Riesling TNs - May 2025

Yule Kim

Yule Kim
1983 Joh. Jos. Prüm Wehlener Sonnenuhr Riesling Auslese: This wine had a beautiful, shimmering balance with everything seamlessly blended and tucked into its proper place. Mellow, understated, but still fresh and barely tertiary, with mouthwatering acidity and the sweetness receded just so. Very clean with almost no botrytis. Really great stuff. Prum just always hits right.

2016 Julian Haart Piesporter Schubertslay Riesling Kabinett: Wow, this is extremely racy and energetic, with a powerful lemon-lime nose, and a palate that is lean, saline, and mineral-forward, streaked with citrus and herbs. The sweetness is felt more than tasted, perfectly balanced with the taut acidity. Really great stuff.

2023 Willi Schaefer Graacher Himmelreich Riesling Kabinett #2: This is drinking really well. Beautifully expressive nose of lemon peel, florals, and apple. The palate is incredibly finessed and the acidity chiseled and precise. Very understated, but intense wine that is crisp, filigreed, mineral, and a touch spicy. Elegant weight and lacy texture.

2020 Willi Schaefer Graacher Domprobst Riesling Spätlese #5: Intense flavors of lemon, white fruit, ginger, and spices that persists through the midpalate to the finish, though, in terms of its weight, it is graced with lightness and finesse. The acidity is sufficient to balance the sugar and prevent the richness from being cloying, but a little more zap to provide some additional lift on the finish would have been nice. Still, a very good wine that still seems surprisingly rather open for business.

2001 Willi Schaefer Graacher Domprobst Riesling Spätlese #3: Very honeyed and rich, but balanced with that classic Schaefer filigreed acidity and lacy finesse. This bottle does seem rather tertiary already and is darker in color than what I would expect for a wine this age. Still delicious and the tertiary notes are still at a point where they add rather than detract, but makes me wonder...

2001 Zind-Humbrecht Riesling Brand: Quite mineral and sharp on the palate with dense white and yellow fruit. Quite dry with a pleasantly bitter, herbal finish. There's a hint of petrol on the nose. This is quite good; in your face, but balanced with acidity and energy. Pleasantly severe.

2019 Hofgut Falkenstein Niedermenniger Herrenberg Riesling Kabinett feinherb #15: I wish this wine had a little more cut and energy. It felt a little too wan and slim; there's some herbal complexity and a hint of white fruit, but it does not have a lot of stuffing. There's acidity, but perhaps not enough to give it more pop and presence. Perhaps this is shut down. And perhaps a little too delicate to have with Sichuan food.

2019 Weingut Clemens Busch Pündericher Marienburg Riesling Spätlese: No formal note, but I did remember this having perceptible sweetness that was balanced with racy acidity. Rich, but not cloying. I wish I had more time to focus on this, but too much wine at this dinner.

1983 Navarro Vineyard White Riesling Cluster Select Late Harvest: Kind of reminded me of a TBA that is somehow also refreshing and relatively light on its feet. Sure, a very sweet sticky, but not ponderous or saccharine at all. A real pleasure to drink.
 
originally posted by Yule Kim:

2019 Hofgut Falkenstein Niedermenniger Herrenberg Riesling Kabinett feinherb #15: I wish this wine had a little more cut and energy.

Not a common reaction to Falkenstein!

But, every wine goes through stages... I'm guessing this wine was not always so wan.
 
83 prum aus - serious nostalgia lane.
i had no interest in german reisling at the time, until my friendly neighborhood merchant casually mentioned that the '83 auslese he was blowing out at 14.99 was worth trying; once i did, i was back waiting for the store to open the following morning to pick up a case
it was then that i noticed another '83 on closeout for 9.99/btl, gruenhauser abtsberg spatlese
that was the beginning of an interesting journey
 
I may as well add on two recent Rieslings on my table:

Nahe Niersteiner Paterberg Kabinett 2021, Georg Albrecht Schneider - pale gold; moderate aroma with fresh green apple & lemon curd, hints of pine/floral; med-light body, decent acid, persistent fresh fruit with a stony touch, med length with slight sweetness. Perhaps a bit low in acid, but otherwise quite classic.

Rheingau "Ein Zwei Zero" NV? (I forgot to look if it's vintage dated), Leitz - pale white gold; true Riesling nose, moderate strength with ripe green apple and a bit of jasmine; med-light body, the flavor is similar and doesn't evaporate like many NA wines, more persistent with a hint of apple sauce or grapeskin in the fiinish, mild compared to a "real" version. Respectable acid, plenty fruit, warm year Kabinett sweetness level to my palate, quite gluggable. Of the twenty or so NA wines I've tried, this is still the only NA wine that comes close to replicating the experience of its alcoholic equivalent.
 
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Yule Kim:

2019 Hofgut Falkenstein Niedermenniger Herrenberg Riesling Kabinett feinherb #15: I wish this wine had a little more cut and energy.

Not a common reaction to Falkenstein!

But, every wine goes through stages... I'm guessing this wine was not always so wan.

Tbh, I think it just wasn't the best pairing with the Sichuan food we had, which was extremely spicy and numbing (even for Sichuan food).
 
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
83 prum aus - serious nostalgia lane.
i had no interest in german reisling at the time, until my friendly neighborhood merchant casually mentioned that the '83 auslese he was blowing out at 14.99 was worth trying; once i did, i was back waiting for the store to open the following morning to pick up a case
it was then that i noticed another '83 on closeout for 9.99/btl, gruenhauser abtsberg spatlese
that was the beginning of an interesting journey

The Prum was a great wine. I'm glad you were able to enjoy a case of it! (here's hoping one day I'll cross paths with that '83 Grunhauser Abtsberg Spatlese).
 
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
I may as well add on two recent Rieslings on my table:

Nahe Niersteiner Paterberg Kabinett 2021, Georg Albrecht Schneider - pale gold; moderate aroma with fresh green apple & lemon curd, hints of pine/floral; med-light body, decent acid, persistent fresh fruit with a stony touch, med length with slight sweetness. Perhaps a bit low in acid, but otherwise quite classic.

Rheingau "Ein Zwei Zero" NV? (I forgot to look if it's vintage dated), Leitz - pale white gold; true Riesling nose, moderate strength with ripe green apple and a bit of jasmine; med-light body, the flavor is similar and doesn't evaporate like many NA wines, more persistent with a hint of apple sauce or grapeskin in the fiinish, mild compared to a "real" version. Respectable acid, plenty fruit, warm year Kabinett sweetness level to my palate, quite gluggable. Of the twenty or so NA wines I've tried, this is still the only NA wine that comes close to replicating the experience of its alcoholic equivalent.

Both of these wines sound like a lot of fun. I haven't had Leitz in a while. I should try to remedy that.
 
originally posted by Yule Kim:
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
I may as well add on two recent Rieslings on my table:

Rheingau "Ein Zwei Zero" NV? (I forgot to look if it's vintage dated), Leitz - pale white gold; true Riesling nose, moderate strength with ripe green apple and a bit of jasmine; med-light body, the flavor is similar and doesn't evaporate like many NA wines, more persistent with a hint of apple sauce or grapeskin in the fiinish, mild compared to a "real" version. Respectable acid, plenty fruit, warm year Kabinett sweetness level to my palate, quite gluggable. Of the twenty or so NA wines I've tried, this is still the only NA wine that comes close to replicating the experience of its alcoholic equivalent.

Both of these wines sound like a lot of fun. I haven't had Leitz in a while. I should try to remedy that.

Oddly I haven't had Leitz's "normal" wines for a few years, but if the non-alcohol version is this good, I'd presume they are worth buying. Or maybe traditional Germanic Riesling just lends itself to NA treatment - I haven't tried the Loosen or Fischer versions.
 
originally posted by Jay Miller:
Wow. I love the Navarro CSLH wines but never held onto one for that long. Respect.

Yeah, the person who brought this wine really loves California wines. Lots of respect that he held onto this bottle for so long. Perfect with Sichuan food.
 
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