Weintourismus sehr beliebt und weiter wachsend
Der neue Global Wine Tourism Report 2025 – mit vielen Anregungen

Niklas Breithaupt bester Sommelier 2025
bei der Sommelier-Trophy der Sommelier-Union Deutschland

9.11.25: Tolle PIWI-Weine zu probieren – aus pilzwiderstandsfähigen Rebsorten im Kühlhaus Berlin
organisiert von PWI International – zugleich Kongress des Verbands: PIWI World Summit

6.-13.11.2025 Super weinkulinarischer November an Mosel und Saar
MAXIME HERKUNFT MOSEL: top Weine und beste Speisen bei 35 Veranstaltungen zu genießen

11.10.- 16.11.2025 Tolle Weine – tolle Genüsse und Kultur: KaiserHerbst 2025
viel zu verkosten und zu genießen im und rund um den Kaiserstuhl

25.10.- bis 30.11.2025: Genusswochen im Ahrtal: ‚Probier mal Ahrwein‘
45 Weingüter, Restaurants und Hotels mit Weinproben und tollen Angeboten

Die Domäne Wachau - hat sich mit ihren Weinen in die Topliga katapultiert!
beutendster österreichischer Weinerzeuger mit biologischem Anbau

Tolle Weine aus Franken, probiert auf einer Frankenreise
das Silvaner-Land, eine Reise wert - spannend am Gaumen die Trias-Terroirs

Dessert Wine and Cheese

A dynamic duo

https://www.bonvinitas.com/media/reviews/photos/thumbnail/780x480c/4a/59/f2/_DessertWinesandCheese_1317307294.jpg
Von  3864

It’s a classic pair, red wine and cheese, but it is not always harmonic, the stronger tannins of many red wines causing a more biting relationship with cheese, especially the more delicate ones.

A lesser known fact is that strong, well-ripened cheese makes an excellent match with many dessert wines. It is a combination to tickle the palette, either as an interesting dessert course or as a small gourmet snack.

Elegant dessert wines are magical, explosively aromatic on the palette.

As masterpieces of the art of vinification, they are pure and natural, no added flavors or sugars. Such gems of wine arise when, during a warm and dry harvest season, single grapes or entire bunches, which are still hanging on the vines, shrivel up until they resemble raisins. If these raisin-like grapes are harvested and sorted individually, the sugar levels in the pressed juice skyrocket. The sugar is so concentrated that the natural fermentation process cannot naturally convert all the sugars into alcohol. The fermentation comes to a halt and a natural sweetness remains in the wine. Relatively low levels of alcohol combine with concentrated extracts. Referred to as premier dessert wines, winemakers commend the beauty of their intense fruity flavors. They are called Beerenauslese, or selected berry harvest, and Trockenbeerenauslese, selected dry berry harvest. Ice wines show very similar intensities as well. These arise by a kind of natural freeze-drying technique, which occurs when the grapes are left on the vines until the temperatures fall below 8° C. The harvesting begins in the wee hours, just before dawn, when the night is at its coldest. The grapes are pressed while they are still frozen, so the water stays in the press with the seeds and skins, and only the sugars and concentrates are extracted from the fruit. “Premier dessert wines are very highly recognized,” says the sommelier in the 1-Michelin-star “Wilder Ritter” restaurant in Durbach, “with a particular emphasis being placed on the German Auslese, Beerenauslese, Trockenbeerenauslese and ice wines.” The view is similar in the “Bourdeaux-Stube” in the Sonnenhof in Lautenbach, where French cheese varieties such as Munster, Comté or Époisses are the most popular. “Reblochon or Roquefort served with a premier dessert wine is a match made in heaven.”

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