Do we ship to you?.
Also Recommended
Picture
Product Name
Vintage
Price
Varietal
Country
Region
Appellation
Size
Additional Discount
Original Item

2021
$26.20
Riesling
Germany
Mosel-Saar-Ruwer
750ml
12B / $25.68
Better Price, Same Score

2021
$22.94
Riesling
Germany
Mosel-Saar-Ruwer
Mosel
750ml
12B / $22.48
Closest Match

2021
$24.93
Riesling
Germany
Mosel-Saar-Ruwer
750ml
12B / $24.43
Best QPR in Price range

2021
$19.93
Riesling
Germany
Mosel-Saar-Ruwer
750ml
More wines available from Loewen
750ml
Bottle:
$21.94
Rated 91 - Full aromas of fine green beans and garden peas are underlined by a lovely lemon peel freshness and just a...
750ml
Bottle:
$21.00
This is an estate wine, all from the Liewener Klostergarten. Some of you will remember this wine when it was a...
750ml
Bottle:
$26.94
Rated 95 - Let’s live on the edge! The breathtaking nose of a thousand fresh herbs, Amalfi lemon and crushed stone...
750ml
Bottle:
$35.94
Rated 93 - I love the delicate lemon balm and Amalfi lemon nose of this very elegant and filigree dry Mosel riesling....
750ml
Bottle:
$33.94
Rated 95 - A fragrant and playful Mosel Spatlese. Excellent tension between delicate fruit, wet stone minerality and...
More Details
Winery
Loewen
Varietal: Riesling
The pale skinned fruits of the Riesling grapevine have been grown in and around Germany's Rhine Valley for centuries, and contributed much to the country's wine culture. Today, Riesling grapes are grown and processed in several countries around the world, where they are prized for their ability to grow well in colder climates, and their unique flavors and characteristics. Riesling grapes produce an impressive array of wines, including fine semi sweet and dessert wines, to excellent dry white wines and sparkling varieties, all which allow the grape to shine through as a premier example of an excellent white wine varietal. One of the things which makes Riesling such a special grape is the fact that it is highly 'terroir expressive', meaning that the features of the land it is grown on can come across well in the flavors and aromas in the wine. As such, it isn't unusual to find flavors of white stone, or smoky ash-like notes in a fine Riesling alongside the more usual orchard fruit flavors more commonly associated with good white wines.
Country: Germany
If German wine has had something of a bad reputation in the past, it may well be the fault of the fact that for a long time now, the Germans have simply kept all the best produce to themselves. Visit any town or village in wine producing regions of Germany, and you'll be faced with a stunning array of extremely high quality wines, each matched with local dishes and full of distinct character and flavor. As white wine production makes up for about two-thirds of all Germany's wine industry, this is by far the most visible and widely enjoyed type of wine, but one should not overlook the quality and range of rosé and red wines on offer from this fascinating country. In particular, the Spatburgunder wines (the German name for Pinot Noir) are generally of an exceptionally high quality, being full of dark, intense hedgerow fruit flavors and exciting spicy notes with a silky smooth finish.