2012 - looking back over a year in Wine Rambling

2012 - looking back over a year in Wine Rambling

Vineyards in northern Yorkshire, dentists, wine museums without wine, finding the pink soul of Riesling, drinking some of the best and worst wines of Germany, finishing unfinished business in Washington, almost enjoying fermentation, sex and murder - it is hard to think of something 2012 did not have on the cards for us.

the colours of wine
the colours of wine

So before the New Year really starts it is time to look back over a year of wine rambling and pick up a few of the high- and lowlights.

January

January is traditionally the quiet month of the year. Everyone complains about heaving eaten too much, dreams of losing weight or drinking more sensibly. Not so me, I don't believe in this approach as statistically the best chance of ensuring an idea fails is to make it into a New Year's resolution. Julian, however, consequently follows his tradition of a wine-free January - and wants to convince you in a historical Retox vs. Detox ramble.

Lent (detail), by Pieter Brueghel the younger
Lent (detail), by Pieter Brueghel the younger

Me, well, I believe in balanced pleasure all year round, which resulted in some good January drinking, including: our first Swiss wine, a true herbal delight, or an enjoyable Australian (!) Grüner Veltliner.

Our wine of the month, however, was classic German: a stunning grand cru Pfalz Riesling from the Knipser winery that taught me that the soul is not always pink.

February

February had some good drinking as well, but also a decent amount of pain. Most notably I decided to take on mighty Dell - and failed. Much more success was had at a fantastic wine tasting in London, an event that showcased the diversity of German wines beyond Liebfraumilch.

Fifty-Four North Vineyard, Yorkshire
Fifty-Four North Vineyard, Yorkshire

Not German at all but also very educational was our February guest ramble: A Tale of Two Vineyards - One Man's Journey Into Amateur Viticulture and Viniculture. Steve Race shared lessons learned from home wine making in Yorkshire and Spain, along with some stunning photos.

This time the wine of the month was in Julian's glass, the delicious 2009 dry Muscat from Kistenmacher & Hengerer in Württemberg. Something different from somewhere different!

March

March continued with excellent wines, especially a 17 year old off-dry German rosé, a stunning Pinot Noir from the Mosel and an outstanding Riesling from Germany's best unknown producer. Despite so much good wine at home I also went out to learn about natural wine at Green and Blue wines.

if that is not a Germanic wine label I don't know
if that is not a Germanic wine label I don't know

The wine highlight of the month, in fact the year, was the very Germanic looking and sounding Reichsrat von Buhl 2009 Forster Pechstein. Monumental.

April

April brought another very interesting guest ramble, this time from professional photographer and wine maker Andreas Durst who asked the question What's wrong with commercial wine photography?. We also had great wines from other European countries, including a fabulous Vouvray. In another of our infamous blind tastings we discovered we cannot tell a sparkling Loire from English fizz.

Thankfully, the pain was easily soothed by the best wine of the month, Philipp Kuhn's 2009 Kirschgarten Riesling.

May

May did not go quite so well. Julian endured the worst wine of the year, and to add insult to injury it came from the Germany state we both were born in. Perhaps this experience turned Julian into a grumpy old man, so he went to a Munich wine tasting to question the meaning of elite in winemaking. At the same time I went to The Hague to sample our first Dutch wine, a Riesling from Maastricht.

The wine of the month brought us back to German harmony and Mosel delight (Reinhold Haart Auslese 2007).

June

For me, June was a month of memories, especially regards the very memorable visit to the Kruger-Rumpf winery where I learned about herbs, dentists and winemaking generations.

Georg Rumpf explaining family relations with his father Stefan in the background
Georg Rumpf explaining family relations with his father Stefan in the background

Julian also had a learning experience - while tasting his way through a sample case of Spanish wine he found out what wine journalism feels like. The wine of the month June must win the price for the best value of 2012, an excellent Loire red from Domaine des Corbillières for less than €7.

July

July had a range of good wines again, including a great value Chardonnay from the Pfalz. However, the most important wine moment came when I went Searching for the soul of Riesling - and discovered Mosel magic at a special event that was more than just food and wine matching.

A second wine event in July did not quite deliver - that was me Not tasting wine at the Samos Wine Museum. Thankfully the very reliable Van Volxem 2011 Saar Riesling won my heart as the wine of the month, which brought some relief..

August

August was a quiet month with one Wine Rambler on holiday and the second one suffering through the peak of four months of pain with Virgin Media. It is a good thing the Wine and Spirit Education trust stepped in with a colourful introduction to English wine.

the colours of English wine
the colours of English wine

The most interesting wine of the month was a Schilcher, a rosé made from the Blauer Wildbacher grape indigenous to Austria's Steiermark region.

September

Washington calling
Washington calling

My main achievement in September was drinking wine by the label, or by the title, after all the wine in question was called "Passion has red lips". Or maybe it was going to Washington D.C. where I had unfinished business with a wine merchant. Julian, however, stayed local, and enjoyed the best wine of the month, a Silvaner from Franken with mineral and vegetable bite.

October

October was extremely busy in our day jobs, and even my occasional ventures into the wine world did not go very well, as I pretty much only seem to have managed to drink the second worst German wine of the year.

this was May, but white aspargus and Pinot Blanc are always pretty
this was May, but white aspargus and Pinot Blanc are always pretty

Julian turned abroad to find the wine of the month, from the dependable Austrian Veltliner grape.

November

In November I followed Julian's lead and went south, to pursue my recent love affair with Italy's Verdicchio. I also went south of the river in London for Tasting Notes - a wine and music pairing event that raised the troubling question of whether Grüner Veltliner pairs better with the "Blue Danube" or a Haydn string quartet.

tasting with music
tasting with music

The wine of the month was something unusual, an outstanding Cabernet Franc from Württemberg.

December

Following a long dearth, my wine year ended on several highlights. For instance a German Chardonnay blending oak and freshness, or a fantastic Muscat ice wine that gave me the tastiest lips you could ever dream of kissing.

The best wine in December was dry though, a very elegant Silvaner to rival the world's best white wines. However, the wine blogging year ended with a serious crime, a story of Riesling, sex, fermentation and murder.

What 2013 may bring we don't know yet. Murder hopefully not, but Riesling and fermentation seems a fair bet. Happy New Year to you and us!

Submitted by Alex Thursday, 03/01/2013

May 2013 bring equally interesting wine stories for the 2 of you! Cheers, Alex.

Submitted by S.M. Saturday, 05/01/2013

Hello Torsten

A rather interesting post to be sure, I started reading the Wine Rambler in mid-2012 so it was great reading some of your earlier posts from the past year.

What I found particularly interesting was the fact that from the same region, Württemberg you had that nasty Riesling Kabinett Trocken, but later in the year a nice Cabernet Franc as well. And yes its always disappointing when a bottle of wine from our home town or region fails so miserably, thankfully I haven't experienced it yet; but probably will one day.

Perhaps this shows that while us Germans have made strides of progress there is still a ways for us to go, and as you said if you've had an estate for 500 years then you'd better damn get your act together and do it right. Either that or get out of the wine business and stop pretending to be something that you are not.

Cheers!

Solomon Mengeu

Submitted by Alexander Saturday, 05/01/2013

In reply to by S.M.

*Smile* Well, Solomon, tradition is a duty to bear, and the House of Württemberg is aware of that (the famous or notorious colloquial quip of HRH Duke Carl is: "this state, which bears _my_ name...").
A structural problem of the estate is that its famous vineyards are not very close to each other, and that each of them - in principle - thus really ought to have an own viticulturist (proper South Africanese for the somewhat misconceived German term "Außenbetriebsleiter"), which demand however would be expensive.
They have divested themselves recently from the Asperger Berg; they never managed to get great wine out of that old, very impressive, but much neglected vineyard. [I once hallowed or desecrated it, depending upon your view, by drinking a bottle of Egon Müller's Scharzhofberger right on top of the summit]
I am quite sure that the 2011 Großes Gewächs may have its act together. Is that enough for the whole estate? My question is maybe rhetoric... send them an email !

Submitted by torsten Saturday, 05/01/2013

In reply to by S.M.

Well, there will always be ups and downs, in any wine region and in any year. Overall we have had much success with Württemberg. In fact, we have had much success with wine overall - but then we pay normal prices for almost all the wines we drink, so we put in quite a bit of effort to find wines that are worth the money. When it does not work, well, at least it tells our readers that we don't like a wine just because it comes from Germany - it has to deliver the goods. Thankfully, they mostly do; and Alexander seems to suggest that the Duke of Württemberg also usually delivers...

Anyway, thank you for your kind words and encouragement, Solomon!