Weingut FJ Gritsch Hochrain Smaragd Gruner Veltliner 2015 Front Label
Weingut FJ Gritsch Hochrain Smaragd Gruner Veltliner 2015 Front Label

Winemaker Notes

Professional Ratings

  • 92
    From the southeast-facing, terraced loess vineyard in Wosendorf, the 2015 Hochrain Gruner Veltliner Smaragd offers a clear, intense and aromatic bouquet of ripe and elegant fruit aromas with a dash of lemon juice intermixed with some spicy, flinty/earthy notes. Full-bodied, round and very elegant on the palate, this is a silky-textured, almost crystalline and highly finessed Hochrain with a piquant, stimulating, salty and aromatic finish. This is gorgeous Gruner Veltliner that was picked very late on November 3. It drinks perfectly today but can age for 15 and more years.
Weingut FJ Gritsch

Weingut FJ Gritsch

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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.

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Wachau

Austria

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As Austria’s most prestigious wine growing region, the landscape of the Wachau is—not surprisingly—one of its most dramatic. Millions of years ago, the Danube River chiseled its way through the earth, creating steep terraces of decomposed volcanic and metamorphic rock. Harsh Ice Age winds brought deposits of ancient glacial dust and loess to the terrace’s eastern faces. Today these steep surfaces of nutrient-poor and fast draining soil are home to some of Austria’s very best sites for both Grüner Veltliner and Riesling.

Wachau is small, comprising a mere three percent of Austria’s vine surface and, considering relatively low yields, represents a miniscule proportion of total wine production. Diurnal temperature shifts in Wachau facilitate great balance of sugar and phenolic ripeness in its grapes. At night cold air from the Alps and forests in the northwest displace warm afternoon air, which gets sucked upstream along the Danube.

Its sites are actually so varied and distinct that more emphasis is going into vineyard-designated offerings even despite grape variety. Grüner Veltliner and Riesling are most prominent, but the region produces Chardonnay, Pinot Blanc (Weissburgunder), Pinot Gris, Sauvignon Blanc and Zweigelt among other local variants.

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