Jurtschitsch Grüner Veltliner Ried Dechant 1ÖTW Kamptal 2022 is no longer available

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Jurtschitsch Grüner Veltliner Ried Dechant 1ÖTW Kamptal 2022

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Jurtschitsch's Dechant single vineyard grüner veltliner is a remarkably good-value wine in a category which already offers outstanding value across the board. Dechant has a south-easterly aspect and is sheltered from northerly winds, resulting in even ripening across Jurtschitsch's 70-plus-year-old vines here. The 2022 vintage has given the wine a prettier and more delicate fruit expression, alongside the winery`s characteristic purity and spice of acidity. Everything is hand-harvested and fermented in 1000-litre neutral Austrian oak barrels. The nose is pretty, lifted and ethereal, with a twist of white pepper dancing above the lime-peel and toasted-peach notes. The palate is pretty and fine, with more precision and restraint than recent warmer vintages. You will be hard-pressed to find many more age-worthy white wines at this price from anywhere in the world. Drink from 2024 to 2032.
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Code: AA4361

Wine characteristics

  • White Wine
  • 2 - Dry
  • Gruner Veltliner
  • 75cl
  • Now to 2032
  • 13% Alcohol
  • no oak influence
  • Cork, natural
  • Vegetarian
  • Vegan
  • Organic

Jurtschitsch

Alwin and Stefanie Jurtschitsch are the new generation in charge at this family-owned estate in Langenlois in the Kamptal region of Austria, having taken over from Alwin’s father Edwin and uncles Paul and Charles. The couple have travelled and worked extensively in France, Australia and New Zealand, experiences which have given them a fresh perspective on their work. They have brought this to bear on both the vineyards and cellar at Jutschitsch, whilst respecting the traditions and heritage of the family estate and the enormous progress made over many years, particularly by Alwin's father and uncles.

They began by putting the ecological principles that had been applied to viticulture and winemaking since the 1970s on an even broader but firmer footing, cutting yields and reducing the sources of their fruit to use only the very best vineyard sites, thus ensuring that only their finest grapes made it into the vats.

It is an uncompromising approach that meant ignoring some of their vineyards, but one that is paying dividends in terms of wine quality.

Alwin believes that the best wines are the result of the care taken in the vineyard, with as little interference as one can get away with in the cellar, so that his role might be described as a subtle blend of farmer and scientist, always trying to understand the soils, vines and winemaking processes as best he can in order to allow the vineyards their fullest expression.

Examples of this approach are the sole use of native...

Alwin and Stefanie Jurtschitsch are the new generation in charge at this family-owned estate in Langenlois in the Kamptal region of Austria, having taken over from Alwin’s father Edwin and uncles Paul and Charles. The couple have travelled and worked extensively in France, Australia and New Zealand, experiences which have given them a fresh perspective on their work. They have brought this to bear on both the vineyards and cellar at Jutschitsch, whilst respecting the traditions and heritage of the family estate and the enormous progress made over many years, particularly by Alwin's father and uncles.

They began by putting the ecological principles that had been applied to viticulture and winemaking since the 1970s on an even broader but firmer footing, cutting yields and reducing the sources of their fruit to use only the very best vineyard sites, thus ensuring that only their finest grapes made it into the vats.

It is an uncompromising approach that meant ignoring some of their vineyards, but one that is paying dividends in terms of wine quality.

Alwin believes that the best wines are the result of the care taken in the vineyard, with as little interference as one can get away with in the cellar, so that his role might be described as a subtle blend of farmer and scientist, always trying to understand the soils, vines and winemaking processes as best he can in order to allow the vineyards their fullest expression.

Examples of this approach are the sole use of native yeasts found in the vineyards to ferment the wines, reductions in sulphur dioxide in winemaking and the introduction of a concrete egg-shaped vat for maturation of some wines alongside the large foudres that have been traditionally used. They are now among the foremost producers of Austria as a result.

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2020 vintage reviews

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