Maison Trimbach - Gewurztraminer - Vendanges Tardives

92 RP Points
Maison Trimbach - Gewurztraminer - Vendanges Tardives - 2017 - 75cl - Onshore Cellars

Maison Trimbach - Gewurztraminer - Vendanges Tardives

Vintage
Size
Prezzo di listino €42.00
Price on application/
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Imposte incluse. Spedizione calcolata alla cassa.

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Più informazioni

Provenienza
Tipo
Paese
Denominazione
Produttore
Tecnico
Servizio
10° - 12° C
Bere
2020 - 2032
Abbinamenti
CakesBlue CheeseFruit-Based DessertsBerries and Fresh FruitsCreme BruleeFoie GrasSpicy Asian Cuisine
Caratteristiche
Light-bodiedMedium-sweetLight intensityFreshElegantComplex

La Storia della Bottiglia

Maison Trimbach

Maison Trimbach

Maison Trimbach è una cantina a conduzione familiare con sede a Ribeauvillé, Alsazia, Francia. Il domaine produce vini in Alsazia da più generazioni, concentrandosi principalmente sulle varietà bianche...

Maison Trimbach è una cantina a conduzione familiare con sede a Ribeauvillé, Alsazia, Francia. Il domaine produce vini in Alsazia da più generazioni, concentrandosi principalmente sulle varietà bianche caratteristiche della regione insieme a una produzione limitata di Pinot Noir. I loro vigneti si trovano in alcuni dei siti più rispettati dell'Alsazia, incluse parcelle Grand Cru.

La produzione di vini dell'Alsazia è caratterizzata da vini varietali che esprimono il terroir unico delle pendici dei Vosgi. Il clima continentale della regione e i diversi tipi di suolo, che vanno dal granito al calcare e all'argilla, creano condizioni ideali per vini bianchi aromatici con spiccata mineralità e potenziale di invecchiamento. Il Riesling alsaziano è particolarmente noto per il suo stile secco, l'acidità vivace e la capacità di riflettere siti vigneti specifici, mentre il Pinot Gris della regione tipicamente mostra più corpo e ricchezza rispetto ad altre interpretazioni dell'uva.

L'attuale gamma di Trimbach dimostra la loro attenzione alle varietà alsaziane tradizionali, con molteplici espressioni di Riesling inclusa la loro Cuvée Frederic Emile e una bottiglia Grand Cru Schlossberg. Producono anche vini di livello Riserva da Pinot Gris e mantengono una piccola produzione di Pinot Noir, l'unico vitigno rosso consentito nei vini dell'appellation Alsazia.

Maison Trimbach
Alsace

Alsace

Alsace stretches along France's eastern border with Germany, forming a narrow strip between the Vosges Mountains and the Rhine River. This unique geographical position has shaped both the...

Alsace stretches along France's eastern border with Germany, forming a narrow strip between the Vosges Mountains and the Rhine River. This unique geographical position has shaped both the region's winemaking traditions and its distinctive bottle shapes, with influences from both French and German viticulture evident throughout its 15,500 hectares of vineyards. The region operates under its own appellation system, with Alsace AOC covering varietal wines and Alsace Grand Cru AOC designating 51 specific vineyard sites of exceptional terroir.

The Vosges Mountains create a rain shadow effect that makes Alsace one of France's driest wine regions, with annual rainfall often below 500mm. The diverse geological foundation includes granite, limestone, sandstone, and volcanic soils, contributing to the complexity found across different vineyard sites. Grand Cru vineyards, situated on the steepest and most favorable slopes, benefit from optimal sun exposure and specific soil compositions that enhance varietal expression.

Alsace focuses primarily on single-varietal white wines, with Riesling, Gewürztraminer, Pinot Gris, and Pinot Blanc forming the core of production. The region's winemaking philosophy emphasizes pure varietal character, typically fermenting wines to dryness unless designated as late-harvest styles. Crémant d'Alsace represents the region's traditional-method sparkling wines, while small quantities of Pinot Noir produce the area's only red wines. The combination of continental climate, protective mountain influence, and varied terroir creates wines with pronounced aromatics, mineral precision, and notable aging potential.

Esplora Alsace
Alsace

Alsace

Alsace is a wine region in northeastern France, located in the eastern foothills of the Vosges mountains and bordering Germany to the east. The region has a documented...

Alsace is a wine region in northeastern France, located in the eastern foothills of the Vosges mountains and bordering Germany to the east. The region has a documented winemaking history stretching back to the medieval period, though its current appellation framework was formalized in the 20th century. The terrain is characterized by steep, terraced vineyards on hillsides that face southeast, with the Vosges providing a natural rain shadow that significantly influences the local climate.

The region experiences a continental climate with warm, dry summers and cold winters, conditions that favor the production of dry wines with concentrated fruit character. Soils vary considerably across Alsace's scattered vineyard sites, ranging from limestone and marl to granite and volcanic substrates, which imparts distinct mineral signatures to wines. The appellation permits several white grape varieties as its principal focus—Riesling, Gewurztraminer, Pinot Gris, and Muscat—alongside limited production of Pinot Noir for red wines. Winemakers here traditionally produce wines across a spectrum of sweetness levels, from bone-dry to late-harvest expressions, depending on vintage conditions and harvest timing.

Alsatian wines are characterized by aromatic intensity and crisp acidity despite relatively high alcohol levels, a profile shaped by the region's cool-climate continental setting. Rieslings from Alsace display floral and mineral notes with stone fruit character, while Gewurztraminers are known for distinctive spice, lychee, and rose petal aromatics. Pinot Gris typically offers broader body and riper fruit expression than Riesling, often with honeyed undertones. The dry style predominates in modern production, though noble rot infections in favorable years produce complex sweet wines of considerable aging potential.

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