
That is alot of stars I know but this lunch was starworthy and incredible. I was fortunate to be invited to a lunch at Gramercy Tavern with Terry Thiese, Helmut Donnhoff and Gaby Donnhoff. It was a fantastic event and one I will not soon forget. The food was really good and I was pleasantly surprised as I went there in the "down period" Bruni references in his review today. Down period no more as this was flavorful, complex and highly detailed food with focus on the ingredients.
The first flight consisted of the 2004 Hermannshohle Grosses Gewachs and the 2006 Oberhauser Leistenberg Kabinett The GG was a phenomenal wine that was very closed. After some aeration the nose opened a bit with mineral, lime, mushrooms and lemon. There was a also a sweet tart thing that kept coming on strong and was very potent on my last sniff. The palate had fantastic concentration along with beautifully ripe fruit and a pure, clean almost rainwater effect on the palate. Great cleansing '04 acidity. Consensus was that this was way too young. Excellent wine in need of a long sleep. The Kabinett on the other hand was open for buisness. Nose of kumqwats, lemon and mineral. This was fat, pure and veyr clean with some nice honeyed fruit and very crisp acids. Both these wines were served with the Open Crab Ravioli with Mussels, Razor Clams and Nettles. I found the GG to go better with the dish as the acidity worked well with the green sauce this was in. But the Leistenberg was no slouch either. Nice intro flight.
The next flight paired the 2006 Kreuznacher Krotenpfuhl Spatlese with the 2001 Schlossbockelheimer Felsenberg Spatlese. Both wines were fantastic and I was particularly interested in the new wine. Krotenpfuhl is a vineyard Helmut bought four years ago and this, I believe, was the first vintage. Earth wine for Donnhoff with lovely notes of lime, white pepper, tulip and verbena, Palate had lovely purity concentration on a leanish frame. A note of truffles developed after a bit of aeration. This is an exciting new site and I am interested to track its evolution. I will definetly squirrel some of these away for the long haul. The 2001 Felsenberg Spatlese was an auction bottling in 2001 and was STUNNING at this lunch when it was open which was for around twenty to thirty minutes and then this wine slowly started to go into a shell. An amazing airy nose with great filigree that highlighted blueberry, fig, apricot, mineral. The complexity was amazing. The palate had just so much depth and I can see why this was selected for auction. Sappy, peachey, wonderful 2001 acidity and a fleshy long finish that really stopped me in my tracks. Just a stunning bottle of wine. This was matched with my favorite dish of the day . . . .Smoked trout with Sunchoke Puree and Pickled Cipollini Onions. Both wines were delightful with the dish.

The final flight was a duo of Auslesen. Started with the 2005 Schlossbockelheimer Felsenberg Auslese which had a brothy nose of apricot, pie and intense minerality all on a bed of botrytis. Rich and complex palate with great depth and loads of depth. The final wine of the afternoon was the 2002 Oberhauser Brucke Auslese. This had the tiniest hint of petrol and all the Brucke power you could ask for. Saucy, earthy, mineral and ripe this was just starting to get interesting but still needs loads of time.
What a fantastic lunch and Helmut was equally fascinating and compelling. He looks at himself as the interpreter of his vineyards and no more than that. Truly a great man churning out brilliant wines.
great notes lyle.
ReplyDeleteI do like you spell truly right, unlike someone i know
fotc
how as the acidity in the 06's
ReplyDeleteplace in between 01-05's levels
rk
The acidity is good. In line with '01 '02.
ReplyDeleteNice notes Lyle. Although my parents live less than 10 mins from Doenhoff, I have not made it to taste with them in the last few years on my Germany visits...I have been able to taste the wines from the cross-Nahe Weingut Schloss Niederhausen and I love their Kupfergrube and Traisener Fels wines.
ReplyDeleteI've been drinking a Hexamer Altenberg Spaetlese Trocken (which I bought at the Weingut in April) over the last few days and was reminded that I regret that we don't get more trockens here in the US.
Did you take the chance and asked Mr. Dönnhoff about the agebility of GG?
ReplyDeleteBest,
Martin "BerlinKitchen"
lyle-
ReplyDeletegreat post- thanks for sharing
Lyle,
ReplyDeleteI'm green with envy, but also dying to hear more about the lunch conversation. Any bons mots from Helmut or Terry?