Vininspo! podcast
Sometimes it’s easy to confuse classicism with conservatism. On the face of it, 1798-founded Weingut A. Christmann seems to tick both boxes. Urbane 7th-generation patriarch Steffen Christmann read law at Heidelberg and presides over the VDP group of revered growers. The estate’s super-elegant wines grow exclusively on sites classified as premier and grand cru, and their crisp, sharp labels speak eloquently of their breeding. Classic to the core. But conservative? It ain’t that simple. All that class belies a dynamism that has only picked up pace since Sophie Christmann joined her father at the helm a decade ago. I first met Sophie in Melbourne in 2016, when she had come to Australia to work the harvest with Jeffrey Grosset and Stephanie Toole in the Clare Valley, and her drive and articulacy were notable then. She talks about her time at Grosset and Mount Horrocks in our interview. Later that same year, she went on work harvest in Baden, southern Germany, with Julian Huber of Weingut Bernhard Huber in Malterdingen. This is one of the country’s champions of world-class Pinot Noir, and we also discuss Sophie’s formative experience there. Sophie immediately started to transform Christmann into a leading producer of site-driven Spätburgunder, as Burgundy’s revered red grape is known in those parts. Again, we discuss that evolution in detail. I also had the pleasure of visiting Gimmeldingen in 2019, the year that Sophie and Steffen had another carpe diem moment, this time with traditional-method sparkling wine. Again, she shares excellent details on this project, which has become Sektgut Christmann et Kauffmann. Alsace-born Mathieu Kauffmann, the other half of this partnership, was the celebrated chef de cave at Champagne house Bollinger. He was initially lured to the Pfalz by a position at Reichsrat von Buhl before teaming up with the Christmanns on an ambitious initiative inspired by the great terroir wines of the grower Champagne movement. In our conversation, I refer to a couple of other [Vininspo! Alt. Format] episodes: one with Ernst Loosen [https://edmerrison.substack.com/p/vininspo-alt-format-how-harvest-happens-at-dr-loosen?r=59dyb2] of the Mosel and another with Cornelius Dönnhoff (Nahe) and Philipp Wittmann (Rheinhessen) [https://edmerrison.substack.com/p/vininspo-alt-format-wittmann-and-doennhoff?r=59dyb2]. Both of those, as well as episode 14 with Gunderloch’s Johannes Hasselbach [https://edmerrison.substack.com/p/vininspo-episode-14-johannes-hasselbach?r=59dyb2], will provide the listener with other fascinating detail about fine German wine. Speaking of progressive, the Christmann estate has been certified biodynamic by respect-BIODYN for over 20 years. We talk about the reframing of the range, whose Aus Den Lagen Riesling and Pinot Noir represent the already high-quality jumping-in point. We talk about the Grossen Lagen (grand-cru sites) of Meerspinne in Gimmeldingen, Vogelsang in Neustadt and, in the village of Königsbach, Ölberg-Hart and jewel-in-the-crown Idig. The Ersten Lagen (premier-cru sites) are spread across these same villages plus Ruppertsberg and Mussbach. Sophie also mentions the famous villages of Forst and Deidesheim, also within the Mittelhaardt section of Pfalz. That subregional name is derived from the Haardt mountains (or, as Sophie says, hills), which are the extension of the Vosges mountains (Vogesen in German) of Alsace to the south, the other side of the French border. Other Pfalz friends (geddit?) that crop up are Weingut Rings, Weingut Dr Bürklin-Wolf and Ökonomierat Rebholz, led by Hans-Jörg Rebholz. A touching reference is made to Philipp Wittmann’s father, Günter. Weingut Rudolf Fürst in Franken, meanwhile, is cited as another benchmark Spätburgunder producer. On that note, German Pinot Noir plantings have jumped by 50% in the past 30 years, and Sophie is one of those leading the quality charge. She talks about how the breakdown of her estate’s plantings has shifted over time. For context, in 2024/5, Riesling accounted for 25.2% of vines in the Pfalz (Palatinate in English), while Pinot Noir was just 7.3%. At Christmann, it is shifting towards two-thirds and one-third, respectively. The wines of Sophie, Steffen, Mathieu and the team are imported into Australia by CellarHand, by whom I am employed on a part-time basis. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit edmerrison.substack.com/subscribe [https://edmerrison.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]
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