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Schloss Johannisberg Riesling Auslese, Rheingau, Germany

Average Price $104 (USD) (Approx, ex-tax, all vintages)
Search Rank 5596
Over all vintages, this was the 5596th most popular wine on Wine-Searcher last year. Search rank last month: 7265th
Price History for Schloss Johannisberg Riesling Auslese
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Region Hierarchy

Sibling regions of Rheingau:
Ahr   Mittelrhein   Rheingau   Wurttemberg  
Baden   Mosel   Rheinhessen    
Franken [Franconia]   Nahe   Saale-Unstrut    
Hessische Bergstrasse   Pfalz [Palatinate]   Sachsen [Saxony]    
  • Rheingau wine region

    Rheingau is one of 13 quality wine regions in Germany. It follows the Rhine river from Hochheim to Lorch, within the federal state of Hesse. The 12.5 miles (20km) from Wulluf to Bingen are the only point at which the Rhine flows in an east-west direction for any significant distance. It is this deviation from its usual northerly journey, around the Taunus hills, that is the heart of the Rheingau and provides the steep, south-facing slopes that are home to the region's vineyards.

    Rheingau's approximately 7750 acres (3100ha) of vines makes up only around 3% of Germany's total vineyard plantings, but the region punches way above its weight in terms of its contribution to the quality and fame of German wine. Almost entirely a Riesling area, the first documented plantings in Rheingau occurred in 1435, and this one variety now accounts for nearly 80% of Rheingau's wine production. Spätburgunder (Pinot Noir) is a distant second at around 12%, followed by Müller-Thurgau at 2%.

    Climatically, the Rheingau is cool-continental with an annual average temperature of 50F (10C), 1643 hours of sunshine per year and only 21 inches (536mm) of annual rainfall (about the same as more ...

  • Germany wine region

    Germany has a long and illustrious history of winemaking, a fact that is often overlooked due to a period of decidedly lesser glory during the 1970s and 1980s.

    The Romans first established vineyards around Trier on the Rhine river, and by the third century AD plantings had spread to the Mosel and its tributaries. During the Middle Ages the Christian church, particularly the Cistercian and Benedictine monasteries, was very influential in the development of wine growing and in the production of quality wine in Germany. Some of the most famous names in German wine today, such as Schloss Johannisberg and Kloster Eberbach, were established as monasteries and producing wines nearly 900 years ago.

    Germany’s greatest variety, Riesling, is first documented in the Rheingau in 1435, and found its way to the Mosel shortly thereafter. In 1720, Schloss Johannisberg became the first major vineyard to be planted exclusively to this superior variety. The mid to late 18th century saw the development of botrytized wines, and by the 19th century Rhine wines were selling for prices above those of the first-growth Bordeaux.

    The German wine industry lost its way in quality terms during the 20th century, expanding plantings onto less-favorable sites and increasing yields to levels at which quality was severely compromised. However, the greatest German producers, sites and wines were never completely lost, and since the late 20th century considerable efforts have more ...

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Tasting Notes Search


Grape Variety Riesling

Riesling is an aromatic white grape variety of German origin which is, if the majority of the world's top wine critics are to be believed, the finest white wine variety on Earth.

For many, the claim may seem at odds with the sea of chaptalized, low-quality wine exported from Germany in the late 20th century. In fact, very little of that wine was Riesling at all, but the reputation has nonetheless stuck. No less unshakeable a stereotype is of Riesling as just a 'sweet' grape, used only to make sticky wines. Although based on a grain of truth (sweet Rieslings are among the finest in the world), this stereotype blindly ignores the fact that most Riesling is either dry or off-dry, and is behind some of the finest, most age-worthy cuvees that money can buy.

The Riesling vine holds a very different place in the wine world to such great grapes as Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot or Chardonnay, and even Sauvignon Blanc, another aromatic variety which excels in cool climates. While these grapes make globally popular wines and have conquered every corner of the winegrowing world, Riesling has a more exclusive fan base, and is conspicuous by its absence in the core vineyards of France, Spain and Italy.

Riesling's home is unquestionably the regions which trace the middle Rhine and the lower Mosel, two of Europe's great wine rivers. This essentially equates to the key wine regions of Germany, most famously the Mosel, more ...


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