Winemaker Notes
With its delicate bouquet of tropical fruits such as pineapple and grapefruit, as well as gooseberry and cassis, this Haardt Scheurebe is focused on freshness, vitality and the exotic.
Professional Ratings
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James Suckling
Here’s a dry wine for sauvignon blanc fans with stacks of blackcurrant and mandarin aromas in the nose. Zesty and vibrant with expressive citrus and nectarine fruit on the barely medium-bodied palate, the racy acidity driving it briskly off into the middle distance.
Like its parent Riesling, Scheurebe is an aromatic variety made in a range of styles from bone-dry to lusciously sweet. Either style will show high acidity, but not quite as high as Riesling. Crisp and pleasant, it features citrus fruit from lime to grapefruit, as well as pear, blackcurrant, herbs and honeysuckle. It thrives in cool climates, and is most popular in Rheinhessen, Pfalz, Franken and Nahe regions of Germany, as well as Austria, Slovenia and Switzerland
This sunny and relatively dry region served for many years as a German tourist mecca and was associated with low cost, cheerful wines. But since the 1980s, it has gained a reputation as one of Germany’s more innovative regions, which has led to increased international demand.