Winningen Riesling Schlossgut Liebieg dry 2020
Visual: Golden yellow color Nose: Yellow fruity, concentrated and intense.
Mouth: Dense on the palate, powerful aromas of mirabelle plum, apricot and orange peel, powerful and highly concentrated while dry-mineral, spicy, with plenty of richness.
(edit with the Customer Reassurance module)
(edit with the Customer Reassurance module)
A buoyant gorgeous Riesling, is not only called so, also tastes heavenly! Low alcohol with full fruit aroma dances on the tongue like clouds in the sky. Pairings: Goat cheese wrapped in bacon, curry dishes (mild), rich dishes (hollandaise).
To drink: Immediately after bottling and up to five years later.
The new local wine from the Winninger Terrassen. The Winninger Domgarten site is located around the village and was originally owned by the church, which is where the name comes from.
In addition to weathered slate, one also finds loess and pumice, which was hurled to the Moselle by a volcanic eruption of Lake Laach.
-
Year: 2020
-
Grape: Riesling
-
Taste: Dry
-
Alcohol: 12,5%
-
Acidity: 5.6
-
Remaining sugar: 5.0
-
Ideal drinking temperature: 9°- 10° C
-
Content: 750 ml
-
Quality: wine of origin
-
Fermentation: virtual spontaneous fermentation
-
Vinification: Stainless steel tanks
Product Details
Data sheet
- Year
- 2020
- Grape
- Riesling
- Taste
- Dry
- Alcohol
- 12,5%
- Acidity
- 5.6
- Remaining sugar
- 5.0
- Ideal drinking temperature
- 9°- 10° C
- Content
- 750 ml
- Quality
- wine of origin
- Fermentation
- virtual spontaneous fermentation
- Vinification
- Stainless steel tanks
Schlossgut Liebieg
Inge and Bernhard Kirsten have been making a name for themselves in the wine world since 1992. The castle estate is run in an ecological way. Their philosophy is: respect for nature and sustainable action in the vineyard during the harvest and in the cellar management. This is how authentic wines are created, marked by the terroir, without superfluous interventions, which embody the particular terroir of the Moselle. Organic certification is particularly important to the estate.
Read More