Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Eberhard von Kunow, Senior Boss of the von Hövel Estate, Saar, Germany, Passes Away on October 12, 2025

(Picture: VDP) 

Eberhard von Kunow
, the senior boss of the Saar winery Hövel, passed away on October 12, 2025, at the age of 77. 

He led the winery from 1973 until 2010/2011, when he handed over the business to his son, Maximilian (Max) von Kunow, the seventh generation of the family to manage the estate. Eberhard von Kunow was a defining personality in Saar wine, known for his focus on high quality and dry wines, and was actively involved in the Association of German Prädikat Wine Estates (VDP), where he served on the board and as an auctioneer. (AI)
 

I have never met Eberhard von Kunow, but Annette and I have met his son, Maximilian von Kunow many times, but in Washington DC and at the estate in Germany. 

Weingut von Hoevel – The New Generation: Max von Kunow in Washington DC, USA/Germany (2014)
 
Picture: Christian G.E. Schiller and Max von Kunow, Weingut von Hoevel, Saar, at BToo in Washington DC

Winemaker Max von Kunow from the famous Weingut von Hoevel in the Saar Valley in Germany was in town (Washington DC). He came with Johannes Hasselbach, Weingut Gunderloch, Germany and Alwin Jurtschitsch, Weingut Jurtschitsch, Kamptal, Austria, to (1) present his Weingut and wines to a small group of sommeliers and wine writers over lunch and (2) to present with Johannes and Max their Wurzelwerk project. The lunch took place at BToo, the up and coming restaurant of Bart.

Picture: BToo in Washington DC

Both events were organized by Rudi Wiest Selections and Annette Schiller, ombiasy PR and WineTours. The upcoming Germany North Tour by ombiasy will include a visit ofMax von Kunow and Weingut von Hoevel. For more information, see:

3 Wine Tours by ombiasy Coming up in 2014: Germany-North, Germany-South and Bordeaux
ombiasy Public Relations

Picture: Annette Schiller, Ombiasy PR and WineTours, Max von Kunow and Johannes Hasselbach

This posting is the last posting in a mini-series covering Wurzelwerk and the 3 contributing wineries:

Special Wine Event on March 18, 2014, in Washington DC with "Wurzelwerk": 3 Terroirs, 3 Winemakers and 9 Wines
"Wurzelwerk" Goes America: 3 Vineyards, 3 Winemakers and 9 Wines
Weingut Gunderloch – The New Generation: Owner Johannes Hasselbach in Washington DC, US
The Wines of Stefanie and Alwin Jurtschitsch, Weingut Jurtschitsch, Kamptal, Austria
Weingut von Hoevel – The New Generation: Max von Kunow in Washington DC, US

Max von Kunow and Weingut von Hoevel

Rudi Wiest (US Importer of Weingut von Hoevel): Eberhard von Kunow was the proprietor of the von Hövel estate from 1973 until 2010 when his son Maximilian von Kunow (the 7th generation) took charge. Already in the first year, Max achieved great success in the Gault-Millau/German Wine Guide producing one of the top three Kabinetts (Oberemmeler Hütte) and the top Feinherb Riesling from the Scharzhofberg both from the 2010 vintage. He also started the estate on the road of organic production. While his father produced mostly fruity style wines, Max wants to produce more dry styled Rieslings. His 2011 Scharzhofberger Grosses Gewächs, (93 points), was one of the highest scored dry wines in the Wein-Plus, a German newsletter.

Pictures: Max von Kunow Explaining
 
Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut von Hövel, Saar, with Owner/ Winemaker Maximilian von Kunow - Germany-North Tour 2017 by ombiasy WineTours 
 
Picture: Cellar Tour and Tasting at Weingut von Hövel, Saar, with Owner/ Winemaker Maximilian von Kunow

Our last stop in the Mosel Region was at Weingut von Hövel in Oberemmel, Saar, Mosel. Owner and Winemaker Max von Kunow as our host. We toured the impressive cellar and sat down for a tasting with Max.

Weingut von Hövel is widely available through Schatzi Wines. The write-up below is essentially taken from the web site of Schatzi Wines.

Pictures: Welcome

Weingut von Hövel

Konz could be seen as a quaint, sleepy valley village in the Saar, surrounded by rolling vineyard hills, pastures and small houses with one modest church steeple–though it is anything but old-fashioned when Max von Kunow is around.  Since assuming the estate in 2010, Max has nearly doubled von Hövel’s vineyard holdings, converted the estate to organic practices (including an intensive compost program) and he is in the process of transforming not only the viticulture, but also the style of the wines.  Max’s father, Eberhard, preferred swift pressing of the grapes; Max is now working with some skin maceration, especially for the drier range, and a slower, gentler crush for the fruity range.  In fact, a dry range really did not exist at this estate until Max arrived because his father did not prefer them.  The wines destined to be fruity are less opulent than in vintages past; they are more crystalline and crunchy.  In keeping with the organics practiced in the vineyards and the longer hang time prior to harvest, Max encourages indigenous yeast fermentations for all of his wines.

That’s a lot of change for such an iconic Saar estate in a short period of time, but Max is like a Tasmanian devil, wanting everything to evolve as quickly as possible.  He seems up to the challenge!  “Saar wines could be the best riesling on planet earth,” Max will tell you directly without any hint of irony or sarcasm.  He is serious and he’s also a schatzi.

Pictures: Weingut von Hövel in Oberemmel, Mosel

History

The 21-hectare von Hövel estate operates out of a manor house that was completed in the 12th century, where it initially served as an abbey retreat for the famous wine monastery of St. Maximin in Trier. Located in Konz-Oberemmel in a side valley of the Saar, which is known as Konzer Tälchen (“little valley” of Konz), the old cellar is today as it was over 800 years ago. The winery was inducted into what is now the von Kunow family in 1806 when it was purchased by Emmerich Grach—son of a well-to-do chandler and the great-great grandfather to Max von Kunow—the estate’s current proprietor.

Grach was an assistant and deputy mayor of Trier, an influential businessman, and a well-known Weingutsbesitzer, or wine estate owner.  In 1803 he purchased Maximinerhof in Oberemmel and renamed it Weingut Grach, alongside several other well-known estates in the region after Napoleon secularized the vineyards of the Saar and Mosel from the churches and monasteries. Grach’s son Johann Georg became owner of Maximinerhofgut, which later went to his grandson-in-law Forstmeister Balduin von Hövel, a head forester from Prussia and good friend of Kaiser Wilhelm II.

Picture: Impressive Corkscrew Collection of Max von Kunow's Father, Eberhard von Kunow

Max von Kunow

Von Hövel’s great-grandson is Eberhard von Kunow, whose parents bought the estate in the 1950s, at which point the winery began operating under the von Hövel family name.  Eberhard von Kunow, Max’s father, owned and operated the von Hövel estate from 1973 until 2010 when Max (the 7th generation) took over the estate with an impressive debut vintage. While Eberhard produced fruity-styled Prädikat wines, Max slowly began to increase the dry range of riesling in hope to round out a classic Saar portfolio; he seeks to produce gastronomy-driven wines.

After finishing secondary school in 1997, Max took an apprenticeship with Kruger-Rumpf in the Nahe region where he decided to follow in his family’s footsteps and pursue a career in winemaking. The following year he worked for Lucashof in Forst (Pfalz), spent time working in Burgundy and returned to Germany where he interned at the Salway estate in Baden; Max completed four apprenticeships before beginning his winemaking studies in 2002. For two years he studied oenology in Veitschöchheim and afterward went on to pursue an International Wine Business degree at Geisenheim. During his time at Geisenheim, Max worked for his family’s estate as well as for Karthäuserhof and Fürst Löwenstein.  He graduated from Geisenheim in 2007 where he worked as an export manager for the Wirsching estate in Iphofen (Franken) and in 2008, moved to Luxembourg where he consulted for 34 private winemakers.  He returned to the family estate in 2010, when his father suffered an unfortunate stroke, jumped right in and as it turned out, achieved great success with his inaugural vintage; he was recognized by Gault-Millau as producing one of the top three Kabinetts (Oberemmeler Hütte) and the top Feinherb Riesling from the Scharzhofberg, both from the 2010 vintage. He took ownership of the estate the following year and has since nearly doubled their holdings.

Pictures: Max von Kunow, Weingut von Hövel, Owner and Winemaker

Vineyards

The wines of Weingut von Hövel say “Mosel” on their labels. Yet, the Weingut von Hövel wines do not come from the Mosel Valley, but from the Saar Valley. Before 2007, the region was called Mosel-Saar-Ruwer, but changed to a name - Mosel - considered more consumer-friendly. The Mosel wine region is Germany's third largest in terms of production but is the leading region in terms of international prestige. The area is known for the steep slopes of the region's vineyards overlooking the river.

Weingut Von Hövel has ownership in the following vineyards; all planted 100% to Riesling:

Oberemmeler Hütte – (5.8 hectare) a monopole of the estate – very light soil, weathered slate, it produces some of the most delicate, subtle, yet steely Rieslings in Germany.

Scharzhofberg – (2.8 hextare) deeper, heavier soil, strong weathered grey slate with high proportion of rocks and gravel (70%), it produces more masculine wines.

Oberemmeler Rosenberg – the estate owns over 2 hectares of the “filet” piece also known as the Rosenkamm, which has many old vine scattered throughout.

Kanzemer Hörecker – (0.6 hectare) monopole – one of the smallest yet greatest vineyards in the Saar, grey green slate with a proportion clay and red soil.

The estate also owns small portions of the heavy soiled Oberemmeler Karlsberg.

Pictures: Vineyard Visit with Max von Kunow

Winemaking

Farming organically was a necessary transition for Max and he has taken it seriously. In addition to completely eliminating the use of herbicides, he propagates regional plants and herbs, prepares his own compost and spreads local straw, marc and raw fertilizer throughout his vineyards. As is the goal of most mindful growers, Max lets the grapes hang as long as possible to ensure they reach—and in some cases exceed—physiological ripeness, or as Max refers to it, “mineral ripeness”; the Saar is the coolest and most windy region in Germany and often requires a longer hang-time than in warmer regions of the world.  He avoids botrytis for the dry range but sometimes includes it for the Prädikat bottlings.

Pictures: Visit of the 800 Years Old Cellar of Weingut von Hövel with Max von Kunow, Owner and Winemaker

When the grapes enter the cellar, Max separates the fruit that he feels is destined for skin maceration (anywhere between 18-36 hours) from the rest in which undergoes gentle crushing before entering the press. Wines are fermented in either stainless steel tanks or neutral wooden 1000 liter Mosel fuder casks. All of the wines ferment spontaneously.

Pictures: Tasting Weingut von Hövel Wines with Max von Kunow, Owner and Winemaker

Tasting


2016 Weingut von Hövel Saar Riesling tocken
2016 Weingut von Hövel Saar Riesling


2016 Weingut von Hövel Saar Riesling Kabinett
2016 Weingut von Hövel Monopollage Hütte Riesling Kabinett
2016 Weingut von Hövel Scharzhofberger Riesling Kabinett


NV Weingut von Hövel Crémant


Bye-bye

Thanks Max for a great tour and tasting at Weingut von Hövel.

Picture: Bye-bye
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