Barbara Öhlzelt ‘Ried Blauenstein’ Riesling 2022
Location: Austria, Niederösterreich, Kamptal
Winemaker: Barbara Öhlzelt
Grapes: Riesling
Soil: Slate, gneiss, amphibolite
Winemaking: Aged in acacia wood barrel
From the Importer Vom Boden: ‘Ried Blauenstein’ Riesling is a single-vineyard wine; it’s bonkers good – prominently, like jaw-droppingly, mineral – a sorta Steinertal of the Kamptal, with Barbara’s touch. It does taste like Riesling from slate and if the name, “Blauenstein,” or “blue stones” suggests as much, this is only partly true. Yes, there is some slate in this terraced vineyard at about 300 meters (1,200 feet) elevation, there is also gneiss and amphibolite. In fact it is the amphibolite, says Barbara, that gives the stones in the vineyard their blue color. So there.
In a region famous (infamous?) for broad, masculine, gooey and textural wines, Barbara Öhlzelt is content to quietly flip the paradigm completely on its head. She farms only around seven hectares in Austria’s Kamptal, quietly making some of the most precise, angelic, energetic wines in the region.
The Kamptal is a curious place; it seems to have been dominated (defined?) by the big boys of the region. These plush Kamptal wines aren’t exactly hard to find, and their general girth has created the distinct impression that the famous loess soils of the region necessarily result in big, broad, glycerin-heavy wines.
Barbara’s style is the polar opposite. While the wines are angular and dancing, they don’t shout… and neither does Barbara. Yet those in the know though, know, ya know?
Along with growers like Jurtschitsch, Barbara is redefining what the Kamptal can be. She champions the lesser-known sites; she eschews textures and winemaking extremes in favor of linear focus and quiet, simmering intensity.
This is the Kamptal as fine, clearly delineated and precisely-etched. Blind-tasting, more than one person wondered, could the Grüners possibly be Rieslings? They have that much tension. Compared to the masculine Kamptal, Barbara’s wines show just as much depth and persistence, yet on a lighter, more refreshing frame. Barbara is the Weiser-Künstler of the Kamptal, translated from slate to the the dialect of the Kamptal – loess, granite and sandstone. The wines are loaded with mouth-watering acidity and the alcohol levels are carefully restrained.
Barbara is soft-spoken but intense, strongly opinionated, deeply passionate, playful and caring. Yes, she has great parcels in the Heiligenstein, Kamptal’s most historic and justly famous site (it’s a mix of various types of ancient primary and volcanic rock and often described as a geologic wonder), but ask her what her favorite site is and she’ll tell you it’s the Kogelberg, where her 65-year-old Riesling vines are a marvel. She won’t badmouth her fellow growers, but it’s also not lost on anyone that she is trying to do something very, verydifferent.
The Öhlzelt lineup offers a beautiful cross-section of her production. The liter Grüner needs no introduction; it is serious well beyond the regular limitations of the milky Grüners that crowd (and slowly destroy) the category. The Grüner from a beautiful domestic vineyard surround the cellar (the “Kellerweingarten”) is a further step, in terms of dimension and depth.
The village wines with the dancing angels (her village is called Zöbing, thus the wines are “Zöbingers”) are all raised in acacia wood. They are multi-site, village-level blends, but from better parcels and older vines than the Kellerweingarten.
So here is the new Kamptal. Refreshing, isn’t it?
Location: Austria, Niederösterreich, Kamptal
Winemaker: Barbara Öhlzelt
Grapes: Riesling
Soil: Slate, gneiss, amphibolite
Winemaking: Aged in acacia wood barrel
From the Importer Vom Boden: ‘Ried Blauenstein’ Riesling is a single-vineyard wine; it’s bonkers good – prominently, like jaw-droppingly, mineral – a sorta Steinertal of the Kamptal, with Barbara’s touch. It does taste like Riesling from slate and if the name, “Blauenstein,” or “blue stones” suggests as much, this is only partly true. Yes, there is some slate in this terraced vineyard at about 300 meters (1,200 feet) elevation, there is also gneiss and amphibolite. In fact it is the amphibolite, says Barbara, that gives the stones in the vineyard their blue color. So there.
In a region famous (infamous?) for broad, masculine, gooey and textural wines, Barbara Öhlzelt is content to quietly flip the paradigm completely on its head. She farms only around seven hectares in Austria’s Kamptal, quietly making some of the most precise, angelic, energetic wines in the region.
The Kamptal is a curious place; it seems to have been dominated (defined?) by the big boys of the region. These plush Kamptal wines aren’t exactly hard to find, and their general girth has created the distinct impression that the famous loess soils of the region necessarily result in big, broad, glycerin-heavy wines.
Barbara’s style is the polar opposite. While the wines are angular and dancing, they don’t shout… and neither does Barbara. Yet those in the know though, know, ya know?
Along with growers like Jurtschitsch, Barbara is redefining what the Kamptal can be. She champions the lesser-known sites; she eschews textures and winemaking extremes in favor of linear focus and quiet, simmering intensity.
This is the Kamptal as fine, clearly delineated and precisely-etched. Blind-tasting, more than one person wondered, could the Grüners possibly be Rieslings? They have that much tension. Compared to the masculine Kamptal, Barbara’s wines show just as much depth and persistence, yet on a lighter, more refreshing frame. Barbara is the Weiser-Künstler of the Kamptal, translated from slate to the the dialect of the Kamptal – loess, granite and sandstone. The wines are loaded with mouth-watering acidity and the alcohol levels are carefully restrained.
Barbara is soft-spoken but intense, strongly opinionated, deeply passionate, playful and caring. Yes, she has great parcels in the Heiligenstein, Kamptal’s most historic and justly famous site (it’s a mix of various types of ancient primary and volcanic rock and often described as a geologic wonder), but ask her what her favorite site is and she’ll tell you it’s the Kogelberg, where her 65-year-old Riesling vines are a marvel. She won’t badmouth her fellow growers, but it’s also not lost on anyone that she is trying to do something very, verydifferent.
The Öhlzelt lineup offers a beautiful cross-section of her production. The liter Grüner needs no introduction; it is serious well beyond the regular limitations of the milky Grüners that crowd (and slowly destroy) the category. The Grüner from a beautiful domestic vineyard surround the cellar (the “Kellerweingarten”) is a further step, in terms of dimension and depth.
The village wines with the dancing angels (her village is called Zöbing, thus the wines are “Zöbingers”) are all raised in acacia wood. They are multi-site, village-level blends, but from better parcels and older vines than the Kellerweingarten.
So here is the new Kamptal. Refreshing, isn’t it?
Location: Austria, Niederösterreich, Kamptal
Winemaker: Barbara Öhlzelt
Grapes: Riesling
Soil: Slate, gneiss, amphibolite
Winemaking: Aged in acacia wood barrel
From the Importer Vom Boden: ‘Ried Blauenstein’ Riesling is a single-vineyard wine; it’s bonkers good – prominently, like jaw-droppingly, mineral – a sorta Steinertal of the Kamptal, with Barbara’s touch. It does taste like Riesling from slate and if the name, “Blauenstein,” or “blue stones” suggests as much, this is only partly true. Yes, there is some slate in this terraced vineyard at about 300 meters (1,200 feet) elevation, there is also gneiss and amphibolite. In fact it is the amphibolite, says Barbara, that gives the stones in the vineyard their blue color. So there.
In a region famous (infamous?) for broad, masculine, gooey and textural wines, Barbara Öhlzelt is content to quietly flip the paradigm completely on its head. She farms only around seven hectares in Austria’s Kamptal, quietly making some of the most precise, angelic, energetic wines in the region.
The Kamptal is a curious place; it seems to have been dominated (defined?) by the big boys of the region. These plush Kamptal wines aren’t exactly hard to find, and their general girth has created the distinct impression that the famous loess soils of the region necessarily result in big, broad, glycerin-heavy wines.
Barbara’s style is the polar opposite. While the wines are angular and dancing, they don’t shout… and neither does Barbara. Yet those in the know though, know, ya know?
Along with growers like Jurtschitsch, Barbara is redefining what the Kamptal can be. She champions the lesser-known sites; she eschews textures and winemaking extremes in favor of linear focus and quiet, simmering intensity.
This is the Kamptal as fine, clearly delineated and precisely-etched. Blind-tasting, more than one person wondered, could the Grüners possibly be Rieslings? They have that much tension. Compared to the masculine Kamptal, Barbara’s wines show just as much depth and persistence, yet on a lighter, more refreshing frame. Barbara is the Weiser-Künstler of the Kamptal, translated from slate to the the dialect of the Kamptal – loess, granite and sandstone. The wines are loaded with mouth-watering acidity and the alcohol levels are carefully restrained.
Barbara is soft-spoken but intense, strongly opinionated, deeply passionate, playful and caring. Yes, she has great parcels in the Heiligenstein, Kamptal’s most historic and justly famous site (it’s a mix of various types of ancient primary and volcanic rock and often described as a geologic wonder), but ask her what her favorite site is and she’ll tell you it’s the Kogelberg, where her 65-year-old Riesling vines are a marvel. She won’t badmouth her fellow growers, but it’s also not lost on anyone that she is trying to do something very, verydifferent.
The Öhlzelt lineup offers a beautiful cross-section of her production. The liter Grüner needs no introduction; it is serious well beyond the regular limitations of the milky Grüners that crowd (and slowly destroy) the category. The Grüner from a beautiful domestic vineyard surround the cellar (the “Kellerweingarten”) is a further step, in terms of dimension and depth.
The village wines with the dancing angels (her village is called Zöbing, thus the wines are “Zöbingers”) are all raised in acacia wood. They are multi-site, village-level blends, but from better parcels and older vines than the Kellerweingarten.
So here is the new Kamptal. Refreshing, isn’t it?