3 X 2

Joel Stewart

Joel Stewart
Puttin' on the Rietsch...

3 from the "Insolite" section of the Alsatian producer Rietsch's offerings. Though Rietsch appears to make more standard, expected wines from the usual grapes, these 3 are the only ones I've seen imported to Japan so far. I like the playfulness going on here....

2007 Rietsch, "PAS SAGE", Mittelbergheim, Alsace. Pinot noir vinified blanc in old barrels purposely not topped off and left to oxidise, vin jaune style. Non-filtered, non-sulfured. And, it's 15.3%. Pure amber color, initial nose is whoah baby, rye bread full on, white flowers, apricots both dried and fresh. Palate is just so loaded with flavors, it's hard to keep up with the circus in the mouth. Closest thing I can think of is a heavier Heredia blanco/rosado done in off-dry style plus a lovely proto-perly tickle around the tongue. Apricots, deep roasted grain and fruit notes, forest, mushroom, tang etc. etc....and the beat goes on. Holy crap. Day 2 shows more development on the palate...apricots come further forward in a near Kracher-like way...and yet the wine remains mostly dry...and, I'll add, very elegant. No detectable heat at all. At $31, this lovely oddity calls for more purchases.

2008 Rietsch, "Sans Doute", Riesling, Mittelbergheim, Alsace, (12.6%) - Cute label which includes a frog and (separately) a crown. What me worry? It's only a non-sulfur riesling that spent 11 mos on lees, bottled unfiltered. Ever so slightly turbid in glass..deja vu aromatics...I've been here before, but where is here? Musky, Sir Leasy, pear, honeysuckle...residual sugary. Thoughts wander to a mix of Alsace, Chablis, Macon, Nantes..perplexing, but likeable. Bone dry on the tongue...not a trace of rs; lemony mineral saline notes all over the place with touches of deeper must and musk. Texturally delightful (again, in a proto-effervescent sort of way)...my tongue is feather-lashed with minerals that near the prickling point, but dissolve just before. The whole package is fun, intriguing and finally the deja vu finds it's answer - gruner. A riesling that shows like a gv. Weird, but fun.

With more air - this is all about lime, lemon and minerals, subtle tingles and crisp grapefruit finish. Then come the lentils. Absolutely gorgeous with crispy fried chicken skins.

2006 Rietsch, Cremant d'Alsace, Chardonnay, (12.5%) Price? $22 Pale gold in glass and initially, a funky, uric acid-like punch, surrounded by hints of white-frosted cake. Frisky mousse at first, which masks the quite tart cab franc-like bitter notes, an appley malic touch, but not quite, and a lengthy grapefruity thing happening on the finish. I pour into both a flute and a Bordeax glass...interestingly, the flute completely clamps down on the wine, as if the lack of 02, snuffs the life out of it. The Bord glass brings out twice the amount of nuance, though nothing seems to get past the foaminess (I still wonder if foaminess is not also related to ph levels in the mouth...any chemistry thoughts anyone?) With time, this wine opens and shows more balance and intrigue. It's enjoyable and yet the mousse puts me off a bit. Plenty of depth, but if the texture is a distraction (esp. where bubbly is concerned) then it's practically game over.

Watermelon in Easter Hay

2008 Chateau Cambon, Beaujolais Rose, (Lapierre)$19.(12.5%). Shy nose - a bit of petrichor here, a floral note there, bare hints of carbonic sweetness. Given time, some freshly chopped garden greens emerge in the swirling, but only just. Contrast this to the palate, where the wine is generously rich, plush even...definitely in the "almost fat" range. Is that a bad thing? No, not really. I'm just reporting here. This is easily the most plush rose I've ever had.

There are close to off-dry red fruit notes, esp. watermelon candy and some grip towards the finish, which is long...very long. Overall Baroque, yes.....in a nearly jiggly Rubensian way. Good with food, but really even better alone. Sort of a different take on the genre...for me at least. I liked it well enough. Far, far superior to that silly VDP thing, and much more serious to boot.

2008 Lapierre, Vin de Pays de Gaules, $17, (12.5%) - Leery about this. Almost like a dark rose in the glass, watery clear on the rim. Cherries, fresh cut greens, a bit of orange rind and a candied hint as well that reminds me of B. Nouveau. Not bad, sort of expected this. Palate is thin and though I gave it plenty of chances,it seems like it's only covering ground already much better represented in the L basic Beaujolais, which I have an extreme fondness for. It left me wondering what's the purpose here, unless the screwcap is a way of saying "drink within a yr of vintage". Not at all competitively priced, but then again, I wouldn't buy it again at any price, unless city water was found to be full of arsenic and bottled water cost more.

2007 Lapierre Morgon sans soufre, (12.5%) Slightly meaty/bretty nose at first, smoke and cherries underneath. Palate shows this too. This is much more astringent an effort than the sulphured version. They might as well be two different wines. I prefer the sulphured, with it's silky texture, bright red fruit and firm, crunch of structure. Here we have something pinched and way too frugal.

I have had a few red wines from Loire producers which taste like this...in fact, this is now a dead ringer for some Puzelat red's I've had (and thus why I prefer P's whites, which seem to show more distinction). I'd have never thought such from previous sulphured Lapierre bottlings. With time, this one develops nicely but, in the end it doesn't shake that brettiness, or whatever that green, stinky tang is. Astringency dominates whatever chance there was at silkiness. I'll take the rose and the entry level sulphured Bojo.
 
2007 Rietsch, "PAS SAGE", Mittelbergheim, Alsace. Pinot noir vinified blanc in old barrels purposely not topped off and left to oxidise, vin jaune style. Non-filtered, non-sulfured. And, it's 15.3%.

And yet California is dissed on this bored. I'll never understand you wine hipsters.
 
originally posted by MarkS:
I'll never understand you wine hipsters.

You mean, I earned my stripes? Whoah, time to pop some sake!

Let's face it, high alc wines are dissed, rhone varietals mostly (some politely accepted)and the list goes on.You see anyone other than local titan Thor posting on Alsace regularly?

I was not proud to announce a 15.3% wine here, but neither embarrassed - it was a data point worth mentioning as I don't think the vin jaunes normally get up there, do they? On the other hand despite the high abv, the wine did not knock us on our butts, lending credence to some in the woo woo world of biodynamism who say things like purity no matter the strength don't fuck ya up. T'was true, this time.
 
Joel,
Were the Rietsch wines actually dry, or was there rs? rs+no filtration or SO2 sounds like a situation where you'd want to be sure the corks were pointing in a safe direction during storage.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
Joel,
Were the Rietsch wines actually dry, or was there rs? rs+no filtration or SO2 sounds like a situation where you'd want to be sure the corks were pointing in a safe direction during storage.

Agreed...at least putting them in decent temp storage would be wise. The ries was bone dry, the cremant may even have had S02, I forget. The vin jaune styled pinot def had rs, and I would be curious to put a bottle in my passive cellar vs one in temp controlled storage for a year to see if the high acidity and alcohol (and oxidation?) acted as natural preservatives.
 
You see anyone other than local titan Thor posting on Alsace regularly?

Yeah, I had to do a doubletake to make sure you weren't a punpuppet from that bard of Boston.

And I think vin jaunes tend to reach higher alcohol levels (closer to 15%, if I'm not mistaken), or at least, feel like they do.
 
originally posted by MarkS:

And I think vin jaunes tend to reach higher alcohol levels (closer to 15%, if I'm not mistaken), or at least, feel like they do.
Overnoy's '98, here at hand, claims 13.5%.
 
Would evaporation increase alcohol anyway? I mean is that how a pinot noir in Alsace can reach such high alcohol levels? I had/have trouble with this part.

Mark, I am punpuppet to no single titanic. I am puntheistic.
 
Alsace has high alcohol levels because it has Germanic grapes planted in an increasingly hot and decreasingly suitable climate, and because thus far the wines that have been most rewarded by critics are extremely ripe, massively-bodied...and why not some residual sugar too?...versions. All generalizations, of course, but true enough.

I would bet, without making any accusations or even insinuations, that dealcoholization will be something desired by more than a few Alsatian winemakers before the next decade is out, unless the climate swings back for a while. I would probably join them, because I don't really see massive replanting as anything but negative.
 
Can't they lessen hang time, or try guyot training? Purely academic questions for me...I might drink anything from Alsace at any alc level, if it's balanced anywhere near what the Pas sage was. (Well, really I should say, I have mostly given up on Alsace and I would have passed this producer over completely if I hadn't stumbled across the blancified pinot vin jaune...it was just too weird not to scratch my head over.)

I know that the white grapes can get up there alcohol wise, but I know zero about Alsatian red grapes...my image of them was that they were grown elsewhere and much thinner, more acid driven, low alcohol wines.

PS - Thor, have you heard of this producer? Their website is worth a glance.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by MarkS:

And I think vin jaunes tend to reach higher alcohol levels (closer to 15%, if I'm not mistaken), or at least, feel like they do.
Overnoy's '98, here at hand, claims 13.5%.

Okay, stand corrected. I've only had one once, from Chateau Chalon, that sure as hell tasted as if it were in Sherry territory, alcohol-wise.
 
originally posted by Thor:
Alsace has high alcohol levels because it has Germanic grapes planted in an increasingly hot and decreasingly suitable climate, and because thus far the wines that have been most rewarded by critics are extremely ripe, massively-bodied...and why not some residual sugar too?...versions. All generalizations, of course, but true enough.

Sure enuf, but that hasn't stopped you, has it? [insert emoticon]
 
Something like 75% of the notes are from one producer, and 90% are from a half-dozen, so no, but...
 
I always find the alcohol more evident on Austrian wines than Alsacian. Which is why I don't buy much Austrian wine.

I haven't checked labels, but do they report higher alcohols (in general)than the Austrians? Note that when I refer to Alsace, I am referring to Trimbach, Weinbach, Boxler, Burn, Gassman, Mure, etc....not ZH and Deiss since I believe that they may be aberrant in this regard.
 
I'd be more interested in actual than reported, based on what producers have told me. I don't think we're going to learn anything useful from the latter. That said, I agree with you that alcohol sticks out more often in Austrians. I think the Alsatians are more routinely heavy, though, which is partly a result of the alcohol. More dry extract to balance the heat? More sugar? Both? I don't know, but probably.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by MarkS:

And I think vin jaunes tend to reach higher alcohol levels (closer to 15%, if I'm not mistaken), or at least, feel like they do.
Overnoy's '98, here at hand, claims 13.5%.

That's a beautiful wine, Joe. Guilhaume and I drank one in France last October. My sense was that aging would be rewarded.
 
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
Would evaporation increase alcohol anyway?

Interesting question. Doesn't the humidity and temperature level change the ratio of alcohol to water evaporation? I have read that Cognac and Armagnac producers shift casks around in warehouses and fiddle with the humidity to adjust the balance. And I think Paul Avril installed a humidifying system in their Chateauneuf cellars for much the same reason.
 
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