The Hirtzberger 2010 Gruner Veltliner Smaragd Axpoint exhibits a typical enhancement of body vis-a-vis Rotes Tor, here ascending to 14% alcohol; and suggestions of pit fruit distillate are tinged with coffee and marjoram. A vaguely Chablis-like sense of meat stock mingled with lemon and herbs informs this wine’s expansive, silken palate, and it finishes with low-toned richness and just a faint hint of heat. As these vines age, the corresponding wine is taking on depth and a more distinctive personality. I’m still inclined, though, to hedge my bets in aging it and to anticipate its wanting to be drunk within the next 6-8 years. Given the penchant at this address for late harvest; considerable skin contact; and must aeration, I was not surprised to learn from Franz Hirtzberger Junior that only their Riesling Federspiel had been at all de-acidified. “If there’d been even a bit more hanging out there though,” he notes “then we wouldn’t have made it” – i.e. acheived ripe grapes. “We learned our lesson from 1996,” as Hirtzberger Senior saw it, namely not to harvest – despite ongoing crop loss and fear of ignoble rot (though in this case that didn’t materialize) – until the acids finally began to diminish and the skins to properly ripen. Importer: Vin Divino, Chicago, IL; tel. (773) 334-6700