originally posted by Claude Kolm:
originally posted by Larry Stein:
The issue with Rheingau was when pretty much all of the old guard wineries began to make mediocre wine. Langwerth von Simmern, Schloss Vollrads, and Kloster Eberbach were the main offenders. I certainly stopped purchasing from that region. I don't know if that's still the case, but it's been going (or went on) for quite a while. Schloss Johannisberg to some degree, too(?) From what I've read, Johannisberg is back on form. The poster child for keeping the flame is Robert Weil. Wines have always been terrific. Prices for Weil is what stopped me from purchasing.
I agree that was one of the issues. Langwerth von Simmern, after a brie swan song, doesn't exist any more, ditto for Schloss Schönborn. Schloss Vollrads has been making better wine than it had, I think that they could still do better. Kloster Eberbach's problem is that it is so large, not all wines are of equal quality, but they built a new state-of-the art facility that opened about 15 years ago or so and that helped. I don't think Schloss Johannisberg had ever sunk to the level people claimed, but at any rate has been making superb wine for a long time. Schloss Reinhartshausen was sold some time ago, but I haven't seen the wines since before the sale. Schloss Eltz ceased to exist a long time ago.
But there are other estates making spectacular wines, e.g., the afore-mentioned Weil, Spreitzer, and Künstler, but also Breuer, Kühn, Prinz, Wegeler, Flick, etc., some of which, such as Künstler, Prinz, and Flick, have profited by gaining vineyards from the old historic estates that ceased to exist.