German Wine Society Washington DC: The
German Wine Society explored the Alto Adige, a German-speaking Alpine
region now part of Italy, in a presentation on Sept. 25 conducted by the
very knowledgeable Annette Schiller and featuring ten sparkling, white
and red wines from this region.
Annette’s familiarity with and love of
this subject were enthusiastically received by the audience, with both
longtime members and first-timers, and all the wines had their
champions. Annette plans to conduct a small-group tour of this
beautiful wine region in 2026, for those eager to learn more about the
Alto Adige.
Christian Schiller: Fantastic Trentino Alto Adige tasting at the German Wine Society - Washington DC led by Annette Schiller. Annette has scheduled an Ombiasy Public Relations and Wine Tours tour to Trentino Alto Adige for September 6 to 13, 2026.
Tour 3: Trentino - Alto Adige: Sunday, September 06 - Sunday, September
13, 2026 -> 8 days - 7 nights. We stay the entire time in the
Parkhotel Laurin in Bozen - an absolutely beautiful, extremely charming
Grand Hotel with a stunning park and pool area. We will also do a day
trip to the Veneto - tasting some Amarone and visiting Verona
Invitation: VISIT THE ALTO ADIGE WITH THE GERMAN WINE SOCIETY AND ANNETTE SCHILLER!
The German Wine Society’s Capital Chapter invites you to join us on Saturday, September 13th, 2025 at 7.00 pm for a tour
presented by our own Annette Schiller through the Alto Adige (or in the
German language: Süd-Tirol) and Trentino vineyards. A few of our
tasting events have included wines of this region before, such as the
Austro-Hungarian Empire dinner, but we have never had the opportunity to
do a tasting before now focused entirely on the Alto Adige. This is an
area where German and Alpine winemaking traditions merge with Italian
ones, on the edge of the German-speaking region of Europe, and thus a
very suitable topic for the German Wine Society. Registrations for this event are due by Tuesday, September 9, 2025, and
the price is $50 for GWS members, $57 for non-members. Please be aware
that, due to limited supply of the wines and size of the venue, we have
a maximum cap of 40 for attendance at this event. Reserve early to
avoid disappointment!
As
the climate gets warmer the wine connoisseur's focus shifts more and
more to higher altitude, cooler climate regions such as Trentino-Alto
Adige in search of elegant, moderate alcohol wines.
We will taste the following wines:
The Whites:
1. 2022 Riesling, Kloster Neustift, Eisacktal, DOC Alto Adige
2. 2023 Weissburgunder, J.Hofstätter, Tramin, DOC Alto Adige
3. 2022 Nosiola, Cesconi Società Agricola, IGT, Vigneti Delle Dolomiti
4. 2023 Gewürztraminer, Elena Walch, Tramin, DOC Alto Adige
Sparkling Wine:
5. NV Ferrari Rosé, Brut, Trento DOC
The Reds:
6. 2023 Schiava, Alois Lageder, Magrè, DOC Alto Adige
7. 2023 Pinot Noir, Cantina Terlan, DOC Alto Adige
8. 2023 Lagrein, Muri-Gries, DOC Alto Adige
9. 2022 Teroldego, Foradori, IGT, Vigneti Delle Dolomiti
10. 2021 Dinotte Blend, Cantina Mezzocorona, IGT, Vigneti Delle Dolomiti
A tasty buffet of cheeses, bread, crackers, charcuterie, grapes and veggies will be provided to accompany the wines. ....
If you have questions about this event, you may contact the event organizer and presenter, Annette Schiller, at aschiller@ombiasypr.com , or by phone at 703-459-7513. Annette’s website is www.ombiasypr.com . For questions about registration and membership, please contact Carl Willner, Capital Chapter President and Secretary, at carl.willner1@verizon.net . If you no longer wish to receive our announcements, please reply to this email to the sender.
Report by President Carl Willner
Fellow GWS Capital Chapter Board Members, and Annette,
Last
night, Saturday, September 13, 2025, the German Wine Society Capital
Chapter held its last event of astronomical summer and seventh of this
year, the Alto Adige Tasting presented by Annette Schiller, at Annette’s
preferred location in the clubroom of Klaus Teuter’s Van Ness apartment
building on Veazey Terrace. The event opened its doors at 6:30 pm for
guests and commenced at 7 pm, finishing about 9:30 pm. Annette and
Christian Schiller, Karen Stokes, Klaus Teuter, and my wife Nina and I
all arrived early around 5:30 pm to help with the setup, which was
complete before guests started arriving. We had 35 persons registered
for the event, 25 members and 10 non-member guests. ...
Karen brought the food and
organized a delicious buffet presentation (including among other things
mozzarella slices with olives, and vanilla pizzelle, to give an Italian
flavor). ...
and we were done and out of the clubroom between 10:30
and 11 pm, notwithstanding several of us lingering for conversation and
enjoyment of a sweet wine Klaus provided.
Annette’s
presentation was, as always, knowledgeable and full of good insights
about the wines, accompanied by very attractive slides illustrating the
beautiful landscapes and wineries of the Alto Adige region (we covered
both the actual Alto Adige region and the adjoining Trentino region).
We tasted ten wines during the evening, four white, one sparkling, and
five red. Several of these were grapes familiar to German wine lovers,
as befits a region on the edge of the German-speaking world, including a
Riesling, Weissburgunder, Gewürztraminer, and Pinot Noir; the Lagrein
can also be found in Germany and the Schiava we had goes under the name
of Trollinger in Germany. But others we tried are not encountered in
Germany, including a Nosiola, a Teroldego (a traditional variety that
had gone extinct and has been revived genetically), and the final wine, a
Dinette Blend. Annette explained that Italy does not have a sweetness
scale or a terroir-based system for individual vineyards as in Germany
(though Italy is moving toward recognition of single vineyards of
particular quality), but relies on the DOC system, which is region-wide
and sets requirements about which grapes can qualify in a particular
region and how the wines need to be produced. Seven of the ten wines we
had received a DOC appellation, while three had an IGT reflecting the
inability of those particular grapes to be approved for DOC in the
region at issue. At the end, Annette asked participants to identify
their favorite wine of the evening, and nearly all of the wines got some
votes, reflecting the overall quality of what we tasted and the variety
of good wines produced in the Alto Adige appealing to many tastes.
This was definitely one of our more educational tastings of the year,
accompanying Annette’s other Comparative Rieslings presentation in the
spring, Phil Bernstein’s New Vintages, and the Rebholz tasting at the
German Embassy in January (which Christian accurately described as a
master class in German wines)....
Overall,
this was a very successful event from all perspectives, providing both
education about and enjoyment of wines, exposure to a new wine region in
the German-speaking world with which most members and guests were not
familiar, and .... We can all
look forward to the next time that Annette presents on a wine topic for
the GWS! Onward to the Oktober Weinfest and Holiday Dinner to complete
our wine year!
A Historical Overview of the Alto Adige and its Winemaking
Trentino-Alto
Adige, as this region is referred to in English-language guide books to
wine regions, is the northernmost wine region of Italy and a very
special place where Italian and German traditions merge. Trentino-Alto
Adige is a fascinating and unique region in the Alps. It
boasts of an extraordinary variety of landscapes: snow-capped mountains
in the Dolomites, valleys, streams, Lake Garda, and century-old
breathtakingly beautiful towns true to their hybrid Germanic-Italian
culture.
This
region, situated south of the Alpine Brenner Pass, has been through a
rollercoaster of invasions and was a continuous bone of contention due
to its strategic importance. Even in Roman times, the Brenner Pass was
strategically significant, on the northern frontier of the Empire. In
the Middle Ages, it served as the main connection between Central Europe
and Italy for merchants, pilgrims, and armies. Finally,
in the early 1600s Trentino (Süd-Tirol)-Alto Adige became part of the
Habsburg Empire. After the fall of the Austro-Hungarian Habsburg Empire
and the Central Powers after WW I, this region was annexed by Italy.
Countless uprisings by the Germanic population followed and Italy tried
to eliminate the German language and culture.
Modern-day Süd-Tirol was created in 1948, after WW II. It was in 1946 that an official agreement was signed which gave this region extensive autonomy. Since
the 1970s, most legislative and administrative powers have been
transferred to the two self-governing provinces that make up the region:
the province of Trento, commonly known as Trentino and the province of
Bolzano (Bozen), commonly known as Alto Adige or Süd-Tirol in German.
Official languages are German and Italian. The people have Italian
citizenship.
Trentino-Alto
Adige has a very long history of winemaking, about 3000 years.
Trentino-Alto-Adige’s vineyards are true Alpin vineyards on elevations
of 700 - 3,300 ft on mostly gravelly soils. Because of the altitude of
this region, even in the hot and sunny summers night temperatures are
always cool and these diurnal temperature differences are excellent for the production of wines of great finesse. This
makes the region famous for single variety crisp, beautiful white wines
such as Pinot Bianco (Pinot Blanc), Gewürztraminer, and the indigenous
grape Nosiola. In terms of
quantity, more red wine is produced than white. More than 50 percent of
all vineyards are planted with the light Schiava (Vernatsch in German).
More and more vineyard area has been dedicated to Pinot Nero (Pinot
Noir). The red Lagrein vine actually comes originally from Trentino, but
the finest Lagrein grows in Gries on flatter, lower-lying vineyards
directly near Bozen in Alto Adige. The often almost opaque, dark purple
Teroldego Rotaliano, also an indigenous grape variety of the region, on
the other hand, comes from one of the few rock-lined valleys in the
northern part of Trentino. Trentino is also home of the production of
modern style red blends.
The Wines of Trentino Alto Adige - Trentino Suedtirol
Food
Tasting
Bye-bye
Postings
Wine Country Italy - Lake Como, Tuscany, Alto Adige - in the Summer of 2025
Chianti Classico
(Brunello di) Montalcino and (Vino Nobile di) Montepulciano
Trentino - Alto Adige
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