hi 2011 – Marcel Deiss Alsace Blanc « Cinderella Wine - Ridiculously low prices for up to 24 hours only.

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Product bottle shot.

$30.00Original List Price

23.61Best Price On The Web
*Including cost of shipping per bottle.

$

19

97

per btl

Qty

bottles


Cinderella offer($18.98) has sold out,
WL price is now being displayed!

Code: 74544

Cinderella Wine says: Product Details:
Please note, orders are processed on a first come basis. If you leave the wine in your cart for even a few minutes it might have already sold out as our stock quantity is removed when you submit the order in final, not when you add it to your cart!

You will get two emails from us with regards to your order. The first email from us only confirms that we received your order. The second email will confirm that we have enough wine to fill your order. Due to the high volume of sales there are times when the wine has sold out, but our system is still updating and shows it as available. We're sorry for any inconvenience and will do what we can to fill your order!

Thanks to your feedback we might bring back some of Cinderella Wine's popular previous offers. If a wine makes another appearance here, this newer offer will always be slightly higher than the original one. Offers that are on the site on Friday through Sunday will be shipped on Monday.

Best Price on Web is determined by Wine-Searcher Pro prices as of yesterday: Wine Library sells this for our sale price of $19.97. There are 6 other stores that sell this from $19.95 to $23.99. You must be logged into the Pro Version of Wine Searcher to see all of the results. Please note, we are not taking virtual inventory into account.

Free shipping on orders of 6 bottles or more!
Please Note it may take 24-48 hours for your order to be put together for store pickup. You'll get an email when it's ready for pick up.
Rating: 94 Pts Wine EnthusiastSize:750ML
Region: Alsace Country:France
Varietals: Riesling, Pinot Bianco / Pinot Blanc, Pinot Noir, Muscat, Pinot Grigio, Gewurztraminer, Silvaner / Sylvaner, Auxerrois, Chasselas, Traminer ABV:13%

More Ratings:

94 Pts Wine Enthusiast

"This wine is made from a mix of 13 different grape varieties in a field blend. It's a totally terroir driven wine, full of mineral and gritty textures in its youth. Behind this structure is a wild range of flavors-spice, apples, pears and apricots-waiting to show through. It needs to age, so drink from 2016. - RV" (03/14)


Description:

Wine:
"This wine is both a revelation and a bargain. The Chateauneuf of Alsace. Made from 13 different grape varietals: Riesling, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Noir, Muscat, Pinot gris, Gewurztraminer, Sylvaner, Pinot Auxerrois, Chasselas, Pinot Beurot, Chasselas Rose, Traminer, Muscat Ottonel. Dry and aromatic, rich and ripe, perfectly balanced - yet never imported to the US until now." - Importer

"This wine comes exclusively from the vineyards of Domaine Marcel Deiss. It is produced annually from 13 Alsatian wines ducts and harvested together, pressed and vinified with the utmost respect, the sweetest technology and inputs without wine. These grapes express the plurality Alsatian and we are happy to produce a wine called our commitment to our region, grape varieties and traditions." - Winery

Winery Philosophy:
"The complantation (art of blending grape varietals in one Terroir) is the most original practice of viticulture in Europe. Long before the winemakers knew about the varieties and become scholar ampelographers, the complantation assumes a regular harvest as noted by Olivier de Serres in his book "The Theatre of agriculture and husbandry fields" (1600 ). Closer to our ear (1852), Jean-Louis Stolz characterized more than 100 grape varieties that cultivars planted in the vineyard in Alsace and described specific complantations in the greatest terroirs of Alsace (Sporen, Schoenenbourg Sonnenglanz, Zotzenberg, Kastelberg, Kaefferkopf). At that time, there were very few pure vineyard, the wine makers gradually realized a real adaptation of a complex vines in the terroir by layering technique (replace artistically a dead vine by its resistant neighbor better adapted)."

"While the grape variety has always been optional for AOC Alsace (Order 1945) and many plots on hillsides were still co-planted in the 60s, the introduction of the legislation which requires the mention of grape variety for Grand Cru (1975 ) can be considered as a historical mistake because it has resulted in a dramatic loss of biodiversity of vineyards, establishment of productive clones and a shift in all varieties. Fortunately, some winemakers have the perseverance and obstinacy, and in 2005, to reform this unjust law (the grape variety is now entirely optional for AOC Alsace and the Grand Cru)." - Winery

This wine was also rated 87 Points by both the International Wine Cellar and the Wine Spectator.