Bob Parsons Alberta. wrote:For no apparent reason, I always seem to have a soft spot for Graacher Himmelreich. Maybe `cos in the old Liquor Board days, there was always plenty around!! Anyhows this has been in my cellar for ions, so lets have a looksie!!
WTN: `89 Graacher Himmelreich Riesling Spatlese-F.W.Gymnasium, M-S-R.
Shipped by Stefan Ress of Rudesheim, AP 3 561 024 17 90. Crumbly cork, alc is 8.5%.
Colour. Dark gold, no sign of rust.
Nose. Some vague gasolein hints, orange zest/marmalade. Apricot and a very brief honeyed scent! Could not find much in minerally tones, maybe tomorrow?
Palate. I have to admit on opening I thought past its best and I served a tad warmer to get more flavours. Initial thoughts were lime, apple, orange peel from my fav. marmalade. Sure is not oxidized and has good acidity and some minerally elements. After 2 hrs, there is some sweetness but no botyrtis. That would come from an auslese right? Quite a turn around in a couple of hours, for sure. I have half-a-bottle for tomorrow! Ok so there is not a lot of fruit here, but quite enjoyable. Probably past the peak but still drinkable.
Cost was $14.00 Cdn in `1993.
****BTW, really enjoyed Ian`s notes from earlier today. Good Open Mike idea there sport!!
A fair dinkum response from yourself mate
botrytis? I don't think there's any hard and fast rule, though yes I'd expect more botrytis influence as the sweetness level increases through Kab, Spat, Aus, BA, TBA. There's also the situation where a producer can effectively declassify down a level if they're missing enough spatlese say, but have too much auslese. I'm sure others can answer this better than me though.
A good point to mention drinking temperature. Ours came from our wine cabinet (about 13C) to the fridge door for half hour (so maybe down to about 11C) before opening and I think with a gradual warming in the room, didn't seem to harm the aromatics too much.
Funny, I never used to like marmalade, but as I've aged (I wouldn't go so far as to say matured

) the taste has become appealing. I think 20 years ago, I'd have said "it's a bit sharp and bitter isn't it". Now I'd say it's refreshing and has a lovely bitter twang! Really enjoying some Portuguese marmalade we discovered recently. Anyway I'm drifting.
Will be interested to see how this one gets on tomorrow. Is the half left in the same bottle, or decanted to a half?
Ta for the note
Ian