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Product Name
Vintage
Price
Varietal
Country
Region
Appellation
Size
Additional Discount
Original Item
2020
$30.94
Gruner Veltliner
Austria
Lower Austria
750ml
6B / $30.32
Better Price, Same Score
2018
$26.94
Gruner Veltliner
Austria
Lower Austria
750ml
12B / $26.40
Better Score, Similar Price
2021
$31.94
Gruner Veltliner
Austria
Kremstal/Kamptal
750ml
12B / $31.30
Closest Match
2020
$31.20
Gruner Veltliner
Austria
Kremstal/Kamptal
750ml
12B / $30.58
Best QPR in Price range
2020
$29.60
Gruner Veltliner
Austria
Kremstal/Kamptal
750ml
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More Details
Winery
Laurenz V.
Varietal: Gruner Veltliner
At the forefront of high quality central European wines is the much admired Gruner Veltliner grape varietal. This pale skinned and highly versatile grape can be used for the production of excellent still white wines, as well as soft, mellow and beautifully aged wines. In many regions around central Europe, winemakers use the Gruner Veltliner to make elegant sparkling wines, which are highly appreciated by wine drinkers for the fact that they have an ability to clearly express the delightfully mineral-rich tones of the terroir the grapes were grown on. Due to the success and pervading popularity of the Gruner Veltliner varietal in many parts of Europe, recent decades have seen this grape being cultivated in several, cooler regions in the New World, to much success.
Country: Austria
Archaeological evidence suggests that grapevines have been grown and cultivated in what is today modern Austria for over four thousand years, making it one of the oldest wine producing countries in the world. Over the centuries, relatively little has changed in Austrian wine, with the dominant grape varietals continuing to be Grüner Veltliner, Zweigelt, Pinot Noir and others. Austria is renowned for producing excellent and characterful dry white wines, although in the eastern part of the country, many wineries specialist in sweeter white wines made in a similar style to those of neighboring Hungary. Today, Austria has over fifty thousand hectares under vine, split over four key wine regions. The domestic wine industry remains strong, with Austrians drinking their local produce outside in the summer, and people around the world are beginning to once more rediscover this fascinating and ancient wine culture.