Tasting Celery seed, clove, and black pepper pungently scent Boxler’s 2008 Gewurztraminer Reserve and then accent a subtly oily, silken, and sweet palate whose litchi and Persian melon are sprinkled with sugared almond and nutmeg, and suffused with saliva-inducing salinity. This strong salinity and (for Gewurztraminer) high acidity make for an impressively next sip-enticing finish that manages even to refresh and invigorate as well as to counteract any tendency of residual sugar to fatigue. Boxler believes that the portion of young vines included here added finesse and helped open up this lovely flower of a wine. You won’t often taste a better “generic” Alsace Gewurztraminer, that’s for sure, though there is no point acquiring this if you haven’t desire for sweet wine. I would anticipate at least a 10-12 year performance run. Jean Boxler relates that in 2009 he picked some parcels of young wines early due to stress, then sold off the juice; and any under 15 years’ age he didn’t even bother to pick. Eventually, when he harvested his older vines and best sites, the sugar levels were the same – but not the flavors. He deftly charted a course with most of the resulting wines between alcohol and residual sugar, but to the extent it was unavoidable, sinned on the side of sweetness. From 2008, almost predictably given the track record at this address, Boxler rendered sharply focused, minerally complex, yet seductively fruit-filled wines that should prove excellent both as keepers and as partners with cuisine. Boxler compares these wines with his 2002s and finds then “definitely more interesting than the 2001s.” While most of the 2008s finished fermenting already by Christmas – which is par for the course chez Boxler – he points out that several of the extraordinary wines from the Brand lingered into spring. (For some detail on among other things Boxler’s different Riesling parcels, see my report in issue 188.)Importer: Robert Chadderdon Selections, New York, NY; tel. (212) 757-8185