An Alsatian wine produced using ancestral mixed-variety planting. Its juicy fruit and straight character create a perfect harmony. More info
Alsace Huebuhl Marcel Deiss (Domaine) serve at a temperature of 15°C. It will pair perfectly with the following dishes: Curry de volaille, Curry de poisson, Homard à l orange.
Peak: Drink until 2027
This Bergheim vineyard Premier Cru comes from the Burg terroir, whose Keuper marl soil and south-facing aspect are particularly favourable to producing powerful, complex wines. This cuvée is no exception: lively, full-bodied and spiced, it is a blend of several Alsatian grape varieties grown in a traditional co-plantation. It has a sumptuous golden colour with cinnamon and clove on the nose and a complex minerality in the mouth which rewards drinking in its youth. The harmony created between its juicy fruit aromas and straight strucutre is something truly special.
Jean-Michel Deiss, (the son of Marcel Deiss, who established the property in 1949) currently manages the 27 hectares of vines, which are planted on some of Alsace's finest terroirs, including the grand cru Altenburg de Bergheim. Jean-Michel Deiss grows his vines according to biodynamic principles, a philosophy that prohibits any form of chemical treatment and combines an understanding of cosmic rhythms with work on the soil and the vines. The objective? To encourage the vines to develop as deep a root system as possible in the subsoil, thereby giving full expression to the terroir. Despite being an acknowledged master of the art of making single varietal wines such as Pinot Gris and Riesling, this exceptional winegrower has waged a veritable campaign against the traditional Alsace approach of regarding the grape variety as the essence of the wine, and granting negligible importance to the terroir. Thus he has reintroduced ancestral practices such as mixed planting of all of the traditional varieties (Riesling, Gewurztraminer, Pinot Gris) on the same plot, with no sorting at the harvest. The terroir then comes to the forefront, free to fully express itself without the omnipresent constraint of a single variety. After years of campaigning, Jean-Michel Deiss finally succeeded in obtaining authorisation for the application of the terms "Grand Cru" and "Premier Cru" (previously reserved for traditional cuvées) to these "vins de terroir". The names of the grape varieties have not appeared on the labels since 2005. More information : Read the article about domain Marcel Deiss on the blog
iDealwine Price(1) corresponds to the hammer price and the buyer's premium charged by the auctioneer.
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