I don't know. I tend to like these wines younger than most.
But that's a general truism. I mean, we kid you and all, but a reasonable percentage of your comments here are "drink X earlier rather than later," and "I don't think it will benefit from age," etc. Sure, to each their own elevated uric acid, and so forth, but I tend to feel that Alsatian riesling is a particularly poor candidate for early drinking when it's an ageable wine. I do think you're in the minority if you prefer something like CFE on the young side, but of course you're free to do so anyway. For me, young CFE is like eating a white truffle with a cold that's preventing me from smelling it, and closed-period CFE -- it has a pretty long one, usually -- is like not having the truffle at all.
I'm not terribly keen on the petrol and lactic things that rieslings can pick up with age.
I understand that. Though I'd argue that the two wines we're typing the most about here, Boxler Sommerberg (let's throw Brand in there too) and CFE (and we'll add CSH) rarely show much of either with age. The Trimbachs tend towards raw steel and salted, almost autumnal metal, respectively, while Boxler's warmer vineyards retain a little more richness (especially the Brand, which also retains spice). Some wines -- Beyer's -- do the reverse: they tend towards petrol in their youth, and then shed it after a few decades. I remember a '72 consumed in about 1999 (at a local restaurant with swans floating on the river) that was many times more vibrant, fresh, and "youthful" than the current vintage I'd tasted earlier that day
chez Beyer.
All that said, like you I'm not an enormous fan of overt petrol either, and my objection to the lactic thing applies more to Germans; it's not that I don't like the quality, exactly, it's that I think it makes the wines taste largely the same from one terroir to another, and that's not what I'm into German rieslings for.
I think Boxler is great young-ish on your scale.
I will agree that given a typical, representative list of young Alsatian rieslings (say, at a restaurant), I'd order the Boxler before many other wines I like as much, or almost as much, in confidence that I won't be struggling to peer into a closed vessel all night.
If you're Kane, sure.
No, no, you're not entirely wrong. I know that it's a goal, as I understand our conversations on the matter, but it's not really achievable all that often without imbalancing the wines.
So how does CFE come in in terms of alcohol and rs?
Pierre is more willing to leave a tiny bit of RS in the wines than Bernard was -- given the changing mesoclimates, he doesn't really have a choice -- but it's only been noticeable in (if I remember correctly) two vintages. (I haven't tasted the '03.) Other than those rare exceptions, it's dry by the usual standards. The goal of the VTs remains near-dryness, though of course in years where they're possible that's extremely unlikely anymore.
As for alcohols...winemakers are always cagey (but not as cagey as marketing directors, and I've more often tasted with the latter than the former), but the number on the label (12.5%) is a fair average, from what I've gleaned. Sometimes it's lower. Sometimes slightly higher. In neither case is it like the gewurztraminers, which...well, I don't want to get anyone into trouble.
What if folks just picked earlier?
Some do. Trimbach's certainly not averse to it, though again this is more of an issue with the other grapes and the ngociant rieslings. I will say that it has been a long, long time since anyone there has bragged about late harvesting dates for anything other than a VT/SGN.
As for why most of the others don't pick earlier, I should think that's obvious.