originally posted by Robert Dentice:
originally posted by .sasha:
But, Salil, don't jump to conclusions. Several things to be excited about. Check out Gilman's upcoming report.
I am awaiting your upcoming report! I leave Saturday for the Mosel. Give us a few tidbits!
Robert asks, I answer.
All true in the article about high levels of acidity and dry extract, the latter being of greater importance to me, as far as shaping the vintage. What may not come across as clearly, if at all, is that there was a real struggle for ripeness, not just in terms of ultimate maturity levels but also within the process itself - long, gradual, occasionally painful. This we've not seen in a long time; younger folks had to rely on their fathers and grandfathers for advice on how things were done in the good old days. Some of the older guard were all excited about this.
So it will be nice to have the Pradikats in the intended Oechsle range, for once.
Plenty of good grapes for fine dry wines in the 12% range, both QbA and GG. This is where matters of taste enter: if you have ever been on the fence about dry German Riesling due to its severity, consider what this unusually high dry extract with its herbaceous/leafy/floral flavour base may do, should your unruly palate interpret it so; provide a bridge between whichever dichotomy offends you the most, be it fruit vs. acidity, or "insufficient" residual sugar vs. bare slate, or else. This is kind of counter-intuitive in the same way that one requires acidity rather than ripeness in order to handle oak, but it works. And the dryer they are, the better, as in some seriously cool hipster shit at 1 gram RS.
But I am equally excited about the fruity stuff. As you will undoubtedly note in John's upcoming report, one could argue that even some of the folks who have been using their best resources for the GGs in recent times have made remarkable off dry Rieslings despite themselves. This is where I differ somewhat with the article - not in a sense that anything in it isn't correct or properly observed on the topic of handling low level botrytis, but more due to dumb luck in that I happened to be tasting several wines in which it was done very well. When I described my impressions to David S (who hasn't tasted the 13s yet) - lower must weights, high dry extract, low level clean botrytis - he told me it sounded like '75 or '66. The level at which this combination strikes gold for this sworn champion of Kabinetts and Spaetlesen is actually at an entry Auslese level, where the wines aren't just clean (as in many 2012s or 2008s or 1998s for example) but also less exotic and far more phenolic in favour and texture. Once again, not only does dry extract mitigate high acidity, it also adds a whole new flavour expression.
So if you wanted to taste something different, you got it.