Monday, May 08, 2006

germski vino



thanks to hairyboi, i bought a nice bottle of german vino from DFS on the way back from phuket...it's now sitting nicely in my fridge waiting for this friday to come around...hairy opened up a bottle of this baby last i was at his place and i was pleasantly surprised at the drinkability and quality of this vino =) thanks bro!

haven't done much drinking of german vinos before, so i did a little bit of scouting around on the net...the one small article that i found use in reference to the above vino is as follows:-

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Understanding German Wine Labels

Many people walk right by the German section of the wine shop, some because they think all German wines are sweet, others because they can't understand all that jibberish on the label.

In fact, many German wines are pleasantly dry, and though it may look confusing at first, the label will tell you more than those from other countries.

By law, German wine labels must show the the quality level of the wine, the region the wine is from, the grapes used, and the ripeness level. Almost all exported wine is of good quality; somewhere you should see the name "
Qualitatswein", or the initials "QbA" or "QMP" to confirm this. Next, find labels that say "Riesling"; this is a wonderfully fruity grape that matches well with a great variety of foods. Then, look for one of these regions: Rheinhassen, Pfalz, Rheingau, or Mosel-Saar-Ruwer; in my opinion these are your best bets. Finally, choose one that says "Kabinett"---this indicates the wine is dry to semi-dry, and made from normally ripened grapes. This is the least expensive and driest type. If you like your wine a bit sweeter, pick "Spatlese" or "Auslese"; these are wines made from grapes that have been picked later, and thus were much riper. Even riper levels such as "Beerenauslese", "Trockenbeerenauslese", and "Eiswein" exist, but they are more like dessert wines and very expensive; I recommend you try Kabinett and Spatlese before moving on in your discovery of German wine.

2 comments:

FlyingMuffyn said...

For a Kabinett, dis one is pretty sweet oredi. i hv a couple of bottles of the more expensive Huxelrebe Spatlese which is even sweeter.

btw both Bacchus and Huxelrebe are grape varieties.

kona said...

orrrrr =P yes vinmassa....

when are you gonna open them up? call me leh =)