How to read a German Wine Label With Harald Ziegler of Weingut Ziegler in the Pfalz.
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The Mandelgarten vineyard is near the town of Gimmeldingen
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Use this rough guide to judge how
sweet your Riesling will be:
13% = Dry. This is a powerful wine
that was likely picked when the grapes
were at a "Spatlese" level or higher.
These are likely to be labeled "trocken"
meaning dry in German.
12 -13% = Dry, but softer. Some wines
at 12% will begin to have touch of
perceptible residual sugar.
11-12% = Off dry. Expect a round soft
wine. All else being equal, this is a
category that shines with spicy food,
be it Thai, Chinese, or Vinegar based
Barbecue from the Southwest US.
Below 11% the wines will become
sweeter and sweeter, but with healthy
acidity they can still be wonderfully
balanced and not at all cloying.
Ziegler's Auslese Gimmeldinger
Biengarten is a great example of this.
underneath the grape variety and Quality level. Note that the label says "Gimmeldinger" but the town is "Gimmeldingen". This is the rough equivalent of how Chicago becomes "Chicagoan" when we means "from Gimmeldingen". The Ziegler's Reisling Auslese For Hubacker" from Weingut Keller which is from the Hubacker vineyard outside of the town of Dalsheim. Foreign as they may seem, German labels are nothing if not logical.
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