Riesling Feinherb, Später-Veit
Staff Pick

Riesling Feinherb, Später-Veit - 2022

Item # 25815 1L

A best value from a top estate in the Mosel. A giving riesling with waxy, fleshy notes and a slight spritz. Feinherb is an unregulated designation ever so slightly sweet. The grapes are hand-picked from the single-vineyard Falkenberg on the steep Piesporter hillside, just above Goldtröpfchen. Weingut Später-Veit uses only wild, ambient yeasts to ferment their wines in stainless-steel tanks. That spicy jerk chicken you've been marinating for your next BBQ will make a fine match.

$18.99/ Single Bottle
$227.88 $205.09/ Case of 12
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Staff Pick Notes

Here's the ideal wine for summertime drinking: light, fresh, and delicious. Feinherb is an unregulated term that usually denotes a wine that's a little too sweet to be considered dry (or "Trocken"). Später-Veit walks that fine line with crisp mineral acidity balanced with a light kiss of sweetness. Where there's residual sugar, there's low alcohol, which is perfect for the humidity of a New York summer. Kick back and beat the heat with this super yummers Riesling!

- JGM

About the Producer

Piesport, Mosel, Germany Piesport is located in the southeastern corner of Germany in the Rhineland-Palatinate, near the historic city of Trier. The vineyards around Piesport are some of the oldest in the world; viticulture has been going on in this unlikely, cold, steep region since the Roman era. Später-Veit is a family estate that received fresh energy when Heinz Welter took over the...

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Glossary

Germany

German wines are some of the most jubilantly fruity bottles in the world. The country's Rieslings have been prized worldwide for centuries, yet they have never quite caught on in the U.S.: this no doubt due to Germany’s arcane system of wine classification. The most useful words to know on German wine labels are “Kabinett,” which indicates an outstanding everyday wine, and “trocken,” which means “dry.” As far as dessert wines go, a half-bottle of German Eiswein is so potent that you'll be able...

Read more about Germany

Riesling

Though the trend is now in the other direction, for many years Riesling was known for producing wines with little alcohol and some residual sugar - too sweet for many modern wine drinkers. Though it's now cultivated worldwide, Riesling is nearly synonymous with German wine, and that country's winemakers have lately begun to produce some very exciting dry versions. They are careful to retain the delightful honeyed, flinty flavors that the best sweet Rieslings have always displayed. Alsace, of...

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