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Vols Riesling Spatlese Vols I 2018 750ml

size
750ml
country
Germany
WA
93
Additional vintages
2022 2019 2018
WA
93
Rated 93 by Wine Advocate
The 2018 Wiltinger Braunfels Riesling Spätlese Vols I displays a clear and delicately flinty nose of perfectly ripe and overripe Riesling intermixed with flinty and vegetal aromas. Crystalline, sweet and lush on the palate, with overripe fruit flavors but also stunningly pure and finessed on the palate, this is a salty-piquant and vibrantly fresh Spätlese with lingering, mouthwatering acidity and mineral grip. This is a very clear, precise, piquant and tightly structured Spätlese, and it's truly worth being aged for a decade or more. Tasted in July 2019. ... More details
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Vols Riesling Spatlese Vols I 2018 750ml

SKU 830369
Out of Stock
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Winery Vols
green grapes

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.
fields

Country: Germany

Much has changed over the past few decades in regards to German wine. Long gone are the days of mass produced, sickly sweet white wines which were once the chief exports of this fascinating and ancient wine producing country, and they have been replaced with something far more sophisticated. Whilst Germany continues to produce a relatively large amount of dessert wine, the wineries of the south of the country have reverted their attention to the production of drier, more elegant wines which really make the most of the fine grape varieties which flourish there. Many of the wineries dealing primarily with the excellent Riesling grapes have produced some truly exceptional dry and semi-sweet wines over the past few years, and it seems the world has finally woken up and noticed the extremely high quality of the distinctive produce coming out of Germany today.