1998 Dr. Burklin-Wolf Wachenheimer Rechbächel Riesling
Posted: 21:53 Sun 25 May 2014
Spätlese Trocken (not enough room to write this in the thread title).
A deep golden straw colour. The nose is very soft and quiet - a slight, very slight, grassy peachiness, with melon and a slightly bitter lychee note. In the mouth what we have is a very layered unfolding of flavours and notes. It begins with white grapes, which seems simple enough and seems to die away; there's a momentary threat that this will be very short and very uninteresting. But then a fresh, slightly bitter tone turns up on the top of the palate, the ghost of Riesling slatey minerality with a mango / lychee tone, followed by rounded melon fruitiness that arrives at the end and lingers in the finish, edged with minerality.
What a mouthful! Delicious. Thank you André.
I have once drunk an early 1970s Riesling that had really fallen apart - literally, dis-integrated - into radically disjointed component flavours, most of which were quite foul (perhaps because they were all so unexpected). This wine, a little 'separated' but still whole, helps me understand what had happened with that frail old bottle.
I didn't get any petrol notes though!
A deep golden straw colour. The nose is very soft and quiet - a slight, very slight, grassy peachiness, with melon and a slightly bitter lychee note. In the mouth what we have is a very layered unfolding of flavours and notes. It begins with white grapes, which seems simple enough and seems to die away; there's a momentary threat that this will be very short and very uninteresting. But then a fresh, slightly bitter tone turns up on the top of the palate, the ghost of Riesling slatey minerality with a mango / lychee tone, followed by rounded melon fruitiness that arrives at the end and lingers in the finish, edged with minerality.
What a mouthful! Delicious. Thank you André.
I have once drunk an early 1970s Riesling that had really fallen apart - literally, dis-integrated - into radically disjointed component flavours, most of which were quite foul (perhaps because they were all so unexpected). This wine, a little 'separated' but still whole, helps me understand what had happened with that frail old bottle.
I didn't get any petrol notes though!