Heymann-Löwenstein Riesling Kirchberg Großes Gewächs 2020 white
Heymann-Löwenstein Riesling Kirchberg Großes Gewächs 2020 is a powerful, dry Mosel Riesling from one of the region’s steepest and warmest grand cru vineyards. This wine captures the drama of the Terrassenmosel – vertiginous slate…
+ Read moreHeymann-Löwenstein Riesling Kirchberg Großes Gewächs 2020 is a powerful, dry Mosel Riesling from one of the region’s steepest and warmest grand cru vineyards. This wine captures the drama of the Terrassenmosel – vertiginous slate terraces, intense sun exposure and painstaking handwork – in a bottling that is both profound and precise. As a VDP.Großes Gewächs from a historic site, it stands among the most serious and ageworthy dry Rieslings in Germany.
Tasting Notes
In the glass, the 2020 Kirchberg GG shows a bright, luminous straw-yellow with green flashes, hinting at both ripeness and youthful tension. The nose is immediately expressive yet refined, with layers of ripe yellow stone fruit, mirabelle and tangerine peel wrapped around notes of crushed slate, warm iron, flint, dried herbs and a subtle smoky, almost ferrous minerality that clearly reflects the red, iron-rich slate. Hints of wild flowers, lemon zest and a gentle, saline breeze add lift and complexity. On the palate, this is a firmly structured, dry Riesling with impressive concentration and grip. Juicy, ripe citrus and stone fruits are carried by a driving, linear acidity that feels cool and precise despite the vineyard’s heat. The texture is dense yet finely woven, with a tactile, almost spicy minerality and a savory, salty finish that seems to echo the steep, rocky terraces. Long and tightly wound in its youth, the 2020 Kirchberg Großes Gewächs has significant aging potential; it will gain complexity, harmony and tertiary notes of honey, smoke and dried fruit over 10–15 years and likely beyond in good cellaring conditions.
Production
The Kirchberg vineyard rises directly behind the village of Hatzenport on the Terrassenmosel, on the left bank of the lower Mosel, with dramatic slopes of 100–150% gradient in full south-facing exposure. The soil is dominated by extremely hard, red, iron-oxide- and quartz-rich slate, making Kirchberg one of the hottest and most extreme sites along the entire Mosel. Here, yields are naturally low and all work – from pruning to harvest – must be done by hand on narrow terraces supported by old dry stone walls. In challenging warm years, such as 2018 and beyond, Reinhard Löwenstein and family rely on meticulous selection and precise timing of harvest rather than any oenological corrections, picking physiologically ripe yet perfectly healthy grapes. The Riesling is gently pressed, with spontaneous fermentation by native yeasts and extended lees contact in stainless steel and/or large traditional casks, allowing the wine to translate the power, heat and stony intensity of Kirchberg into a structured, terroir-driven dry Riesling without cosmetic intervention.
Food & Serving
This is a gastronomic Riesling that shines with richly flavored, sophisticated cuisine. Think roasted or grilled sea bass, turbot or monkfish, shellfish in saffron or fennel sauces, veal in light cream reductions, roasted poultry with root vegetables, or refined pork dishes with herb-driven jus. It also pairs beautifully with Asian-inspired dishes that balance umami and spice – such as miso-marinated cod, Thai lemongrass chicken or lightly spiced pork belly – where the wine’s acidity and minerality cut through richness. Serve at 10–12°C (50–54°F) in a medium-sized white wine or Riesling glass to allow the aromas to unfold. Decanting for 30–60 minutes when young is recommended to open the nose and soften the tightly coiled structure; mature bottles can be served directly after a gentle double-decant to remove sediment.
Producer
Weingut Heymann-Löwenstein is a benchmark estate on the Terrassenmosel and one of the key pioneers of serious, dry, terroir-expressive Riesling in the Mosel region. Based in Winningen, the family has painstakingly reclaimed and cultivated some of the steepest and most dramatic slate terraces along the last 100 kilometers of the Mosel River. Reinhard Löwenstein not only helped to define the identity of this subregion – coining the term “Terrassenmosel” itself – but also played a leading role in demonstrating that the Mosel can produce world-class, dry grand cru Rieslings from VDP.Große Lage sites. The estate’s wines are regularly acclaimed by top German and international critics, and Heymann-Löwenstein is today regarded as one of the most important and influential producers in the Mosel-Saar-Ruwer, particularly for its intensely mineral, ageworthy Großes Gewächs bottlings such as Kirchberg.
Recommended by top sommeliers
