Grape Grazing in the Yarra Valley

February 10, 2008

Yesterday marked the start of the 21st Yarra Valley Grape Grazing Festival. Until 18th February various festival events are going to take place in different locations around the Yarra Valley.

For program details please visit www.grapegrazing.com.au.

Today for instance a Tempranillo and Tapas event is being organised at Sutherland Estate (www.sutherlandestate.com.au). I wrote about this vineyard before, beautifully located. You should taste their Tempranillo wine (released only recently) but also their other reds (Shiraz). On a hot day, the whites and the rose make the right drink.

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Spectacular views from Sutherland cellar door

If you are in for live Motown music you have to go to Yering Farm (www.yeringfarmwines.com). Alan Johns and his crew will serve you their hand-crafted and award-winning wines. Try the premium Yering Farm Wines series, especially the award winning 2003 Chardonnay.

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Charming rustic cellar door at Yering Farm

Today you can participate in a picnic for the palate (On the Palate Summer Festival) at Healesville Racecourse where about 15 wineries show their finest wines and were you can enjoy regional food (www.onthepalate.com.au). The lawns of the local country race track are a fabulous spot for a picnic under old oak trees. You can meet the wine makers there and the chefs of some of the best local restaurants will offer you their food.

If you are in the vicinity check it out. If you plan to visit Victoria in the near and not so near future make it your destination.


Trivento – Wine from Argentina

February 9, 2008

You might remember that the other day in Kuala Lumpur I could not taste the wine on the menu, a ‘2005 Trivento Golden Reserve Malbec’ of the Maredo Restaurant because it was sold out.

Guess what? I found the brand in Vin +, a small wine shop in Kemang, Jakarta. I bought one bottle only to try it out.

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The Trivento 2005 Golden Reserve Malbec

You might wonder about the results?

Today I went again and bought a whole case of it. It is a most delicious wine and retails for about 235,000 Indonesian Rupiah which is equivalent to about 17 € or 28 A$.

It is a deep, red, ruby wine with a wonderful nose displaying aromas of mint, cherries and chocolate. The wine was matured in new French oak for a year and was aged for another year in the bottle before its release. Its a pity that Malbec has this short, dry finish but the aromas compensate you for that. However, for non-Malbec lovers there are Syrah and Cabernet Sauvignon wines on offer as well.

Moreover, I also bought from the Trivento product range a ‘2006 Reserve Chardonnay’, a ‘2006 Tribu Torrontes’ and a ‘2005 Reserve Malbec’. More about these wines later.

Trivento Bodegas Y Vinedos (www.banfivintners.com) was founded in 1996 and is located in Mendoza, Argentina. Most of its vineyards are to be found on high altitude in the best zones of Mendoza (up to 1100 meters above sea level). Trivento Vineyards possess a modern winery with a capaity of about 27 million litres of wine. It has all the modern equipment used nowadays to make wine. The winery is surrounded by about 10 ha of vineyards.

Tomas Larrain holding a degree in agricultural economics from the Catholic University of Chile is the general manager and Federico Galdeano, a native of Mendoza with extensive experience in the Napa Valley/California and Tuscany/Italy, is the wine maker.

By the way I now found out that the rumour – that the Argentineans drink their best wines themselves and export only the rest – is false. They do export some of their good wines!


8. Wine Rally

February 7, 2008

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Through my various blogger contacts, in this case it was Swetlana Kittke, who writes about food and wine and resides in Berlin (http://myexperience4u.blogspot.com), I was made aware of an interesting undertaking, called the wine rally.

I watched it from the sidelines for a while and finally decided to participate. In Jakarta I am six hours ahead of the European crowd. Except for morning wine drinkers or people who have an early lunch, I should be the first to open a bottle and enjoy it with a meal. However, as I cannot as easily go to a wine shop as my European colleagues, I decided instead to pay a visit to my own wine cellar and select from there the bottle with the most beautiful label for tonights dinner. Of course I excluded my own label of Two Hills Vineyard though I like it also very much.

But let me explain. The rumor is that the recent shipments of wine to Indonesia faced some kind of legal problems (related to licensing). Customs withheld the containers containing the wine and they were left for too long in the open and got too hot. Therefore, almost all wine that you currently can buy at the open market in Jakarta is off. This drop is not even good for cooking wine thats how bad it is. This is the reason why I restricted myself to existing stocks and went to my own ‘cellar’ only. I hope you can forgive me. I also wanted to write in two languages (English and German) but then time ran out. it is now 5 minutes to midnight and I have to load up the piece.

The theme of the 8th wine rally is “the label”, and is based on the question “is it alright to buy a wine just because we like the beauty of the label”? Of course beauty is in the eyes of the beholder but all of us might have bought wine because we liked the label, or at least the design of the label might have played a bigger part in the selection of the wine than other criteria. Thats how I understood the task.

Ok, so here I start.

I selected a bottle from Rees Miller Estate (www.reesmiller.com) in the Upper Goulburn Wine Region (www.uppergoulburnwine.org.au). It has the most beautiful wine label in my collection. It consists of an almost abstract painting of an Australian landscape as you can find in Central Victoria where the vineyard is located. If I am not mistaken the origin of the painting was explained in an earlier version of Rees Miller website. The original is displayed in their cellar door.

Sylke Rees and David Miller are certified biodynamic, organic grape growers and wine makers. Needless to say, their wines are superb! Their family-owned vineyard is located in the Upper Goulburn Wine Region, about three kilometers east of the charming country town of Yea, Victoria (about 1 1/2/ hours northeast of Melbourne).

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Rees Miller ‘2004 Cotton’s Pinch Merlot’

We had in fact two bottles with our dinner and made this Wednesday so to speak to a Rees Miller day. Since tomorrow we are celebrating the Chinese spring festival (which is an official holiday in Indonesia) and the advent of the New Year (the year of the rat), one could argue that the last day of the year would deserve a special treat anyway.

Apart from the Rees Miller Estate ‘2004 Cotton’s Pinch Merlot’, we also tasted the ‘2006 Thousand Hills Reserve Shiraz’. I briefly describes the ‘Cooton’s Pinch Merlot’ in an earlier blog entry. Its a well rounded wine, dark red the colour and displays the typical aromas of blackberry and other forest fruit, mulberry and some spicy chocolate. The wine shows well balanced tannins and a good structure, its deep and complex and displays a long finish. Its alcohol is 14.4%.

The 2006 Shiraz has a little less alcohol (14% alc/Vol.) but what a firework of different aromas when you open the bottle. Flavours of licorice, blackberry, mocha, spice and leather hit your tastbuds. The colour is deep red. The wine is smooth and complex. Many wine critiques in Australia laud the distinctly European style which displays great elegance. The long finish is wonderful. I love the wine lingering on and on and on.

The 2004 vintage of this wine is holding position 19 on the list of the best Shiraz wines in the world. The 2006 vintage is not under cork anymore but the bottle comes with a stelvin cap.

The good news for all the Germans is that you can obtain Rees Miller wines from a wine distributer there. Please visit the website of Shiraz und Co (www.shiraz-und-co.de).

Address:
Rees Miller Estate
5355 Goulburn Valley Highway
Yea, Victoria 3717
Tel.: +631 5797 2101
info@reesmiller.com


A memorable visit to Villány in Hungary

December 13, 2007

Two years ago we visited our former Jakarta neighbours, Tibor Vidos and Andrea Domjan and their family in Budapest. They were extraordinarily good hosts and took us around their beautiful country.

One of the day trips had as destination a wine region near the Croatian border. Villány (or Wieland in German, Vilanj in Serbian and Croatian) is a small town in Baranya county, famous for its wines. Villány is also the name of the region (for more information visit www.borut.hu in English and www.villany.hu in German and Hungarian). The wine route of the same name was established in 1994 and it was the first of its kind in Hungary.

Before the fall of the iron curtain Hungary produced mainly cheap wines for the Soviet market. That changed with the end of authoritarian one-party rule and the advent of democracy. In the Villány wine region the joint effort of eigth settlements and its vignerons, vintners and wine-makers has born rich and abundant harvest. Some of the inhabitants are of German origin and one finds German names all over the place. Today the region produces excellent wines and many of them have won international acclaim and multiple awards.

Its a while that I wanted to write about this visit but I had forgotten where I stored the pictures and because of the complicated Hungarian language I had also forgotten the names of the places we were taken to. While rearranging my PC I found some wonderful shots and was able to put together the pieces or at least some of them.

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Margit and Tibor at the Polgár Pincészet cellar door.

From the menu on the table which I enlarged on my computer I could identify the name of the place were we drank wine and after some research on the net I found the winery and restaurant and everything fell into place. Unfortunately, I do not master Hungarian but the webpage of Polgár is entirely in this very difficult European language (www.polgarpince.hu). However, I know one thing: their wines were outstanding and I highly recommend to visit the place.

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The region is very picturesque, though flat, and intensively used by mixed agriculture.

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On some of the houses one finds nests of white storks a reminder of bygone times.

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This is the picture from which I identified the village and the region. My daugthers Lucy and Charlotte in front of the gate of a winery. Some of the script on the sign advertising it is even in German.

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Margit and I sampling the excellent wines of Polgár.

At the Polgár Pincészet restaurant cum cellar door the waitress even spoke German which somehow made the place even more familiar. We did not have sufficient time to visit any other winery becaused we had to return the very day to Budapest. So poor Tibor could not enjoy any of the wines, he was the driver. Unfortunately, i had not taken any tasting notes and even do not remember which wines we tasted. I guess the white was a Riesling or Rizling as it is written in Hungarian and the red must have been a merlot because as Merlot producers we are keen on tasting any other Merlot we can lay our hands on.

We took only six bottles with us (and we should have taken more). Half of them we left with Tibor in Budapest as a thank you for the wonderful experience but than drank some of them together at the last evening. The other three we took with us to Berlin, the next stop of our European trip in summer 2005, where we drank them with my friends Ulrike, Rodrigo, Ulrich and Elfriede. Away from their land of origin the wines tasted even finer and more delicate. unfortunately, I do not remember which wines we drank, I only know that we had a white, a rose and a red wine, all from Polgár Pincészet.

This is my last blorg entry before leaving for Australia. If you should happen to visit Hungary on Christmas or any other time, please include this lovely little wine region into your travel plans. I can only urge you to also visiting Polgár, a winery and a degustative experience you should under any circumstances not miss.


Wines from Canada – the Niagara Wine Region

December 5, 2007

Today, I will take you to Ontario in Canada.

My old friend and former flat mate Dominik Franken with whom I studied agricultural economics at Bonn University and who now lives in Ontario (he is in the investment business but is also a musician) pointed me to the Niagara Wine Region on the Niagara peninsula in Ontario. (http://niagarawineregion.com)

When we hear ‘Canada’ what comes to mind is anything but wine. We think about wilderness, moose, endless prairies, cold winters, the Rocky Mountains, black bears, maple syrup, maybe squabbles’ between French and English speakers, St Laurence stream, and so on. But Canada has also its fair share of the worlds wine regions, one of them the Niagara Wine Region.

Its located only a short drive (about 20 to 40 minutes) from the Niagara Falls, to the West of the border between Ontario and New York State, USA (on a peninsula between Lake Ontario and lake Erie). Actually on both sides of the border you will find vineyards and wineries, in total about 60 plus wine businesses.

In 1982, about 25 years ago I went by train from New York City to Montreal and on my way back, I visited Niagara Falls. It was spectacular to see the falls. I would love to visit the region again, this time maybe with my family. That was the time when I worked for two month on a cash crop farm near Thedford and explored Ontario and Quebec.

Well, instead of me visiting again, my winelover friend Dominik (please visit his website for more information about his music at www.cowandsow.com) went their recently. His suggestions for a tour go as follows:

Start with visiting a large producer of an industrial type, for instance Jackson-Triggs Vintners and their Niagara Estate Winery. Both proprietors and co-founders, Don Triggs and Allan Jackson, are both icons, promoters and champions of the Canadian wine industry. They won many prestigious national and international awards. The grapes come from two estates, the Niagara Estate in Ontario and the Okanagan Estate in British Columbia. An international team of winemakers brings all kinds of influences to their wines.

2145 Niagara Stone Road
Niagara-on-the-lake
905-468-4637
www.jacksontriggswinery.com

Then move on to Marynisson Estate, a family-owned winery. John Marynissen, the owner-winemaker is a Canadian who migrated from Holland in 1952 and grew grapes with his wife Nanny. Even before establishing his own winery John was well known as an excellent winemaker and received multiple awards. Dominik loved the Rieslings (the 1999 won a bronze medal) and the Sauvignon Blanc wines. On the webpage only wines from 2000 till 2002 are on offer, no Riesling among them.

RR#6 Concession 1
Niagara-on-the-lake
905-468-7270
www.marynissen.com

Dominik ended his tasting tour at the Reif Estate Winery. The Reif family are migrants from Neustadt, Germany and the Pfalz wine region. Ewald Greif established the first vineyards in 1977. The family has a more than 12 generation lasting tradition of growing grapes and making wines. In 1987 his nephew Klaus, a graduate in oenology and viticulture from the famous Geisenheim Institute in Germany, took over the reigns from his uncle. This year they Reif family commemorates the 25 anniversary of the winery. They went also online with their brand new Reif Shop. The wine club is called “Reif for Life”. Dominik loved their Riesling wines where he detected the German roots of the winemakers. The most amazing wines, however, were the ice wines, the Vidal Ice Wine (an award winning wine of the highest quality).

15608 Niagara Parkway
Niagara-on-the-lake, Ontario
905-468-7738
www.reifwinery.com

You might want to follow Dominks route and visit the above wineries. However, there is even more to see and taste.

A fellow blogger of mine, Canadian Sommelier Lorie O’Sullivan (http://lorieloveswine.wordpress.com), a native of the Niagara Wine Region, suggested to me the following list (in no particular order) of great wineries. I quote from her e-mail:

1. Stratus – very modern facility and wine making…they are making
some great blends both white and red. This winery is located in
Niagara on the Lake. www.stratus.com

2. Flat Rock Cellars (great Pinot Noir, Chardonnay & Riesling, this
winery is growing grapes that do well with their microclimate and
soil). Winery is located in Jordan, right on top of the escarpment.
www.flatrockcellars.com

3. Tawse Winery – (amazing Chardonnay and Cabernet Franc wines) –
Another modern winery located on the Beamsville Bench. www.tawse.com

4. Henry of Pelham – They make the best hybrid wine, Baco Noir in
Niagara. They also make a great Gewurztraminer too. They also have
some older vines too. www.henryofpelham.com

5. Peninsula Ridge or Thirty Bench – both of these wineries are
close to each other on the Beamsville Bench. Thirty Bench is smaller
and has an excellent Pinot Noir and Riesling. Peninsula Ridge does a
great Sauvignon Blanc and Merlot. www.thirtybench.com or
www.peninsularidge.com

I met Lorie in cyberspace only but she kindly parted with her knowledge of the region. She suggested another winery as well. Its name is le Clos Jordanne but it has not established a public winery and cellar door as yet, Lorie says. The wine is sold through LCBO and restaurants.

Well, if you should happen to be in Canada for Christmas, the above might be your visiting program. My thanks go to Lorie and Dominik for these interesting suggestions.


DAGERNOVA: wine co-operative at the Ahr

November 18, 2007

I have already written about my visits to the Ahr wine region. Vine cultivation has a long tradition in the Ahr valley going back to about 770 AD.

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The above sign reads as follows: “Happy humans and good wine should always be united together”. I found it on the wall of the cellar door of the DAGERNOVA Wine Co-operative in Dernau, Ahr valley. DAGERNOVA is the latin name of Dernau, a quaint little village in the Ahr valley and the seat of the co-operative.

One of the interesting phenomena in the German wine economy is the ‘wine co-operative’, usually the association of grape and wine producers to jointly make and sell their wines or some of their produce.

Co-operatives are very common in German agriculture and have a long and winding history as an institution. Today some of the most powerful and efficient wine producers in the wine sector are of this type. The economic advantages of co-operatives are obvious: the larger scale of purchases of inputs and the sale of produce allows a much better bargaining position in the market. One of the few downsides might be that top individual producers might find higher prices for their top wines outside the co-operative umbrella but cannot dispose of their minor qualities without it. This conflict of interest might severely damage the prospects of co-operatives’ business success.

Therefore true support and a certain discipline on the part of the members of the co-operative is necessary to make it successful. Competing strategic goals are to be avoided, instead synergies need to be developed. Professional wine making and marketing are a precondition for the making of high quality wines, wines which can also enter into the premium and high price segments of the market.

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The cellar door of DAGERNOVA in Dernau

An excellent example for this segment of the German wine industry is ‘DAGERNOVA Wine Manufactory’, a co-operative of the Ahr vintners. On its webpage the co-operatives (www.ahrwinzer-eg.de and www.dagernova.de) motto is cited. It reads “tradition without dust”; and in fact the co-operative has a long tradition but is modern in nature. Its was founded in 1970 when two of the local vinters associations merged and created this new entity. In the years following many more vintners and their associations joined. From 1993 onwards the co-operative was operating under “Ahr Winzer eG” which translates into ‘Ahr Vintners registered co-operative’. Today the members of the co-operative cultivate about 170 ha of vineyards. Needless to say that the co-operative won many awards and medals for its wines. In 2006 for instance the German magazine ‘Weinwelt’ (wine world) awarded DAGERNOVA ‘the best Riesling producer of the Ahr’ title. Gault Millau awarded ‘one bunch’ (eine Traube).

When we visited the co-operatives cellar door it was buzzing with customers. Every sunny autumn weekend is seen by many in the surrounding towns of the Rhineland and the Ruhr as an excellent opportunity to take a long Sunday walk along the Ahr river and to visit wineries and cellar doors. Although Ahr wines are more pricy than wines from many other regions, the Ahr has successfully succeeded by justifying this by rigorous emphasis on quality.

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The Ahr valley is German red wine territory. Here a bottle of Regent, a “new” red variety.

Needless to say we tasted quite a few bottles of excellent red wines of the base (up to 7 €/bottle) and primium segements (up to 9.5 €/bottle). What they call ‘cult wines’ starts at 11.85 €/bottle. I acquired a “2006 Pinot Noir Spätlese” which I gave to my friend Ulrich Hillejan and where I anxiously await the “tasting results”.

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Joyce, Ulla, Claudia and Rainer, DAGERNOVA cellat door


German wine regions: Franconia- a visit to Würzburg

November 16, 2007

Together with my mother and my brother Wolfgang, we visited the hometown of my maternal grandfather for a family reunion. The small village of Reichenberg, near the city of Würzburg was our destination. My mothers father, Hans Heinrich Schüssler, was the one who introduced me to wine and wine drinking. When I was about 16 years old he took me to the Juliusspital (one of the three big wineries in the city and winner of this years ‘Riesling of the World’ Challenge in Canberra) in Würzburg where I had my first ‘official’ glas of Franconian wine.

Würzburg is another ancient city where the Catholic church and its archbishops reigned. Needless to say that vineyards and wine production are an old and beloved feature of the local culture and the economy influencing its specific social habits and customs. The castle of Würzburg is one of the main features. On its slopes vines are grown as well.

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The castle in Würzburg, with the historic bridge and the vineyards on the castle slopes

Franconia is the name of the wine region. It currently has about 6,000 ha under vines. The proportion of red varieties is low (19 %). Main varieties are white grape varieties such as Müller-Thurgau (32 %), Silvaner (21 %) and Bacchus (12 %). But, as along the Mosel river, red varieties are on the increase. ‘Franken’ (Franconia) produces some excellent Pinot Noir wines as well. Nowhere in Germany does Silvaner produce such stunning wines as in Franconia.

The shape of the local wine bottles ‘Franconian style’ is very special too. It’s called “Bocksbeutel” in German and usually reserved for higher quality Franconian wines.

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The “Bocksbeutel” bottle, trademark of Franconia

The above bottle from “Staatlicher Hofkeller”, the second of the three big wineries in Würzburg (the third one is “Bürgerspital”), was the first I drank with a glas enclosure in my life. It was a “2005 Hammelburg Trautlestal, Silvaner Kabinett, dry” which displayed all the characteristics of an excellent Franconian Silvaner wine. For newcomers to Franconian wine I can highly recommend this drop.

The next day after the family reunion, we visited Würzburg and had lunch at ‘Juliusspital’ (www.juliusspital.de). ‘Juliusspital’ does not only own vineyards, a winery, a historic cellar door and restaurants but also a hospital, a retirement home, an academy, a conference centre and other facilities. “Spital” also means ‘hospital’.

Juliusspital Foundation was founded in 1576 by the prince bishop Julius Echter of Mespelbrunn (a wonderful little castle in the Spessart, a beautiful region full of forests nearby). Today Juliusspital is a modern service company providing mainly health care and related services to the public but traditionally is also involved in agriculture, forestry and wine making. the Juliusspital Wine Estate is as old as the hospice.

The Franconian wine region covered in the 16th century more than 40,000 ha of vineyards and was the largest coherent wine-growing area in Europe. The decline of Franconian viticulture started with the ‘thirty Years” War which destroyed most of the vineyards in Upper and Central Franconia. After a short revival in the 18th century a second decline reduced the region to about 10,000 ha and the thrid decline was accompanied by peronospera and phyloxera outbreaks at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century. After World War II only about 2,300 ha under vines remained. Today, about 7,000 vintners cultivate the 6,000 ha under vines which produce roughly 50 million bottles and an annual turnover of about 200 million EUROs.

The soils in Franconia consist either of soils based on red sandstone, shell limestone and what the Germans call ‘Keuper’ (clay rocks), all emerging during different geological epochs some going back more than 200 million years.

Today Juliusspital Wine Estate cultivates about 168 ha of vineyards and produces more than 85,000 cases of wine. The composition of its vine varieties is about 35 % Silvaner, 22 % Riesling, 20 % Müller-Thurgau and 5 % Pinot Noir. the rest (18 %) includes Pinot Gris, Pinot Blanc, Baccus, Scheurebe, Traminer, Muskateller, and Rieslaner (a regional variety). the average yield is given with 60 hl/ha. the top locations (terroir) are ‘Würzbuger Stein’, ‘Iphoefer Julius-Echter-Berg’, ‘Randersackerer Pfülben’ and ‘Eschendorfer Lump’.

At the recently held 2007 Canberra International Riesling Challenge, the Juliusspital Wine Estate won the overall award for best Riesling of the World with its “2006 Julius-Echter-Berger Beerenauslese”. By the way, the webpage of Juliusspital shows this wine with a price tag of 47.60 EURO only.

According to the October-November issue of ‘Weinwelt’ (World of wine), a German wine magazine, the top producers in Franconia are:

♦♦♦♦ (four stars)
– Fürstlich Castellisches Domaenenamt, Castell
– Rudolf Fürst, Bürgstadt
– Horst Sauer, Eschendorf

Horst Sauer also participated in the 2007 Canberra International Riesling Challenge and won a gold medal in the ‘current vintage 2006 sweet category’ for his “2006 Eschendorfer Lump Riesling TBA” and a bronze medal for “2006 Eschendorfer Lump Riesling dry”.

♦♦♦ (three stars)
– Juliusspital, Würzburg
– Fürst Löwenstein, Kreuzwertheim
– Hans Wirsching, Iphofen
– Brennfleck, Sulzfeld (significantly improved in 2006 and newly listed with three stars)
– Hofmann, Röttingen (as above)

♦♦ (two stars)
– Walter Erhard, Volkach (improved in 2006 and newly listed as two stars)
– Rudolf Max, Retzstadt (as above)
– Max Müller I, Volkach (as above)
– Trockene Schmitts, Randersacker (as above)
– Graf Schoenborn, Volkach (as above)

♦ (one star for discoveries of the year)
– Burrlein, Mainstockheim
– Felshof. Sommershausen
– Gebr. Geiger Jun., Thüngersheim
– Max Merkert, Eibelstadt
– Reiss, Würzburg
– Markus Schneider, Volkach

Unfortunately, I have only one bottle of Bocksbeutel left in my wine fridge. Empty bottles I have in abundance (for instance “2002 Würzburger Stein, Silvaner, Kabinett, dry” of Staatlicher Hofkeller which won a gold medal, “2003 Baccus, dry” of Schloss Castell and “2003 Würzburger Stein Sivaner, dry” of Juliusspital). The bottle to be enjoyed soon is a “2005 Kitzinger Hofrat, Silvaner, dry” of Bernhard Völker. What a pity that Franconian wines are not available in my local duty free shop in Jakarta.

The red wine “pope” of Franconia is Paul Fürst (Winery Rudolp Fürst in Bürgstadt. He won “German vintner of the year” award in 2003 and “best vintner of Franconia” in 2004. His webpage is very interesting too (www.weingut-rudolf-fuerst.de).
At the wine webpage www.finewinepress.com you will find an interesting interview with Paul Fürst in English. His “2003 Spätburgunder” (Pinot Noir) is a well acclaimed and award winning wine. I will introduce you to the winery at another time.

While in Würzburg we lunched at Juliusspital Restaurant which is what Germans call “gut bürgerliche Küche”, which I freely translate as “good quality, local food” (robust and harty in nature but also with delicate and fragrant elements). We drank from the open wine list (we had to drive home). My brother had a “2006 Juliusspital Schwarzriesling (Pinot meunier), dry” and I drank a “2006 Würzburger Abtsleite, Silvaner, Kabinett, dry”, both solid wines. It was unfortunate that we could not participate in any tasting since we had to get home the same day.

The design of the restaurant, by the way, is typical for historic German country inns. When I visited the restrooms I found to my great suprise wonderful cartoons on tiles. I had to take pictures, one of which you see below.

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The texts freely translates as “Guess darling whom I am holding in my arm”.

Unfortunately, I do not have good photos of the family reunion. Needless to say that the three of us were overwhelmed by the hospitaly extende to us. Tables were bending under the food and wine on offer. We were talking and talking. It was so exciting that I forgot to take “intelligent” pictures with the result that I have some good ones of some of the participants but not of others. This is the reason why I will not show any of them because it would be unfair vis-a-vis the people whom I did not catch in a good enough pose. Since I have planned to take my wife and children there when we visit Germany next year, I promise to be more careful and present you with some good shots in the future.

The address of the restaurant cum wine bar is

Weinstuben Juliusspital
Familie Frank & Edith Kulinna
Juliuspromenade 19
97070 Würzburg
Tel.: 0931-54080
http://www.juliusspital.de


Vintage time along Rhine, Ahr and Mosel

November 9, 2007

I had the great fortune to witness vintage time in some of the German wine regions. During my first walk through vineyards at the Rhine (Middle Rhine) near Bad Honnef, I talked to some grape pickers. My first innocent (and maybe ignorant) question “what grapes they were harvesting”, was answered in heavy accented German: “I have to ask the boss”. Most of these picking crews seemed to come from the Middle East, Turkey and Poland.

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Picking crew at the foot of ‘Drachenfels’

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Empty fruit bins on trailers in the Ahr valley

In the Ahr valley I mostly ran into family-member picking-crews. On the steep slopes, it is realy hard physical work to get the grapes. Buckets are carried up or downhill and emptied into bins. Tripping and losing one’s balance can result in severe falls. Most of the family-managed vineyards are small but also cheap foreign labour is employed to cope with the harvest during vintage time.

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The slopes are very steep. Family members were doing the picking work

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Tractors transport the fruit to the wineries

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Pinot Noir fruit at the Ahr

Harvesters cannot be used on the slopes. Near Trier I found caterpillar tractors were used to transport the fruit out of the vineyards. A precondition is that the rows are spaced accordingly. Sometimes two rows of vines are planted close together and a middle row between such double rows is wider so that the caterpillars can drive through. In any case picking grapes is hard work that deserves our respect and appreciation. We wine drinkers know it and are thankful that people are still willing to collect the grapes from such steep vineyards.

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Picking crew in Olewig vineyards, a location along the Mosel near Trier

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Caterpillar tractors for the steep slopes

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Mosel Riesling fruit

‘Zum Wohl’ (freely translated as ‘to your health’) as the Germans toast when drinking wine.


And the winner is ? – 2007 Canberra International Riesling Challenge

November 4, 2007

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You might remember that I wrote about the 2007 Canberra International Riesling Challenge? The 8th Challenge has seen a new record of 486 entries (wines) from 249 wineries and six countries. What I have not done yet is to also inform you about the outcome of the event. This is the more enjoyable since the overall winner comes from a German winery which I visted recently in Würzburg, Franconia. The newly added category trophy of ‘Best in the World’ was won by “Weingut Juliusspital Iphofer Julius-Echter-Berger Riesling Beerenauslese 2006”.

As last year the ‘Challenge Winner’ came from Australia. The 2006 winner was a “Tim Adams 2006 Riesling” and the 2007 award was won by “Orlando Wines St. Helga Eden Valley Riesling 2002”.

The history of the event is a success story of new world wine, in this case Riesling wine, promotion. Under www.rieslingchallenge.com you can find the full story and the long list of entries and winners. Although I cannot do justice to all the many award winners from the different countries, I would like to selectively take out and refer to some of the participating wineries and their wines.

It came as no surprise that the German Riesling winner of the ‘Best in the World’ came from Franconia, one of the wine regions famous for its ‘Bocksbeutel’, wine filled in ellipsoid shaped bottles. Franconia (area under wines in 2007: 6072 ha) had a ripper of a vintage in 2006, ranked by the German wine magazine ‘Weinwelt’ as 4 to 5 star quality, the best since 1997.

Because of the cool August of 2006, the wines show high acidity which together with the excellent extraction values provides a high storage potential. The growing period, however, ended after a beautifully warm (almost hot) September, in a very wet October (50 to 140 liter precipitation) and for many vintners this meant a run against the clock to avoid the fruit rotting on the vines.

Weingut Juliusspital is one of the top German wineries. Horst Kolesch, the head of the winery (which is one of the three big wineries in Wuerzburg), can be very happy with the outcome of the event. Apart from winning the main trophy, his wines did very well in the competition and won various other medals. Another of the top Franconian wine producers, Horst Sauer Winery, won among others a gold medal in the ‘current vintage 2006 sweet category’ for his “2006 Eschendorfer Lump Riesling TBA” and a bronze medal for “2006 Eschendorfer Lump Riesling trocken”.

From the vicinity of my hometown Trier, the ‘Bischoefliche Weingueter’ won a silver medal for their “2006 Kaseler Nies’chen Spaetlese” (sweet category), a famous terroir from the Ruwer river. The “2006 Scharzhofberg Spaetlese” won a bronze medal in the ‘current vintage dry category’. The location of the vineyard is the prime terroir for Riesling wines in Wiltingen, a small village at the Saar river. From the Mosel vineyards of the Bischoefliche Weingueter the “2006 Dhroner Hofberg Spaetlese” won a bronze medal in the ‘semi-dry category’.

Let me turn to some of the Australian wineries. From the Yarra Valley the Long Gully Winery (the owners are of German origin)won a gold medal for their “2007 Long Gully Estate Riesling” (current vintage dry category).

From our own region, the Upper Goulburn Wine Region, only Delatite Winery (www.delatitewinery.com.au) had (three) entries. The “2006 Barwite Riesling” and the “2005 Delatite Riesling” won bronze medals each. The “2006 Delatite Riesling” won a silver medal. These awards are a great success and a further addition to the many national and international awards Riesling wines from Delatite have won recently.

The 2007 Judges were:
– Louisa Rose (Chairman of Judges), Chief Winemaker, Yalumba
– John Belsham, Foxes Island, Marlborough, New Zealand
– Ken Gargett, Wine Writer, Queensland
– Alexander Kohnen, Director of the German Wine School
– David O’Leary, Director/Winemaker, O’Leary Walker Wines
– Sally Harper, The Bathers Pavillion/Sommerlier, Sydney

PS: It was interesting to learn that Sevenhill Cellars from Southern Australia won a bronze medal for their “2007 Sevenhill Riesling” and a gold medal in the ‘museum class 2004 and prior vintages’ category for their “2001 Sevenhill Riesling”. My friend Neville Rowe has recently taken up the general managers position at this winery which is the oldest in the Clare Valley.


Wine production in the capital city of Berlin

October 18, 2007

I spent the second month of my stay in Germany in Berlin, the capital city of the Federal Republic. Berlin is not located in the centre of the country but rather to the east, only about 70 kilometers from the border with Poland. It’s far away from my own homeland, the Mosel banks. I always joke, my hometown Trier is closer to Paris than to Berlin. In history the Treverer and the Mosel where they settled belonged to both countries or to put it the other way: we were ruled by both.

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Wine shop in Berlin where wine consumption is ‘en vogue’ (in Lichterfelde)

But can you imagine that grapes are also grown on the soils of the national capital? A curiosity, one might think; indeed so it is. Recently I learned from local newspaper articles that today vines are grown in five city districts (for instance Wilmersdorf, Prenzlauer Berg, Wedding, Kreuzberg-Friedrichshain). Because the region is not certified as a wine producing area, the wines produced from the local grapes are not allowed to be sold commercially.

This is not neceassarily an impediment to wine being ,though in small, in fact very small, quantities. The district councils use the bottled local wines as gifts for public anniversaries and award ceremonies. In some cases citizens can obtain these wines against a small fee. Usually the grapes are transported to a proper winery in a wine region where the wines are made. Many of the grapes are turned into sparkling wines. Apart from Riesling red varieties are also grown. Depending on the weather and disease conditions, between 200 and 400 bottles are produced in each of the districts. For us ‘normal’ wine consumers a tasting might be out of the question but it is good for the promotion of the divine drink.

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Advertisement for wine and invitation for wine appreciation classes