We've made no secret about our tastes in white wines. We like 'em light, dry and minerally. If it's summertime and seafood or salads are in the offing, Sauvignon Blanc is our go-to. If we just want to taste a generally great example of a white wine other than Sauv Banc, we go to Alsace where we have yet to taste one that fails to impress.
There are ten white grape types allowed in Alsace. For our purposes here we'll concern ourselves with the five biggies: Gewurztraminer, Riesling, Pinot Gris, Muscat and Auxxerrois. The first four are considered to be noble types by the locals. The Muscat name in Alsace is a little different in that it encompasses four different Muscat types. Auxxerois is genetically the same as Chardonnay and produces a white wine in that vein. While Muscat and Pinot Gris don't conjure up notions of nobility for us we'll defer to the Alsatians and their classification. We feel, however, Alsatian Riesling and Gewurz are bonafide stars within any white wine lineup.
Ninety percent of the wines of Alsace are white with about 60% of those being AOC varietals made from the noble types listed above. Another four percent are varietals sourced from recognized Grand Cru vineyards. Another fifteen percent are Cremant sparkling wines. The rest are either blends of the notable grapes and/or lesser grapes and since the AOC (noble) types are the only types rated, all of these others are considered to be mere table wine. Since Alsace makes 100% varietal wines, some of the table wine blends consist of the great types while others are of the lesser five types. In general a Gentil is usually a blend of superior grapes; Edelzwickers are usually lower quality blends.
Alsace has an identity problem, by the way. For much or its history it has been German including four stints in the last hundred fifty years. While most French wine labels identify by place names, Alsace, like Germany, labels with varietal names. In fact, Riesling and Gewurztraminer are German grape types and therein lies the problem. The public sees the wines as German and generalizes about style and quality based on what they have tasted in the past. Sweeter mass marketed German plonk doesn't begin to represent the nobility of dry Alsatian Riesling and Gewurztraminer. Germany has now learned this from Alsace and is currently making drier wines.
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