MULLER-CATOIR 2007 SCHEUREBE HAARDTER MANDELRING TROCKENBEERENAUSLESE TBA 375ML

Item #:
318027
Size:
375ml
Quantity On Hand:
3
Wine Advocate Score: 97 Open Wine Advocate Score: rating modal
Wine Advocate Score: Logo

Robert Parker's Wine Advocate has an online database housing over 450,000 Wine Reviews and Ratings, more than any other website! They review wines from more than 25 different countries and over 500 different regions around the wine world

$200.00
THIS IS A LIBRARY WINE. PLEASE USE AN AH-SO OR DURAND WHEN EXTRACTING THE CORK.
WINE ADVOCATE 97 POINTS The Muller-Catoir 2007 Haardter Mandelring Scheurebe Trockenbeerenauslese is redolent of, and exudes, red currant jelly, grapefruit and blood orange marmalade, marzipan, and mint-sage syrup. Incredibly light, bright, and lively for a wine this viscous and far gone on noble rot, it simultaneously seduces and invigorates; coats and impinges, leading into a finish of incredible exuberance and sheer sap. This isn’t just lip-smacking; it’s tongue-hanging-out, face-smacking. I would anticipate 30 or more years of excitement in these bottles. David Schildkneckt, Wine Advocate.
You had to play poker and take some chances this year, remarked Martin Franzen, and based on the vinous evidence, he repeatedly played winning hands. The stylistic evolution of wines under Franzen’s and proprietor Philip Catoir’s direction – which I honestly find it difficult to understand why so many commentators view as utterly discontinuous with the legacy of legendary former cellar master Hans-Gunter Schwarz – has run toward increasing refinement and subtlety in the Rieslings, for which conditions in 2007 – assuming (as one can, here) impeccable viticultural husbandry and patience at harvest – were ultimately ideal (even as they had been problematic in 2006). Franzen has turned out the first totally masterful Scheurebe collection of his career this year. And the nobly sweet wines – including, improbably, six tour de force TBAs, among which are the estate’s first-ever from Muskateller and Weissburgunder and first Scheurebe TBA since 1964 – dazzle with the audacity and at times raucousness that routinely accrue to nobly sweet Pfalz 2007s, and are at their best unsurpassed. Nearly all of this year’s collection (save for one refusenik Rieslander TBA) had been bottled already in April, a bold strategy considering how downright unsettled by nature some of them are. But capturing all of their energy in bottle seemed to be the governing metaphor. I cannot resist pointing out that – in keeping with a lamentable national trend – there is now not just no halbtrocken wine here, but no middle ground: every wine this year is either legally trocken or obviously sweet. Muller-Catoir is increasing their acreage of Pinot Blanc – in itself a welcome development, although partisans of Rieslaner will be dismayed to learn that it is coming at that variety’s expense.