Germany seems particularly well-endowed in this respect. Alexandra Künstler and Konstantin Weiser started out in 2005, taking a long lease on some steep, slate slopes of ungrafted Riesling vines in Enkirch near Traben-Trarbach to which they added more land last year and now have a grand total of 2.5 ha (6.5 acres) in Enkircher Ellergrub, Enkircher Zeppwingert and Trabener Gaispfad, all ranked highly in the official classification of 1897 (the one Erni Loosen pored over in our BBC tv series). They are from southern Germany but met in the Mosel. After his wine studies Konstantin worked with various other producers including Leitz in the Rheingau. Here’s how they describe themselves on their well-written website: “Our philosophy is not about wine-‘making’. We rather see ourselves as respectful companions in the process of the development from grape to wine. So we believe in the unique character and the potential of ungrafted vines in sites untouched by modern reparcelling. In order to fulfil the demands imposed by such a treasure, we do not shrink from the additional expenditure of purely manual labour.”
The only thing that is (unfairly) slightly offputting is the similarity of the name Weiser to that of the anti-hero in the extraordinarily spooky Oscar-winning film The Lives of Others. Go see it. Go buy these wines. There is no connection whatsoever between them.