• Garage Caveau

    Reiterpfad Riesling - Garage Caveau - Organic

    Regular price €67,43 EUR Unit price €89,91  per  l
  • Weingut Immich-Batterieberg

    Trabener Zollturm Riesling - Grosse Lage - Weingut Immich-Batterieberg

    Regular price €47,44 EUR Unit price €63,25  per  l
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What makes German Riesling special?

Riesling is one of the few grape varieties in the world that truly expresses its origin. Where the vines grow, the soils they root through, how the climate influences ripening — all of this ends up directly in your glass. This diversity is no coincidence, but the result of decades, sometimes centuries, of artisanal work in exceptional sites. No other country demonstrates this as clearly as Germany.

Germany's most important Riesling regions

Germany is one of the most diverse wine countries in the world — and Riesling grows from the Mosel to Saxony, from the Rheingau to the Pfalz. Each region brings its own character: different soils, a different climate, a different signature.

That's exactly what makes our selection exciting. In addition to the classic sites that wine connoisseurs worldwide know, you'll find Rieslings from regions you might not yet have on your radar — Württemberg, Saxony, Saale-Unstrut. Often from small family businesses, often organic-certified, always hand-picked.

Our tip: Let yourself be surprised by the origin. Use the region filter and discover how differently Riesling can taste — depending on where it grew.

Dry, off-dry, or noble sweet — which style suits you?

One of the most common misconceptions about Riesling: that it's always sweet. The truth is more complex and beautiful.

Dry: The majority of our Rieslings are made in a dry style — crisp acidity, clear fruit, long finish. Excellent with fish, white meat, and Asian cuisine.

Feinherb (Off-dry): A slight residual sweetness that balances the acidity. Often the most accessible style — and underestimated by those who haven't tried it yet.

Kabinett & Spätlese: Traditional Prädikat wines with natural sweetness and fantastic lightness. Great with spicy dishes or as a wine on its own.

Noble Sweet (Auslese to Trockenbeerenauslese): Rarities that are produced in exceptional years. Complex, concentrated, extremely long-lived — and unparalleled for lovers of sweet wines.

Gutswein, Erste Lage, Großes Gewächs — what do these mean?

The German wine classification can be confusing at first glance. Simply put, it works like a pyramid:

Gutswein & Ortswein are the entry-level wines from an estate — often surprisingly good and a fair way to get to know a new producer.

Erste Lage refers to wines from particularly good single vineyards — more depth, more character, often more aging potential.

Großes Gewächs (GG) is the highest category for dry single vineyard wines — Germany's answer to Grand Cru. If you want to understand what Riesling is capable of, start here.