帕克團(tuán)隊(duì)
88
eRobertParker.com, #200Apr 2012
High-toned lemon and grapefruit rind, mint, and cress scent Eva Clusserath’s 2010 Trittenheimer Apotheke Riesling trocken, which comes to the palate firm and bright, it’s fresh lemon, lime and grapefruit buffered from being too sharp and its bite of cress as well as piquancy of nuts, toasted seeds, and fruit pips also well-contained and merely adding to the invigoration of a sappy, refreshing finish. Even at 12% alcohol, this displays a lot of lift. I would monitor its evolution but not be surprised if it gave half a dozen or more years of admirable service. (Interestingly, tasting the richer and less buoyant 2009 alongside, that wine displays if anything more characteristics for which I resort to mineral vocabulary. And the strongly herbal and floral 2008 is today the most expressive, transparent, and complex of the three.) Eva Clusserath was among the many to experience a commercially depressing 2010 vintage. “We went as many as three or four times into the same vineyard to optimize ripeness,” she reports, and in the face of all that expensive labor, volumes were down by close to half. Clusserath double-salt de-acidified the must for her basic dry wine, but otherwise says she waited as long as she could to harvest (beginning only near the end of October) and arrived at total acidity in her other musts of around ten grams, extremely moderate by vintage standards (not to mention lower than Clusserath’s husband Philipp Wittmann registered in Rheinhessen!). And as usual at this address, a day or more of skin contact was permitted for the dry wines; and all of the wines stayed on their fine lees until bottling, which ranged from late May though July. Together with losses during fermentation and to tartrate precipitation, these factors resulted in wines whose finished acid levels would not even raise an eyebrow on the Mosel, something one can claim for very few 2010s. Yet ironically, despite that analytical fact, these wines are recognizably of their vintage in terms of their relatively sharp corners and in the best instances productive tension, vivacity and invigoration.Importer: Domaine Select Wine Estates, New York, NY; tel. (212) 279-0799