Peach, papaya, musk melon, and mango in the nose of the Haags’ 2008 Brauneberger Juffer-Sonnenuhr Riesling Spatlese A.P. #7 migrate onto a creamy yet animated and uncannily buoyant palate and waft their way – accompanied by lily-like floral perfume – into a long, soothing finish. Even airier and at least as elegant as the corresponding Juffer (which was harvested a week earlier, in the last days of October), this evinces a greater sense of ripeness by way of its tropical fruits and hints of honey, with suggestions of peach kernel, toasted nuts, brown spices, salt, and wet stone offering counterpoint. Does this wine ever really “touch down” on the palate? I know I am over-using “epitome” but how else can one express this wine’s relationship to its vintage’s potential? At around 500 cases, it represents a relatively large lot of Sonnenuhr Spatlese for the Haags, and they are setting some aside unsold. It should repay 25 or more years’ cellaring.
Oliver Haag began picking already before the mid-point of October, but the results testify to his having had fully ripe grapes. “We did a lot of leaf-pulling and an extensive pre-harvest thinning this year,” he points out, adding that “the Auslesen were picked largely at the end of October, not too late. One picking was intended for Beerenauslese, but it didn’t appeal to me for that character, considering what good wines we have had in recent years, so I declassified that fruit into gold capsule Auslese.” Haag has this year dropped the Pradikat designations from all of his dry-tasting wines (and “Juffer” from what used to be "Juffer Kabinett"), while bottled his Brauneberger Juffer-Sonnenuhr-Sonnenuhr trocken as Grosses Gewachs. The idea is not only to simplify and to create a convention that non-Pradikat wines taste dry or nearly-so, but also to return to something more like the labeling that prevailed before 1971. But putting the words “Erste Lage” on the label of wines from the Sonnenuhr – in keeping with a VDP-wide program – actually adds further impetus to fatuous consumer questions. As all close students and lovers of Burgundy know, the words “premier cru” on a label mean increasingly little, and the best sites or portions of sites nowadays achieve their price and due reverence regardless of whether the label indicates “premier cru.”
Importer: Rudi Wiest, Cellars International, Carlsbad, CA; tel. 800 596 9463.