Austria is small, with barely 0.5% of its land covered in grapevines, but the country has contributed significant innovation and creativity to the wine world, from viticulture to stemware. In its more recent history, Austria’s industry was marked by the 1985 “antifreeze” scandal. Though the practice of sweetening wines with diethylene glycol, or DEG, hardly represented the majority of Austrian winemakers, all were implicated. Impressively, the industry banded together over the following years and developed stricter regulations and practices. Today, Austria has not only redeemed its reputation, but its wine industry is recognized for a proportionately high level of quality and rigorous standards. Pioneers from the last century have paved the way for today’s set of bright winemakers, many of whom are bringing excitement and originality to lesser-touted pockets throughout the country.
Geographically central, Austria has been a thoroughfare for many civilizations throughout history. The Hallstatt culture of the Late Bronze Age through the early Iron Age (1200–500 BCE), among the earliest of Celtic peoples, was first to significantly settle this area, landing just southeast of what is today Salzburg. Salt mines in the region allowed this group to prosper, producing over a ton of salt per day and supplying over half of Europe. Artifacts discovered here, such as bronze ornaments and sword handles made of African ivory, suggest significant wealth. As the tribe grew and became more sophisticated, a wine culture developed. Art and other remnants dated between 600 and 400 BCE signal more frequent wine consumption and a stratification of society, as the Hallstatt tribes were dominated by the fiercer La Tène Celts.
The first record
Glossary of Terms indicates that blau = black, although "blau" in German means blue.
A small typo in the Seewinkle section: It looks like the village of Apeton should be Apetlon. Also a small update in the OTW section: It looks like Thermenregion has now joined as well.
Hey Anthony - I believe Ruster Ausbruch can include any white Qualitatswein grape variety, and the Austrian Wine website lists the five principal grapes as Welschriesling, Weissburgunder, Chardonnay, Muskateller, and Furmint. But other white grapes are also authorized within the Qualitatswein category.
I think the compendium might be incorrect regarding the permitted varietals for Ruster Ausbruch DAC. According to the 5th edition of Oxford and Austrianwine.com the permitted varietals are:
Welschriesling (not mentioned in compendium)
Weissburgunder, Chardonnay, Muskateller, and Furmint.
the compendium offers Grauburgunder as an authorized variety but I can’t find any mention of that in the resources listed above.
Hey Anthony! Correct this should read after. The guide is updated. Thanks!
“…wherein dessert grapes that don’t appear destined for great botrytis are dried on reed mats for six to eight weeks before harvesting from the vine.”
before should read after, no?
I guess this must be a recent update? This expert guide says 65.7 hl/ha and the WSET Diploma D3 textbook says 67.5 hl/ha...Just thought I should point it out!
I just noticed that the Austrian Wine website lists maximum overall yields set for the country is 75 hl/ha...www.austrianwine.com/.../maximum-permitted-yield
Thanks, Michael! The varietal planting data is updated with these numbers.
Just a note that the Austrian Wine website has some updated production data for plantings of white wines and red wines as of May 2022.
Hey Juan! This is edited and updated.