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WTN: Dry German Riesling

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Rahsaan

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WTN: Dry German Riesling

by Rahsaan » Wed Sep 02, 2009 9:31 pm

Spent a long weekend in Germany with my wife's family drinking lots of dry German white wine and not doing much careful analysis. But these stuck in my head.

2007 Maximin Grünhäuser Abtsberg Riesling Superior
The structure was big and round but the flavors were gray cool and verdant at the same time. Interesting trick, but the texture was just so dull and bordering on soft that it almost made me angry. On the third night some tingling mineral acidity came out but it was still mostly dull and plodding. Is this a stage and will the acidic structure reemerge at some point? Or is this wine just dead/bad?

2006 Maximin Grünhäuser Abtsberg Riesling Superior
This was better than the 2007 because it had a bit more structure although that could have just been the more detectable sulfur making it austere and firm. The gray cool and verdant theme was still present and it too bordered on dull, but the tilt towards firmness made a better impression and made me hope (against hope?) that this has more positive days in its future?

2007 Maximin Grünhäuser Riesling QbA Trocken
Nothing special here and perhaps too sour for many. But with a big table full of people and a nice fish dinner circulating through the plates, it was an easy-enough dose of Grünhäuser Flavor for me to keep drinking.

2008 Bürklin-Wolf Riesling QbA Trocken
More material here and probably most would prefer this QbA trocken to the Grünhäuser. Certainly more substantial and less likely to offend. But in the end it depends which flavors and textures you prefer. Although this too performs well with a large table and lots of fish so who cares.
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Re: WTN: Dry German Riesling

by David M. Bueker » Thu Sep 03, 2009 6:50 am

You are just running into the overapplication of the dry dogma to areas where it is not well suited (i.e. the Ruwer).
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Re: WTN: Dry German Riesling

by Rahsaan » Thu Sep 03, 2009 9:45 am

David M. Bueker wrote:You are just running into the overapplication of the dry dogma to areas where it is not well suited (i.e. the Ruwer).


Have you had the Grünhaus spätlese trocken? I have heard from seemingly reliable palates that it can be a very nice wine. I bought a couple of bottles of that and am hoping they show better than these attempts at glory.
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Re: WTN: Dry German Riesling

by David M. Bueker » Thu Sep 03, 2009 9:56 am

I've had a couple of Grunhaus trocken wines in the past, and am yet to be convinced.
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Re: WTN: Dry German Riesling

by Rahsaan » Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:32 pm

David M. Bueker wrote:am yet to be convinced.


That makes two of us, although I am still trying.

I have liked some QbA and Kabinett feinherb-esque stuff, although nothing profound.
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Re: WTN: Dry German Riesling

by David M. Bueker » Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:42 pm

Given the monumental quality of Grunhaus Auslese (don't let the critics scare you off the 2001s) I see no reason to buy their drier wines. There's plenty of dry wine specialists out there.
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Re: WTN: Dry German Riesling

by Rahsaan » Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:57 pm

David M. Bueker wrote:Given the monumental quality of Grunhaus Auslese (don't let the critics scare you off the 2001s) I see no reason to buy their drier wines. There's plenty of dry wine specialists out there.


You're probably right. You live, you drink, you spend money, you learn.
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Re: WTN: Dry German Riesling

by David M. Bueker » Thu Sep 03, 2009 5:00 pm

Rahsaan wrote:You live, you drink, you spend money, you learn.


I like that.
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