So, join me from September 4 - September 13, 2018 when I am traveling in the Bordeaux wine region. During this tour you get a thorough understanding of “Bordeaux”. We travel to Saint-Emilion, Margaux, Saint-Julien, Pauillac, Saint-Estèphe, Sauterne, Graves, Pessac-Léognan. We visit a barrel maker for you to understand the importance of the perfect barrique for the perfect wine, we visit an oyster farmer and the Atlantic Ocean for you to understand the uniqueness of the Bordeaux wine region, we have very private meals with the owners or winemakers at prominent Châteaux for you to understand the importance of matching wines and food, we visit a wine merchant for you to understand the complicated system of the “place de Bordeaux”. There are 4 slots left on this tour - first come first served.

For a detailed itinerary, pricing, and how to sign up, please see https://ombiasypr.com/index.php/wine-tours/bordeaux/bordeaux-introduction

For an impression of the tour, please see the write up of a previous tour: http://schiller-wine.blogspot.com/2017/09/total-immersion-in-bordeaux-world-class.html

Or join me from September 20 - September 30, 2018 when I am traveling from Lyon to Paris through the Burgundy and Champagne regions. Burgundy is one of the world’s best-known wine region, but perhaps one of the least understood. During this tour you get a thorough understanding of the region. We travel through the Beuajolais, the Mâconnais, the Côte Chalonnaise, the Côte de Beaune, the Côte de Nuits, Chablis, and the Champagne to understand the importance of “terroir” in producing world-famous Chardonnay and Pinot-Noirs and to learn how the famous bubblies are made. The Burgundy and Champagne regions are steeped in history and we will get an idea about the importance of the clergy and monks for the development of oenological knowledge. We will visit 1000 year old abbeys; quaint small wine villages; the Hospice de Beaune; and of course we will have excellent wine pairing meals at wine domaines or restaurants. There are 2 slots available on this tour - first come first served.

For a detailed itinerary, pricing, and how to sign up, please see https://ombiasypr.com/index.php/wine-tours/burgundy/burgundy-introduction

For an impression of the tour, please see the write up of a previous tour: http://schiller-wine.blogspot.com/2016/06/burgundy-and-champagne-2016-by-ombiasy.html

Feel free to contact me at any time with questions you may have. You can email me or call me at +49 177 337 0281. I am more than happy to speak with you and to explain the tours to you.

Santé

Annette

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Rieflé-Landmann in Pfaffenheim, Alsace, with Paul Rieflé - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

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Picture: Paul Rieflé of Domaine Rieflé-Landmann, Alsace, with Robyn Bancroft and Annette Schiller

Earlier this year, Jean-Claude Rieflé of Domaine Rieflé-Landmann, Alsace, spent a week in the Washington DC area "to work the market". Annette and I attended a fabulous winemaker dinner with Jean-Claude Rieflé at Bart Vandaele's Belga Café on Capitol Hill as well as a winetasting at McLean Wine Outlet in McLean, Virginia. At these encounters we agreed with Jean-Claude Rieflé that on the forthcoming ombiasy tour to Alsace, we would visit him. And we did. Unfortunately, Jean-Claude could not meet us when we visited as he was on a sales trip. Instead, his son Paul took care of us.

Pictures: Annette Schiller, Christian Schiller, Jean-Claude Rieflé of Domaine Rieflé-Landmann in Pfaffenheim, Alsace, and Chef Bart Vandaele at Belga Café. See: Winemaker Dinner with Jean-Claude Rieflé of Domaine Rieflé-Landmann, Alsace, at Bart Vandaele's Belga Café on Capitol Hill in Washington DC, USA/ Alsace

We started the visit with a tour of the cellar, where Paul Rieflé was cleaning the barrels. We continued with a tasting of the Rieflé wines and were joined by Paul. Before leaving, we spent a few minutes in the vineyard with Paul Rieflé.

Pictures: Welcome at Domaine Rieflé-Landmann

Domaine Rieflé-Landmann

Viticulture has been a Rieflé family affair for 6 generations, since 1850. From the 1980s, Annick and Jean-Claude Rieflé were at the helm. They were joined at the domaine by their sons, Thomas and Paul, in 2009 and 2010, respectively. Thomas manages the vineyard and Paul is in charge of sales and marketing. Recently, the Rieflé family took over the vineyards of Seppi Landmann and renamed the estate to Domaine Rieflé-Landmann. The vineyard area totals 23 hectares, including a plot in the Grand Cru vineyard Steinert.

Picture: Domaine Rieflé-Landmann

Domaine Rieflé-Landmann (Stephan Reinhard/ Robert Parker)

Stephan Reinhard (Robert Parker's Wine Advocate): Domaine Rieflé-Landmann is the new name of the former Domaine Rieflé, which is located in a beautiful old winemaker's house that was built in Pfaffenheim, Southern Alsace, in 1609. That's because the Rieflé family took over the vineyards from the vigneron and bon vivant Seppi Landmann, a living legend who started his late winemaking career in 1982 without owning a winery. Landmann had rented a cellar in Soultzmatt where he produced some remarkably good, if not mythic wines beyond all traditions (Cuvée Sophie Marceau, Cuvée Erotique, Hors La Loi, Vallée Noble, Grand Cru Zinnkoepflé...). His personal brand still exists (otherwise he would not have sold his vineyards) so that's why the renamed Domaine Rieflé-Landmann markets its wines under two different signatures: the well established Domaine Rieflé and the Seppi Landmann brand.

Pictures: In the Vineyard with Paul Rieflé

The family, today represented by the young brothers Thomas (who cares for the vineyards) and Paul Rieflé (who does all the marketing things and showed me the vineyards and the wines), farms 79 different blocks adding up to 23 hectares (57 acres). The vines are located close to the winery in Pfaffenheim and Rouffach and, since Landmann sold his vines, also in Westhalten and Soultzmatt. They are classified for six different appellations: Crémant d'Alsace, Alsace, Alsace Côte de Rouffach, Alsace Vallée Noble, Alsace Grand Cru Steinert and Alsace Grand Cru Zinnkoepflé. Paul hopes that the lieu-dits of Pfaffenheim -- Bergweingarten (a small single vineyard within the Côte de Rouffach and adjacent to the Grand Cru Steinert which is, and always was, planted 90% with Gewurztraminer) and Bihl (east of the village) -- will receive Premier Cru status one day.

The Rieflé brothers share a humanist and socially responsible approach to winemaking. Faced with the realities of a global market, they took inspiration from the famous quote by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry: "We do not inherit the Earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children."

Pictures: In the Cellar with Paul Rieflé

Since years, the domaine farmed their vineyards organically and with the recently released 2014 vintage, Rieflé-Landmann is an AB-certified organic wine producer. Unusual enough yet visionary, perhaps the manual work is outsourced to a local association for professional reintegration, what Paul Rieflé calls "a part of our humanist approach and support for the local community." It also "engenders a strong identity which cannot be delocalized, and which is a guarantee of sustainability in a rapidly changing world," Paul believes...

Although by far I did not taste all the wines produced at Rieflé-Landmann -- curious to taste the Bergweingarten once -- the wine quality is very good if not excellent, whereas the prices are still extremely fair. This is a very promising domaine to discover and some of the wines should (or will) be available in the US.

Pictures: Tasting with Annick and Paul Rieflé

The Wines we Tasted

Stephan Reinhard (Robert Parker's Wine Advocate): The domaine produces a wide but well structured range of wines -- variety wines for every day, villages wines for more ambitious wine lovers and the grands crus and late harvested wines for hedonists -- that reflect the originality of the Alsatian wine culture and the specific terroirs. The most prominent single vineyard of the former Domaine Rieflé is the Grand Cru Steinert which overlooks the village of Pfaffenheim, in which the family holds 65 ares. It is based on an oolitic limestone massif, which is scarcely covered by topsoil in several places. Whereas Riesling is planted on the uppermost part of the cru, Pinot Gris likes it halfway down on the flattest parts. To stress the influence of the terroir, Rieflé produced a blend of Riesling and Pinot Gris under the Grand Cru Steinert appellation in 2014; whereas in 2013 the Seppi Landmann Grand Cru Zinnkoepflé was already an assemblage of four varieties. Will this be the future at Rieflé-Landmann: selling terroir instead of varieties? This would be courageous and pioneering.


Crémant d'Alsace Blanc de Blanc Brut Domaine Rieflé NV

This Crémant Brut, made from 40% Pinot Blanc, 40% Auxerrois, 10% Pinot Gris and 10% Auxerrois is floral and delicately fruity on the nose with notes of brioche. It is generous on the palate, with fine bubbles and a sugar dosage which remains discreet.

2015 Muscat Cuvée Erotique SeppiLandmann


2016 Riesling Riesling Domaine Rieflé
2013 Riesling 1er Cru Bihl Domaine Rieflé
2016 Riesling 1er Cru Steinstück Domaine Rieflé


2014 Riesling Grand Cru STEINERT Domaine Rieflé

The Grand Cru Steinert vineyard lies 13km south of Colmar and overlooks the village of Pfaffenheim. It sits just below the Schauenberg mountain, known as the mountain of contemplation, which is considered to be an important place of natural energy.

Steinert literally refers to the stony nature of the terroir. It lies opposite the Alsace plain, the Rhine and the Black Forest and faces towards the rising sun. The hard, homogeneous, dry and filtering soil sits directly on the oolithic limestone bedrock which is partially visible on the surface. Oolites are small spherical grains, shaped like fish eggs, that were formed on the surface of the rocks by marine microfossils. Wines from the Steinert vineyards are characterised by their powerful structure combined with a subtle finesse and underlying menthol notes.

Domaine Rieflé has 65 ares of vines on this terroir. Riesling is planted on the uppermost part of the parcel and Pinot Gris half-way down on the flattest parts.

Alcohol: 12°
Acidity : 9,6 g/l (tartric)
Residual sugar: 8 g

2011 Pinot Gris Grand Cru STEINERT Domaine Rieflé

This Grand Cru Steinert Pinot Gris opens up with an expressive bouquet of zesty yellow fruits such as pineapple and mango. Although smooth in texture, the limestone terroir imparts a fresh and acidic structure, which is accentuated by candied notes of quince and fig on the end palate.

The perfect partner for foie gras but you can also try it with a generously garnished tuna steak or with desserts such as pineapple fritters or crème brûlée.

Alcohol: 14.5%
Residual Sugar: 39.1 g/l
Tartaric Acid: 5.9 g/l


Pinot Noir L'Étoffe Domaine Rieflé 2016

Forbes: White grapes are typically what first jump to mind when we think of Alsace – Riesling in particular, plus Pinot Gris, Gewürztraminer, Pinot Blanc, Sylvaner, and Muscat make up about 90% of their plantings. Pinot Noir, however, counts for the other 10% and its numbers have slowly been growing in recent years; it is the only red variety in the region and is now the fifth most planted grape overall.

What accounts for its recent emergence? Winemakers point to climate change (which enables the grapes to reach consistent phenolic ripeness), and the next generation’s intentionally broad experience globally before returning to their home region to succeed their parents in the vineyard and the cellar. Technically, it’s the region’s clay and limestone soils that are responsible for Alsatian Pinot’s light to medium body, red fruit aromas, vibrant acidity, and fresh tannins.

It is a silky red wine, with soft tannins and red fruits flavours. 100% Pinot Noir.

Alcohol: 13%
Acidity: 5.3 g/l (tartric)
Residual sugar: 0 g/l

Evening and Night in Riquewhir

Following the tasting, we drove to Riquewhir and checked in at Hotel Le Schoenenbourg. Hotel Le Schoenenbourg in Riquewhir, Alsace, is a 3 ½ star hotel with a great outdoor pool, nestled at the foot of vine-covered rolling hills just outside of the city gate of Riquewhir, a typical very charming, romantic Alsatian wine town.

Pictures: Hotel Le Schoenenbourg in Riquewhir, Alsace

We had an Alsatian dinner at Restaurant La Grappe d'Or in Riquewhir. La Grappe d'Or was our second choice. Our first choice, D'Brendelstub, was closed on that day; this is a traditional restaurant serving excellent local specialities prepared under the direction of 1 Michelin star chef Jean-Luc Brendel. His Michelin starred restaurant “La Table du Gourmet” around the corner is one of my absolute favorites in all of Alsace (closed on Tuesdays and Wednesdays).

Pictures: Alsatian Dinner at Restaurant La Grappe d'Or in Riquewhir

schiller-wine: Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen - All Postings (Published and Forthcoming)

The Sun-Kissed South: Germany’s Pinot Noir, the Other Whites, the Culinary Regions - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Sekt: Cellar Tour and Tasting at Griesel&Compagnie, Sekthaus Streit, Bensheim, with Winemaker Rachele Crosara - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Lunch at 1 Michelin Star Restaurant Landhaus Feckl in Ehningen, with Chef Franz Feckl and Host Manuela Feckl - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

The Evolving Structure of the Wine Industry in Germany– The Case of the Lake Constance Region

Schloss Salem at Lake Constance in Germany: A Museum, a School and a Wine Estate

Visit of Schloss Salem, Kirche Birnau and Weingut Markgraf von Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Staatsweingut Meersburg in Meersburg, Baden, Lake Constance (Bodensee) - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

2 Cellar Tours and 1 Tasting at Weingut Ziereisen in Efringen, Markgräfler Land, Baden, with Hanspeter and Edel Ziereisen - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Pinot Noir Star Producer Weingut Martin Waßmer in Bad Krozingen, Markgräfler Land, Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

Dinner at Restaurant Schwarzer Adler, 1 Star Michelin, Oberbergen, Kaiserstuhl, Baden - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Hunn in Gottenheim, Tuniberg, Baden, with Kilian and Martina Hunn - Germany-South and Alsace 2018 Tour by ombiasy WineTours: Baden, Alsace, Pfalz and Rheinhessen

The World Class Wines of Alsace

In the world class white wine region Alsace

Tour and Tasting at Domaines Schlumberger in Guebwiller, Alsace - Germany-South and Alsace 2017 Tour by ombiasy WineTours

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Rieflé in Pfaffenheim, Alsace, with Paul Rieflé

Cellar Tour and Massive Tasting at Domaine Rolly-Gassmann in Rorschwihr, Alsace, with Pierre Gassmann

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Domaine Pfister in Dahlenheim, Alsace, with Melanie Pfister

Dinner at 2 Michelin Star Restaurant Auberge du Cheval Blanc, Alsace

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

Vineyard Tour and Massive Tasting at Weingut Siener in Birkweiler, Pfalz, with Owner/ Winemaker Peter Siener

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

Dinner Tasting at the Vinothek/ Wine Tavern of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, with the Managing Director of Weingut Bürklin-Wolf, Steffen Brahner

Extensive Vineyard Tour and Tasting at Weingut Reichsrat von Buhl in Deidesheim, Pfalz, with
General Manager Richard Grosche

Tasting and Cellar Tour at Weingut Battenfeld-Spanier/ Kühling-Gillot in Hohen-Sülzen, Rheinhessen, with Carolin Spanier

Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Wagner-Stempel in Siefersheim, Rheinhessen, with Oliver Müller and Cathrin Wagner

Cellar Tour, Tasting and Lunch at Weingut Schloss Westerhaus in Ingelheim, Rheinhessen, with the Owners Countess and Count von Schönburg-Glauchau and Technical Director Toni Frank

Tasting at Weingut Knewitz in Appenheim, Rheinhessen

Schiller’s Favorite Wine Taverns in Mainz, Germany








A View from New York: 2016 Dry German Rieslings: Graceful, Resonant, Delicious - New York Times, Eric Asimov

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Picture: The American Flag at Weingut von Winning in Deidesheim, Pfalz. See: Tour and Tasting at Weingut von Winning in Deidesheim, Pfalz – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015), Germany

With his weekly column in the New York Times, Eric Asimov is one of the most influential wine crities in the USA. A few weeks ago, on May 3, 2018, he issued an article about dry German Rieslings. With the American consumer only slowly discovering the "New Germany", which is red, dry and sparkling (See: The New Germany – Red, Dry, Sparkling: German Wine Society Tasting, led by Annette Schiller, at Restaurant Old Europe in Washington D), this was a very welcome article. Unfortunately, Eric Asimov does not seem to be fully on top of what is going on in Germany in terms of wines.

Germany is moving to a terroir-based classification, similar to the one of Burgundy, away from the ripeness-of-the-grapes-at-harvest-based classification of the German Wine Law of 1971. This has nothing to do with simplifying the German system of wine labels. It is driven by climate change, which is transforming Germany - in terms of the ripeness of the grapes at harvest - from a marginal producer to a mainstream producer. Getting the grapes ripe in Germany's vineyards has moved from being the central to a side issue. As a result, the terroir has moved to the front and the sweetness of the grapes at harvest has moved to the back. The new terroir-based classification reflects these developments during the past few decades.

Picture: Annette Schiller and Klaus Peter Keller, Weingut Keller. See: VDP.Rheinhessen Invited to a Gala Dinner: The World Class Wines of the VDP.Rheinhessen Winemakers and the World Class Food of Philipp Stein (1 Star Michelin, Favorite), with Klaus Peter Keller, Philipp Wittmann, H.O.Spanier, Caroline Gillot-Spanier and Other Rheinhessen Stars

Leading the push towards a new classification is the VDP, the association of about 200 elite producers in Germany. The VDP has designed a Burgudny-style classification for its members, which, like in Burgundy, comprises 4 quality levels: Gutswein, Ortswein, Erste Lage, Grosse Lage - Bourgogne, Villlage, Premier Cru, Grand Cru. Within each category, you have different sweetness levels of the wine: Trocken, Kabinett, Spätlese, Auslese, etc, with Kabinett being sweeter than Trocken, Spätlese being sweeter than Kabinett, etc. The Grosses Gewächs (GG) is the Trocken wine from a Grosse Lage vineyard. In fact, the term is redundant - Grosse Lage Trocken should suffice - but has become very popular among German wine lovers.

This classification applies to both sweet-style and dry wines (and not only to dry wines as the Asimow article implies) as well as to white wines and to red wines. It is supposed to be a comprehensive classification.

The large majority of non-VDP producers, in particular the young producers, are following the lead of the VDP. Most commen is a 3-tier classification with Gutswein, Ortswein and Lagenwein - Estate Wine, Village Wine and Single Vineyard Wine.

I have written quite a bit about the new German classificatio  system, which is evolving. It is work in progress. The next step is probably a reform of the German Wine Law of 1971, with a view of bringing it in line with what the VDP is doing.

Certainly, this is not an issue of simplifying the German labeling.

Picture: Christian Schiller with Eva Fricke, Weingut Eva Fricke, Rheingau. See: A German Riesling Feast in New York City: Rieslingfeier 2015, USA

Here is Eric Asimov's article:

2016 Dry German Rieslings: Graceful, Resonant, Delicious

By ERIC ASIMOV MAY 3, 2018

People have complained forever about the complexity of German wine labels. Aside from the unfamiliarity of the language, the terminology is used almost nowhere else and does not always make intuitive sense.

Paradoxically, the traditional labels have a precision to them that, if you take the time to learn the lingo, communicates almost exactly what is in the bottle. But that did not prevent complaints.

So over the years, the German wine authorities and individual producers have tried to simplify things. Many producers now either use brand names for their moderately priced bottles, which cuts through the jargon, or at least have eliminated the gothic fonts that made labels hard to decipher even for those who were able to translate the meaning.

The rise of dry riesling in Germany over the last 20 years gave the authorities an additional incentive to make wine labels friendlier to the public. Rather than seize this chance, the Germans appear to have made their labeling rules even more confusing.

It used to be that those seeking dry German rieslings needed to keep an eye out for the word “trocken,” which means dry. But many producers, not without good reason, wanted to make distinctions between the quality of vineyard sites, so they created a Burgundy-inspired overlay that might at least suggest a geographical hierarchy for dry wines.

Picture: At Weingut Müller Catoir. See: Vineyard Tour, Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut Müller Catoir – Germany-South Tour by ombiasy WineTours (2015)

The problem is, the newer terminology is not consistent through all German regions. Many producers who belong to certain growers’ associations have adopted the term “grosses gewächs” to indicate dry wines from individual vineyards deemed exceptional. But that phrase is not employed in the Rheingau region, where the preferred term is “erstes gewächs.”

Meanwhile, erstes gewächs should not be confused with “erste lage,” which indicates wines from sites that aspire to grosses gewächs status but have yet to earn the designation. Nor should grosses gewächs be confused with “grosse lage,” indicating wines from top sites that are not dry. And definitely don’t confuse grosse lage with grosslage, an old term meaning that a wine comes from several vineyards in a particular town rather than one vineyard, or einzellage.

Not surprisingly, many producers choose to use the simpler trocken designation.

Perhaps it is unfair sport to remark on the confusing nature of German wine labels. But I mention it because the wine panel recently tasted 20 bottles of dry German riesling from the largely excellent 2016 vintage. The tasting was blind, which spared us from the daunting label verbiage. But anybody examining the list of our 10 favorites will require a decoding device.

For the tasting, Florence Fabricant and I were joined by Sabra Lewis, beverage director at L’Atelier de Joël Robuchon. We usually aim for two guests, but our second was a casualty of the New York region’s dysfunctional transit system, so we went ahead with just the three of us.

Although Germany’s sweet rieslings are singular and among the treasures of the wine world, its dry rieslings can be equally wonderful and are likewise unlike those from anywhere else.

Rieslings from Austria generally feel firmer, denser and more penetrating, while those from Alsace are altogether bigger and more voluminous.

If I can speak generally about dry German rieslings, which can vary considerably depending on which region they come from, they are often far more delicate in texture than the others, precise and jewel-like rather than rich.

By many accounts, difficult weather made the 2016 vintage tough to manage for many growers, but it produced wines of exceptional balance that amplify many of the best traits of dry German rieslings. The wines we liked best were deep and profoundly mineral, while also resonant and refreshing.

What do I mean by resonant? These are wines that feel three-dimensional in the mouth. They have length — their flavors proceed in a linear fashion and last long after you swallow — and depth, which suggests the sort of complexity that makes you want to taste the wine again and again in an effort to unravel the flavors.

But these are also young wines, and the more ambitious among them will benefit from aging five to 10 years to allow these complexities to uncoil while mellowing the rippling acidity. Sabra wondered whether some of them would ever relax, and suggested that maybe 20 years would do it. I don’t think it will take that long, but the best of these wines are well worth giving some time.

Not all of the wines were exceptional, however. Balance was sometimes an issue. We rejected some wines that were overbearingly acidic — punishingly tart and lacking charm. That’s an old complaint about dry German rieslings, and one I was surprised to find might still have legitimacy.

The good far outweighed the bad, however. Sabra called it a transparent vintage, meaning that the wines were quite expressive of their terroirs. And we found some excellent values, wines that are delicious right now. Top among them was our best value, a trocken from Schloss Mühlenhof in Rheinhessen — juicy, zesty and, if not complex, immensely satisfying, and just $13 for a liter.

Right behind it was the Blauschiefer trocken from Stein in the Mosel, likewise lively, juicy and stony and just $19, albeit for a 750-milliliter bottle.

Picture: Tasting with Gernot Kollmann, Weingut Immich-Batterieberg in Enkirch, Mosel. See: Tasting and Vineyard Visit at Weingut Immich-Batterieberg in Enkirch, Mosel, with Gernot Kollmann - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours

While lovely bottles, these two predictably lacked the depth and nuance of our top (and more expensive) wines. Our No. 1 bottle was the Forster Ungeheuer grosses gewächs from von Winning in the Pfalz. Earthy, lively and multidimensional, the wine is a pleasure to drink now, but will get even better with time.

If, by the way, you ever want to read some entertaining promotional wine writing, check out von Winning’s American importer, Terry Theise, who describes this wine in his 2017 catalog like this: “firm and caramelly, shiitakes, goose fat, but all in a heaving jiggling orgy of hedonism and licentiousness.” I’m afraid multidimensional is all you will get from me.

No. 2 was the Lorcher Krone from Eva Fricke in the Rheingau, tightly coiled yet graceful and full of energy. Our No. 3 bottle was the Dalsheim Hubacker grosses gewächs from Keller in Rheinhessen, rich and succulent, with apricot and mineral flavors.

Just behind these wines were the stony, tangy Haardter Herrenletten from Müller-Catoir in the Pfalz, the balanced energetic Maximin Klosterlay erste lage from Carl Loewen in the Mosel and the fresh, floral Dhroner Hofberg from A.J. Adam in the Mosel. Also well worth noting were the Marienburg Fahrlay grosses gewächs from Clemens Busch in the Mosel and the “Detonation” from Immich-Batterieberg, also in the Mosel.

It’s important to emphasize that this was a fragmentary tasting, simply a cross-section of the 2016 vintage. We did not have many bottles from the Nahe region, where the ’16s have been especially lauded; and in a land of many small producers, you can look well beyond our top 10 to find wonderful bottles.

Just know that they are well worth seeking out. And, if you are uncertain about which words indicate that a wine is dry beyond the all-purpose trocken, the alcohol level is often a dead giveaway. The sweet wines, in which all the sugar in the juice was not converted to alcohol in fermentation, are usually less than 10 percent alcohol. These dry bottles were 11.5 to 13 percent.

Picture: Annette and Christian Schiller at the Rieslingfeier 2017 in New York City with Clemens Busch. See: The Annual "Slaughterhouse" Riesling Feast in New York: Rieslingfeier 2017, USA

Tasting Dry German Rieslings

★★★½ Von Winning Pfalz Forster Ungeheuer Riesling Grosses Gewächs 2016 $56

Lively and multidimensional, with complex aromas and flavors of spices, citrus and earth. (Terry Theise Estate Selections/Skurnik Wines, New York)

★★★½ Eva Fricke Rheingau Lorcher Krone Riesling Trocken 2016 $60

Graceful, tightly coiled and energetic, with aromas and flavors of flowers, citrus and minerals. (Bonhomie Wine Imports, South Orange, N.J.)

★★★ Keller Rheinhessen Dalsheim Hubacker Riesling Grosses Gewächs 2016 $90

Rich, deep and succulent, with aromas and flavors of apricots and minerals. (Petit Pois/Sussex Wines, Moorestown, N.J.)

★★★ Müller-Catoir Pfalz Haardter Herrenletten Riesling Trocken 2016 $44

Stony, fresh and resonant, with tangy, earthy, herbal flavors. (Terry Theise Estate Selections/Skurnik Wines, New York)

★★★ Carl Loewen Mosel Maximin Klosterlay Riesling Trocken Erste Lage 2016 $28

Great balance and energy, with aromas and flavors of wet rocks, lime and apple. (Terry Theise Estate Selections/Skurnik Wines, New York)

★★★ A.J. Adam Mosel Dhroner Hofberg Trocken 2016 $67

Fresh and floral, with balanced flavors of peaches and minerals. (Terry Theise Estate Selections/Skurnik Wines, New York)

Best Value: ★★½ Schloss Mühlenhof Rheinhessen Riesling Trocken 2016 one liter, $13

Fresh, juicy and zesty, with spicy flavors of citrus and peach. (Savio Soares Selections, Brooklyn)

★★½ Stein Mosel Blauschiefer Riesling Trocken 2016 $19

Lively and juicy, with flavors of peach, orange and wet stones. (Vom Boden, Brooklyn)

★★½ Clemens Busch Mosel Marienburg Fahrlay Riesling Grosses Gewächs 2016 $71

Fresh and delineated, with aromas and flavors of minerals, flowers and citrus. (Louis/Dressner Selections, New York)

★★½ Immich-Batterieberg Mosel Riesling Trocken “Detonation” 2016 $28

Zesty, with aromas and flavors of citrus, salt and flowers. (Louis/Dressner Selections, New York)

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