BACK.
After a 2-year interruption, Annette Schiller and Christian Schiller, with Ombiasy Public Relations and Wine Tours, invited again for their traditional August Riesling Party. This is a casual wine tasting and socializing
event taking place inside well as outside on our decks. Each guest has
to bring a bottle of Riesling/ German wine. Annette prepares typical
German food to enjoy with the wines.
Pictures: Annual Riesling Party at the Schiller Residence in Washington DC, USA (2019)
Riesling
Worldwide, there are about 34.000 hectares planted with Riesling.
Germany – with 22.400 hectares – accounts for 2/3 of the total. The
second largest Riesling producer is Australia, with 4500 hectares. But
this is only about 1/10 of the total. Alsace follows with 3500
hectares. Austria, the US with Washington State and New York State as
well as New Zealand make up the remainder. But overall, Riesling is
really a niche wine, accounting for only less than 1 percent of total
wine production in the world - but a very special niche wine.
Dry and Sweet Riesling
Many wine drinkers, in particular outside of Europe, when they see a
Riesling in the shelves, have the association of a sweet-style wine.
This is however misguided. Rieslings as a rule are dry wines. Of
course, there are the famous sugar sweet Beerenauslese,
Trockenbeerenauslese, Eiswein and Schilfwein wines from Austria and
Germany, the Sélection de Grains Nobles from France, the icewines from
Canada and other Rieslings, made from botrytized, dried or frozen
grapes.
The grapes that go into these wines have such a high sugar content that
there is nothing you can do to make dry wines out of these grapes.
They inevitably produce nobly sweet wines. But apart from these
specialty wine, which account for only a tiny share of total
production, Riesling grapes in Germany, Austria, Alsace, the US and
Australia have normal sugar content at the time of fermentation and
tend to produce dry wines, when fully fermented.
However, modern cellar methods allow winemakers in Germany (and
elsewhere) to produce wines with a bit of residual sugar with these
grapes. These are exceptional wines, essentially made by not letting
the fermentation going its full course so that natural sugar remains
in the wine. Alternatively, German winemakers are allowed to add
sweet-reserve (sterilized grape juice) to increase the sweetness level
in the wine, but today, this is mostly done, if at all, for fine
tuning the residual sweetness. These fruity-sweet wines are the wines
that are so popular among the fans of German wine in the world. These
sweet-style wines have lost popularity in Germany, although there
appears to be a comeback, but in any case remain very popular outside
of Germany, for example in the US.
Schiller's Riesling Party 2022
80 Bottles of Wine
This year, 80 Riesling/ German wine lovers followed the call and showed
up with a bottle of wine, mostly, but not exclusively, Riesling, ranging from the popular entry level Loosen Brothers Dr. L to a number of quite spectacular wines, including a 50 years old Dom Perignon Champagne, which Donna Christenson brought. The center of the party was our lower deck,
where I arranged the wines according to their sweetness level.
The
most popular category were German Kabinett level wines from the Mosel,
including from Weingut JJ Prüm, Weingut Dr. Loosen, Weingut, Weingut Forstmeister-Geltz Zilliken, Weingut Maximin Grünhaus - Weingut der Familie von Schubert and Weingut Willi Haag.
Interestingly, not a single guest brought a GG (Grosses Gewächs), the new ultra-premium dry wine category in Germany.
While
there were about 50% dry and 50% sweeter-style wines, most of the dry
wines were accounted for by Alsace, Austria and the Finger Lakes region,
while all sweet-style wines were accounted for by Germany. This is in
stark contrast to what you would experience for example in a restaurant
in Frankfurt, where the list for German wines, except for noble-sweet
wines, is essentially accounted for by dry wines.
The most exotic wine was a Riesling from Moldova.
At the noble-sweet level, we had an Eiswein, a Beerenauslese and a Trockenbeerenauslese.
Finger Lakes
Austria
Alsace
Washington State - Moldova - Canada
Non-Riesling
Germany: Entry-level
Germany: Entry-level
Gutswein Trocken
Kabinett
Spätlese + Auslese
Noble-sweet German: Beerenauslese, Trockenbeerenauslese and Eiswein
The Food
The food was served in our dining room.
The main dish was a home-made (by Annette) German Potato Salad with Frankfurter Sausage. In addition, there was:
French Brie Cheese, Italian Salami and German Bread
Raw vegetables with Middle Eastern Hummus and Greek Tzatziki
Italian Mozarella and Tomato Salad
Grapes and Dutch Cookies
Invitation
Dear wine friends,
Annette & Christian
Previous Riesling Parties at the Schiller Residence in McLean, Virginia
This was our seventh annual Riesling Party in McLean, Virginia:
Annual Riesling Party at the Schiller Residence in Washington DC, USA (2019)
Annual Riesling Party at the Schiller Residence in Washington DC, USA (2017)
Annette and Christian Schiller’s Summer of Riesling 2016 in McLean, Virginia,
with German Star Winemaker Christian L. Stahl, German Wine
Journalist Joachim A.J. Kaiser and Virginia Star Winemaker Chris
Pearmund
Annual Riesling Party at the Schiller Residence in Washington DC, USA (2015)
Riesling Summer at the Schiller Residence in Washington DC, USA (2014)
Summer of Riesling with Annette and Christian Schiller in Washington DC, USA (2013)
2021
No Riesling Party (Covid)
2020
No Riesling Party (Covid)
2019
2018
No Annual Riesling Party
2017
2016
Pictures: German Star Winemaker Christian L. Stahl, German Wine Journalist Joachim A.J. Kaiser and Virginia Star Winemaker Chris Pearmund
2015
Pictures: Denman Zirkle, Owner of Weingut Richard Böcking, Mosel and Annette Schiller
2014
Picture: Annette Schiller, German Wine Princess Sabine Wagner and Christian Schiller
2013
Pictures: Annette Schiller and Austrian Wine Importer Klaus Wittauer, with his Rieslings from Weingut Anton Bauer and Weingut Tegernseehof.
schiller-wine: Related Postings
Announcement: Ombiasy WineTours in 2022 Summer and Fall
Announcement: 3 Ombiasy Wine Tours in 2022 - Rhône Valley Tour: June 20 - June 29, Germany South - Alsace: July 01 - July 10, Bordeaux: September 20 - September 29
Upcoming: Total Immersion in Bordeaux: World Class Wines and Exquisite French Gourmet Cuisine - Bordeaux Tour 2022 by ombiasy WineTours, France - One Room Available (Single/ Double)
One Room Available - Forthcoming Germany-South and Alsace Tour by ombiasy WineTours, July 01 - July 10, 2022
One Room Available - Rhône Valley Tour 2022 by ombiasy WineTours: Wine, Culture and History, France, June 20 - June 29, 2022
Christian Schiller`s SCHILLER-WINE Blog on Corking Wines` Top 101 Wine Writers of 2020 List
German Wine Society Capital Chapter Membership Meeting 2022: Carl Willner Re-elected
President and Christian Schiller Re-elected Vice-president, USA/ Germany
Washington DC Downtown, USA/ Germany
Christian Stahl, Winzerhof Stahl, Franken, Germany back in the USA - Winemaker Dinner at the Schiller Residence in McLean, Northern Virginia
The Wines of Germany: Presentation by Annette Schiller at the German Embassy in Washington DC/ Consular Conference December 2021
All Sorts of Sparklers: How do the Bubbles get into that Bottle - Presentation by Annette Schiller, ombiasy WineTours, at the 2021 American Wine Society National Conference in Atlantic City
No comments:
Post a Comment