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Rainer Wess Grüner Veltliner, Kremstal 2020

3.571430000 star rating 7 Reviews
The father and daughter duo of Rainer and Christina Wess have really raised the bar with the 2020 vintage of this consistently excellent dry white wine. Along with the ever-present juicy stone fruit, lemon and spice aromas, there is added complexity of delicious struck-match, flint and vanilla pod. The palate is rounded but brilliantly fresh, with notes of lemon curd, gingerbread and peaches. A wine which offers something for everyone as it is both complex and absolutely charming.
is no longer available
Code: AA3261

Wine characteristics

  • White Wine
  • 2 - Dry
  • Gruner Veltliner
  • 75cl
  • Now to 2025
  • 12.5% Alcohol
  • no oak influence
  • Screwcap
  • Vegetarian
  • Vegan
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Rainer Wess Grüner Veltliner, Kremstal Video transcript

Video transcript

Today, I'm tasting grüner veltliner, and this example comes from a lovely little winery called Rainer Wess. In fact, Rainer Wess is actually the name of the winemaker himself. Weingut Rainer Wess is made up of Rainer, but also his daughter Christina, and her now fiancé, David, and it's a lovely little family winery, and they really put their heart and soul into everything that they do. And I think that really shows through in the glass as well.

Grüner veltliner is a key indigenous grape for Austria. It's the most planted grape in the country and really thrives in the cool climate there. It has this lovely, precise fresh acidity. It's a really refreshing style of wine and also is famous for having these delicious stone-fruit characters too.

On the nose with a wine like this, you get this kind of peachiness, which is really nice, but also this kind of oyster shell aroma too. And on the palate that oyster shell becomes a certain sort of salinity, making it very moreish. There's so many layers to a wine like this. It's perfect with food and actually really versatile. Great with something like a creamy pasta, a carbonara or delicate shellfish and seafood too, and everything in between.

But because it's such a generous wine, and I think fantastic value at around the ten pound mark, it's every bit as good just by itself too.

Austria

Austria has a long history of making fine wines, but with the country's wines undergoing a renaissance in recent years, now is arguably the best time to get to know the diverse and delicious bottles on offer.

There is evidence that vines were being cultivated in Austria for the production of wine by the Celts, even before the Romans. Austria was, rather surprisingly, the third-largest producer of wine globally in the 1920s, mainly producing and exporting simple light white wines. In more recent times the country has had to deal with the infamous ‘anti-freeze’ scandal of the 1980s when a handful of bulk producers were found to have adulterated their wines with ethylene glycol to sweeten their wines.

The problems of the 1980s hit the country's industry hard, but also had the effect of initiating the most wide-ranging quality control measures being implemented to ensure that this sort of disaster could never happen again. The industry was further...

Austria has a long history of making fine wines, but with the country's wines undergoing a renaissance in recent years, now is arguably the best time to get to know the diverse and delicious bottles on offer.

There is evidence that vines were being cultivated in Austria for the production of wine by the Celts, even before the Romans. Austria was, rather surprisingly, the third-largest producer of wine globally in the 1920s, mainly producing and exporting simple light white wines. In more recent times the country has had to deal with the infamous ‘anti-freeze’ scandal of the 1980s when a handful of bulk producers were found to have adulterated their wines with ethylene glycol to sweeten their wines.

The problems of the 1980s hit the country's industry hard, but also had the effect of initiating the most wide-ranging quality control measures being implemented to ensure that this sort of disaster could never happen again. The industry was further reinvigorated as larger and less quality-oriented producers went out of business, leaving old sites available for a new generation of winemakers and the original fine winefamily producers.

Austria's wine regions are confined to the east of the country where the Alps settle into the great Pannonian Plain, running north to south along the many borders from the Czech Republic in the north to Slovenia in the south. The climate here is continental, characterised by cold winters, hot dry summers, and often a large diurnal temperature flux with hot days, and cold nights. This is perfect for ripening a large range of grape varieties and retaining acidity and fresh aromas in white wines.

Broadly there are three major regions: Niederösterreich in the north, Burgenland and Steiermark to the south. Within these regions are a further 16 smaller DACs (Districtus Austriae Controllatus).

Niederösterreich (27,128ha) is known for high-quality white wine production, and most of the vineyards are focused along the banks of the Danube and its tributaries. Nearly half of all vines in this large area are grüner veltliner although world-class rieslings are also produced. Sub regions to look out for here include Kamptal, Kremstal, Wachau, Wagram and Weinviertel.

Burgenland (13,840ha) is the area of vineyards focused around Lake Neusiedl - Central Europe's second-largest lake which straddles the Austrian-Hungarian border. Full-bodied and rich red wines are produced under the influence of the hot continental climate. The complex soil structure throughout the hills surrounding the lake, the various aspects available and large diurnal temperature change allows fine mineral-driven reds to be made. The reds produced use local grape varieties which are suited to the terroir - look out for blaufränkisch, zweigelt and St Laurent. The natural humidity caused by the lake can also lead to high levels of botrytis making this an excellent source of high-quality dessert wines.

Steiermark (Styria) (4,240h) the smallest Austrian area is developing a great reputation for its steely sauvignons and fresh aromatic white wines. Although many of the best wines are made in such small quantities that they are never exported, this is a region to watch.

In terms of grapes, grüner veltliner, native to Austria and Central Europe, is the king of the whites in terms of volume. It is turned into everything from light, thirst-quenching wines to complex barrel-aged stars. It is a great food wine and is finding its way on to many more restaurant wine lists around the world.

Riesling is less widely planted, at only 5% of Austria's production, but makes some of the country's finest wines, particularly on the steep slopes of the Wachau Valley along the banks of the Danube. Riesling's common style in Austria is bone-dry, elegant and steely with fresh citrus flavours.

Chardonnay (sometimes locally called morillon) and sauvignon blanc are increasingly planted and are already showing themselves to be hugely promising. The highly aromatic scheurebe, a German import, has a foothold in Steiermark making peach and blackcurrant-leaf-scented wines that marry well with spicy foods.

Reds make up about a third of Austrian plantings. 13 varieties are permitted, including both the dominant indigenous varieties and those more recently introduced such as cabernet and pinot noir. Zweigelt is the most commonly planted, making up 15% of Austria's red vines, and is a 1920s cross between blaufränkisch and St Laurent. It makes relatively light reds generally, with sour-cherry and redcurrant flavours supported by fine tannins and a spicy linear finish.

Blaufränkisch (pronounced blaou-FREN-kish) is a late-ripening indigenous variety can create wines with dense tannins, high acidity and concentration that can age well for many years. Generally the wines have notes of blackberries, ripe cherries or plums. St Laurent wines are often confused with pinot noir as they can have a similar profile: red-berry perfume, light elegant and crisp. However, St Laurent is often used to add elegance to a blend.

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Weingut Wess

Rainer Wess initially studied oenology at Klosterneuburg in the 1980s, and then went to work in various vineyards in Bordeaux. He moved back to Austria in the late 1990s and fell in love with the vineyards of the Wachau and Kremstal, finally purchasing vineyards of his own in 2003.

He purchased 10ha of vineyards in both Kremstal and Wachau. From the outset the focus was on riesling and grüner veltliner, and carefully trying to match these varieties with the perfect plots within vineyards so that the wines might express great terroir. The vines are farmed very carefully with little if any chemicals used, and at harvest the grapes are hand picked. Today, his brilliant winemaker daughter Christina and son-in-law David have taken over the rains from Rainer and continue to bring the terroir into the bottle in as unadulterated and as pure a form as possible.

The winery is housed in a monastery’s ancient cellar right in the middle of the famed Sandgrube vineyard in Krems. Rainer added a new gravity-flow grape-reception facility to the old building in order to ensure that grapes were processed in the gentlest way possible, without pumps. The juice and wine is carefully handled without any oak, which enhances the purity they seek.

Austria Vintage 2020

The 2020 vintage in Austria will go down as a vintage which produced wines with a particularly impressive ageing potential. It was a long and cool vintage, resulting in wines with an incredible freshness, focus and structure.

The Guardian

Austrias gruner veltliner is a really versatile white that could take you through a whole range of dishes.

Fiona Beckett

decanter.com

From the cool 2020 vintage, this is quite tight at first, but the white stone fruit and lemon citrus notes open with time in the glass. The palate is fresh and focused with an attractive flintiness. Not...
From the cool 2020 vintage, this is quite tight at first, but the white stone fruit and lemon citrus notes open with time in the glass. The palate is fresh and focused with an attractive flintiness. Not the most complex, but very well priced from a respected producer focused on sustainable farming and low-intervention winemaking.
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Amy Wislocki

The Times

… flinty, floral grüner, with oodles of dill and white pepper spice.

Jane MacQuitty

The Sunday Times

Made by father and daughter Rainer and Christina Wess, this has an appealing aroma: a trace of white pepper, spice and ginger. It also has enough structure and acidity to pair with all kinds of foods.

Will Lyons

JancisRobinson.com

Still pretty youthful; I’d keep this a little longer ideally. The acidity is still pretty marked at the beginning, though there is the beginning of grüner's white pepper and dill pickle....
Still pretty youthful; I’d keep this a little longer ideally. The acidity is still pretty marked at the beginning, though there is the beginning of grüner's white pepper and dill pickle. Still a little chewy.
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15.5+/20

2019 vintage reviews
2018 vintage reviews

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