Here's the open, obvious secret: Lauer's "Senior" is one of the of the greatest values in German wine, and frankly white wine, period. While Lauer considers this a village-level wine (special Lauer label-reading tip: any bottle with a green circle on it is considered a village-level wine), the ?Senior? is in fact a single-vineyard wine sourced completely from the Grand Cru Kupp. With an average vine age of around 70 years and a plethora of ungrafted vines, this is a wine that punches well above its price. It is Grand Cru for the price of village, plain and simple. There's a story here, so make a quick cup of coffee and sit for a moment. The wine is called "Senior" as a tribute to Florian's grandfather who was already in the 1950s famous at least in the Saar Valley for his dry Riesling. So the story goes, he would walk through the cellar and taste all the barrels and then write Senior on the cask he wanted for his own drinking. Nine times out of ten, the cask he took was good ole Fass, or barrel, #6, sourced from parcels in the western-most part of the Kupp. This is one of the cooler parcels, farthest away from the moderating influence of the Saar River. As it happens, this wine nearly always ferments to a precarious, near-impossible-to-describe balance, in this gray area that is not at all sweet, but not legally dry either. I refer to this style of wine as "dry tasting." In the old days, dry Saar wines often needed a little bit of residual sugar, not to make them taste fruity, but to just counter the ferocious acidities. So this is Senior not only named after Florian's grandfather, but after an old-school style of wines common for the Saar. And while it is fashionable now to do natural ferments, and to seek a more natural balance for Rieslings, the Lauers are famous because they have been doing it for centuries, before it was in vogue. You just have to taste this wine; while it normally ferments to about 12-14 grams residual sugar per liter, the wine is dry tasting yet textural with amazing depth and clarity. Don't worry about how dry or not it is - it's just delicious. Focus on that.

Supplier notes (vom Boden) - ()