Clemens Busch Marienburg Grosses Gewächs Trocken 2015
Location: Germany, Mosel
Winemaker: Clemens and Rita Busch
Grapes: Riesling
Soil: Slate
Winemaking: Take note of the bottle's top capsule foil: its color (blue, grey, red) will indicate the color of slate the grapes are grown on. These vines are grown on grey slate.
From the original Marienburg parcel, which has been in the Busch family for generations. This is a little confusing, but originally Marienburg was the name of a single parcel of a larger hill, and that is the wine you're tasting right now. Just like in Burgundy, each parcel had its own name. But in the 1970s, some administrative bozos decided that the whole system was too complicated, and globally renamed the whole hill Marienburg.
As an F-U to these jerks, Clemens still bottles each parcel by its original name. So this wine, the Marienburg, is actually the parcel originally called Marienburg.
Certified biodynamic. Hand harvest. Vinified and aged in large oak barrels. Stainless steel tanks are also used for vintages with exceptionally high yields. Malolactic fermentation only occurs in years with high ripeness and PH. Maximum free sulphur at bottling of 30 mg/l.
From the Impoorter Louis/Dressner: Since taking over his family winery in 1984, Clemens Busch and his wife Rita have shaped it into one of the most iconoclastic estates in the Mosel. A firm believer that naturalpractices in the vines and cellar lead to to the ultimate expression of terroir,Clemens exemplifies the balance between tradition and forward thinking we so look forward to when seeking out new producers.
The majority of Clemens' production is grown on the extremely steep Pündericher , a 25 hectare hill that spans an entire hillside facing the village of Pünderich. Exposed full south/southeast and right on the edge of the river, it is widely considered amongst the very best sites in the Mosel. 17 hectares of the hill are planted in vines and Clemens owns 11 of them.
As more and more of his neighbors abandoned the great vineyards of the Marienburg throughout the 1980's to plant Pinot Noir in the plains (which could be worked mechanically and was in much higher demand at the time), Clemens capitalized on their eagerness to sell at low prices. Starting with just two hectares, in due time he managed to acquire monopoles of many of the Marienburg'sdifferent sites, sometimes going as far as buying neighboring parcels from 11 different owners!
The lieu-dit Marienburg was originally a much smaller, individual parcel that shared the hill with many other vineyards, all with their own names and attributes. In 1971, a law hoping to unify the identity of the area's varied terroirs declared that the entire hill be re-named Marienburg. This decision never sat well with Clemens; as the fifth generation working this land, he knew that these vineyards featured different soil compositions and micro-climacticvariables influenced by fissures, vineyard walls, the inclination of slope and exposure.In such, Clemens his wines site by site and bottles them by the historic vineyard names.
The original Marienberg vineyard faces south/southeast, is dominated by grey slate and also produces "Vom Grauen Schiefer" (from grey slate) and "Vom Roten Schiefer" (from red slate) as well as the Marienburg GG.
Rothenpfad is all red slate, a true rarity in the Mosel. Prior to 2006, most of this hard to reach area was overgrown. A land consolidation permitted Clemens to replant and save some old vines. Today, about a hectare is grown.
Farhlay is the only part of the hill dominated by blue slate. The soil is particularly rocky, so the vines must dig deep to find their nutrition here, resulting in a mineral style.
Falkenlay is defined by grey slate, and located between Rothpfad and Farhlay. Considered by some to be the finest site on the Marienburg, it provides the best grapes for noble sweet wines. A special selection of the best grapes from the old vines of this vineyard are bottled under the name "Raffes".
Finally, Felsterrasse is a tiny terracedparcel and Clemens' favorite. The soils are composed of thick grey slate and are particularly hard to work.
80% of the wines are fermented and agedin very old, 1000 liter barrels; the youngest are 48 years old and many were built by Rita's father. Nothing is ever added to the wine, save a low dose of sulfur at bottling.The wines are never fined. For the sweet and noble sweet wines, Clemens prefers halting the fermentation with a deep freeze followed by a filtration, allowing him to drastically reduce sulfur, which again is only added at bottling.
Pay attention to the capsules on the top of each different bottling, as their color (red, grey, blue) indicate the slate type of each vineyard.
Location: Germany, Mosel
Winemaker: Clemens and Rita Busch
Grapes: Riesling
Soil: Slate
Winemaking: Take note of the bottle's top capsule foil: its color (blue, grey, red) will indicate the color of slate the grapes are grown on. These vines are grown on grey slate.
From the original Marienburg parcel, which has been in the Busch family for generations. This is a little confusing, but originally Marienburg was the name of a single parcel of a larger hill, and that is the wine you're tasting right now. Just like in Burgundy, each parcel had its own name. But in the 1970s, some administrative bozos decided that the whole system was too complicated, and globally renamed the whole hill Marienburg.
As an F-U to these jerks, Clemens still bottles each parcel by its original name. So this wine, the Marienburg, is actually the parcel originally called Marienburg.
Certified biodynamic. Hand harvest. Vinified and aged in large oak barrels. Stainless steel tanks are also used for vintages with exceptionally high yields. Malolactic fermentation only occurs in years with high ripeness and PH. Maximum free sulphur at bottling of 30 mg/l.
From the Impoorter Louis/Dressner: Since taking over his family winery in 1984, Clemens Busch and his wife Rita have shaped it into one of the most iconoclastic estates in the Mosel. A firm believer that naturalpractices in the vines and cellar lead to to the ultimate expression of terroir,Clemens exemplifies the balance between tradition and forward thinking we so look forward to when seeking out new producers.
The majority of Clemens' production is grown on the extremely steep Pündericher , a 25 hectare hill that spans an entire hillside facing the village of Pünderich. Exposed full south/southeast and right on the edge of the river, it is widely considered amongst the very best sites in the Mosel. 17 hectares of the hill are planted in vines and Clemens owns 11 of them.
As more and more of his neighbors abandoned the great vineyards of the Marienburg throughout the 1980's to plant Pinot Noir in the plains (which could be worked mechanically and was in much higher demand at the time), Clemens capitalized on their eagerness to sell at low prices. Starting with just two hectares, in due time he managed to acquire monopoles of many of the Marienburg'sdifferent sites, sometimes going as far as buying neighboring parcels from 11 different owners!
The lieu-dit Marienburg was originally a much smaller, individual parcel that shared the hill with many other vineyards, all with their own names and attributes. In 1971, a law hoping to unify the identity of the area's varied terroirs declared that the entire hill be re-named Marienburg. This decision never sat well with Clemens; as the fifth generation working this land, he knew that these vineyards featured different soil compositions and micro-climacticvariables influenced by fissures, vineyard walls, the inclination of slope and exposure.In such, Clemens his wines site by site and bottles them by the historic vineyard names.
The original Marienberg vineyard faces south/southeast, is dominated by grey slate and also produces "Vom Grauen Schiefer" (from grey slate) and "Vom Roten Schiefer" (from red slate) as well as the Marienburg GG.
Rothenpfad is all red slate, a true rarity in the Mosel. Prior to 2006, most of this hard to reach area was overgrown. A land consolidation permitted Clemens to replant and save some old vines. Today, about a hectare is grown.
Farhlay is the only part of the hill dominated by blue slate. The soil is particularly rocky, so the vines must dig deep to find their nutrition here, resulting in a mineral style.
Falkenlay is defined by grey slate, and located between Rothpfad and Farhlay. Considered by some to be the finest site on the Marienburg, it provides the best grapes for noble sweet wines. A special selection of the best grapes from the old vines of this vineyard are bottled under the name "Raffes".
Finally, Felsterrasse is a tiny terracedparcel and Clemens' favorite. The soils are composed of thick grey slate and are particularly hard to work.
80% of the wines are fermented and agedin very old, 1000 liter barrels; the youngest are 48 years old and many were built by Rita's father. Nothing is ever added to the wine, save a low dose of sulfur at bottling.The wines are never fined. For the sweet and noble sweet wines, Clemens prefers halting the fermentation with a deep freeze followed by a filtration, allowing him to drastically reduce sulfur, which again is only added at bottling.
Pay attention to the capsules on the top of each different bottling, as their color (red, grey, blue) indicate the slate type of each vineyard.
Location: Germany, Mosel
Winemaker: Clemens and Rita Busch
Grapes: Riesling
Soil: Slate
Winemaking: Take note of the bottle's top capsule foil: its color (blue, grey, red) will indicate the color of slate the grapes are grown on. These vines are grown on grey slate.
From the original Marienburg parcel, which has been in the Busch family for generations. This is a little confusing, but originally Marienburg was the name of a single parcel of a larger hill, and that is the wine you're tasting right now. Just like in Burgundy, each parcel had its own name. But in the 1970s, some administrative bozos decided that the whole system was too complicated, and globally renamed the whole hill Marienburg.
As an F-U to these jerks, Clemens still bottles each parcel by its original name. So this wine, the Marienburg, is actually the parcel originally called Marienburg.
Certified biodynamic. Hand harvest. Vinified and aged in large oak barrels. Stainless steel tanks are also used for vintages with exceptionally high yields. Malolactic fermentation only occurs in years with high ripeness and PH. Maximum free sulphur at bottling of 30 mg/l.
From the Impoorter Louis/Dressner: Since taking over his family winery in 1984, Clemens Busch and his wife Rita have shaped it into one of the most iconoclastic estates in the Mosel. A firm believer that naturalpractices in the vines and cellar lead to to the ultimate expression of terroir,Clemens exemplifies the balance between tradition and forward thinking we so look forward to when seeking out new producers.
The majority of Clemens' production is grown on the extremely steep Pündericher , a 25 hectare hill that spans an entire hillside facing the village of Pünderich. Exposed full south/southeast and right on the edge of the river, it is widely considered amongst the very best sites in the Mosel. 17 hectares of the hill are planted in vines and Clemens owns 11 of them.
As more and more of his neighbors abandoned the great vineyards of the Marienburg throughout the 1980's to plant Pinot Noir in the plains (which could be worked mechanically and was in much higher demand at the time), Clemens capitalized on their eagerness to sell at low prices. Starting with just two hectares, in due time he managed to acquire monopoles of many of the Marienburg'sdifferent sites, sometimes going as far as buying neighboring parcels from 11 different owners!
The lieu-dit Marienburg was originally a much smaller, individual parcel that shared the hill with many other vineyards, all with their own names and attributes. In 1971, a law hoping to unify the identity of the area's varied terroirs declared that the entire hill be re-named Marienburg. This decision never sat well with Clemens; as the fifth generation working this land, he knew that these vineyards featured different soil compositions and micro-climacticvariables influenced by fissures, vineyard walls, the inclination of slope and exposure.In such, Clemens his wines site by site and bottles them by the historic vineyard names.
The original Marienberg vineyard faces south/southeast, is dominated by grey slate and also produces "Vom Grauen Schiefer" (from grey slate) and "Vom Roten Schiefer" (from red slate) as well as the Marienburg GG.
Rothenpfad is all red slate, a true rarity in the Mosel. Prior to 2006, most of this hard to reach area was overgrown. A land consolidation permitted Clemens to replant and save some old vines. Today, about a hectare is grown.
Farhlay is the only part of the hill dominated by blue slate. The soil is particularly rocky, so the vines must dig deep to find their nutrition here, resulting in a mineral style.
Falkenlay is defined by grey slate, and located between Rothpfad and Farhlay. Considered by some to be the finest site on the Marienburg, it provides the best grapes for noble sweet wines. A special selection of the best grapes from the old vines of this vineyard are bottled under the name "Raffes".
Finally, Felsterrasse is a tiny terracedparcel and Clemens' favorite. The soils are composed of thick grey slate and are particularly hard to work.
80% of the wines are fermented and agedin very old, 1000 liter barrels; the youngest are 48 years old and many were built by Rita's father. Nothing is ever added to the wine, save a low dose of sulfur at bottling.The wines are never fined. For the sweet and noble sweet wines, Clemens prefers halting the fermentation with a deep freeze followed by a filtration, allowing him to drastically reduce sulfur, which again is only added at bottling.
Pay attention to the capsules on the top of each different bottling, as their color (red, grey, blue) indicate the slate type of each vineyard.