Greywacke Riesling

£25.00
  • Greywacke Riesling
  • Greywacke Riesling

Greywacke Riesling

£25.00

AVAILABILITY: 4 in stock

Grape Riesling
Style Off-Dry, White, Medium Bodied, Aromatic, Citrus and Stone Fruit, Fresh, Minerality
Country New Zealand
Region Marlborough
Volume 75cl
ABV 12%
Dietary Sustainable

 

Greywacke Riesling is a highly fragrant and aromatic wine, bursting with the delicate perfume of lime flowers, lusciousness of white-fleshed peach, and the headiness of springtime jonquils. It has a refreshing and invigorating off-dry palate with notes of anise and wet stones, and a harmonious balance of natural acidity, sweetness, and vivacity.

About the Producer

Greywacke was created in 2009 by Kevin Judd, chief winemaker at Cloudy Bay from its inception for 25 years and instrumental in the international recognition which Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc enjoys now. The name 'Greywacke' was adopted by Kevin for his first Marlborough vineyard located in Rapaura in recognition of the high prevalence of rounded greywacke river stones in the soils of the vineyard, a sedimentary rock which is widely found in Marlborough. Kevin Judd is also New Zealand's finest wine photographer and has recently published a book 'The Landscape of New Zealand Wine'

Visit the Greywacke Website

Vineyard and Winery

The fruit for this wine was grown at the organically-farmed Ashmore Vineyard in Fairhall, adjacent to the mouth of the Brancott Valley. The soils are gravelly clay-loam and conditions are more typical of the Southern Valleys than the Wairau plains. The 24-year-old vines are trained on a two cane VSP trellis with careful shoot and bunch thinning carried out to regulate yields.

The grapes were hand picked at moderate ripeness levels to capture the exuberance and natural acidity of the variety, and were whole bunch pressed using a very low maceration press cycle. The resulting juice was cold-settled, then racked to fermentation vessels. Half of the juice was inoculated in a stainless steel tank using cultured yeast, while the other half was filled into old French oak barriques, where it was allowed to undergo spontaneous indigenous yeast fermentation. All of the wine was then transferred to a stainless steel tank where the fermentation was stopped, retaining 19 g/L residual sugar. The blended wine was filled into old barrels, where it remained on yeast lees for a further five months, prior to bottling.

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