I have just noticed that the FT editorial staff have decided to
put the heading 'Germany's best vintage yet?' on their, slightly
shorter, version of this article. I would like to make it plain to
anyone who might conceivably care, that I would not have chosen this
headline myself.
Germany’s
2003 wines may be too much of a good thing for purists but they may
well make new converts to the particularly distinctive style of German
wine. A typical young, top quality German Riesling from a classic
vintage is searingly high in acidity, sometimes rather astringent and
often strongly marked by the smell of sulfur, which ambitious German
producers still add routinely in much higher quantities than elsewhere
to preserve the sweeter wines for the long life that is expected of
them. Put like that, it is difficult to see why anyone buys them at
all. The answer lies in what happens in the bottle over the next 10, 20
or more years. Last week I enjoyed a 1911 Erbacher Markobrunn Riesling
Trockenbeerenauslese which was still miraculously vigorous, if not
nearly as sweet as when it was bottled. And at a less rarefied level,
the 1993s that I bought in 1994 for well under £100 a dozen are
drinking beautifully now.
To
those who have long enjoyed Germany’s unique combination of bottle-aged
refreshing fruit, mineral extract and low-alcohol elegance, the 2003s
may seem just a bit too much – more a punch in the nose with
already-opulent fruit than the usual sophisticated whisper of things to
come. But I think that many newcomers to German wine will love the
directness of the 2003s and will be worried not the slightest whether
the wines will last 30 years or not.
Vintage
2003, made from grapes grown in record temperatures, is exceptional
everywhere in Europe but nowhere more so than in Germany (and England
of course) where grapes usually struggle to ripen. Last summer the
season got off to an early start even before the heat arrived. Riesling
vines budded in mid April, almost two weeks earlier than in 2002 in the
Mosel-Saar-Ruwer, and flowering was even further ahead. In the
Rheingau, grapes benefited from 350 more hours of sunshine than average
and day and night temperatures topped 40 and 27 degrees Centigrade
respectively. On well-run estates virtually all grapes reached at least
Spätlese levels of ripeness, and the harvest generally began earlier
than in any previous known year.
The
great fear among growers was that their grapes, uncommonly yellow in
early September rather than the relatively hard, green berries often
seen at this time, might develop overripe flavours and that acidity
could be dangerously low. Certainly by analysis total acid levels are a
point or two lower than usual. In 2001 and 2002 at Dr Loosen in
Bernkastel for example, total acidities averaged between 8 and 9.5 g/l
whereas in 2003 they were rarely much more than 7. But while up to half
of the acidity in the two earlier years was malic, by far the dominant
acid in 2003 throughout Germany was the fresher-tasting tartaric. This
has given growers the confidence to believe in the longevity of their
2003s.
“At
first we thought that 2003 was too dry and ripe for Riesling,” said the
gifted Helmut Dönnhoff of the Nahe, who made only one wine at basic
Kabinett level in 2003, “but after the first tasting of the wines we
immediately saw the balance. The acidity is very pure and pronounced.
Normally we lose about a gram of acidity during fermentation but not in
2003. This is definitely my best vintage yet, better even than 1971,
but it needed more work than any other, especially in the vineyard,
because it was complicated by extremes. It was as though I were
suddenly given a Ferrari but there was no-one to tell me how to drive
it. It was possible to make far more mistakes in 2003 than usual.”
In
the Saar valley in the far north Egon Müller, always one of the more
sphinx-like producers, claimed on the other hand that 2003 was one of
his easiest vintages. There was no need for lots of spraying against
vine disease and each vineyard matured in convenient succession. The
Saar certainly seems to have benefited from wonderfully crisp acids in
many of the wines.
“I asked Manfred Prüm about 1959,” Ernie Loosen told me about one of the 20th
century’s most famous wine producers and vintages, “and he said 2003
was the closest he has ever seen. So maybe we shouldn’t worry too much
about the analyses. And probably the 2003s won’t go into their shell as
much as the 2001s and 2002s.”
To
judge from the Rieslings from the better producers in northern Germany,
acidities seem generally to be refreshing enough – although some of the
other grape varieties, particularly the Pinots, grown further south in
Pfalz and Baden lost so much natural acidity while ripening than many
producers were panicked, most unusually, into adding acidity, as is
regularly done in warmer New World wine regions, with unhappy results
in some cases. Some growers, particularly those whose vine leaves had
already turned yellow, rushed into picking in early September (a month
earlier than usual) and the result, as in Bordeaux, was that there was
acid and sugar but a shortage of ripe fruit flavour in the middle. All
in all there are strong similarities between Bordeaux’s and Germany’s
2003s with some very good wines made and some very unbalanced ones.
The
best wines, which tend to have riper flavours than usual – more yellow
peach than white peach or green apple with the odd note of a tropical
fruit such as mango or passion fruit – were picked in very late
September or October, having had the chance to build up real flavours
in September when nights were cooler but there was no dangerous
rainfall.
At
least the dry summer delivered very healthy grapes – so dry were
conditions in fact that in many areas there was very little botrytis,
the ‘noble rot’ fungus responsible for great,
long-lived sweet wines. Although some producers added some botrytised
grapes picked as late as January 2004, the sweeter wines were often
made from raisined rather than nobly rotten grapes. Josef Leitz of
Rüdesheim in the Rheingau managed to make no fewer than five
Trockenbeerenauslesen picked between 240 and 280 degrees Oechslé. They
were still slowly fermenting in glass carboys in his tasting room,
central heating on to encourage the yeasts despite the heat of the
summer, last month.
High
alcohol levels can be a menace however, particularly in the dry styles
which are now so fashionable in Germany and increasingly tolerated
elsewhere. Record ripeness levels in grapes were fermented out to dry
wines with 15 and sometimes 16 per cent alcohol by some producers –
something very, very unGermanic. This is a vintage in which drier
styles should be bought with extreme caution; many an example has an
uncomfortably ‘hot’ finish and none of Riesling’s trademark delicacy.
At Schloss Reinhartshausen in the Rheingau for example, the oldest
vines with the most complex, best balanced fruit were devoted
exclusively to dry wine production – notably for the expensive new
Erste Gewächs category (still selling quite slowly in Germany, I hear).
Yields
tended to be a bit lower than usual because of the drier weather.
Gunderloch harvested an average of 44 hl/ha rather than 50 but the
Hasselbachs were so proud of how much greener their plots on the
Rothenburg slope above the Rhine were than their neighbours that they
published photographs of them. They were not the only growers to credit
a covering of hummus on the soil to retain moisture with the quality of
their 2003s.
So
now Germany can lay claim to three exceptional vintages in a row but,
as Walter Bibo of Schloss Reinhartshausen commented last week, “if 2004
were to be another vintage like 2003 it would be a disaster. There is
no demand for this much alcohol.”
My top 20 producers of 2003s
As usual, J J Prüm has not yet released 2003s.
Dönnhoff, Nahe (dry and sweeter wines)
Leitz, Rheingau (dry and sweeter wines)
Dr Loosen, Mosel (sweeter wines)
Egon Müller, Saar (sweeter wines)
Geltz-Zilliken, Saar (sweeter wines)
Müller Catoir, Pfalz (sweeter wines)
Gunderloch, Rheinhessen (sweet wines)
Wittmann, Rheinhessen (sweet wines)
Schloss Saarstein, Saar (sweeter wines)
Robert Weil, Rheingau (sweeter wines)
Fritz Haag, Mosel (sweeter wines)
Schloss Lieser, Mosel (sweeter wines)
Reinhold Haardt, Mosel (sweeter wines)
St Urbans-Hof, Mosel and Saar (sweeter wines)
von Kesselstatt, Mosel and Saar (sweeter wines)
Heymann Löwenstein, Mosel (sweeter wines)
Milz-Laurentiushof, Mosel (sweeter wines)
Max Ferd Richter, Mosel (sweeter wines)
Schlossgut Diel, Nahe (sweeter wines)
Dr Crusius, Nahe (dry and sweeter wines)
See tasting notes on purple pages for detailed tasting notes and scores on hundreds of 2003 Germans.