Longuich lessons

Thor

Thor Iverson
Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt 2005 Majoratsfllung Riesling Deutscher Sekt Extra Dry (Germany) For a change (amongst various brands of sekt, not something particular to this bottle) this isnt like drinking glass shards spiked with tartaric acid. Rather, theres some almond skin, melon rind, apple, and bitter lemon to be braced by the expectedly vivid acidity. Not bad at all. (12/09)

Vollenweider 2008 Wolfer Goldgrube Riesling Sptlese Goldkapsel 05 09 (Mosel) Very ripe. Very, very ripe. Very, very, veryoh, hell, you know where Im going with this. But it isripe, I meanthough theres a flood of acidity to match it, and it actually manages a fierce, fisticuffs-in-lava sort of balance. Apples? Sure, why not? Mineral-grayed coarse sea salt as well. Fascinating. And very young. Very, very young. Very, very, very (1/10)

Nigl 1996 Grner Veltliner Alte Reben (Kremstal) I dont know if this is fully developed, but its drinking awfully well at the moment. Celery dust. The wines ripe but precise, with rocks and sweat more dominant than any sensation of fruit. Finishes long, with pepper in both powdered and seeded form. Swirls and evades as much as it envelops. Really quite delicious. (1/10)

Schmitt-Wagner 2001 Longuicher Maximiner Herrenberg Riesling Kabinett 15 02 (Mosel-Saar-Ruwer) Difficult. Muted, somewhat sulfurous, and probably too young. Nonetheless, whats perceptible is moderately enticing. A grayed-out minerality suffuses everything, but theres a leafy, almost lemongrass-like aromatic component (albeit brief), then apple skin, and finally some walnut thats not only aromatic, but textural as the wine drifts off into an uncertain finish. I wonder how much more time this will require, or if that number is imaginary. (1/10)

Schmitt-Wagner 2001 Longuicher Maximiner Herrenberg Riesling Auslese 18 02 (Mosel-Saar-Ruwer) Despite obvious power and intensity, this suffers from the same seemingly sulfurous muting as the same vineyards kabinett tasted at the same time. Everything here is dialed up fruit, acidity, palate impact and that helps. In terms of a terroir signature, this wine performs largely as the kabinett does, with the exception of an expansion of the realm of apple-derived characteristics. I have more hope for a future here than I do for the kabinett, but I dont lack hope for either. (1/10)

Darting 2007 Drkheimer Fronhof Scheurebe Beerenauslese 030 08 (Pfalz) From 375 ml. Not as lurid as the tropical soap factory that scheurebe can sometimes be, but still with one foot in the drink umbrella and lounge chair genre. Thankfully, the other foots in a big vat of (loose) structure and vibrancy. Very sweet, but not in a tooth-eroding way, and fun. (1/10)

von Kesselstatt 2007 Graach Josephshfer Riesling Sptlese 15 08 (Mosel) I miss the days when a sptlese was a medium-weight wine. This is a bruiser, and though along with its full metal jacketed weight comes vibrant structure that carries that weight, its a very muscular wine. Green apple granite and dripping molten iron sundae topping. Age is called for. (1/10)

Fritz Haag 2002 Brauneberger Juffer Riesling Kabinett 3 03 (Mosel-Saar-Ruwer) Dryish lemongrass, dry apple skin, and spritz. Sulfurous. Still too young for true enjoyment. (1/10)
 
Vollenweider 2008 Wolfer Goldgrube Riesling Sptlese Goldkapsel 05 09 (Mosel) Very ripe. Very, very ripe. Very, very, veryoh, hell, you know where Im going with this. But it isripe

Sure it was ripe. But I'm not sure that the ripe was such a dominant characteristic worthy of such emphasis? Although of course I was not the most critical at that point.
 
*shrug* For me, the past-auslese-ishness of the wine was indeed the dominant characteristic at the moment. And it's true that your entire faculty was perhaps not present at the convocation.
 
originally posted by Thor:
*shrug* For me, the past-auslese-ishness of the wine was indeed the dominant characteristic at the moment..

I remember it as sweet but without necessarily the body to back that up and put it past Auslese territory. Although I'm sure it technically could have qualified as something higher based on the oechsle.

Of course body is not everything and I remember with fondness wonderfully lacy Ausleses from Prum. But then those were more harmonious in terms of the balance between flavors and weight.
 
I meant the past-auslese descriptor more as a power/weight identifier than something related to sugar at harvest.

Let's not forget that I liked the wine.
 
Ripe but without much botrytis. That's why the GKs and LGKs from Vollenweider are always a bit extreme. This qualified for BA, of course, but tasting his BAs and TBAs it's easy to understand why he's only willing to slap an Auslese label and spend more on capsules. I think his best work is almost always in the Sptlese range, anyway, especially tasting through his first few vintages ('00-'02).
 
originally posted by Yixin:
That's why the GKs and LGKs from Vollenweider are always a bit extreme. This qualified for BA, of course, but tasting his BAs and TBAs it's easy to understand why he's only willing to slap an Auslese label...

I assume you mean Sptlese.
 
Celery dust. Those are two words that say Gruner to me but I have never heard them before. Oh how I hate to swell your little head but when you truly deserve praise I am a magnanimous person by nature and cannot resist speaking out.
 
originally posted by Thor:

Fritz Haag 2002 Brauneberger Juffer Riesling Kabinett 3 03 (Mosel-Saar-Ruwer) Dryish lemongrass, dry apple skin, and spritz. Sulfurous. Still too young for true enjoyment. (1/10)

Not the greatest Vintage/Vineyard/Praedikat combination either...
 
Maureen, the funny thing was that David brought the auslese and, independently, I'd brought the kabinett from the cellar. Random coincidence that it was the same vineyard/producer.

But tell you what: 1 for 1 trade with your CFE 375imes! Seem fair?

Not the greatest Vintage/Vineyard/Praedikat combination either...
Well, I got it for an absurd price, so I always figured I could live with the consequences.
 
Don't understand the vintage/vineyard/producer comment. 2002 was a pretty good vintage, even at the kabinett range, and Fritz Haag is consistently good. One might quibble with house style, but they turn out fine with age. I think the kab came from the lower parcel (likely Mandelgraben) but left my notes behind in Traben-Trarbach. The Juffer is a big vineyard, and the family has got many of the good bits.
 
originally posted by Yixin:
Don't understand the vintage/vineyard/producer comment. 2002 was a pretty good vintage, even at the kabinett range, and Fritz Haag is consistently good. One might quibble with house style, but they turn out fine with age. ...

Indeed, I drank the B. Juffer Sonnenuhr kabinett '02 just last week and it was a terrific drop. I like 02s in general (MSRs at least) and think they are showing well now - in fact, with my rapidly depleting stash of 98s and my about nonexistant 97s, I find that 02s from my cellar offer the best chance for catching a mosel at the right time for maximum enjoyment.

and thor - yeah, right!
 
You're drinking the 98s too young, I think. The great kabinetten are starting to wake up. A Theo Haart was mindblowingly good at the estate.
 
originally posted by Yixin:
You're drinking the 98s too young, I think. The great kabinetten are starting to wake up. A Theo Haart was mindblowingly good at the estate.

I have had quite a lot of a '98 Goldtrpfchen kabinett from Theo Haart the last couple of years. It was obviously a late release with ap 1 02. Really a great wine.
 
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