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Christoph Edelbauer, Grüner Veltliner

Kamptal, Austria 2019 (750mL)
Regular price$28.00
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Christoph Edelbauer, Grüner Veltliner

Everything Christoph touches turns to gold. His micro-production estate is bottling some of the most thought-provoking wines in Austria. If you gravitate to the finest Cru Chablis or Dry Vouvray, then this needs to be in your fridge ready-to-go! The wine has classic straw-yellow at its core with silver-green reflections on the rim. After you’ve opened the bottle (decanting is not necessary), you may notice a touch of spritz from a little trapped CO2, but not to worry, it dissipates quickly as all the textbook Grüner Veltliner aromas begin wafting from the glass: green apple, lime blossom, white pepper, green herbs, wet stones, and white flowers. Its hards to resist the freshness and racy persistence.  

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Austria

Northeastern Austria

Weinviertel

Considered by most to be the oldest growing zone in Austria, Weinviertel is also, geographically, the largest in the country and covers the vast, northeastern expanse of Lower Austria, stretching from the western border of Slovakia, following the Danube inland and veering up to the southern border of Czechia. Its name, which translates to “wine quarter,” reflects the region’s rich, ancient wine heritage and, according to the Weinviertel DAC website, there are “7,000 years of artifacts to prove it.”

Northeastern Austria

Wachau

Austria’s Wachau appellation is the country’s most acclaimed region. About an hour northwest of Vienna along the Danube River, the vista of the steep, terraced vineyards of the Wachau creates a magnificent landscape akin to a verdant, ancient amphitheater—it is a UNESCO World Heritage site, after all. With rich and unique soils here of löess and gneiss, which lend vivid minerality to the wine.

Eastern Austria

Burgenland

The Burgenland appellation, running along Austria’s border with Hungary southeast of Vienna, has a diverse topography and a mix of soils, with more primary rock and slate at higher locations and dense loams in the rolling hills that extend toward the Pannonian plain.

Southeastern Austria

Steiermark

The region of Styria (Steiermark) is in southeastern Austria which sits near the border with Slovenia. This area is studded with long-extinct volcanoes whose deposits are a key component of the local soils and the vineyards benefit from a classic Austrian push-pull of cool Alpine air and warmer “Pannonian” currents from the east.

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