Achtung! Gas! 2004 Germans


Prolog: A friend is an archeologist whose relatives served in Central Powers forces in the first world war (in more than one Power, I think) and left letters and photos about it. Spurred by this connection, the friend collected a virtual museum of everyday artifacts of Austro-Hungarian and German military life. It includes compact, portable hand-crank-operated sirens to warn of gas attack. Restored and fully functional, 90 years later. They are flat and (I'm trying to think of something that everyone reading this will know) roughly size and shape of a detachable computer keyboard. I considered practical uses.

Main story: 2004 premium (QmP) German Rieslings have been arriving on the market. A tasting in California was organized by an experienced fan who had joined an importer on a commercial visit to the winemakers -- this fan speaks German of course -- who reported impressions to us (a "Kabinett-and-Spätlese" vintage; similar weather to Burgundy that year) with comments on wines and producers and trends. We tasted this selection, in separate flights for the two weights:

Spätlesen 2004 Fritz Haag Brauneberger Juffer-Sonnenuhr, AP 7-05 (USD $31) 2004 von Beulwitz Kaseler Niesc'chen Alte Reben, AP 06-05 ($23) 2004 von Schubert Maximin Grünhaüser Abtsberg, AP 17-05 ($35) 2004 von Schubert Maximin Grünhaüser Herrenberg, AP 16-05 ($35) 2004 Josef Rosch Trittenheimer Apotheke, AP 9-05 ($20)

Chardonnay
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Yes, I remember it too. There was a public display terminal at a museum that Mark will know (LHS) in the early 1970s. People could go up to a terminal and exchange discussion. The program...

Auslesen 2004 Fritz Haag Brauneberger Juffer-Sonnenuhr no. 6, AP 6-05 ($40) 2004 Fritz Haag Brauneberger Juffer-Sonnenuhr no. 9, AP 9-05 ($70) 2004 von Beulwitz Kaseler Nies'chen ** .375, AP 05-05 ($31.50) 2004 von Schubert Maximin Grünhaüser Abtsberg .375, AP 19-05 ($24) 2004 Josef Rosch Trittenheimer Apotheke * .500, AP 11-05 ($29) 2004 Josef Rosch Leiwener Klostergarten .500, AP 10-05 ($29)

(The last was characterized as a declbuttified eiswein.)

Impressions: Achtung! Gas! Prominent sulfur dioxide here, the burnt-match smell (and the bleached colors that warned of it). Especially the Haag wines (I sneezed, another taster had a coughing attack. "Wine-Tasting Asthma Outbreak Sends Three To Hospital," I gasped out between sneezes, mostly joking.) SO2 is in many premium German wines, it helps preserve them; even when young it tends to blow off after time in the glbutt; but it can be a surprise.

TN Solihull Fine Wine Soc. 26th Annual Dinner
At Kaivan's Georgian pile on a cold and and foggy Edgbaston night. With truffle oil cream cheese canapes Pol Roger...

Tasting blind of the Spätlesen I most enjoyed the Rosch Trittenheimer Apotheke (1st pick) and von Schubert Maximin Grünhaüser Abtsberg (2nd). That Rosch was also the cheapest wine. Generous fruit-acid, penicillin-like SO2 smells. On taste a sharp frozen-limeade bittersweet citrus. Intense, almost peel-like. Others found peaches and apricots. The von Schubert Abtsberg was viscous; hint SO2, delicate sweet aroma. Taste of generous sugar and acid, almost lemonade. Concentrated. Of the Auslesen the Beulwitz Kaseler Niesc'chen was light gold, sweet florality and canned pears in smell; taste of appealing delicate lemony fruit. Minerals and gelatin. The Haag barrel no. 9, though the gas made me sneeze, had spice and fruit. Tasting of a vegetal hint, "7-up" lemon-lime undercurrent, fine mineral finish, more delicate than some. Pricey though. Rosch Trittenheimer Apotheke smelled of peach and tasted of very concentrated fruit with softer acid than some. Rosch Leiwener Klostergarten also was very fine: yellow, delicate, floral.

All available in US from importer-retailer Dee Vine Wines in San Francisco (Pier 19, The Embarcadero, Tel. 415 398 3838, colorful catalog, email joe at dvw.com -- web site www.dvw.com is not always representative). From other importers too, in some cases.

Epilog: Now I have a use for the portable sirens.

-- Max

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That could be it exactly. (Still have it on hand, too, from the period of the posting.) This might be useful to know: I blind-taste...

AP note: For anyone unfamiliar with it, the part of the AP Number (printed on German labels) shown here has barrel number and inspection year. Different barrels from the same vineyard, bottled separately, can be very distinct wines, as with the Haag Auslesen here. Note their market price differences.


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