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Date: 2005-04-04 10:21:33
From: Antti Rinta-Huumo

Subject: Re: Red wine from germany (was: Hi, Fellow

Hello everybody,

And greetings from Finland !! I am a big fan of German Dry Rieslings but
also would like to inform that there are suberb reds made in Germany. Try to
find Weingut Koehler-Rubrecht's (Owner Bernd Philippi) "Philippi
Spätburgunder" or Weingut Breuer's Spätburgunder.

Antti

----- Original Message -----
From: "Ray Bibby" <ray@grbwinecellar.com>
To: <wineforum@wein-plus.com>; <wineforum@wein-plus.de>
Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2005 6:42 PM
Subject: [wineforum] Red wine from germany (was: Hi, Fellow wine lovers.
I've


> Hi,
>
> I have been reading this forum passively from Canada and have a question
for
> Raymond. Have you ever tried a Red wine from Germany, I ask this because
of
> the comments made below about German Reds from Baden Wurttemberg. I
import
> wine into Canada and one of the best German Wines I have ever tried is
from
> the town of Waldulm. The co-op there (Waldulmer) make a very nice
> Spatburgunder Spatlese. When I market it in Canada I tell people it is a
> red wine for white wine drinkers.
>
> Ray
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: wineforum_owner@apris.de [mailto:wineforum_owner@apris.de] On Behalf
> Of boscastle@t-online.de
> Sent: April 1, 2005 11:41 AM
> To: wineforum@wein-plus.de
> Subject: [wineforum] Hi, Fellow wine lovers. I've a...
>
>
> Well Raymond, you seem to have lots of opinions to consider! For what
> it's worth I agree the lieblich style will never disappear
>
> Perhaps you should remember one or two basic facts about the Riesling
> grape which others haven't touched on yet. First of all you have to
> remember that this is probably the most difficult country as far as
> latitude and weather is concerned to produce wine. (Hence although
> 10% of wine production is red (and most of it here in Baden and
> Württemberg) little of it is very good which is why there is hardly
> any exported). The Riesling is a hardy vine well suited to this
> climate - in fact when grown elsewhere it is either another grape
> (like the Californian so-called Riesling or Italian Riesling which is
> Wechselriesling) or it doesn't produce wines with the delicacy and
> subtleness of taste like a good German Riesling. Riesling can be
> crisp and dry and if you know what you're looking for - and often is.
> Some labels have the word Trocken (Dry). My advice is look for a
> 'Kabinett' wine which is strictly speaking a non-recognized older
> description used before the 1964 wine law but it's traditional and
> everyone knows what it means. Remember too there is a difference
> between a QbA wine and a QmP; the latter being from a more specific
> area or vineyard - (not that it always means much since
> half a dozen growers can work in one vineyard. Some of the
> Piesporter vineyards are good examples; so to is Wehler Sonnenuhr).
> Qualitätswein mit Prädikat can have 5 additional grades of which the
> most common is Spätlese (late harvest). We are typical here in
> Baden-Württemberg in that the harvest usually begins aroound
> early/mid-October. Most of the QbA and QmP wines will be pressed
> from this main gathering. Grapes still left on the vine - (given
> enough sunshine) - begin to age and gradually shrivel in size which
> means the sugar content gets more concentrated - hence the increasing
> sweetness of Spätlese and Auslese. If he is lucky the vintner will be
> able to make Beerenauslese (grapes still on the vine which are
> beginning to rot) or Trockenbeerenaulese when the remaining grapes
> are smaller still and resemble sultanas. If any are selected and
> picked with frost still on them you have Eiswein. These later
> gradings produce true dessert wines.
>
> So the Riesling can and does product a variety of wines and a good
> one has
> that lovely delicate balance between fruitiness and crispness. It's
> a
> balance between acidity and sweetness.
>
> Unfortunately most wine in the UK is sold in supermarkets and
> although it is possible to find reasonable and good value wines don't
> forget the
> supermarkets have helped to ruin the availability of good wines.
> Supermarkets need (1) huge quantities of wine (2) at a minimum price
> for
> maximum profit and (3) it must be consistent in taste ie. one batch
> must
> taste much like another. Result is blending and since adding sugar
> is
> illegal producers use grape juice or Sussreserve. As this alters
> the
> flavour markedly (and does not have to even come from the same
> vineyard or
> village) it is possible to achieve the same kind of bland uniform
> taste.
> It's not helped by the supermarket and high street drinks shops
> using
> generic names like Mosel Blümchen, Niersteiner Gutes Domtal, Black
> Label
> and, of course, Liebfraumilch (which by the way means nothing to a
> German.
> There is a Liebfraumilch vineyard (in Worms) but it is illegal to use
> the
> name in the way that British and Americans do.
>
> Last thought - because Riesling grapes have a relatively small yield
> various let us remember hybrids have been produced using the Riesling
> as a starting point. So we have Müller-Thurgau (cross between
> Riesling and Silvaner) which ripens earlier and has a greater yield.
> Can be quite pleasant but my tip for a different German experience is
> try Kerner. We've drunk many a bottle of it and it tends to have a
> fairly consistent dry taste. One final tip - don't make the mistake
> most British and Americans make of thinking you MUST always have wine
> with food. German people often drink wine by itself - (we usually do
> and I'm English!) What better than a little cheese and a good QmP
> Riesling on a warm summer evening together with friends? David
> Williams.
>
>
> This message was created using the Web-based forum :
> www.wein-plus.com/forum/
>
>

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