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Alzinger Ried Muhlpoint Federspiel Gruner Veltliner 2024

Alzinger Ried Muhlpoint Federspiel Gruner Veltliner 2024

The Land

Alzinger Ried Mühlpoint Federspiel Grüner Veltliner 2024 comes from Ried Mühlpoint in Unterloiben, a site tucked at the toe of the Steinertal slope, close to the Danube. It’s a classic “transition” vineyard: higher sections feel the pull of the mountain with gneiss surfacing, while the lower stretches shift into deeper loam-rich layers built from erosion material. That mix—rocky precision up top, broader soil weight below—is a big part of why Mühlpoint Grüner often shows a distinct peppery spice without losing its clean line. The vineyard is partially terraced and sits on a moderate slope, giving you ripeness without heaviness.

The Wine

This is Grüner is in the Federspiel register: medium-bodied, dry, and intended for the table. Fermentation and élevage are primarily in stainless steel, with just a small portion in neutral Austrian oak to round edges rather than add flavor. Alzinger’s style is deliberately restrained—clean fruit, controlled extraction, and a calm, precise finish rather than overt opulence. In the glass, expect a tight Wachau profile: green and yellow orchard fruit, citrus peel, and that signature white pepper/fennel-like spice, carried by brisk acidity and a stony, savory edge. It’s one of those wines that starts “refreshing” first, then gets more complex as it evolves with air and warms up in the glass.

The People

Leo Alzinger is one of the benchmark names in the Wachau because he’s obsessively consistent about one thing: elegance over impact. He’s known for harvesting with patience—pushing maturity for balance and detail rather than chasing sheer concentration—then keeping the cellar work simple and precise. The result is a house style that feels effortless but exacting: wines that are transparent, food-driven, and unmistakably Wachau, with Mühlpoint specifically leaning into spice, clarity, and a long, dry finish.

 

Food pairing

Wiener schnitzel with lemon and a simple cucumber–dill salad.

This is the cleanest match for Federspiel Grüner: the wine’s brisk acidity cuts straight through the crisp fried crust, its peppery spice loves the savory browned notes, and the squeeze of lemon amplifies the wine’s citrus lift. The cucumber–dill salad effortlessly echoes the herbal greenness in the wine. Recipe on blog.

$13.20

Original: $44.00

-70%
Alzinger Ried Muhlpoint Federspiel Gruner Veltliner 2024

$44.00

$13.20
Product image 1

Description

The Land

Alzinger Ried Mühlpoint Federspiel Grüner Veltliner 2024 comes from Ried Mühlpoint in Unterloiben, a site tucked at the toe of the Steinertal slope, close to the Danube. It’s a classic “transition” vineyard: higher sections feel the pull of the mountain with gneiss surfacing, while the lower stretches shift into deeper loam-rich layers built from erosion material. That mix—rocky precision up top, broader soil weight below—is a big part of why Mühlpoint Grüner often shows a distinct peppery spice without losing its clean line. The vineyard is partially terraced and sits on a moderate slope, giving you ripeness without heaviness.

The Wine

This is Grüner is in the Federspiel register: medium-bodied, dry, and intended for the table. Fermentation and élevage are primarily in stainless steel, with just a small portion in neutral Austrian oak to round edges rather than add flavor. Alzinger’s style is deliberately restrained—clean fruit, controlled extraction, and a calm, precise finish rather than overt opulence. In the glass, expect a tight Wachau profile: green and yellow orchard fruit, citrus peel, and that signature white pepper/fennel-like spice, carried by brisk acidity and a stony, savory edge. It’s one of those wines that starts “refreshing” first, then gets more complex as it evolves with air and warms up in the glass.

The People

Leo Alzinger is one of the benchmark names in the Wachau because he’s obsessively consistent about one thing: elegance over impact. He’s known for harvesting with patience—pushing maturity for balance and detail rather than chasing sheer concentration—then keeping the cellar work simple and precise. The result is a house style that feels effortless but exacting: wines that are transparent, food-driven, and unmistakably Wachau, with Mühlpoint specifically leaning into spice, clarity, and a long, dry finish.

 

Food pairing

Wiener schnitzel with lemon and a simple cucumber–dill salad.

This is the cleanest match for Federspiel Grüner: the wine’s brisk acidity cuts straight through the crisp fried crust, its peppery spice loves the savory browned notes, and the squeeze of lemon amplifies the wine’s citrus lift. The cucumber–dill salad effortlessly echoes the herbal greenness in the wine. Recipe on blog.