One of the greatest deals in bone-dry Riesling we’ve ever seen.

- 97 pts James Suckling97 pts JS
- 95 pts Wine Advocate95 pts RPWA
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2023 Tesch Riesling Trocken St. Remigiusberg Laubenheim Nahe 750 ml
Retail: $30 | ||
$28 | 7% off | 1-11 bottles |
$26 | 13% off | 12+ bottles |
- Curated by unrivaled experts
- Choose your delivery date
- Temperature controlled shipping options
- Get credited back if a wine fails to impress
“How Could the Beauty of a Ripe Apricot Be Married to a Lightning Strike?”
Jancis Robinson—our greatest active wine critic and a Master of Wine—called Riesling “the greatest white-wine grape in the world.” She went on to say that “German dry Riesling is one of the wine world’s undervalued treasures.”
Consider the historic Weingut Tesch. The Wine Advocate hailed them as “one of the most interesting producers in Germany when it comes to dry, linear…Riesling classics in top quality and for affordable prices.” They went on to declare that “2023 is perhaps the best vintage that Martin Tesch has produced.”
But we’re able to offer Tesch’s 2023 St. Remigiusberg single-vineyard Riesling for a stunning price, and it needs to be in the cellar of anyone who covets exceptional white Burgundy or Sancerre. It’s made with more care and technique in both the vineyard and the cellar than nearly any white at the price—an undervalued treasure if we ever saw one.
Weingut Tesch was founded three centuries ago, in 1723, and has been tending vines in the heart of the Nahe region ever since, acquiring land in some of the most coveted crus of the area.
This bottling is entirely from the St. Remigiusberg vineyard in the town of Laubenheim, one of the two top sites in the Tesch portfolio—and their smallest vineyard. “Of all the dry crus, the Remigiusberg is the most sophisticated and complex,” according to the Wine Advocate, and this wine begs for bottle age or a decant ahead of drinking.
It’s hard to think of a white-wine-friendly meal that St. Remigiusberg wouldn’t improve, and this category of wine can’t stay a value like this for much longer—the quality is too obvious and the prices stunningly low. Take advantage while you can.