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Grüner Veltliner

Grüner Veltliner (Green Veltliner) German: [ˈɡʁyːnɐ fɛltˈliːnɐ] (listen)) is a white wine grape variety grown primarily in Austria, Hungary, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic. The leaves of the grape vine are five-lobed with bunches that are long but compact, and deep green grapes that ripen in mid-late October in the Northern Hemisphere.

Grüner Veltliner
Grape (Vitis)
Color of berry skinBlanc
SpeciesVitis vinifera
Also calledGrüner Muskateller, Veltliner (more)
OriginAustria?
Notable regionsLower Austria, Burgenland, Slovakia, Moravia
Notable winesSmaragds from Wachau
VIVC number12930

In 2008, Grüner Veltliner plantations in Austria stood at 17,151 hectares (42,380 acres), and it accounts for 32.6% of all vineyards in the country, almost all of it being grown in the northeast of the country. Thus, it is the most-planted grape variety in Austria. Some is made into sparkling wine in the far northeast around Poysdorf. Along the Danube to the west of Vienna, in Wachau, Kremstal and Kamptal, it grows with Riesling in terraces on slopes so steep they can barely retain any soil. The result is a very pure, mineral wine capable of long aging, that stands comparison with some of the great wines of the world. In recent blind tastings organized by the Austrian Wine Marketing Board, Grüner Veltliners have beaten world-class Chardonnays from the likes of Mondavi and Maison Louis Latour.[1]

Outside of Austria, Grüner Veltliner is the second most widely grown white grape variety in the Czech Republic, encompassing approximately 2,120 hectares (5,200 acres) and resulting in approximately 11% of Czech wine production.[2] In recent years a few US wineries have started to grow and bottle Grüner Veltliner, including wineries and vineyards in Massachusetts, at Hazy Mountain's Little North Mountain Vineyard in Swoope, Virginia (Shenandoah Valley AVA)), Oregon, Maryland, the North Fork of Long Island AVA and Finger Lakes AVA regions of New York State, Napa Valley, Clarksburg AVA, Monterey AVA and Santa Ynez Valley AVA in California, Ashtabula County, Ohio, Southern New Jersey's Bellview Winery, Pennsylvania, and along the Lake Michigan Shore AVA of Southwest Michigan. Gruner Veltliner is also planted in Australia, particularly in the Adelaide Hills wine region in South Australia, as well as the Okanagan Valley of British Columbia, Canada.

Some ampelographers (such as Hermann Goethe in his 1887 handbook of ampelography) have long assumed that Grüner Veltliner is not related to the other varieties with "Veltliner" in their name (such as Roter Veltliner), or that it is only distantly related.[3] A first DNA analysis in the late 1990s secured Savagnin (Traminer) as one parent of Grüner Veltliner, but was not able to identify the other parent among the candidates studied.[4] The other parent was later found to be an originally unnamed variety of which only a single, abandoned, very old and weakened vine was found in Sankt Georgen am Leithagebirge outside Eisenstadt in Austria. The grape is therefore referred to as St. Georgener-Rebe or "St. Georgen-vine".[5]

Grüner Veltliner has a reputation of being a particularly food-friendly wine and is a popular offering on restaurant wine lists.[6] It is made into wines of many different styles - much is intended for drinking young in the Heuriger (bars serving new wine) of Vienna, a little is made into sparkling wine, but some is capable of long aging. The steep vineyards of the Danube (Donau) west of Vienna produce very pure, mineral Grüner Veltliners intended for laying down. Down in the plains, citrus and peach flavors are more apparent, with spicy notes of pepper and sometimes tobacco.

History

 
Location of Eisenstadt in the Burgenland region of eastern Austria near the town of Sankt Georgen am Leithagebirge where the surviving parent vine of Grüner Veltliner, St. Georgener-Rebe, was found

Grüner Veltliner has been believed to date back to Roman times, with its name being derived from Veltlin (Valtellina) in northern Italy, though ampelographers and wine historians have yet to find a link between the grape and the Italian commune.[5] The grape is likely indigenous to Austria.[7] The current name appeared in a document for the first time in 1855; before that time it was known as Weißgipfler.[3][4] Only by the 1930s was Grüner Veltliner established as the standard name of the grape. Until the Second World War, it was regarded as just another Austrian grape, but after the introduction of Lenz Moser's Hochkultur system of vine training, it expanded quickly in plantation from the 1950s to later become Austria's most planted variety.[4]

In recent years, Grüner Veltliner has seen an uptick in interest following the results of a 2002 wine tasting organized by Masters of Wine Jancis Robinson and Tim Atkin. Here Grüner Veltliner from Austria beat out several highly acclaimed white Grand cru wines from Burgundy.[7]

Pedigree

 
Through Savagnin, Grüner Veltliner is either a grandchild or a half-sibling of Pinot noir (pictured).

In 2007, DNA analysis confirmed that Grüner Veltliner was a natural crossing of Savagnin (Traminer) and an obscure Austrian grapevine from the village of Sankt Georgen am Leithagebirge located outside Eisenstadt in the Burgenland region of eastern Austria.[5] The vine was first found in 2000 in an overgrown part of a pasture in a location where there had not been any vineyard since the late 19th century, and is assumed to have been the last vine in this location for over a century. Local experts were not able to determine the variety of the vine. Only when it was threatened to be ripped out in 2005 additional samples were taken and later analyzed at Klosterneuburg. Genetic analysis in the following years by Ferdinand Regner was able to determine that St. Georgener-Rebe is a parent variety to Grüner Veltliner.[3][8][9]

St. Georgener-Rebe was once known under the synonym Grüner Muskateller but appears to have no direct relationship to the Muscat family of grapes. In February 2011, the single surviving vine of St. Georgener-Rebe, thought to be over 500 years old, was vandalized and severely cut in several places by an unknown assailant. The vine survived with the Austrian government designating the vine as a protected natural monument. Ampelographers are currently propagating cuttings of the vine for vineyard plantings and commercial cultivation.[5][10]

Relationship to other grapes

Through its parent, Savagnin, Grüner Veltliner is a half sibling of Rotgipfler and is either a grandchild or a half-sibling to Pinot noir which has a parent-offspring relationship with Savagnin. The nature of this relationship is unclear since DNA profiling has not yet determined between Pinot and Savagnin which grape is the parent and which grape is the offspring.[5]

Despite having the name Grüner Veltliner, the grape has no known connection to other Veltliner grapes including Roter Veltliner and Frühroter Veltliner. The grey-berried vine Grauer Veltliner (also known as Veltliner Grau) was once thought to be a distinct grape variety but DNA evidence in 1996 showed that it was color mutation of Grüner Veltliner.[5]

Viticulture

 
Grüner Veltliner being hand harvested at Hahndorf Hill vineyard in the Adelaide Hills

Grüner Veltliner is a mid-ripening grape variety that usually does not have an issue achieving physiological ripeness in most of the northern European wine regions where it is grown. The vine can be very fruitful and high yielding producing small, yellowish-green berries. Grüner Veltliner is very susceptible to the viticultural hazards of downy and powdery mildews as well as infestation from a species of rust mites that feed on grape leaves.[5]

While Grüner Veltliner can grow on a variety of vineyard soils, wine expert Oz Clarke notes that the grape tends to thrive on soils with high loess content.[11] While newer vineyards have been experimenting with a variety of vine training systems, in Austria Grüner Veltliner has been historically trained in the Lenz Moser style developed in the 1920s. Known as the "high culture" or Hochkultur method because of how relatively high (1.3 metres (4.3 ft)) the vine trunk is allowed to grow, the goal is to reduce vine density by spacing the vines in wide rows that are 3.5 meters (11.5 ft) apart.[12]

Wine regions

Grüner Veltliner is most closely associated with Austria where it is the most widely planted grape variety in the country, covering almost a third of all Austrian vineyards, with 17,034 hectares (42,092 acres) in cultivation in 2012. The grape is authorized in five Districtus Austriae Controllatus (DAC) regions—the Weinviertel where it is the only permitted grape variety; Leithaberg where it can be made as a varietal or blended with Pinot blanc, Chardonnay and Neuburger; Traisental, Kremstal and Kamptal where it is planted with Riesling. The grape is also found in the Donauland (now known as the Wagram region) and in the Wachau region of Lower Austria. Along the Danube river warm air currents come in from the Pannonian Basin to the east and blow westward, warming the vines. This area tends to produce more full bodied wines with peach flavor notes.[5]

 
Grüner Veltliner planted in the vineyards along the Danube in Wachau

The Weinviertel region in the northeast, along the border with the Czech Republic and Slovakia, is home to more than half of all Austrian Grüner Veltliner with 8,529 hectares (21,080 acres) reported in 2012. Here the grape can achieve very high yields (up to 100 hectoliters/hectare or 5.7 tonnes/acre) and can produce simple, quaffing wines with fresh acidity and crisp fruit as well as base wine for sparkling sekt. But in vineyards on favorable locations where the yields are restricted, wine producers can make examples of full-bodied, dry Grüner Veltliner that has pepper, mineral and citrus notes that can develop Burgundian wine traits as they age.[5]

In the vineyard area around Lake Neusiedl along the border with Hungary there is 1,272 hectares (3,143 acres) of Grüner Veltliner planted along the east side of the lake and 882 hectares (2,179 acres) planted in the Neusiedlersee-Hügelland "hill country" on the west side. Here some sweet Auslese and botryized Trockenbeerenauslese styles of Grüner Veltliner can be produced.[5]

In Krems-Hollenburg, located just east of Krems an der Donau, one of the oldest vineyards in Austria still being used for commercial wine production is home to old vines of Grüner Veltliner that are more than 150 years old.[5]

Other European wine regions

Grüner Veltliner is known as Veltlinske Zelené in Slovakia where it is the most widely planted white grape variety in the country. The grape's 3,805 hectares (9,402 acres) represent almost one-fifth of all grape plantings in the country. Across the border in the Czech Republic, the local synonym for Grüner Veltliner is similar, Veltlinské zelené, with 1,713 hectares (4,233 acres) in production as of 2011.[5]

In Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol wine region of north east Italy, along the border with Austria, virtually any grapevine with Veltliner in its name (particularly Veltliner bianco) is likely to be Grüner Veltliner. At one point Frühroter Veltliner was planted in old vineyards of the Alto-Adige but most of those vines have been uprooted and replaced with other varieties. Grüner Veltliner is a permitted variety in the Denominazione di origine controllata (DOC) wines of Valdadige DOC and Valle Isarco DOC.[5]

 
A Grüner Veltliner from the Willamette Valley wine region of Oregon

In Germany, Grüner Veltliner is the grape behind the historic Hansenwein produced in the village of Plochingen located outside Stuttgart in the Württemberg wine region. In France, the grape is not permitted in any Appellation d'origine contrôlée (AOC) wine however there are a few hectares of Grüner Veltliner being cultivated on an experimental basis in the country.[5]

There is 1,439 hectares (3,560 acres) of Grüner Veltliner planted in Hungary where the grape is known as Zöld Veltlini. The majority of these plantings are found in the western wine regions around Lake Balaton, the northern vineyards in the foothills of the Mátra mountains and the southern wine regions of Tolna County and Kunság. Some plantings of Grüner Veltliner can also be found in Bulgaria.[5]

In the New World

In recent years, plantings of Grüner Veltliner have been expanding in the New World wine regions of Australia, New Zealand, the United States and Canada. In New Zealand, the grape was first planted in the Gisborne region on the North Island where the first commercial bottle of the wine was released by Coopers Creek Vineyard in 2008. From here plantings of Grüner Veltliner spread to the South Island wine regions of Marlborough and Central Otago. It is grown in Central by Ata Mara vineyards one of the southernmost vineyards in the world. The first bottle of Gruner Veltliner was produced by Ata Mara in 2013. Central Otago has a climate similar to the region of Wachau in Austria with hot day time temperatures and cool nights.

In Canada, Grüner Veltliner is found in British Columbia. Across the border in the United States, the grape is planted on a small scale in California, Washington State, Oregon, Idaho, and New York.[5] In Oregon, the grape is found in the American Viticultural Areas of the Chehalem Mountains, Eola-Amity Hills, Willamette Valley and Umpqua Valley. In the Umpqua Valley, Reustle Prayer Rock Vineyards is believed to be the first winery in the United States to produce a commercial Grüner Veltliner with their 2005 release.[13][14] Other notable Oregon Growers include Chehalem Winery, Raptor Ridge Winery, and Illahe Vineyards. New York State's Finger Lakes AVA is home to some small plantings of Grüner Veltliner due to the cool climate and proximity to the glacially formed Finger Lakes which help mitigate excessive cold in the early spring and the winter. Lamoreaux Landing is one of a few notable Finger Lakes wineries that produces Grüner Veltliner.[15]

Additional American plantings of Grüner Veltliner are found in Maryland, Virginia, in the Outer Coastal Plain AVA[16][17] of New Jersey and in the Lehigh Valley AVA of Pennsylvania. American Grüner Veltliners tend to be medium bodied, lightly fruity with high acidity and spice notes.[18]

In California, one of the early plantings of Grüner Veltliner was in the Diamond Mountain District AVA of Napa Valley. In 2006, the 1/3 acre planting of the grape at Von Strasser Winery in Diamond Mountain was the only recorded planting of Grüner Veltliner in the state of California.[19]

 
An Australian Gruner from Hahndorf Hill Winery in the Adelaide Hills

In Australia, Grüner Veltliner has seen an increase of interest and plantings which has led wine expert James Halliday to speculate that the grape may be "the next big thing" in Australian wine.[20] One of the earliest Grüner Veltliner plantings in the country was in the Adelaide Hills wine region in the state of South Australia in 2008 by Hahndorf Hill Winery. The grape planting is part of an extensive effort of Adelaide Hills grower, chaired by Henschke's viticulturist, Prue Henschke, to make Grüner Veltliner a signature variety for the region. Here the region's large diurnal temperature variation allow the grape to build sugar levels during the warm days but maintain a balance of acidity during the cool nights.[21]

The first varietal bottling of Grüner Veltliner in Australia was released in 2009 by the Canberra winery Lark Hill followed by Hahndorf Hill in 2010.[5]

Styles

Grüner Veltliner can be produced in a variety of styles from simple jug wine meant to be consumed soon after the vintage to ageworthy wine that can continue to develop in the bottle. According to wine expert Oz Clarke, Grüner Veltliner is usually not very aromatic in its youth, developing more tertiary aromas with age. Instead the grape often shows white pepper, lentil and celery note with some examples showing citrus notes and more full bodied examples having what Clarke describes as a "honeyed weight" to them.[11]

Despite many believing that white pepper aromatics (Rotundone) is a signature feature of Gruner Veltliner, it has been regularly noted in articles by wine expert Jancis Robinson and other writers on Ms. Robinson's web pages,[22] that this is not the case. In recent decades, Ms Robinson has observed that this white pepper characteristic has become less noticeable and nowadays, more often than not, is absent in many classic examples of this variety.

According to wine expert Tom Stevenson, Grüner Veltliner is often lightly fruity with noticeable spice and characteristic white pepper note. Well-made examples from favorable vintages can have a similarity to Chardonnay produced in Burgundy. And, like Chardonnay, the variety can be made in an overly oaky and "fat" style. Unoaked examples can exhibit a minerality similar to Riesling.[7]

Master of Wine Jancis Robinson notes that Grüner Veltliner is usually produced dry with spicy, peppery notes. It is often full-bodied and with age can take on aromas and flavors similar to white Burgundies.[12]

Synonyms

Over the years Grüner Veltliner, which colloquially is sometimes referred to as GrüVe, has been known under the following synonyms: Bielospicak, Cima Biancam, Dreimänner, Feherhegyü, Feldlinger, Grauer Veltliner (in Austria), Green Veltliner, Grün Muskateller, Grüne Manhardsrebe, Grüner, Grüner Muskateler (in Austria), Grüner Muskateller (in common usage until the 1930s), Grüner Velteliner, Grüner Weissgipfler, Grüner Weltliner, Grünmuskateller, Gruner Veltliner, Manhardsrebe, Manhardtraube, Manhartsrebe, Mauhardsrebe, Mouhardrebe, Mouhardsrebe, Muskatel, Muskatel Zeleny, Nemes Veltelini, Plinia Austriaca, Ranfol bianco, Ranfol Bijeli, Ranfol Weisser, Rdeci Veltinec, Reifler Weiss, Ryvola Bila, Tarant Bily, Valtelin blanc, Valtelina vert, Valteliner, Valteliner blanc, Valteliner vert, Velteliner Grüner, Velteliner vert, Velteliner Weisser, Veltelini Zöld, Veltlin Zeleny, Veltlinac Zeleni, Veltlinec, Veltliner (in Alto Adige), Veltliner blanc, Veltliner grau (in Austria), Veltliner Grun, Veltliner Gruner, Veltliner Grün, Veltliner verde, Veltlini, Veltlinske zelené (in Slovakia), Veltlínské zelené (in Czech Republic), Veltlinski Zelenii, Veltlinsky Vert, Veltlinsky Zeleny, Vetlinac, Vetlinac Zeleni, Weisser Raifler, Weisser Reifler, Weisser Valteliner, Weisser Velteliner, Weisser Veltliner, Weissgipfler (in Austria), Weissgipfler Grüner, Yesil Veltliner, Zeleni Vetlinac (in Slovenia), Zeleny Muskatel, Zleni Veltinac, Zöld Muskotally, Zöld Muskotalynak, Zöld Veltelini (in Hungary), Zöld Velteliny, Zöldveltelini and Zold Veltelini.[5][23][24]

References

  1. ^ Robinson, Jancis (2002-11-16). . jancisrobinson.com. Archived from the original on 2007-07-02. Retrieved 2007-04-26.
  2. ^ Wine of Czech Republic: Statistics and Charts 2008-06-11 at the Wayback Machine, accessed July 1, 2011
  3. ^ a b c Wein-Plus Glossar: Grüner Veltliner, accessed 2013-01-22
  4. ^ a b c (PDF). Austrian Wine Marketing Service. April 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-04-26.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r J. Robinson, J. Harding and J. Vouillamoz Wine Grapes - A complete guide to 1,368 vine varieties, including their origins and flavours pgs 449-450 Allen Lane 2012 ISBN 978-1-846-14446-2
  6. ^ Robinson, Jancis Vines, Grapes & Wines Mitchell Beazley 1986 ISBN 1-85732-999-6
  7. ^ a b c T. Stevenson, ed. The Sotheby's Wine Encyclopedia (5th Edition) pgs 54,403, 448-451 Dorling Kindersley (2011) ISBN 9780756686840
  8. ^ Elternteil des Grünen Veltliners gefunden[permanent dead link], Der Winzer 2009-08-06 (in German)
  9. ^ Pressemappe zum Pressegespräch „Vater (-rebe) des Grünen Veltliner gefunden“, 2009-08-06 (in German)
  10. ^ Nick Stephens "Unique, Ancient St Georgen Vine Vandalized 2013-10-30 at the Wayback Machine" Bordeaux Undiscovered, February 15th, 2011
  11. ^ a b Oz Clarke Encyclopedia of Grapes pg 114 Harcourt Books 2001 ISBN 0-15-100714-4
  12. ^ a b J. Robinson (ed) "The Oxford Companion to Wine" Third Edition pgs 335, 399-400 Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 0-19-860990-6
  13. ^ Dan Berger "Go Ahead, Say It: Umpqua Better You Should Taste It" Appellation America. March 17th, 2008
  14. ^ Cole Danehower "Essential Wines and Wineries of the Pacific Northwest" pgs 194 & 198 Timber Press, London (2010) ISBN 9780881929669
  15. ^ "5 best Finger Lakes wineries for great wines and outstanding tasting rooms". 24 April 2015.
  16. ^ Outer Coastal Plain AVA "Outer Coastal Plain AVA 2013-03-23 at the Wayback Machine" OCPVA. March 10, 2015
  17. ^ Bellview Winery "Instagram.com - Bellview Winery" Bellview Winery. March 10, 2015
  18. ^ Appellation America "Gruner Veltliner" Grape Profiles. Accessed: May 12th, 2013
  19. ^ Alan Goldfarb "Adding Austrian Flavor to the Diamond Mountain District: An interview with Rudy von Strasser" Appellation America. October 12th, 2006
  20. ^ James Halliday Gruner veltliner – the next big thing? Australian Wine Companion. June 3, 2011
  21. ^ Valerina Changarathil, Gruner Veltliner wine grape variety to be grown in Adelaide Hills Adelaide Now, January 25, 2011
  22. ^ "2009 Grüner Veltliner & the missing pepper | JancisRobinson.com". www.jancisrobinson.com. March 10, 2011.
  23. ^ Vitis International Variety Catalogue: Veltliner Gruen 2012-03-23 at the Wayback Machine, accessed on December 27, 2009
  24. ^ Robinson, Jancis. . Archived from the original on 19 September 2010. Retrieved 26 December 2009.

External links

  • Austrian Wine Marketing Service

grüner, veltliner, tarant, bily, redirects, here, german, wine, grape, that, also, known, tarant, bily, elbling, green, veltliner, german, ˈɡʁyːnɐ, fɛltˈliːnɐ, listen, white, wine, grape, variety, grown, primarily, austria, hungary, slovakia, czech, republic, . Tarant Bily redirects here For the German wine grape that is also known as Tarant Bily see Elbling Gruner Veltliner Green Veltliner German ˈɡʁyːnɐ fɛltˈliːnɐ listen is a white wine grape variety grown primarily in Austria Hungary Slovakia and the Czech Republic The leaves of the grape vine are five lobed with bunches that are long but compact and deep green grapes that ripen in mid late October in the Northern Hemisphere Gruner VeltlinerGrape Vitis Color of berry skinBlancSpeciesVitis viniferaAlso calledGruner Muskateller Veltliner more OriginAustria Notable regionsLower Austria Burgenland Slovakia MoraviaNotable winesSmaragds from WachauVIVC number12930In 2008 Gruner Veltliner plantations in Austria stood at 17 151 hectares 42 380 acres and it accounts for 32 6 of all vineyards in the country almost all of it being grown in the northeast of the country Thus it is the most planted grape variety in Austria Some is made into sparkling wine in the far northeast around Poysdorf Along the Danube to the west of Vienna in Wachau Kremstal and Kamptal it grows with Riesling in terraces on slopes so steep they can barely retain any soil The result is a very pure mineral wine capable of long aging that stands comparison with some of the great wines of the world In recent blind tastings organized by the Austrian Wine Marketing Board Gruner Veltliners have beaten world class Chardonnays from the likes of Mondavi and Maison Louis Latour 1 Outside of Austria Gruner Veltliner is the second most widely grown white grape variety in the Czech Republic encompassing approximately 2 120 hectares 5 200 acres and resulting in approximately 11 of Czech wine production 2 In recent years a few US wineries have started to grow and bottle Gruner Veltliner including wineries and vineyards in Massachusetts at Hazy Mountain s Little North Mountain Vineyard in Swoope Virginia Shenandoah Valley AVA Oregon Maryland the North Fork of Long Island AVA and Finger Lakes AVA regions of New York State Napa Valley Clarksburg AVA Monterey AVA and Santa Ynez Valley AVA in California Ashtabula County Ohio Southern New Jersey s Bellview Winery Pennsylvania and along the Lake Michigan Shore AVA of Southwest Michigan Gruner Veltliner is also planted in Australia particularly in the Adelaide Hills wine region in South Australia as well as the Okanagan Valley of British Columbia Canada Some ampelographers such as Hermann Goethe in his 1887 handbook of ampelography have long assumed that Gruner Veltliner is not related to the other varieties with Veltliner in their name such as Roter Veltliner or that it is only distantly related 3 A first DNA analysis in the late 1990s secured Savagnin Traminer as one parent of Gruner Veltliner but was not able to identify the other parent among the candidates studied 4 The other parent was later found to be an originally unnamed variety of which only a single abandoned very old and weakened vine was found in Sankt Georgen am Leithagebirge outside Eisenstadt in Austria The grape is therefore referred to as St Georgener Rebe or St Georgen vine 5 Gruner Veltliner has a reputation of being a particularly food friendly wine and is a popular offering on restaurant wine lists 6 It is made into wines of many different styles much is intended for drinking young in the Heuriger bars serving new wine of Vienna a little is made into sparkling wine but some is capable of long aging The steep vineyards of the Danube Donau west of Vienna produce very pure mineral Gruner Veltliners intended for laying down Down in the plains citrus and peach flavors are more apparent with spicy notes of pepper and sometimes tobacco Contents 1 History 1 1 Pedigree 1 2 Relationship to other grapes 2 Viticulture 3 Wine regions 3 1 Other European wine regions 3 2 In the New World 4 Styles 5 Synonyms 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit Location of Eisenstadt in the Burgenland region of eastern Austria near the town of Sankt Georgen am Leithagebirge where the surviving parent vine of Gruner Veltliner St Georgener Rebe was foundGruner Veltliner has been believed to date back to Roman times with its name being derived from Veltlin Valtellina in northern Italy though ampelographers and wine historians have yet to find a link between the grape and the Italian commune 5 The grape is likely indigenous to Austria 7 The current name appeared in a document for the first time in 1855 before that time it was known as Weissgipfler 3 4 Only by the 1930s was Gruner Veltliner established as the standard name of the grape Until the Second World War it was regarded as just another Austrian grape but after the introduction of Lenz Moser s Hochkultur system of vine training it expanded quickly in plantation from the 1950s to later become Austria s most planted variety 4 In recent years Gruner Veltliner has seen an uptick in interest following the results of a 2002 wine tasting organized by Masters of Wine Jancis Robinson and Tim Atkin Here Gruner Veltliner from Austria beat out several highly acclaimed white Grand cru wines from Burgundy 7 Pedigree Edit Through Savagnin Gruner Veltliner is either a grandchild or a half sibling of Pinot noir pictured In 2007 DNA analysis confirmed that Gruner Veltliner was a natural crossing of Savagnin Traminer and an obscure Austrian grapevine from the village of Sankt Georgen am Leithagebirge located outside Eisenstadt in the Burgenland region of eastern Austria 5 The vine was first found in 2000 in an overgrown part of a pasture in a location where there had not been any vineyard since the late 19th century and is assumed to have been the last vine in this location for over a century Local experts were not able to determine the variety of the vine Only when it was threatened to be ripped out in 2005 additional samples were taken and later analyzed at Klosterneuburg Genetic analysis in the following years by Ferdinand Regner was able to determine that St Georgener Rebe is a parent variety to Gruner Veltliner 3 8 9 St Georgener Rebe was once known under the synonym Gruner Muskateller but appears to have no direct relationship to the Muscat family of grapes In February 2011 the single surviving vine of St Georgener Rebe thought to be over 500 years old was vandalized and severely cut in several places by an unknown assailant The vine survived with the Austrian government designating the vine as a protected natural monument Ampelographers are currently propagating cuttings of the vine for vineyard plantings and commercial cultivation 5 10 Relationship to other grapes Edit Through its parent Savagnin Gruner Veltliner is a half sibling of Rotgipfler and is either a grandchild or a half sibling to Pinot noir which has a parent offspring relationship with Savagnin The nature of this relationship is unclear since DNA profiling has not yet determined between Pinot and Savagnin which grape is the parent and which grape is the offspring 5 Despite having the name Gruner Veltliner the grape has no known connection to other Veltliner grapes including Roter Veltliner and Fruhroter Veltliner The grey berried vine Grauer Veltliner also known as Veltliner Grau was once thought to be a distinct grape variety but DNA evidence in 1996 showed that it was color mutation of Gruner Veltliner 5 Viticulture Edit Gruner Veltliner being hand harvested at Hahndorf Hill vineyard in the Adelaide HillsGruner Veltliner is a mid ripening grape variety that usually does not have an issue achieving physiological ripeness in most of the northern European wine regions where it is grown The vine can be very fruitful and high yielding producing small yellowish green berries Gruner Veltliner is very susceptible to the viticultural hazards of downy and powdery mildews as well as infestation from a species of rust mites that feed on grape leaves 5 While Gruner Veltliner can grow on a variety of vineyard soils wine expert Oz Clarke notes that the grape tends to thrive on soils with high loess content 11 While newer vineyards have been experimenting with a variety of vine training systems in Austria Gruner Veltliner has been historically trained in the Lenz Moser style developed in the 1920s Known as the high culture or Hochkultur method because of how relatively high 1 3 metres 4 3 ft the vine trunk is allowed to grow the goal is to reduce vine density by spacing the vines in wide rows that are 3 5 meters 11 5 ft apart 12 Wine regions EditGruner Veltliner is most closely associated with Austria where it is the most widely planted grape variety in the country covering almost a third of all Austrian vineyards with 17 034 hectares 42 092 acres in cultivation in 2012 The grape is authorized in five Districtus Austriae Controllatus DAC regions the Weinviertel where it is the only permitted grape variety Leithaberg where it can be made as a varietal or blended with Pinot blanc Chardonnay and Neuburger Traisental Kremstal and Kamptal where it is planted with Riesling The grape is also found in the Donauland now known as the Wagram region and in the Wachau region of Lower Austria Along the Danube river warm air currents come in from the Pannonian Basin to the east and blow westward warming the vines This area tends to produce more full bodied wines with peach flavor notes 5 Gruner Veltliner planted in the vineyards along the Danube in WachauThe Weinviertel region in the northeast along the border with the Czech Republic and Slovakia is home to more than half of all Austrian Gruner Veltliner with 8 529 hectares 21 080 acres reported in 2012 Here the grape can achieve very high yields up to 100 hectoliters hectare or 5 7 tonnes acre and can produce simple quaffing wines with fresh acidity and crisp fruit as well as base wine for sparkling sekt But in vineyards on favorable locations where the yields are restricted wine producers can make examples of full bodied dry Gruner Veltliner that has pepper mineral and citrus notes that can develop Burgundian wine traits as they age 5 In the vineyard area around Lake Neusiedl along the border with Hungary there is 1 272 hectares 3 143 acres of Gruner Veltliner planted along the east side of the lake and 882 hectares 2 179 acres planted in the Neusiedlersee Hugelland hill country on the west side Here some sweet Auslese and botryized Trockenbeerenauslese styles of Gruner Veltliner can be produced 5 In Krems Hollenburg located just east of Krems an der Donau one of the oldest vineyards in Austria still being used for commercial wine production is home to old vines of Gruner Veltliner that are more than 150 years old 5 Other European wine regions Edit Gruner Veltliner is known as Veltlinske Zelene in Slovakia where it is the most widely planted white grape variety in the country The grape s 3 805 hectares 9 402 acres represent almost one fifth of all grape plantings in the country Across the border in the Czech Republic the local synonym for Gruner Veltliner is similar Veltlinske zelene with 1 713 hectares 4 233 acres in production as of 2011 5 In Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol wine region of north east Italy along the border with Austria virtually any grapevine with Veltliner in its name particularly Veltliner bianco is likely to be Gruner Veltliner At one point Fruhroter Veltliner was planted in old vineyards of the Alto Adige but most of those vines have been uprooted and replaced with other varieties Gruner Veltliner is a permitted variety in the Denominazione di origine controllata DOC wines of Valdadige DOC and Valle Isarco DOC 5 A Gruner Veltliner from the Willamette Valley wine region of OregonIn Germany Gruner Veltliner is the grape behind the historic Hansenwein produced in the village of Plochingen located outside Stuttgart in the Wurttemberg wine region In France the grape is not permitted in any Appellation d origine controlee AOC wine however there are a few hectares of Gruner Veltliner being cultivated on an experimental basis in the country 5 There is 1 439 hectares 3 560 acres of Gruner Veltliner planted in Hungary where the grape is known as Zold Veltlini The majority of these plantings are found in the western wine regions around Lake Balaton the northern vineyards in the foothills of the Matra mountains and the southern wine regions of Tolna County and Kunsag Some plantings of Gruner Veltliner can also be found in Bulgaria 5 In the New World Edit In recent years plantings of Gruner Veltliner have been expanding in the New World wine regions of Australia New Zealand the United States and Canada In New Zealand the grape was first planted in the Gisborne region on the North Island where the first commercial bottle of the wine was released by Coopers Creek Vineyard in 2008 From here plantings of Gruner Veltliner spread to the South Island wine regions of Marlborough and Central Otago It is grown in Central by Ata Mara vineyards one of the southernmost vineyards in the world The first bottle of Gruner Veltliner was produced by Ata Mara in 2013 Central Otago has a climate similar to the region of Wachau in Austria with hot day time temperatures and cool nights In Canada Gruner Veltliner is found in British Columbia Across the border in the United States the grape is planted on a small scale in California Washington State Oregon Idaho and New York 5 In Oregon the grape is found in the American Viticultural Areas of the Chehalem Mountains Eola Amity Hills Willamette Valley and Umpqua Valley In the Umpqua Valley Reustle Prayer Rock Vineyards is believed to be the first winery in the United States to produce a commercial Gruner Veltliner with their 2005 release 13 14 Other notable Oregon Growers include Chehalem Winery Raptor Ridge Winery and Illahe Vineyards New York State s Finger Lakes AVA is home to some small plantings of Gruner Veltliner due to the cool climate and proximity to the glacially formed Finger Lakes which help mitigate excessive cold in the early spring and the winter Lamoreaux Landing is one of a few notable Finger Lakes wineries that produces Gruner Veltliner 15 Additional American plantings of Gruner Veltliner are found in Maryland Virginia in the Outer Coastal Plain AVA 16 17 of New Jersey and in the Lehigh Valley AVA of Pennsylvania American Gruner Veltliners tend to be medium bodied lightly fruity with high acidity and spice notes 18 In California one of the early plantings of Gruner Veltliner was in the Diamond Mountain District AVA of Napa Valley In 2006 the 1 3 acre planting of the grape at Von Strasser Winery in Diamond Mountain was the only recorded planting of Gruner Veltliner in the state of California 19 An Australian Gruner from Hahndorf Hill Winery in the Adelaide HillsIn Australia Gruner Veltliner has seen an increase of interest and plantings which has led wine expert James Halliday to speculate that the grape may be the next big thing in Australian wine 20 One of the earliest Gruner Veltliner plantings in the country was in the Adelaide Hills wine region in the state of South Australia in 2008 by Hahndorf Hill Winery The grape planting is part of an extensive effort of Adelaide Hills grower chaired by Henschke s viticulturist Prue Henschke to make Gruner Veltliner a signature variety for the region Here the region s large diurnal temperature variation allow the grape to build sugar levels during the warm days but maintain a balance of acidity during the cool nights 21 The first varietal bottling of Gruner Veltliner in Australia was released in 2009 by the Canberra winery Lark Hill followed by Hahndorf Hill in 2010 5 Styles EditGruner Veltliner can be produced in a variety of styles from simple jug wine meant to be consumed soon after the vintage to ageworthy wine that can continue to develop in the bottle According to wine expert Oz Clarke Gruner Veltliner is usually not very aromatic in its youth developing more tertiary aromas with age Instead the grape often shows white pepper lentil and celery note with some examples showing citrus notes and more full bodied examples having what Clarke describes as a honeyed weight to them 11 Despite many believing that white pepper aromatics Rotundone is a signature feature of Gruner Veltliner it has been regularly noted in articles by wine expert Jancis Robinson and other writers on Ms Robinson s web pages 22 that this is not the case In recent decades Ms Robinson has observed that this white pepper characteristic has become less noticeable and nowadays more often than not is absent in many classic examples of this variety According to wine expert Tom Stevenson Gruner Veltliner is often lightly fruity with noticeable spice and characteristic white pepper note Well made examples from favorable vintages can have a similarity to Chardonnay produced in Burgundy And like Chardonnay the variety can be made in an overly oaky and fat style Unoaked examples can exhibit a minerality similar to Riesling 7 Master of Wine Jancis Robinson notes that Gruner Veltliner is usually produced dry with spicy peppery notes It is often full bodied and with age can take on aromas and flavors similar to white Burgundies 12 Synonyms EditOver the years Gruner Veltliner which colloquially is sometimes referred to as GruVe has been known under the following synonyms Bielospicak Cima Biancam Dreimanner Feherhegyu Feldlinger Grauer Veltliner in Austria Green Veltliner Grun Muskateller Grune Manhardsrebe Gruner Gruner Muskateler in Austria Gruner Muskateller in common usage until the 1930s Gruner Velteliner Gruner Weissgipfler Gruner Weltliner Grunmuskateller Gruner Veltliner Manhardsrebe Manhardtraube Manhartsrebe Mauhardsrebe Mouhardrebe Mouhardsrebe Muskatel Muskatel Zeleny Nemes Veltelini Plinia Austriaca Ranfol bianco Ranfol Bijeli Ranfol Weisser Rdeci Veltinec Reifler Weiss Ryvola Bila Tarant Bily Valtelin blanc Valtelina vert Valteliner Valteliner blanc Valteliner vert Velteliner Gruner Velteliner vert Velteliner Weisser Veltelini Zold Veltlin Zeleny Veltlinac Zeleni Veltlinec Veltliner in Alto Adige Veltliner blanc Veltliner grau in Austria Veltliner Grun Veltliner Gruner Veltliner Grun Veltliner verde Veltlini Veltlinske zelene in Slovakia Veltlinske zelene in Czech Republic Veltlinski Zelenii Veltlinsky Vert Veltlinsky Zeleny Vetlinac Vetlinac Zeleni Weisser Raifler Weisser Reifler Weisser Valteliner Weisser Velteliner Weisser Veltliner Weissgipfler in Austria Weissgipfler Gruner Yesil Veltliner Zeleni Vetlinac in Slovenia Zeleny Muskatel Zleni Veltinac Zold Muskotally Zold Muskotalynak Zold Veltelini in Hungary Zold Velteliny Zoldveltelini and Zold Veltelini 5 23 24 References Edit Robinson Jancis 2002 11 16 Gruner Veltliner distinctly groovy grape jancisrobinson com Archived from the original on 2007 07 02 Retrieved 2007 04 26 Wine of Czech Republic Statistics and Charts Archived 2008 06 11 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 1 2011 a b c Wein Plus Glossar Gruner Veltliner accessed 2013 01 22 a b c Gruner Veltliner Austrias Secret Weapon PDF Austrian Wine Marketing Service April 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 04 26 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r J Robinson J Harding and J Vouillamoz Wine Grapes A complete guide to 1 368 vine varieties including their origins and flavours pgs 449 450 Allen Lane 2012 ISBN 978 1 846 14446 2 Robinson Jancis Vines Grapes amp Wines Mitchell Beazley 1986 ISBN 1 85732 999 6 a b c T Stevenson ed The Sotheby s Wine Encyclopedia 5th Edition pgs 54 403 448 451 Dorling Kindersley 2011 ISBN 9780756686840 Elternteil des Grunen Veltliners gefunden permanent dead link Der Winzer 2009 08 06 in German Pressemappe zum Pressegesprach Vater rebe des Grunen Veltliner gefunden 2009 08 06 in German Nick Stephens Unique Ancient St Georgen Vine Vandalized Archived 2013 10 30 at the Wayback Machine Bordeaux Undiscovered February 15th 2011 a b Oz Clarke Encyclopedia of Grapes pg 114 Harcourt Books 2001 ISBN 0 15 100714 4 a b J Robinson ed The Oxford Companion to Wine Third Edition pgs 335 399 400 Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 0 19 860990 6 Dan Berger Go Ahead Say It Umpqua Better You Should Taste It Appellation America March 17th 2008 Cole Danehower Essential Wines and Wineries of the Pacific Northwest pgs 194 amp 198 Timber Press London 2010 ISBN 9780881929669 5 best Finger Lakes wineries for great wines and outstanding tasting rooms 24 April 2015 Outer Coastal Plain AVA Outer Coastal Plain AVA Archived 2013 03 23 at the Wayback Machine OCPVA March 10 2015 Bellview Winery Instagram com Bellview Winery Bellview Winery March 10 2015 Appellation America Gruner Veltliner Grape Profiles Accessed May 12th 2013 Alan Goldfarb Adding Austrian Flavor to the Diamond Mountain District An interview with Rudy von Strasser Appellation America October 12th 2006 James Halliday Gruner veltliner the next big thing Australian Wine Companion June 3 2011 Valerina Changarathil Gruner Veltliner wine grape variety to be grown in Adelaide Hills Adelaide Now January 25 2011 2009 Gruner Veltliner amp the missing pepper JancisRobinson com www jancisrobinson com March 10 2011 Vitis International Variety Catalogue Veltliner Gruen Archived 2012 03 23 at the Wayback Machine accessed on December 27 2009 Robinson Jancis Gruner Veltliner Archived from the original on 19 September 2010 Retrieved 26 December 2009 External links EditGrape varieties in Austria Gruner Veltliner Austrian Wine Marketing Service Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gruner Veltliner amp oldid 1148400976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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