
Schloss Lieser, 'Schiefer' Riesling Trocken 2023
Producer: Schloss Lieser
Region: Mosel, Germany
Varietals: 100% Riesling
Viticulture: Practicing Organic
Category: White Wine
Size: 750ml
"Juicy and lively with a pronounced stony acidity, this barely medium-bodied dry riesling has a lovely limey freshness. Still quite sleek, and there's a minty character that accentuates the freshness. From organically grown grapes with Fair'n Green certification. Drink or hold. Screw cap." - James Suckling
In the cellar the philosophy is very clear: We make the wines with the highest quality fruit we possibly can. Only top sites can produce great wines. In the cellar, the fermentations are always spontaneous. This is how we like our Mosel Rieslings and we feel it’s an important part of our style. We almost always use stainless steel, except for cooler vintages where we employ some oak. We don’t do macerations and we strive to do our pressing when it’s cool. We always press with low pressure as we want the wines to be fine and elegant, preferring the structure of the wines to come from extended lees contact rather than maceration or phenolics from pressing. We don’t filter the juice and do a sedimentation as we want to see relatively clear juice going into the fermentation tank. The wines ferment for as long as they need, but often fermentation takes about 6-10 weeks. After fermentation, we leave the wines on the gross lees for as long as needed. We taste the wines all the time during this period and the decision for racking is always made by taste, really when I am thinking that they are ready. After racking the wines spend three to four months on the fine lees. We decide when to rack and bottle, again, according to how the wines taste. The wines are made in very reductive conditions and so some wines take longer to be ready for bottling than others. We make wines for drinking but also for aging, so it’s important not to rush them. I always use native yeasts and have for decades. To me, the native yeasts bring more complexity, more texture, but they don’t lose the clarity that makes the wines of the Mosel so special.”