Archive for the ‘Ernie Loosen’ Category

Intravino Interview With Ernst Loosen

Friday, March 22nd, 2013

Intravino

 

Italian Magazine “Intravino” recently ran an interview with Ernie Loosen. If you speak Italian, you can read the article here. Or, enjoy Ernie’s responses in English, below.

 

What is your first  memory of being in a winery? 

I grew up at the winery, as the winery was our home!

 

Which wine not yours would you take to a romantic dinner? 

Red Burgundy

 

Who would you invite to a dream dinner party?

Frederick the Great, John Cleese and Neil Young.

 

Which living winemaker/producer do you most admire and why? 

Elio Altare, he is a great guy and very humble with a lot of fantastic winemaking ideas.

 

If you could take part in a winemaking of the past, which vintage & country would you choose?

I would love to have seen how they produced the great Rieslings at the turn of the century, maybe the 1893 or 1911 vintage in Germany.

 

What is your greatest fear for the wine world of the future? That we lose focus on traditions and go after trends and that major grape varieties are planted everywhere so that consumers forget where the grapes originated and how they should really taste.

 

What do you consider your greatest achievement as a wine producer?

Having started in the wine business at a time when the entire German wine industry was dead, and believing in a grape variety that was even more dead, it’s enormously gratifying now, after 25 years, to see Riesling gain back the reputation it deserves, and to know that I played some part in that.

 

Which unusual food & wine pairing have you discovered lately?

The rising sun in the morning with a bottle of Auslese, was just recommended to me by my nephew who is studying at University. We call this “lifestyle wine pairing.”

 

Which grape varieties do you consider the most underrated? 

Riesling and Chenin Blanc

 

If you had a super power to use in your job ,which would be? 

Turning water into wine.

 

Who’d play you in a film of your life? 

Hugh Grant.

 

What is your favourite smell in a wine? 

A wine that expresses the typical aroma structure that fits to the grape variety I am drinking.

 

How do you relax?

With a lot of friends, good food and great bottles of wine.

 

Tell us a joke about wine. 

Mr. Meier’s doctor said to him “If you keep drinking like this you won’t see old age.”

To which Mr. Meier replied “Great! I always say that wine keeps you young!”

Ernst Loosen in Taiwan With Simon Wine Cellars

Monday, October 8th, 2012

Hello my friends, Ernie here.

I was in Taiwan a few days ago and our distributor, Simon Teng from Simon Wine Cellars in Hsin Chu, organized an unusual tasting in a great setting. He rented an old Hakka farmhouse and put a whole 120-pound pork on the barbecue. It is done in the traditional Hakka style, which are the native people of this area. As you can see, we had a lot of fun and people loved the Dr. Loosen Riesling and J Christopher Pinot Noir.

Simon Teng and his wife, Dominique Levy, my importer and Janet Chen, our translator.

Ernst Loosen Dinner in Beijing on October 10

Friday, September 21st, 2012

Special to our fans in Beijing….

Ernst Loosen at Kempinski Hotel dinner in Beijing last year (2011).

Join Ernst Loosen, returning after his successful wine dinner in the previous year, for a five-course dinner matched by Dr. Loosen wines at the wonderful Kempinski Hotel’s Dragon Palace Restaurant.

DATE: October 10, 2012
TIME: 7:00 pm
COST: RMB 488 per person
RESTAURANT: Dragon Palace
PLACE: Kempinski Hotel Beijing Lufthansa Center

(All prices are in RMB and subject to 15% surcharge.)

More information.

For inquiries and reservations, please call +86 10 6465 3388 ext. 4217 or e-mail restaurant.beijing@kempinski.com.

Happy Birthday, Ernie!

Wednesday, September 12th, 2012

Please join us in wishing our winemaker, Ernst Loosen, a very happy birthday today!

Ernie and his wife, Eva, are celebrating in Italy and Switzerland and have been visiting some old friends who just happen to be famous winemakers:

 

Ernie whooping it up with Elio Altare and some of Elio’s excellent wines in the foreground.

Ernie with winemaker Angelo Gaja.

Ernie with winemaker Mario Cordero.

Ernie with winemaker Elio Altare.

 

Congratulations on another trip around the sun!

Ernst Loosen Visits Total Wine Stores in Seattle, USA

Monday, August 20th, 2012

Love this fun pic of Ernie and pals when he poured at Total Wine Stores in Seattle last week. More than 200 people attended!

Weekend at Blackberry Farm in Tennessee!

Thursday, August 2nd, 2012

Ready for the wine/food trip of a lifetime?

Join Ernie Loosen and Chef Alan Wong (Pineapple Room Restaurant in Honolulu) for a “Continental Exchange” weekend at Blackberry Farm in the Smoky Mountains of East Tennessee.

August 19 – 22

It’s a four-day/three-night experience filled with wine tastings, dinners with special wine pairings, garden tours, and cooking lessons, all created around Chef Wong’s cuisine and Dr. Loosen wines, amid the exquisite beauty and comfort of Blackberry Farm Resort.

You’ll begin your experience at a welcome reception on the iconic Main House veranda with champagne and canapés. Chef Wong and Ernie will be there to greet you, and host Sam Beall will give everyone an introduction.

An opening dinner will follow that will be the perfect welcome to Blackberry Farm with cuisine by Executive Chef Joseph Lenn. Ernie will pair wines to complement Joseph’s Foothills Cuisine. Chef Wong and Ernie will be seated at the table with you, so you’ll have plenty of opportunity to enjoy their company and wisdom about food and wine.

From there, you’ll launch on your oeno-culinary journey, led by Ernie and Chef Wong.

In between events, you’ll enjoy the luxurious amenities and natural beauty of Blackberry Farms, rated the #1 resort in the Continental US and Canada by Travel & Leisure Magazine.

Read the event brochure

Learn more about Blackberry Farm

To make your reservation, call 800.557.8864.

ABOUT BLACKBERRY FARM

Often described as “Easy to get to. Hard to leave.” – Blackberry Farm is located in the heart of the Great Smoky Mountains of East Tennessee.

This 62-room Relais and Chateaux and Relais Gourmand property offers some of the world’s finest wines, cuisine, fly fishing, horseback riding, hiking, cycling, sporting clay and mountain biking opportunities.

In addition to an abundance of outdoor activities, Blackberry Farm offers a destination spa and a series of annual cooking schools and culinary events along with other world-renowned guest chefs and vintners.

Here Comes the Loosen Bros. USA Portfolio Tour 2012!

Friday, March 30th, 2012

For the Wine Trade in Chicago, Boston & New York City — We are happy to announce that Loosen Bros. USA, the national importer for Dr. Loosen, will be taking our small but growing band of top-drawer winemakers to your cities, April 16-18.

In each city, we’ll have an extensive selection of our wines for you to taste, and you can get the real dirt straight from these winemakers who, like Ernie Loosen, are committed to the idea that terroir is real and a wine’s place of origin matters.

We look forward to showing you our current range of wines from:

CHICAGO
Monday, April 16, from 11 am to 4 pm
Tenzing Basecamp, 165 North Morgan, Chicago

(We will be part of Tenzing Wine & Spirits’ annual portfolio tasting.)

Attending Winemakers:

  • Ernst Loosen, Dr. Loosen (Mosel) & Villa Wolf (Pfalz)
  • Wilhelm Weil, Robert Weil (Rheingau)
  • Nicolas Potel, Domaine de Bellene & Maison Roche de Bellene (Burgundy)

To attend the tasting, or for more information, please contact: Doug Krenik, Director of Sales, Loosen Bros. USA 720-237-8170 or doug.krenik@drloosen.com.

BOSTON
Tuesday, April 17, from 11 am to 4 pm
Catalyst Restaurant, 300 Technology Square, Cambridge

Attending Winemakers:

  • Ernst Loosen, Dr. Loosen (Mosel) & Villa Wolf (Pfalz)
  • Wilhelm Weil, Robert Weil (Rheingau)
  • Carl von Schubert, Maximin Grünhaus (Ruwer)
  • Nicolas Potel, Domaine de Bellene & Maison Roche de Bellene (Burgundy)
  • Jay Somers, J. Christopher Wines (Oregon)

To attend the tasting, or for more information, please contact Ian Dick, NE Region Sales Manager, Loosen Bros. USA 413-429-7063 or ian.dick@drloosen.com.

NEW YORK
Wednesday, April 18 – noon to 4 pm
The Lamb’s Club, 132 West 44th Street, Manhattan

Attending Winemakers:

  • Ernst Loosen, Dr. Loosen (Mosel) & Villa Wolf (Pfalz)
  • Wilhelm Weil, Robert Weil (Rheingau)
  • Carl von Schubert, Maximin Grünhaus (Ruwer)
  • Nicolas Potel, Domaine de Bellene & Maison Roche de Bellene (Burgundy)
  • Jay Somers, J. Christopher Wines (Oregon)

To attend the tasting, or for more information, please contact: Ian Dick, NE Region Sales Manager, Loosen Bros. USA 413-429-7063 or ian.dick@drloosen.com.

Please feel free to pass the invitation on to your friends and colleagues in the wine trade.

A Sigh of Relief — The “Picture Book” 2011 Harvest in Germany

Tuesday, March 6th, 2012

Hello my friends. Ernie Loosen here, with notes from our 2011 harvest.

After the small, somewhat difficult vintage in 2009, followed immediately by the extremely low-yielding, labor-intensive 2010 harvest, we were blessed with a much welcome respite in 2011.

Ripening Riesling fruit hanging in the sunny September air above the village of Ürzig. The botrytis-affected grapes in the cluster on the left were selected out for Auslese and TBA.

But that’s not to say things are back to normal. As in the past several years, the weather was quite erratic, and the seasons far from “normal.” Happily, however, the end result was a relaxed and very fine harvest during ideal conditions, giving us a plentiful crop of delightful, charming wines.

An Early Start and Extended Hang Time for Aromatic Ripeness

Once again, unseasonably warm weather in early spring got the growing season off to a very early start. It was as if someone had simply flipped a switch from winter to summer, skipping spring altogether. Bud break and flowering were nearly four weeks ahead of the average, but then cold weather returned in May, with some areas getting damaged by night frost. Our actual summer was cooler and wetter than normal, bringing on the usual fears of under-ripeness and disease issues. But warm, sunny weather returned in September, and the fruit ripened beautifully.

Our main harvest in the Mosel began on Sept. 22. This is about three weeks earlier than the historical average (my mother looked out the window, saw us picking and said, “That’s just crazy. In my day we never started picking before the first of November!”), but because of the very early flowering, we had the typical amount of hang time — about 120 days.

With a late-ripening grape like Riesling, this extended hang time is essential for the flavors and aromas to develop fully. It’s what I call “aromatic ripeness.” Without it, the wines will be simple and uninteresting. Fully developed aromatic ripeness, coupled with a normal level of sugar ripeness (that is, not over-ripe), gives you wines that are intensely expressive of fruit and site, but retain an elegant structural balance. This is what we’re looking for at Dr. Loosen.

Time for Careful Selections for Various Prädikat Levels

At first, we jumped into the harvest with the frantic pace of the past few years. But then we saw that the ripeness was rising — and the acidity was dropping — at a much more relaxed rate. That allowed us to slow down and really take our time with the careful selections we do for the various Prädikat levels. We ended up with wines in all Prädikats, except for Beerenauslese. There wasn’t an inordinate amount of botrytis, so it mostly went into the Auslese selection (clusters with about 50% botrytis-affected grapes), with only the totally shrivelled, individually selected berries going into the selection bucket for Trockenbeerenauslese (TBA).

Kabinetts With Brilliant, Beautiful Fruit and a Charming Delicacy

The hallmark of the vintage will be the Kabinetts. They are classically balanced, delicate wines with more elegance and finesse than the supercharged 2010 vintage. They have brilliant, beautiful fruit and a charming delicacy that is immediately appealing. Acidity levels are slightly below average (hovering around 8 grams/liter in most of the wines) — another welcome relief after the über-acidic 2010 harvest — but the wines are finely balanced, with poise and grace.

Balanced, Harmonious Dry Wines

The more moderate acidity also makes it an excellent year for well-balanced, harmonious dry wines, such as the Grosses Gewächs (“GG”) bottlings we do from several of our classified vineyard sites: Wehlener Sonnenuhr, Ürziger Würzgarten, Erdener Treppchen and Erdener Prälat. These are small-production bottlings, made from healthy (non-botrytis) grapes that have achieved Auslese ripeness (minimum 85° Oechsle; about 21 Brix), but are fermented dry, with indigenous yeasts, and matured in traditional wooden casks to help round out the acidity.

The Crazy Eiswein Harvest of 2011 (It Came in 2012!)

Picking Eiswein in the steep Erdener Treppchen vineyard. The breathable plastic sheeting protects the grapes from rain and birds.

As always, we left out several parcels of fruit in the hope that a hard enough freeze (minimum –8° C) would come to give us Eiswein. Usually it happens by Christmas, but in 2011 Santa Claus had come and gone, and there was still no sign of Jack Frost. The grapes continued to hang through January, but still nothing. Then, in early February, the severely cold weather from Eastern Europe made its way to the Mosel and we had temperatures down to –14° C. I happened to be in Australia at the time, helping d’Arry and Chester Osborn celebrate the 100th anniversary of their d’Arenberg winery. On the same day that we finally finished our 2011 Riesling harvest with the Eiswein (February 2nd), Chester started his 2012 Riesling harvest in the McLaren Vale!

And what about that wild hail storm back in September?

As you may recall, we suffered a severe hail storm here in the Middle Mosel in September 2011. A lot of damage was done to buildings, cars and vines, but we were fortunate in that the damage to our vineyards was quite localized. Our worst-hit vineyards were in Wehlener Sonnenuhr, where we lost about 30 percent of the crop that was hanging in those parcels. It was quite a large crop, however, so what the hail really gave us was a sort of natural green harvest. A heavy rain followed the hail, which washed away the broken grapes and cleaned the remaining fruit clusters. Then the weather turned sunny, the grapes dried, and the risk of rot was avoided. There was no negative effect on the quality of the fruit — only the reduced yield to give us better ripeness.

2011: A Peaceful, Self-Assured Vintage

All in all, this harvest reminds me of the lovely 1983 vintage: normal must weights, acidity that is firm but not strident, and fruit flavors that are purely delicious. It was such a pleasure to once again have a harvest that wasn’t so completely nerve-wracking and exhausting. The tension and stress that marked the 2010 harvest did make the wines rather energetic, but I think the more peaceful, self-assured nature of the 2011 vintage will make it extremely approachable, especially for those who are new to Riesling.

Ernst Loosen with Pals in Burgundy

Sunday, March 4th, 2012

Burgundy is one of Ernie Loosen’s great loves, and every year he makes a trip there with a small group of friends. This year the gang toured Rousseau, DRC, Mugnier, Claude Dugat, Clos de Tart, and Domaine Leflaive.

Enjoy Ernie’s pics of this year’s tour and to read more about it, visit LE BLOG DU GRAND JURY. (And if you don’t speak French, Google translator helps. Bon chance!)

(left to right) Wang Yi, Roger Christian, Roberto Schneuwly, Claude Dugat, Enzo Vizzari, Oruzzio Vagnozzi, Ernst Loosen

In the cellar at Clos de Tart

Ernie is a huge fan of Burgundy and keeps a large cellar.

At dinner.

Tasting Grands Echezeaux 2011. Formidable!

Ernst Loosen in Florida

Saturday, March 3rd, 2012

Ernie Loosen and our Southeast Sales Manager Sarah Noble did a swing through Florida in February, teaching Riesling seminars and visiting with customers and vendors. Enjoy these pics from their trip, and if you want to see even more, check out the photo album on our Facebook page.

More about the companies featured in these photos at: B-21 Wine Merchants in Tarpon Springs, Sideberns Restaurant in Tampa, and Joe’s Stone Crab in Miami.

The "Mad Winemaker of the Mosel" himself at B-21 Wine Merchants in Tampa, Florida

Ernie Loosen with B-21 wine expert Shannon Sprenthall

Ernie teaches a Riesling seminar at Sideberns Restaurant & Wine Shop in Tampa

Ernie and Kevin Pelley, Wine Director at Sideberns in Tampa

Ernie and Chateau Ste. Michelle Winemaker Bob Bertheau in fine form at Joe's Stone Crab in Miami Beach. Ernie and Bob were in town to do their "Riesling Roadshow" for their joint venture, Eroica Riesling.

Tasty goodness at Joe's Stone Crab in Miami Beach.

Ernie and Selected Brands Rep Amy Cairns. Read our feature story on Selected Brands at http://www.drloosen.com/blog/?p=2169