Winemaker Notes
Gold hue with a soft green tint. Discreet aromas of dried herbs and candied fruit; scents of ginger-bread and lemon verbena evolve with air. Juicy mouthfeel, velvety texture and a mineral core. Fla-vours of pineapple, apple jelly and salt-crusted oranges. Off-dry with elegant extract sweetness. The piquant acidity creates pressure and tension, yet this is a calm and firm wine with a long fruity, salty finish. (tasted by wine academic Johannes Fiala)
Professional Ratings
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James Suckling
A strikingly original gruner veltliner. Complex nose of a rocky shoreline, with just a hint of driftwood. Very cool, but also texturally complex with gentle acidity. The long, stony finish also makes this really stand out. From biodynamically grown grapes with Respekt certification.
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Wine Enthusiast
A bright, lip-smacking Riesling, underscored by stony mineral details, this meshes a vivid structure of acidity and minerality with friendly flavors of peach skin, clementine, white raspberry, wet stone and coriander seeds. The long finish resonates with hints of smoke and wet stone.
Fun to say and delightfully easy to drink, Grüner Veltliner calls Austria its homeland. While some easily quaffable Grüners come in a one-liter—a convenient size—many high caliber single vineyard bottlings can benefit from cellar aging. Somm Secret—About 75% of the world’s Grüner Veltliner comes from Austria but the variety is gaining ground in other countries, namely Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and the United States.
Appreciated for superior wines made from indigenous varieties, Austria should be on the radar of any curious wine drinker. A rather cool and dry wine growing region, this country produces wine that is quintessentially European in style: food-friendly with racy acidity, moderate alcohol and fresh fruit flavors.
Austria’s viticultural history is rich and vast, dating back to Celtic tribes with first written record of winemaking starting with the Romans. But the 20th century brought Austria a series of winemaking obstacles, namely the plunder of both world wars, as well as its own self-imposed quality breach. In the mid 1980s, after a handful of shameless vintners were found to have added diethylene glycol (a toxic substance) to their sweet wines to imitate the unctuous qualities imparted by botrytis, Austria’s credibility as a wine-producing country was compromised. While no one was harmed, the incident forced the country to rebound and recover stronger than ever. By the 1990s, Austria was back on the playing field with exports and today is prized globally for its quality standards and dedication to purity and excellence.
Grüner Veltliner, known for its racy acidity and herbal, peppery aromatics, is Austria's most important white variety, comprising nearly a third of Austrian plantings. Riesling in Austria is high in quality but not quantity, planted on less than 5% of the country’s vineyard land. Austrian Rieslings are almost always dry and are full of bright citrus flavors and good acidity. Red varietal wines include the tart and peppery Zweigelt, spicy and dense Blaufränkisch and juicy Saint Laurent. These red varieties are also sometimes blended.