Weingut Wechsler, “Westhofen” Riesling Trocken
Weingut Wechsler, “Westhofen” Riesling Trocken

Weingut Wechsler, “Westhofen” Riesling Trocken

Rheinhessen, Germany 2020 (750mL)
Regular price$39.00
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Weingut Wechsler, “Westhofen” Riesling Trocken

Katharina Wechsler’s attractively priced “Ortswein” (“village wine”) is so named for her home village of Westhofen, and it comes with an impressive pedigree: Fruit is sourced from Wechsler’s three most prized parcels: the famed “Kirschpiel” Grand Cru (a limestone-rich site made famous by Wechsler’s neighbor and mentor, Klaus-Peter Keller); “Morstein” (also a Grosses Gewächs”) and the family’s monopole site wedged between those two, “Benn.”


This is a chalky, mineral-driven powerhouse with a real sense of place, completely transcending its modest price tag. Wechsler’s painstaking biodynamic farming is evident in a wine of breathtaking purity and depth. This is a truly gastronomic wine that should be on the table with main-course dishes—no apéritif, this!

Weingut Wechsler, “Westhofen” Riesling Trocken
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Germany

Western Germany

Pfalz

The Pfalz is Germany’s second-largest wine region (behind Rheinhessen, which it borders to the south). The vineyards are situated between the thickly forested Haardt Mountains and the western bank of the Rhine River, with soils that are rich in loam mixed with sandstone, loess (wind-blown silt), and chalky clay.

Western Germany

Rheinhessen

he Rheinhessen is Germany’s largest-production wine zone and, in comparison to some of the dramatic valleys further north, is a more open landscape of gently rolling hills.

Western Germany

Saar

The Saar River is a tributary of the Mosel (and in-cluded in the broader “Mosel-Saar-Ruwer”) PDO designation with vineyards perched on steep slopes of blue Devonian slate. The rocky soils and cool temperatures of these northerly valleys produce Germany’s most chiseled, high-acid  styles of Riesling.

Southwestern Germany

Baden

Baden, Germany’s southernmost wine region, has a long history with the “Pinot” family. The region’s vineyards were planted by the same Cistercian Monks who established Pinot Noir in Burgundy. Bordered by the Rhine River and the Black Forest, Baden has diverse soils—everything from loess (silt) to volcanic tuff to limestone, the most prized Pinot Noir soil of all.

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