Kunstler Riesling Dry Gg Rudesheimer Berg Schlossberg 2020 750 ML
SKU: SGPF552946
Product Details
Brand: | Kunstler |
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Country: | Germany |
Region: | Rheingau |
Appellation: | Rudesheimer |
Grapes Varietal: | Riesling |
Wine Type: | Still |
Wine Style: | White |
Vintage: | 2020 |
Size: | 750 ML |
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Opens with a clear, precise and purely stony bouquet with iodine aromas intertwined with intense, ripe, bright Riesling fruit and fine flinty notes. On the palate, this is a supple, rich and somewhat lactic Berg Schlossberg with a creamy texture structured by crystalline, uplifting acidity. The finish is intense, lush and round but dry.\n \n Producer Information\n Gunter Künstler comes to us from the famous village of Hochheim am Main; in 17th century Britain the term ‘Hock’ was used to describe all Rhinegau wines. At that time, these wines were much more famous than Mosel wines and were more expensive than some of the finest Bordeaux. Thomas Jefferson visited the region in 1788 and described Rheingau Riesling as “small and delicate Rhysslin which grows only from Hochheim to Rudesheimâ€. He was so impressed with the quality that he found here, he took 100 cuttings of Rheingau Riesling back to Monticello. Hochheim was quite famous long before this and the region was known for producing quality wines in the Shakespearean era. Both ‘Hock’ and ‘Rhenish’ can be found in Shakespearean texts. Hochheim am Main is on the banks of the Main river, which flows west from Frankfurt, meeting the Rhein at Mainz, on the other side of the river from Hochheim. Essentially the vineyards in this village are at the cross of these two rivers, which certainly influences the wines produced here. Weingut Künstler has a history dating back to 1648. Until the end of World War II, the family grew grapes on their estate 80 km north of Vienna, in Untertannowitz in the South Moravian Region in the Czech Republic. After expropriation and expulsion, Franz Künstler was forced to leave the homeland of his family and in 1965 he re-established the Weingut Künstler in Hochheim Main/Rheingau. In 1992 his son Gunter took over the estate, and in 1994 the estate was admitted to the VDP. Generally soils here are loess, clay, sand, loam, marl and limestone. The greatest sites in the village are Domdechaney (pronounced Dom-Dey-Sha-Nay), Kirchenstück and Hölle while you could consider Herrnberg and Stielweg 1er Crus.