The Jancis Robinson Story | Mission Blind Tasting | wine writing competition | 🎁 20% off annual memberships

Competition – Jeff Vogel

• 3 min read
Image

An (unedited) entry in our seminal wine competition

My name is Jeff Vogel. I’ve served on active duty in the United States Air Force since 1999—an unremarkable vintage in most cases, but meaningful to me regardless. My career as an air traffic controller has taken me many places, but none as fine and memorable as Germany. I’d spent a number of years there in my youth. My father, the venerable Patrick “Herr” Vogel (photographed here with me), was an early doyen in the world of popcorn, a noble endeavor indeed. You see, in the early 80’s, movie-goers in European markets demanded the same banal culinary diversions as Hollywood folk, and so the demand for popcorn grew. (Rather immensely, if my five-year old memory serves me correctly.)

With his German fluency well affirmed—thank you, Rotary International—my father took a senior sales position in Bad Homburg and planted us firmly there until my own dual fluency had flourished. I doubt that was the point, but it was certainly the payoff. I wish I could remember more of that experience. The pictures are astounding; the stories, too. Castles, beer, sausages, questionable characters with more cigarettes than teeth, and vineyards aplenty. But alas, these are largely unwritten pages in my nascent youth.

Fast-forward about seventeen years, and I’m back in Germany. The odds were resolutely against this based on my junior rank and experience, and no one got a direct assignment like this. One had to endure Korea first, or brave some frozen redoubt in Greenland. And yet I felt my feet firmly planted on hot asphalt in some idyllic and unpronounceable German village. It is at this point I wish to stress the word “hot”. Of all the summers—of all the years!—we could have moved to any patch of earth, we were blessed with the summer of 2003 in Germany. It seemed as if the air were on fire. Not embers and ashes; not a parlor fire; but a veritable inferno. We could not escape it.

My very Nebraskan wife—a wellspring of useful, practical insights—was quick to note the absence of air conditioning in our third-floor apartment. I failed to recognize the import of this in May of 2003; my deep failure was apparent in June. I imagined a beer—any beer—that could sate my insatiable thirst. After all, I was a self-proclaimed “beer guy”. But an unfiltered wheat beer, heavy and clove-ridden, was hardly the swift and bracing tonic I needed. Bitburg, based on earlier encounters, was a winter beer: a mouthful of wet, prickly hay, snake oil, and last year’s lawn clippings. There were a few lagers that seemed to fit the bill, but I wouldn’t make it one meter out the front door of the Getränkemarkt with a rack of twenty bottles. Not in that heat.

I needed wine, I recall. Something refreshing at least, with a modicum of alcohol to distract us from the bonfire we lived in. If it proved to be lip-smacking and memorable, then at least we’d have prescriptive measures for the next conflagration. I asked the Getränkemarkt’s store-worker for his recommendation, (auf Deutsch, of course), but he seemed as familiar with his wine selection as I was. Nevertheless, he seemed to hold Riesling in high regard, and so I grabbed the only one cold enough to pay for, a 2001 Riesling Kabinett Trocken from the Lucashof winery in Forst. The vineyard, according to my now-hilarious tasting notes, was the Forster Stift (or, “monastery”, for those as curious as I).

It was—and still is—a wine I’ll always return to in reverence. Neither famous nor unique in any way, it was still as mythical to me as Zeus. Few are the wines today that could match the irony of a 5 Euro, 2001 Forster Stift: weightless density, profound grace, and nail-biting nuance. After years and years spent unraveling the mysteries of wine, I can still feel the virgin rapture of Riesling. The first sip, the first tingling on the sides of my tongue, the first unshakeable urge to draw a wine in words, the first glass gone, the second one promptly thereafter. We could not feel the heat anymore that year, although I think we chose to think of other things beside it. After all, there was this limpid yellow-white nectar in our glasses, and it tasted like a river flowing in the Garden of Eden.

Wählen Sie Ihre Mitgliedschaft
25th

For the dad who loves wine

Start your membership this Father’s Day with 20% off a full year. Expert reviews, honest writing, no guesswork. Or, gift a membership and save 20%.

Enter code DAD20 at checkout. Offer ends 22 June.

Mitglied
$135
/Jahr
Über 15 % jährlich sparen
Ideal für Weinliebhaber
  • Zugang zu 295,436 Weinbewertungen und 16,098 Artikeln
  • Zugang zu The Oxford Companion to Wine und The World Atlas of Wine
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
Inner Circle
$249
/Jahr
 
Ideal für Sammler

Everything in “Member”, plus:

  • Early access to the latest wine reviews, 48 hours in advance
  • Early access to the latest articles, 48 hours in advance
Professional
$299
/Jahr
Für Weinprofis (Einzelnutzer)
  • Zugang zu 295,436 Weinbewertungen und 16,098 Artikeln
  • Zugang zu The Oxford Companion to Wine und The World Atlas of Wine
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
  • Frühzeitiger Zugang zu den neuesten Weinbewertungen und Artikeln, 48 Stunden im Voraus
  • Gewerbliche Nutzung von bis zu 25 Weinbewertungen und -punkten für Marketingzwecke
Gewerblich
$399
/Jahr
Für Unternehmen in der Weinbranche

Everything in “Professional”, plus:

  • Gewerbliche Nutzung von bis zu 250 Weinbewertungen und -punkten für Marketingzwecke
  • Access to submit wines for review
  • Offer memberships to your employees and manage them from a single place
  • API access available for an additional fee
Bezahlen Sie mit
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
Abonnieren Sie unseren Newsletter

Erhalten Sie die neuesten Beiträge von Jancis und ihrem Team führender Weinexperten.

Mit dem Abonnement erklären Sie sich mit unserer Datenschutzerklärung einverstanden und stimmen zu, Updates von unserem Unternehmen zu erhalten.

More Gratis für alle

WWC26 announcement graphic
Gratis für alle 18 June 2026 Prizes announced! Académie du Vin Library, the sponsor of the 2026 wine writing competition, has just announced...
Institute of Masters of Wine logo
Gratis für alle Here are the questions posed to those striving for those coveted two letters, among them our very own Sam Cole-Johnson...
Wild menu - yellow background
Gratis für alle Carefully cultivated wildness in the Home Counties. And an unmissable wine list. Farm to fish to fork to frying pan...
Chenin Blanxc vineyard in South Africa
Gratis für alle Jancis makes a suggestion. A version of this article is also published by the Financial Times. See also South Africa’s...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Flowers in the Meinklang vineyard
Weine der Woche A magical sparkling wine from Austria, from €9, £15.50, $16.95. It is, some say, the time when magic is strongest...
Dalla Valle vineyard
Verkostungsberichte A banner vintage. Above, Dalla Valle Vineyards in Oakville produced two of Sam’s highlights of this vintage (image courtesy of...
La Réméjeanne vineyard
Verkostungsberichte A taster of the quality potential in wines grown in the southern Rhône’s ‘north-west corridor’. Above, one of Domaine La...
Hugo, Rui, Francisco and Ricardo of Cas’amaro
Verkostungsberichte A tour of the southern half of this Portuguese wine region. See part 1 for producers and wines from the...
Ch Grand-Puy-Lacoste
Unverblümte Meinungen Nick Martin reflects as another en primeur campaign winds up. Château Grand-Puy-Lacoste (pictured above) bundled a visit to the property...
A castle in the Espera vineyards
Verkostungsberichte A tour of this underappreciated and sometimes misrepresented Portuguese wine region. Today, we cover the northern half – Encostas d’Aire...
Azenhas do Mar, Portugal
Insider-Informationen The wines of this Portuguese region are emerging from the shadows of their history. Above, Azenhas do Mar in Colares...
Jota Tanaka at Gotemba distillery
Getränke außer Wein An exploration of the transparency of Japanese whisky – and how that sensibility is influencing whiskey-making back in Scotland. Above...
Weininspiration wöchentlich direkt in Ihr Postfach
Unser Newsletter erscheint jede Woche und ist für alle gratis
Mit Ihrem Abonnement erkennen Sie unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen an.