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Wine for Normal People

Ep 173: Pfalz -- The German Region for Dry Wine Lovers

Wine for Normal People

Wine for Normal People

Alcohol, Lifestyle, Arts, Education, Food, Wine, Dining, Grapes

4.61.5K Ratings

🗓️ 6 December 2016

⏱️ 32 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Pfalz is the region for you if you have the question: How do I get into German wine If I hate sweet stuff?

Overview:

  • Pfalz is an important region in terms of quantity and quality. It's one of the most promising German wine regions for Riesling and Spätburgunder (Pinot Noir)
  • In Western Germany, Between Rhine and lower lying Haardt mountains – continuation of Vosges, just south is Alsace
    • Warmer climate
      • Summers are dry, not too hot, winters mild. almost Mediterranean in some sections (almonds grow here)
      • Excellent viticultural conditions

History:

  • Pfalz is from the Latin for for palace and it's named for Palatine Counts of the Holy Roman Empire, who held court in the nearby city of Heidelberg from the 13th to the 18th century.
  • Traces of winemaking from 550 BC.
  • The region languished for a while after Romans left, viticulture was not a priority for a long time.
  • German wine route created in 1935 and is an easy path for tourists, great for Pfalz wine (Deutsche Weinstrasse) -- has helped with revival in modern times

Today:

  • Pfalz is one of the most innovative regions in Germany – young winemakers, less expensive land

Grapes

  • 60% white, 40% red
    • Riesling 25%
    • Dornfelder 14%
    • Muller-Thurgau 10%
    • Blauer Portugieser 9%
    • Spatburgunder 7%
  • Mittelhaardt – top Rieslings, South – increasing plantings of Riesling but also Spatburgunder, Portugieser, Dornfelder
  • Different from many German regions –
    • Dry wines, not sweet
    • Fuller bodied
    • Reds – can reach 13% alcohol (rare in Germany)

Pfalz is the place dry wine lovers should try first in Germany! So go explore!

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Thanks for

0:08.0

downloading Wine for Normal People Radio,

0:10.0

the podcast for people who like wine but not the snobbery that goes with it.

0:14.0

I'm Elizabeth Schneider, a certified Silmaier and certified specialist of wine.

0:20.0

And I'm MC Ice, just a wine-loving normal person.

0:23.0

So you know how I'm always talking about Riesling and how much I love it?

0:29.0

Oh yeah.

0:30.0

And how I think that a lot of people might think I'm crazy because even though

0:37.6

Reesling is very popular. Yeah, we went out to dinner for the first time forever

0:41.7

last night and what did you talk to the waiter about?

0:44.6

Riesley. Yes. But at the same time it's like I still think people think that

0:52.3

Reesling is always sweet.

0:54.1

I don't know how to convince people to try it except to say, okay, of course I always talk

1:00.0

about Alsace, but Alsace has some problems right now, Alsas France.

1:03.8

What do you mean he's got problems?

1:05.0

I just tweeted this lately in like the last 10 years they've been very inconsistent with

1:09.6

sugar levels, so sometimes you'll get one in slightly

1:12.1

trouble. No, they didn't get in trouble.

1:14.0

But they're slightly sweet and it's like, no, this is not good.

1:17.0

So now they've had to start thinking about sweetness scales on the back of reasoning.

1:21.0

And that's just not how it should go down. They have enough sun to get

1:25.0

the grapes ripe. So it shouldn't be that they're putting sugar or not

...

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