This is not intuitively an apt pairing. Riesling's usually strong fragrance and floral notes can give a sweetish impression even in "dry" examples and clash with the salt and iodine in the oysters. However with this one the combination worked brilliantly.
Maximin Grünhäuser Abtsberg Alte Reben trocken 2008 C. von Schubert - Alc.11% was bone dry, perfect with the oysters and very good with Alsatian choucroute. It showed medium/light body, minerality, very crisp but non-astringent acidity allied with quite dense substance and a firm finish with a surprising degree of salinity and with the usual lovely Abtsberg fragrance present but held sufficiently in check not to clash with the oysters. More subtle and complex than a bottle two years ago without any loss of crispness; 16.5/20+++.
To take the matter further, I recall a conversation with Dr. Carl von Schubert a couple of years ago in which he recommended richer and sweeter styles of his wines with high iodine oysters on the grounds that they would be a much better foil for such oysters than a bone dry wine, which would tend to be hardened. I wonder? Any views?
Maximin Grünhäuser Abtsberg Alte Reben trocken 2008 C. von Schubert - Alc.11% was bone dry, perfect with the oysters and very good with Alsatian choucroute. It showed medium/light body, minerality, very crisp but non-astringent acidity allied with quite dense substance and a firm finish with a surprising degree of salinity and with the usual lovely Abtsberg fragrance present but held sufficiently in check not to clash with the oysters. More subtle and complex than a bottle two years ago without any loss of crispness; 16.5/20+++.
To take the matter further, I recall a conversation with Dr. Carl von Schubert a couple of years ago in which he recommended richer and sweeter styles of his wines with high iodine oysters on the grounds that they would be a much better foil for such oysters than a bone dry wine, which would tend to be hardened. I wonder? Any views?