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Riesling, the White W ine of Germany

Riesling, the White W ine of Germany. The Noblest Grapes of the World. Chardonnay Riesling Pinot Noir Merlot Cabernet Sauvignon. Riesling.

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Riesling, the White W ine of Germany

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  1. Riesling, the White Wine of Germany

  2. The Noblest Grapes of the World Chardonnay Riesling Pinot Noir Merlot Cabernet Sauvignon

  3. Riesling • Lettie Teague..” there is arguably no greater white grape in the world than Riesling, opinion of winemakers in Germany, Austria and Alsace, American restaurant sommeliers • A great Riesling can age longer than many great red wines and develop even more interesting qualities as it ages from floral and citrus to mineral and steel and petrol • Low alcohol, great food wine, no wine more versatile • Excels at all degrees of sweetness and dryness

  4. It is a very, very cool growing area. Most of the wine that’s made is white, although in the southern parts of the country there are some very nice Spätburgunders, Pinot Noirs that are made Since it is cool, the wines will tend to be high in acid Germany—The northern limit of viticulture

  5. Riesling - Characteristics • Great transparency of flavor • Little else in the glass than the grape • No oak is used, oak would kill the aroma and flavors • Unlike chardonnay which can be fixed up with oak • Little can be done to fix up Riesling, unless less ripe and requiring additional sugar

  6. Characteristics: Acidity vs Sweetness • Riesling have high acidity which is great for food • Rieslings are often sweet to offset or balances the acidity • This sweetness is obtained in two ways. • Residual sugar left from the fermentation ,and in that case it would have to be sterile filtered so the yeast wouldn’t continue to ferment the sugar that’s there. • Or the sweetness could be obtained by adding a bit of sweet juice that is retained from the must during the winemaking and this is a süss reserve. This is typically sterile filtered and then perhaps added to the wine if it’s dry, or added to bring up the sweetness to balance the acidity in some of these wines that can actually be very tart.

  7. German Riesling • Riesling is at its best in Germany, despite plantings in Alsace, Austria, and Clare Valley of Australia • Riesling in Germany is king, it is most expressive of this site than any other • Loves cool climates • Can subsist with minimum moisture • Can grow on stony infertile ground, often slate

  8. German Vineyards • Ancient vineyards of the Mosel and Pfalz date back to the dawn of Christianity • A century after Caesar’s conquest of Gaul • Careful site selection, requires maximizing warmth. • It turns out that these are south facing slopes, the sun goes up and down in the southern sky during the season, and so it’s these south facing slopes that get the direct sun rays. • river valleys have moderate temperature and produce better quality wines

  9. German Wine Categories • Key point is to obtain enough sugar in the fruit by harvest and by the time the weather cools when no additional sugar being put into the grape • Sugar accumulation denotes high quality from quality vineyards in Germany. • The most valuable wines are from grapes that can attain the highest sugarat harvest • Quality is directly related to ripeness, but sweetness is at the discretion of the winemaker • Goal: balance acidity, alcohol, and sweetness

  10. German Wine Categories • QbA wines are the lowest quality category: Liebfraumilch or Blue Nun • Chaptalization is allowed- the addition of sugar to boost up the alcohol during fermentation • QmP wines, higher quality category • Chaptalization not allowed at fermentation to increase the alcohol • In 2007 these QmP wines were now just referred to as Prädikatswein

  11. Prädikatswein Categories • 5 Categories ( from lowest to highest sugar content) • Kabinett • Spatlese • Auslese • Berrenauslese • Trockenbeerenauslese • Minimum sugar requirement established at harvest • Minimum sugar requirement varies by region

  12. Prädikatswein Categories Kabinett • So Kabinett is the normal harvest. • The normal harvest means that the local authorities declare that on a particular day that harvest for that particular region can begin. • Wines harvested within a few days of this normal harvest are allowed to use the name Kabinett, • These wines are usually dry.

  13. Prädikatswein CategoriesSpatleses • The Spätleses are late harvest wines, • Harvested anywhere from 12 to 14 days after the normal harvest. • So if a grower has a vineyard they can choose to harvest a certain fraction of it as Kabinett at normal harvest, but then they can leave some of it and harvest it later as Spätlese • Can be sweet or dry

  14. Prädikatswein CategoriesAuslese • Now Auslese starts to show some characteristics of the other two categories. • Auslesesare made from selected clusters, and so during the harvest, the harvesters go through, and select individual clusters that are good and ripe, maybe have a little bit of Botrytis infection • Auslesesare sweet or dry

  15. Prädikatswein CategoriesBeerenausleses • Beerenausleses, are selected berries that are harvested. • These are usually berries that are infected with Botrytis or at least are very ripe. They look somewhat like things that are going to be raisins very soon. • These wines are always sweet. • They’re typically sold as 375s simply because they’re fairly expensive wines.

  16. Prädikatswein CategoriesTrockenbeerenauslese • Trockenbeerenausleseis one category above the Beerenauslese • Trockenbeerenauslesesare made from individually selected dried berries. • They’re typically infected with Botrytis (noble rot vs bunch rot?– here its noble rot!) • Botrytis makes these wines have a tremendous flavor impact. • They’re very, very sweetwith flavors of apricot

  17. Sweet or Dry? • With German wines you can’t always tell • If alcohol level is less than10% sweet, if 12% dry • Makes it a very difficult purchase decision • The quality level reflects the sugar in the grapes, not in the wine • Some wines are labeled • Trocken: • Halbtrocken, slightly sweet

  18. Rheingau, Nahe/Mosel-Saar-Ruwer • Vineyards here are very prestigious and classified as fine wine regions. Most important varietal is Riesling • German wine reputation is that’s made in the Rheingau and in the Mosel. • These are steep vineyards, and so that means hand labor • These are south facing vineyards along the river. That does two things. It means that we’ll get the • Earliest ripening because of the south facing and warmer vineyard, • Won’t get winter kill because the weather is moderated along these river valleys

  19. Rheinhessen/Rheinpfalz • The Rheinhessen and the Rheinpfalz together are some of the largest wine regions in Germany, and it’s the source of the lower priced wines, for example, Liebfraumilch or Blue Nun • Each of these produces about a quarter of the German wine production, and so the everyday wines we see from Germany would come from the Rheinhessen and the Rheinpfalz. • These are gently rolling terrains. • Mechanized agriculture

  20. Winemaking • Harvest- avoid bruising of skin • Fermentation- chilled to preserve flavors, 50-65 degrees F, no M-L fermentation, preserve taut acidic bright quality • Aging- stainless steel or neutral oak • No blending • Can be made bone dry, sparkling to sweet • High acidity responsible for age-ability

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