Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller and Ernst Dautel, Weingut Dautel
I visited with the Weinfreundeskreis Hochheim the Württemberg wine region for 2 days. More specifically, we spent 2 days in the Zabergäu and had 4 extensive tastings - at Staatsweingut Weinsberg, Weingut Dautel, Weingut Wachstetter and Weingaertner Cleebronn-Guegglingen.
The Zaber is a minor tributary of the River Neckar in Württemberg , Germany. It is some 22 km in length and joins the Neckar from the west at Lauffen am Neckar. It has given its name to the Zabergäu, the area between the Heuchelberg and Stromberg hills.
Picture: The Zaber
Wine Region Württemberg
Baden-Württemberg is one of the 16 German states that make up Germany. Baden-Wuerttemberg is one of the growth centers of Germany due to its booming export industries. Mercedes-Benz and Porsche are prime examples. Baden-Württemberg comprises two wine growing areas, Baden and Württemberg.
Wine from Württemberg is mainly red wine. The main production area is along the Neckar River between Stuttgart and Heilbronn. There are also vineyards on Lake Constance that belong to Württemberg.
More wine is consumed here (per capita) than anywhere else in Germany - actually twice as much as in the rest of Germany. The German poet Friedrich von Schiller wrote already several centuries ago: “A Württemberger without wine--is that a real Württemberger?”
The Trollinger is the most popular variety, which is grown almost exclusively in Württemberg. It is a nice table wine that goes well with the local food. If you are looking for a premium wine, Lemberger (known as Blaufränkisch in Austria and Kékfrankos in its Hungarian homeland) is the grape variety to go for. The Lemberger made by Weingut Dautel and Weingut Wachstetter, which we had during the tour, can compete with the best red wines in the world.
With 11,000 hectares under vine, Württemberg is Germany's fourth largest wine region. Winemaking cooperatives are very common in Württemberg, number around 70, and are responsible for almost 75% of the region's production.
Wines from Württemberg are hard to find in the US. This is partly explained by the production structure, which is dominated by co-operatives. These co-operatives are known for producing top class wines. But they tend to be less aggressive in terms of penetrating new markets.
See:
Wine region: Baden and Württemberg, Germany
Schiller in Württemberg
Schiller, or Schillerwein, is a specialty from Württemberg. It is made by blending red and white grapes before fermentation. Ideally, the Schiller is a field blend, i.e. red and white grapes are planted in mixed lots in the vineyards and are harvested and fermented together. I am not aware of any producer who makes his Schiller as a field blend, but in the old days it was the rule.
Pictures: A “Viertele” of Schillerwein from Staatsweingut Weinsberg at Weinhaus Stetter in Stuttgart
The name of the wine has nothing to do with the famous German poet Friedrich von Schiller (although he is from Württemberg). The wine got its name from the verb “schillern”. The verb "schillern" means "to scintillate". Schiller, or Schillerwein, is thus a wine with a scintillating color, reflecting the fact that the wine is a blend of red and white grapes.
There are basically two ways of producing wine that is in-between red and white wine and often called rosé wine. First, using red grapes, but limiting the skin contact of the juice during fermentation so that only a small part of the red color is extracted from the skin and the wine thus has a rosé color. Second, blending white and red grapes before fermentation or red and white wines after fermentation.
Most of the Rosés on the market these days are wines that are produced 100 percent out of red grapes. Blending finished white and red wines is outlawed in many countries. Interestingly, it is allowed for producing Rosé Champagne and other sparkling wine in France. Blending white and red grapes before fermentation to make rosé-type wines is a specialty in a number of countries, including Germany.
For more on Schiller, see:
A “Viertele” of Schillerwein at Weinhaus Stetter in Stuttgart, Wuerttemberg, Germany
Schillerwein---a German Speciality
Schiller in the Glass in Stuttgart, Germany
Staatsweingut Weinsberg
Staatsweingut Weinsberg is a winery owned and run by the Government of Baden-Wuerttemberg. Germany is a federal state with 3 levels of government: federal, state and local. At the federal level, there is no government ownership in the wine industry, but there is extensive involvement at the state level. In addition, there is government ownership at the local level.
Pictures: At Staatsweingut Weinsberg
At the state level, there are 2 kinds of involvements. First, there are wine estates that are government owned, but operate like private wineries. There are five such wine estates in Germany and all of them are large. Second, there are government wine estates that produce and sell wine, but also fulfill other functions, notably research and education. The second group I understand is treated like government departments and is accounted for in the national accounts in the government sector.
For more, see:
The Role of Government - Government Owned Wineries in Germany
Staatsweingut Weinsberg falls into the second category; it is a department of the Government of Baden-Wuerttemberg. It is part of a school and research institute, which was initiated and planned by Immanuel August Ludwig Dornfeld (1796-1869), the father of the well known Dornfelder grape variety, and built in 1868 as the "Royal School of Viticulture" under King Charles I of Württemberg (1823-1891), the first viticultural school of Germany.
Today, between 30 to 50 students are at the school with the aim to become a Weinbautechniker (vocational winemaker training). This is a winemaker degree below the bachelor level. The school also trains coopers.
As for research, new grape varieties developed here include Acolon, Cabernet Dorio, Cabernet Dorsa, Cabernet Mitos, Dornfelder, Kerner, and Silcher.
Staatsweingut Weinsberg has 40 hectares of vines, some of which are planted in the estate’s solely owned Weinsberger Schemelsberg and Abstatter Burg Wildeck. Riesling, Lemberger and Pinots dominate.
Picture: Starting with a Justinus K.
Managing Director of the Staatsweingut Weinsberg is Günter Bäder. Gerhard Wächter is the Winemaker. Annual production amounts to 20.000 cases. The Staatsweingut also produces sparkling wine and spirits. The Staatsweingut Weinsberg is a member of the VDP, the association of German elite winemakers.
Lunch: Waldschenke Hoernle in Stromberg-Heuchelberg
Pictures: Annette Schiller (Ombiasy Wine Tours) and Katharina Schiller at Waldschenke Hoernle
Weingut Dautel
Weingut Dautel is in Bönnigheim and run by Ernst and Christian Dautel. Ernst Dautel is in his mid-60s. He just transferred formal ownership of the winery to his son Christian, who studied at Geisenheim Collegue and after a number of internships around the world is ready to take over. Ernst Dautel also studied at Geisenheim in the 1970s and then took over from his parents, who had previously delivered their grapes to the local cooperative. In the 1970s, it was a very small operation with just 1 hectare of vines. Since then, Ernst Dautel has expanded to 10.5 hectares of vineyards, all on the eastern extension of the Stromberg hill.
Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller at Weingut Dautel
Right from the beginning, Ernst Dautel went his own way. He was one of the first in Germany to ferment and age his red wine in barriques. Also, in the 1990s, he was one of the first winemakers to produce premium blends in Germany, such as the „Kreation Rot“, while Wuerttemberg was and still is dominated by single variety wines. Also, in 1988 he started to plant Chardonnay and other international grape varieties in Germany, which was very rare at the time.
Pictures: Ernst Dautel with Annette Schiller, Christian Schiller and Helmut Seufert
Today, red grapes account for 60%, including Lemberger, Pinot Meunier, Pinot Noir and Samtrot, and white grapes account for 40%, including Riesling, Chardonnay and Pinot Blanc. This represent - compared with the rest of Wuerttemberg - a high share of white wines.
Picture: Ernst Dautel
As a member of the VDP, Weingut Dautel is classifying its wines according to the new VDP classification (Gutswein, Ortswein, Erste Lage Wein and Grosse Lage Wein). But there are still elements of his previous classification (1 to 4 stars). Four star wines were wines aged for 2 years in barrique.
Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller and Christian Dautel
In the vineyard, Ernst Dautel explained, he is moving to organic vine growing. He has gone a long way but is not yet there. He practices natural vegetation and integrated use of beneficial insects for pest control.
In the cellar, he follows a minimal intervention approach. Pumping and filtratings is kept to a minimum. The wine is made in stainless steel tanks, large wood casks (“Stueckfaesser”) and small barrique barrels, depending on the wine.
Picture: The Wines of Weingut Dautel
Ernst Dautel: “The basis for our strong and characterful red wines is a long, classic maceration. Because of their nice tannic structure, our red wines age very well. For our 4 star wines, the maceration is followed by barrel aging for almost two years, which contributes to a harmonious integration of the oak note. As for the white wines, preserving the flavors and the fine acidity are important for us. A long aging on the lees provides the finesse that characterizes our white wines. You can discover the art of "assemblage in our two white wine blends and their two red wine cuvée partners. A perfect combination of the individual notes of the different grape varieties in the blend is the secret of these great wines. "
Dinner: Dorfkrug in Leingarten
This is the second restaurant of Uwe Straub, who also owns and runs the Loewen (16 toques Gault Millau).
Weingut Wachtstetter
Weingut Wachstetter is in Pfaffenberg, right in the middle of the village. It is a traditional family operation, with 3 generations living under one roof and working together. Weingut Wachstetter is in particular known for its premium Lembergers (known as Blaufränkisch in Austria and Kékfrankos in its Hungarian homeland).
Picture: Rainer and Annette Wachtstetter with Christian G.E. Schiller
Today, Rainer Wachtstetter is at the helm of Weingut Wachtstetter. He owns and runs the winery now in the 4th generation. It all started with Karl and Ernst Combé, the great-grandfather and the grandfather of Rainer. In particular Ernst left a strong impression on Rainer, which explains why one the Wachstetter product lines is called Ernst Combé line.
Picture: Annette Schiller with Rainer Wachtstetter
In 1979, Ernst Combé - with his son-in-law Roland and daughter Anni – decided to move their wine production by beginning to bottle and sell directly his wine. When Rainer Wachtstetter joint in 1987 the family winery at the age of 19, it was clear that he would push on in that direction. Indeed, since then, the vineyard area has expanded from 3 to 17 hectares and Weingut Wachstetter has become one of the best red wine producers in Wuerttemberg, if not in Germany.
Rainer Wachtstetter is in charge of winemaking today. He has a degree of Weinbautechniker. His wife Annette looks after sales and the accounts, father Roland and mother Anni continue to help. Rainer and Annette have 3 children, Felix, Louis und Anna; Felix helped when we were there.
Pictures: At Weingut Wachtstetter
Rainer Wachtstetter is a founding member of the winemaker group Junges Schwaben; the group was awarded the ArtVinum Prize in 2010 as Europe’s Best Up-and-coming Winemakers. In 2009, Rainer Wachtstetter became a member of the VdP, the association of German elite winemakers.
The specialty of Weingut Wachtstetter is the Lemberger. Rainer Wachtstetter devotes 35% of the vineyard area to this grape variety. He definitely has become one of the best Lemberg producers in Baden-Württemberg.
Stuart Pigott: “Yes, I know that you’re probably asking yourselves who the hell Rainer Wachtstetter is and if a red wine from Württemberg can really be worth recommending this highly, but this is a rare bargain amongst „serious“ red wines. Wachtstetter has been perfecting the making of red wines from the Lemberger grape for over a decade and the result is this medium-bodied, supply tannic dry wine with a wonderful bouquet in which elderberry, plum, baking spices and something floral mingle. Where’s my glass?”
Pictures: Tasting in the Adler
Besides Lemberger and (of course) Trollinger, Rainer Wachtstetter also makes Pinot Noir, Samtrot and Dornfelder. Rainer Wachtstetter is not only a specialist in red wines, but also makes excellent white wines, including Riesling.
Picture: Weingut Wachstetter Wines
Of course, as a member of the VDP, Weingut Wachtstaetter is following the new VDP classification. But you can still find elements of the old Weingut Wachstetter classification. Rainer Wachstetter has devoted a series of Riesling, Spätburgunder and Lemberger at the middle level to his 3 children Anna, Louis und Felix. The Ernst Combé series with red wines fermented and aged in barrique represents ultr-premium wines. The Grosses Gewaechs from the Grosse Lage Pfaffenhofener Hohenberg ( Riesling and Lemberger) represent ultra-premium dry wines.
Since the beginning of the 1900s, the small and cosy Gasthaus Adler – a wine tavern - has been an integral part of the Weingut Wachtstetters. Today, it is only open durng a few weekends in the spring and the autumn. We had our tasting in the Gasthaus Adler, which has room for 60 guests. We did not eat there, but Rainer Wachtstetter explained that the food is very much local food. In particular, the Gasthaus Adler has been known for many decades for its superb Spanferkel, with home-made Spätzle und Kartoffelsalat.
Lunch: Waldhorn am Schloss
Picture: Landgasthof Waldhorn
Weingaertner Cleebronn-Guegglingen
The Weingaertner Cleebronn-Güglingen is in Cleebronn. It is a co-operative with about 500 members, founded in 1951. The vineyard area totals about 250 hectares in the Michaelsberg in Cleebronn and in the Kaisersberg in Güglingen. As far as red varieties are concerned, Weingaertner Cleebronn-Güglingen make Lemberger, Pinot Meunier, Pinot Noir, Trollinger, Acolon, Samtrot and Trollinger and the white varieties: Riesling, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, Muller-Thurgau, Traminer, Sylvaner and Kerner.
Picture: At Weingaertner Cleebronn-Guegglingen
In 2008, the Weingaertner Cleebronn-Guegglingen co-operative was on its knees, but has staged a remarkable comeback. Last year, it was named as “Rising Star of the Year” by the Gault Millau wine guide.
In 2009, as part of the restructuring efforts, the wine portfolio was streamlined. There are now 3 lines of wines. The premium line "emotion CG" (CG = Cleebronn-Güglingen) is produced from old vines of selected parcels with considerable yield reduction. The red wines are matured after long maceration in French barriques and bottled without filtration. The other two lines are "St. Michael "(base segment) and "Duke Christopher "(middle segment). About two million bottles of wine are produced annually.
Pictures: Weingaertner Cleebronn-Guegglingen
The wines come from the Michaelsberg in Cleebronn and in the Kaisersberg in Güglingen. The Cleebronner Michaelsberg is part of the foothills of the forested Stromberg region. Its isolated location and unusually mild and balanced climate offer excellent conditions for wine making. The Michaelsberg gained historical significance owing to St. Michaels Chapel, which was erected on this hill in early Christian times.
Pictures: Michaelsberg
Gault Millau: “Our last year's "Discovery of the Year"confirmed the award impressively this year. It is absolutely exemplary, with care in that about 280 hectares large co-operative even entry level wines are made. Already the very reasonably priced St. Michael wines offer great every day drinking pleasure. In the middle range, the Herzog Christoph wines are ainws with a very good price quality ration. At the top level, the Emotions GC Riesling convinces with tropical fruit, the Lemberger with character and complexity and the Pinot Noir with a distinctive backbone. The impressive blend of this line is among the best red wines of the region. A sensation is the Riesling Trockenbeerenauslese: With its density, complexity and balance, this is probably the best noble-sweet wine of the last years in Wuerttemberg - Chapeau!”
We had a delicious “Winzerplatte” at the Weingaertner Cleebronn-Guegglingen for dinner.
schiller-wine: Related Postings
The Role of Government - Government Owned Wineries in Germany
One of the Fathers of the German Red Wine Revolution: Weingut Huber in Baden
Wine region: Baden and Württemberg, Germany
In the Glass: A 2007 Pinot Noir from the Gault Millau Shooting Star of the Year - Estate Baron Gleichenstein, Germany
Wine basics: Field Blends
Wine Maker Count of Bentzel-Sturmfeder in Frankfurt am Main Presenting his Wines from Wuerttemberg, Germany
A “Viertele” of Schillerwein at Weinhaus Stetter in Stuttgart, Wuerttemberg, Germany
Schillerwein---a German Speciality
Schiller in the Glass in Stuttgart, Germany
Showing posts with label Schillerwein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Schillerwein. Show all posts
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Thursday, January 3, 2013
A “Viertele” of Schillerwein at Weinhaus Stetter in Stuttgart, Wuerttemberg, Germany
Picture: A “Viertele” of Schillerwein at Weinhaus Stetter
A Viertele is local dialect for a quarter and means a quarter of a liter of wine. This is the traditional quantity served in the Wuerttemberg area. I recently had a Viertele of Schillerwein at Weinhaus Stetter in Stuttgart in Wuerttemberg in Germany.
Schillerwein
Schillerwein is a very special wine, produced by blending red and white grapes before fermentation. Ideally, the Schiller is a field blend, i.e. red and white grapes are planted in mixed lots in the vineyards and are harvested and fermented together. I am not aware of any producer who makes his Schiller as a field blend, but in the old days it was the rule.
Pictures: Christian G.E. Schiller and Schillerwein
The name of the wine has nothing to do with the famous German poet Friedrich von Schiller (although he is from Württemberg). The wine got its name from the verb “schillern”. The verb "schillern" means "to scintillate". Schiller, or Schillerwein, is thus a wine with a scintillating color, reflecting the fact that the wine is a blend of red and white grapes.
Rosé and Schiller
There are basically two ways of producing wine that is in-between red and white wine and often called rosé wine. First, using red grapes, but limiting the skin contact of the juice during fermentation so that only a small part of the red color is extracted from the skin and the wine thus has a rosé color. Second, blending white and red grapes before fermentation or red and white wines after fermentation.
Most of the Rosés on the market these days are wines that are produced 100 percent out of red grapes. Blending finished white and red wines is outlawed in many countries. Interestingly, it is allowed for producing Rosé Champagne and other sparkling wine in France. Blending white and red grapes before fermentation to make rosé-type wines is a specialty in a number of countries, including Germany.
Stuttgart – a City of Wine
Stuttgart is a city of wine, although this is not very well known in the world. Most of the vines are planted along the Neckar, but grapes also grow in the center of the city. Stuttgart has a long viticulture tradition. In the 17th Century, the city was still the third largest viticultural community in the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. The city boasts five wine growing cooperatives and a number of private wine producers.
Pictures: Vineyards in Stuttgart
Wine Tavern Stetter
Located in the arty Bohnenviertel (Bean Quarter), “Weinhaus Stetter”, a typical wine tavern, is a local favorite. It has a long tradition. Ernst Stetter established the company with a cooperage and wine trading in 1902. In the following years he provided all restaurants in downtown Stuttgart with wine. After the Second World War the wines were delivered in bottles and not in barrels anymore.
Pictures: Weinhaus Stetter
Roman Stetter owned and managed the wine tavern with his wife Gertrud until 2008. Since 2009, Andreas Scherle is the new owner of the tavern. The Scherle family has been owning Hotel Woertz Zur Weinsteige, including the Restaurant Zur Weinsteige for many decades.
The kitchen offers traditional Swabian food. Popular are Spätzle, pasta-type noodles made from flour, eggs, water, and salt. Spätzle are either served as a main course with some sort of sauce or with cheese, or as an accompaniment to a main dish. Also popular are Maultaschen, similar to large ravioli, stuffed with pork, onions, spinach, eggs and spices. They are served fried with onions and egg or in a broth.
Pictures: Wine and "Spaetzle"
“Besenwirtschaft” - a Seasonal Wine Room
Alternatively, I could have gone to one of the many Besenwirtschaften. The history of the Swabian “Besen” starts in 812 with a decree of Karl the Great. This permitted the winegrowers to serve their wine in their own private households.
The tradition has continued to this day with wine sometimes being served in the winegrowers’ living rooms, sometimes in rebuilt stables or side rooms. The winegrowers place a broom ("Besen") in front of their doors as a sign that their homes are now open for visitors.
Under law, winegrowers may run a Besenwirtschaft without restaurant permission in their own home, however, not for longer than four months out of the year and not for more than two different periods of time.
If you are in other parts of Germany, you’ll see these establishments too. They will be called other names, such as “Strausswirtschaft”
Wine Region Wuerttemberg
Baden-Württemberg is one of the 16 German states that make up Germany. Baden-Wuerttemberg is one of the growth centers of Germany due to its booming export industries. Mercedes-Benz and Porsche are prime examples. Baden-Württemberg comprises two wine growing areas, Baden and Württemberg.
Wine from Württemberg is mainly red wine. The main production area is along the Neckar River between Stuttgart and Heilbronn. There are also vineyards on Lake Constance that belong to Württemberg.
Pictures: Hotel Woertz Zur Weinsteige
More wine is consumed here than anywhere else in Germany - actually twice as much as in the rest of Germany. The German poet Friedrich von Schiller wrote already several centuries ago: “A Württemberger without wine--is that a real Württemberger?”
The Trollinger is the most important variety, which, with its characteristic bright red color, is grown almost exclusively in Württemberg. There is also Lemberger, which is a better wine.
With 11,000 hectares under vine, Württemberg is Germany's fourth largest wine region. Winemaking cooperatives are very common in Württemberg, number around 70, and are responsible for almost 75% of the region's production.
Wines from Württemberg are hard to find in the US. This is partly explained by the production structure, which is dominated by co-operatives. These co-operatives are known for producing top class wines. But they tend to be less aggressive in terms of penetrating new markets.
schiller-wine: Related Postings
Wine basics: Field Blends
Woelffer Wines from Long Island, New York State
Schillerwein---a German Speciality
Schiller in the Glass in Stuttgart, Germany
A Viertele is local dialect for a quarter and means a quarter of a liter of wine. This is the traditional quantity served in the Wuerttemberg area. I recently had a Viertele of Schillerwein at Weinhaus Stetter in Stuttgart in Wuerttemberg in Germany.
Schillerwein
Schillerwein is a very special wine, produced by blending red and white grapes before fermentation. Ideally, the Schiller is a field blend, i.e. red and white grapes are planted in mixed lots in the vineyards and are harvested and fermented together. I am not aware of any producer who makes his Schiller as a field blend, but in the old days it was the rule.
Pictures: Christian G.E. Schiller and Schillerwein
The name of the wine has nothing to do with the famous German poet Friedrich von Schiller (although he is from Württemberg). The wine got its name from the verb “schillern”. The verb "schillern" means "to scintillate". Schiller, or Schillerwein, is thus a wine with a scintillating color, reflecting the fact that the wine is a blend of red and white grapes.
Rosé and Schiller
There are basically two ways of producing wine that is in-between red and white wine and often called rosé wine. First, using red grapes, but limiting the skin contact of the juice during fermentation so that only a small part of the red color is extracted from the skin and the wine thus has a rosé color. Second, blending white and red grapes before fermentation or red and white wines after fermentation.
Most of the Rosés on the market these days are wines that are produced 100 percent out of red grapes. Blending finished white and red wines is outlawed in many countries. Interestingly, it is allowed for producing Rosé Champagne and other sparkling wine in France. Blending white and red grapes before fermentation to make rosé-type wines is a specialty in a number of countries, including Germany.
Stuttgart – a City of Wine
Stuttgart is a city of wine, although this is not very well known in the world. Most of the vines are planted along the Neckar, but grapes also grow in the center of the city. Stuttgart has a long viticulture tradition. In the 17th Century, the city was still the third largest viticultural community in the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. The city boasts five wine growing cooperatives and a number of private wine producers.
Pictures: Vineyards in Stuttgart
Wine Tavern Stetter
Located in the arty Bohnenviertel (Bean Quarter), “Weinhaus Stetter”, a typical wine tavern, is a local favorite. It has a long tradition. Ernst Stetter established the company with a cooperage and wine trading in 1902. In the following years he provided all restaurants in downtown Stuttgart with wine. After the Second World War the wines were delivered in bottles and not in barrels anymore.
Pictures: Weinhaus Stetter
Roman Stetter owned and managed the wine tavern with his wife Gertrud until 2008. Since 2009, Andreas Scherle is the new owner of the tavern. The Scherle family has been owning Hotel Woertz Zur Weinsteige, including the Restaurant Zur Weinsteige for many decades.
The kitchen offers traditional Swabian food. Popular are Spätzle, pasta-type noodles made from flour, eggs, water, and salt. Spätzle are either served as a main course with some sort of sauce or with cheese, or as an accompaniment to a main dish. Also popular are Maultaschen, similar to large ravioli, stuffed with pork, onions, spinach, eggs and spices. They are served fried with onions and egg or in a broth.
Pictures: Wine and "Spaetzle"
“Besenwirtschaft” - a Seasonal Wine Room
Alternatively, I could have gone to one of the many Besenwirtschaften. The history of the Swabian “Besen” starts in 812 with a decree of Karl the Great. This permitted the winegrowers to serve their wine in their own private households.
The tradition has continued to this day with wine sometimes being served in the winegrowers’ living rooms, sometimes in rebuilt stables or side rooms. The winegrowers place a broom ("Besen") in front of their doors as a sign that their homes are now open for visitors.
Under law, winegrowers may run a Besenwirtschaft without restaurant permission in their own home, however, not for longer than four months out of the year and not for more than two different periods of time.
If you are in other parts of Germany, you’ll see these establishments too. They will be called other names, such as “Strausswirtschaft”
Wine Region Wuerttemberg
Baden-Württemberg is one of the 16 German states that make up Germany. Baden-Wuerttemberg is one of the growth centers of Germany due to its booming export industries. Mercedes-Benz and Porsche are prime examples. Baden-Württemberg comprises two wine growing areas, Baden and Württemberg.
Wine from Württemberg is mainly red wine. The main production area is along the Neckar River between Stuttgart and Heilbronn. There are also vineyards on Lake Constance that belong to Württemberg.
Pictures: Hotel Woertz Zur Weinsteige
More wine is consumed here than anywhere else in Germany - actually twice as much as in the rest of Germany. The German poet Friedrich von Schiller wrote already several centuries ago: “A Württemberger without wine--is that a real Württemberger?”
The Trollinger is the most important variety, which, with its characteristic bright red color, is grown almost exclusively in Württemberg. There is also Lemberger, which is a better wine.
With 11,000 hectares under vine, Württemberg is Germany's fourth largest wine region. Winemaking cooperatives are very common in Württemberg, number around 70, and are responsible for almost 75% of the region's production.
Wines from Württemberg are hard to find in the US. This is partly explained by the production structure, which is dominated by co-operatives. These co-operatives are known for producing top class wines. But they tend to be less aggressive in terms of penetrating new markets.
schiller-wine: Related Postings
Wine basics: Field Blends
Woelffer Wines from Long Island, New York State
Schillerwein---a German Speciality
Schiller in the Glass in Stuttgart, Germany
Labels:
Germany,
Schillerwein,
Wuerttemberg
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Schiller in the Glass in Stuttgart, Germany
Pictures: Christian G.E. Schiller with a Schiller
My daughter Katharina is currently doing a Masters at the University Hohenheim in Stuttgart in the region of Württemberg in the south of Germany. There, you can find a wine that has the same name as my daughter and I have – Schiller. It is produced by blending red and white grapes before fermentation. Ideally, the Schiller is a field blend, i.e. red and white grapes are planted in mixed lots in the vineyards and are harvested and fermented together. I am not aware of any producer who makes his Schiller as a field blend, but in the old days it was the rule. And it was a very special field blend as it comprised red and white grapes.
The name of the wine has nothing to do with the famous German poet Friedrich von Schiller (although he is from Württemberg). The wine got its name from the verb “schillern”. The verb "schillern" means "to scintillate". Schiller, or Schillerwein, is thus a wine with a scintillating color, reflecting the fact that the wine is a blend of red and white grapes.
Rosé and Schiller
There are basically two ways of producing wine that is in-between red and white wine and often called rosé wine. First, using red grapes, but limiting the skin contact of the juice during fermentation so that only a small part of the red color is extracted from the skin and the wine thus has a rosé color. Second, blending white and red grapes before fermentation or red and white wines after fermentation.
Pictures: Schiller in a Wine Tavern in Stuttgart, Germany
Most of the Rosés on the market these days are wines that are produced 100 percent out of red grapes. Blending finished white and red wines is outlawed in many countries. Interestingly, it is allowed for producing Rosé Champagne and other sparkling wine in France. Blending white and red grapes before fermentation to make rosé-type wines is a specialty in a number of countries, including Germany.
Weinrallye #56 Gemischter Satz – Field Blend
This posting is being published as part of the Weinrallye, a monthly blog event in Germany. Participating wine bloggers - mainly in Germany - are all releasing postings today under the heading “Gemischter Satz – Field Blend”. Weinrallye is the brainchild of Thomas Lippert, a winemaker and wine blogger based in Heidelberg, Germany. The first wine rally took place in 2007. Thomas Lippert is the author of the wine blog Winzerblog. This month's wine rally is organized by the Baccantus Blog, which is run by Stefan Schwytz and Matthias Lubner.
Some people argue that Gemischter Satz is the true terroir wine. They say that winemakers can resort today to all sorts of tricks if the wine does not come out the way they want it. They can add acid if necessary, or tannins, or color, compensating in the wine cellar for what they did not get from nature in the vineyard. In the old days before the advanced techniques of today became available, they had to think ahead about what their vineyard would give them. One could say that in the way they planted the vineyard you could see their vision of what would make the most complete wine. Going back to Schiller, if they wanted to make a Rose-type wine, they had to plant red and white grapes.
In France, Jean-Michel Deiss from the Domaine Marcell Deiss is a well known proponent of this approach. Jean-Michel Deiss believes that the truest expression of Alsatian terroir comes from field blends. He has planted his best vineyards with numerous grapes, which he harvests and vinifies together. Jean-Michel Deiss treats them as a true field blend, and consequently harvests, vinifies and blends them together. Jean-Michel Deiss' approach is viewed by many as radical. He argues that his goal is a return to the methods, style, and traditions that gave Alsace wines such fame and fortune from the Middle Ages until the end of the 19th century.
Indeed, the Gemischter Satz practice was common throughout Central Europe in a time when most growers had very small vineyards. To reduce the risk of having no grapes - and no income - at all, they planted many varieties. It also was viewed as an approach that produces over the years a wine with consistent quality. To achieve this, they mixed varieties with a different ripening time and with different acidity levels, with a view of minimizing risk and ensuring a consistent quality of wine.
schiller-wine: Related Postings
Wine basics: Field Blends
With the WienWein Winemakers in Vienna in the Heurigen Drinking Gemischter Satz Wine
Woelffer Wines from Long Island, New York State
Schillerwein---a German Speciality
In the Glass: 2008 Gemischter Satz, Richard Zahel, Vienna, Austria
In the Glass: 2007 Edelzwicker
My daughter Katharina is currently doing a Masters at the University Hohenheim in Stuttgart in the region of Württemberg in the south of Germany. There, you can find a wine that has the same name as my daughter and I have – Schiller. It is produced by blending red and white grapes before fermentation. Ideally, the Schiller is a field blend, i.e. red and white grapes are planted in mixed lots in the vineyards and are harvested and fermented together. I am not aware of any producer who makes his Schiller as a field blend, but in the old days it was the rule. And it was a very special field blend as it comprised red and white grapes.
The name of the wine has nothing to do with the famous German poet Friedrich von Schiller (although he is from Württemberg). The wine got its name from the verb “schillern”. The verb "schillern" means "to scintillate". Schiller, or Schillerwein, is thus a wine with a scintillating color, reflecting the fact that the wine is a blend of red and white grapes.
Rosé and Schiller
There are basically two ways of producing wine that is in-between red and white wine and often called rosé wine. First, using red grapes, but limiting the skin contact of the juice during fermentation so that only a small part of the red color is extracted from the skin and the wine thus has a rosé color. Second, blending white and red grapes before fermentation or red and white wines after fermentation.
Pictures: Schiller in a Wine Tavern in Stuttgart, Germany
Most of the Rosés on the market these days are wines that are produced 100 percent out of red grapes. Blending finished white and red wines is outlawed in many countries. Interestingly, it is allowed for producing Rosé Champagne and other sparkling wine in France. Blending white and red grapes before fermentation to make rosé-type wines is a specialty in a number of countries, including Germany.
Weinrallye #56 Gemischter Satz – Field Blend
This posting is being published as part of the Weinrallye, a monthly blog event in Germany. Participating wine bloggers - mainly in Germany - are all releasing postings today under the heading “Gemischter Satz – Field Blend”. Weinrallye is the brainchild of Thomas Lippert, a winemaker and wine blogger based in Heidelberg, Germany. The first wine rally took place in 2007. Thomas Lippert is the author of the wine blog Winzerblog. This month's wine rally is organized by the Baccantus Blog, which is run by Stefan Schwytz and Matthias Lubner.
Some people argue that Gemischter Satz is the true terroir wine. They say that winemakers can resort today to all sorts of tricks if the wine does not come out the way they want it. They can add acid if necessary, or tannins, or color, compensating in the wine cellar for what they did not get from nature in the vineyard. In the old days before the advanced techniques of today became available, they had to think ahead about what their vineyard would give them. One could say that in the way they planted the vineyard you could see their vision of what would make the most complete wine. Going back to Schiller, if they wanted to make a Rose-type wine, they had to plant red and white grapes.
In France, Jean-Michel Deiss from the Domaine Marcell Deiss is a well known proponent of this approach. Jean-Michel Deiss believes that the truest expression of Alsatian terroir comes from field blends. He has planted his best vineyards with numerous grapes, which he harvests and vinifies together. Jean-Michel Deiss treats them as a true field blend, and consequently harvests, vinifies and blends them together. Jean-Michel Deiss' approach is viewed by many as radical. He argues that his goal is a return to the methods, style, and traditions that gave Alsace wines such fame and fortune from the Middle Ages until the end of the 19th century.
Indeed, the Gemischter Satz practice was common throughout Central Europe in a time when most growers had very small vineyards. To reduce the risk of having no grapes - and no income - at all, they planted many varieties. It also was viewed as an approach that produces over the years a wine with consistent quality. To achieve this, they mixed varieties with a different ripening time and with different acidity levels, with a view of minimizing risk and ensuring a consistent quality of wine.
schiller-wine: Related Postings
Wine basics: Field Blends
With the WienWein Winemakers in Vienna in the Heurigen Drinking Gemischter Satz Wine
Woelffer Wines from Long Island, New York State
Schillerwein---a German Speciality
In the Glass: 2008 Gemischter Satz, Richard Zahel, Vienna, Austria
In the Glass: 2007 Edelzwicker
Labels:
Germany,
Schillerwein,
weinrallye,
Wuerttemberg
Sunday, April 18, 2010
In the Glass: 2008 Gemischter Satz, Richard Zahel, Vienna, Austria
Picture: In Grinzigen beim Heurigen Gemischter Satz is a Field Blend Wine
This is an unusual wine, made in an age-old Austrian tradition. It is a Gemischter Satz, which is made from a blend of grapes that are grown together in the field, and then picked and fermented at the same time. Not too long ago, this age-old Austrian tradition was about to die, threatened by the mania for "single varietal" bottling. But luckily, the tradition was maintained, the grapes remained planted in mixed vineyards of Gruener Veltliner, Riesling, Muscat, Ottonel, and other grapes. Typically, Gemischter Satz wines do not specify the grapes within.
Field blends are different from more typical blended wines – cuvees - like Bordeaux, where the various grapes are grown separately and vinified separately. Many famous wines are blended wines. Red Bordeaux is generally made from a blend of grapes. As a very broad generalization, Cabernet Sauvignon dominates the blend in red wines produced in left bank of the Gironde estuary. Typical blends are 70% Cabernet Sauvignon, 15% Cabernet Franc and15% Merlot. Merlot dominate in Saint Emilion, Pomerol and the other right bank appellations. These blends are typically 70% Merlot, 15% Cabernet Franc & 15% Cabernet Sauvignon.
Another Cuvee is Edelzwicker, which I discussed in my “in the glass" column on my Blog on November 5, 2009. See below. In the past, blending was the norm in Alsace, and these blends were called "zwicker". Edelzwicker (noble-blend) is a "zwicker" made only from grapes considered to be noble.
The German Schiller used to be a Gemischter Satz Wine
Is Gemischter Satz Wine the True Terroir Wine?
Some people argue that Gemischter Satz is the true terroir wine. They say that winemakers can resort today to all sorts of tricks if the wine does not come out the way they want it. They can add acid if necessary, or tannins, or color, compensating in the wine cellar for what they did not get from nature in the vineyard. In the old days before the advanced techniques of today became available, they had to think ahead about what their vineyard give them. One could say that in the way they planted the vineyard you could see their vision of what would make the most complete wine.
In France, Jean-Michel Deiss from the Domaine Marcell Deiss is a well known proponent of this approach. Jean-Michel Deiss believes that the truest expression of Alsatian terroir comes from field blends. He has planted his best vineyards with numerous grapes, which he harvests and vinifies together. Jean-Michel Deiss treats them as a true field blend, and consequently harvests, vinifies and blends them together. Jean-Michel Deiss' approach is viewed by many as radical. He argues that his goal is a return to the methods, style, and traditions that gave Alsace wines such fame and fortune from the Middle Ages until the end of the 19th century.
Indeed, the Gemischter Satz practice was common throughout Central Europe in a time when most growers had very small vineyards. To reduce the risk of having no grapes - and no income - at all, they planted many varieties. It also was viewed as an approach that produces over the years a wine with consistent quality. To achieve this, they mixed varieties with a different ripening time and with different acidity levels, with a view of minimizing risk and ensuring a consistent quality of wine.
Gemischter Satz Wines in Austria
That any wine comes from Vienna seems absurd on the face of it. Great urban centers are not known for their vineyards, beyond a novelty acre here and there. But Vienna is different. Around 1,700 acres of vines are planted within the city limits. Of the great metropolises in wine-growing countries, Vienna alone has its own appellation. Viennese viticulture stretches back centuries if not millenniums to early Celtic and Roman settlements. Most of the production is destined for Vienna itself.
Tasting Notes
2008 Gemischter Satz, Richard Zahel, Vienna, Austria
12 % alcohol, Gruener Veltliner, Riesling and Chardonnay
Light yellow in the glass, notes of petrole and green unripe apple on the nose, very refreshing, sour, high in acidity without the sugar to neutralize it, comes across very watery when you first drink it, but develops nicely on the palate, good party wine.
Weingut Zahel, Austria
www.zahel.at
Schiller Wine - Related Postings
Austria's 17 Best Zweigelt Wines - The 2010 Wein.pur List
German Wine makers in the World: A. Schlumberger, Austria
Wine ratings: Austria's best red wines - 2010
Wine ratings: Austria - Falstaff Top Red Wines 2009/2010
Austria's 13 Top Zweigelt Wines - The 2009/2010 Falstaff Selection
In the Glass: 2007 Edelzwicker
Wine Basics: Field Blends
German Wine Basics: Schillerwein - A German Speciality
Labels:
Austria,
field blend,
Schillerwein
Monday, January 4, 2010
German American Wines: (1) Pacific Rim Dry Riesling, (2) Eroica, (3) Woelffer and his Schiller Wine

I was born and grew up in Germany. For the past 26 years, I have lived in the US, on and off, in the greater Washington DC area. Over this period, I have discovered wonderful American wines, both from the East and the West Coast. I have continued to drink German wines, although at times, I have been disappointed by what I found in the shelves of the American retailers. And I have discovered a number of German-American wines. These have taken different forms. I will discuss three forms. This is the first article in a series.
First, the most extreme, I believe, is blending of grapes grown in America with grapes grown in Germany. It seems unusual, but it happens.
The second form is a joint venture of an American and a German wine maker, using American grapes.
Third, there are a number of winemakers in the US who make their wine in the US with American grapes, but who have learned how to make wine in Germany. They came to the US some years ago, are settled in the US and produce American wines, but you can see the German roots in the wines.
For each of the three categories, I will discuss one wine or winemaker.
German American Blend: NV Pacific Rim Dry Riesling, Pacific Rim Winemakers
Pacific Rim Winemakers is a new undertaking of Randall Grahm who made a name for himself with the easy-drinking wines of the Santa Cruz-based company, Bonny Doon Vineyard. I find the wines of Pacific Rim Winemakers excellent. They only make Riesling.
Pacific Rim Winemakers also sells a NV Pacific Rim Dry Riesling. This wine is an intercontinental blend, made of wine from the US and Germany. 80 percent of the grapes come from the Columbia valley in Washington State and 20 percent from the Mosel valley in Germany, selected by the German wine maker Johannes Selbach. Because it is a true German/American product, the label cannot show the vintage but has to say NV.
I had a bottle of the wine recently with my daughter Dorothea and my son Benjamin in Concord, New Hampshire. We ate Maine Lobster and T-Bone Steak and had the wine with the Lobster. It worked very well with Lobster. It may also work with Asian food. There is a geisha on the label that underscored the wine’s affinity for Asian foods.
Our tasting notes: Light straw-color with a greenish glint of brass; attack of petrol and green apple on the nose; oily texture, legs; hint of tropical fruit and spices on the palate; mouth-filling, dry and acidic; lasting finish.
Here are notes of the winemaker: To make our Dry Riesling, we pick our grapes relatively early (21-22.5 Brix). The Riesling juice is fermented at cold temperatures for 30 days and then aged in stainless steel tanks. We leave our dry wines sur lie (which means that we keep the wine on the yeast lees to increase the mouthfeel of the wine) post fermentation for five months and we stir the lees once or twice a week. We use no oak and no malolactic on this wine — it's as pure and unmanipulated as it gets. For our Dry Riesling, we blend 20% of German Riesling wine — selected by Johannes Selbach in the Mosel region — to 80% of our Columbia Valley Riesling. The German Riesling lends great depth and acidity, as well as low alcohol.
Joint venture of an American and German winemaker: Eroica
The Eroica is a collaboration between Chateau Ste. Michelle, the huge Washington winemaker, and Dr. Ernst Loosen, the eminent Riesling producer from the Mosel region of Germany. The wine is made at Chateau Ste. Michelle from grapes grown in the Columbia Valley.

Picture: Ludwig van Beethoven
Eroica was launched in 1999. Named for Beethoven’s Third Symphony, Eroica is supposed to reflect not only its variety and site, but also its heritage: bold and forward from its Washington roots, elegant and refined from German inspiration.
Founded in 1934, Chateau Ste. Michelle pioneered European vinifera grape growing in Washington State and has been producing classic European varietal wines under the Ste. Michelle label since 1967. The Dr. Ernst Loosen Estate in the Mosel valley has produced fine Riesling for over two centuries. It is one of the top German wine estates.
They make three kinds of the Eroica. The regular, dry Eroica, an ice wine and a Single Berry Selection. The latter is made in the traditional German Trockenbeerenauslese (TBA) style, for which the Mosel valley is so famous, and is one of the few TBAs in North America. This wine is made in very limited quantities and has scored a 98 in the Wine Spectator.
German winemaking in America: Woelffer Estate and Schiller Wine
The Woelffer Estate is one of the top wine estates on Long Island, New York State. It would not be what it is today without the two Germans Christian Woelffer, its founder, and Roman Roth, its wine maker. I have written about them in my German Winemakers in the World series. Among their wines, I found the
Grandioso Rose 2008—39% Chardonnay, 32% Cabernet Franc, 29% Merlot
This is a “Schiller”. Winemaker Roman Roth knows how to make Schiller from back home in Germany. Schiller is made by blending red and white grapes before fermentation. It looks like a Rose, but it is not, at least not in the French tradition. You can find Schiller only in the region of Württemberg in the south of Germany. The wine got its name from the verb “schillern”. The verb “schillern” means “to scintillate”. “Schiller” is thus a wine with a scintillating color, reflecting the fact that the wine is a blend of red and white grapes. In the past, Schiller used to be a Gemischter Satz wine, but to my knowledge nobody does it any more. Today, Schiller is a blend, but not a field blend. See my posting of August 12, 2009
Picture: Christian G.E.Schiller at Woelffer Estate
The Grandioso is a blend, but not a field blend, shinny pale in color, the aroma is full with fresh lime, papaya, and some raspberry notes, the mouth-feel is crisp, elegant and austere, lip-smacking acidity and beautiful yeast notes ensure a vibrant finish.
This series of German American wines will continue.
Schiller Wine – Related Postings
Wine ratings: Two American/German wines - Eroica and Poet's Leap - on Top 100 wines list for Washington State 2009
German Wine Basics: Schillerwein – A German Speciality
Wine Tasting: Woelffer Wines from Long Island, New York State
Christian Woelffer and Roman Roth, USA
Labels:
German American Wine,
New York State,
Riesling,
Schillerwein,
US,
Washington State
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)



