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Rudolf Furst
For followers of the international wines investing market, the role of Pinot Noir in Germany is
interesting. As prices soar for Burgundian Pinots, second-market buyers have begun to cast their
nets further afield for comparable quality at a far lower price. And Germany offers a welcome
alternative; superb quality, long ageing potential and a marketing export strategy that beggars
belief, certain producers such as Rudolf Furst, are setting themselves apart from the crowd. As
Wine guru Jancis Robinson said in 2018: “German Pinot Noir now belongs in the company of great
Pinot Noirs around the world...”.
Paul and Sebastian make a great father-son team
A winemaking family for over 400 years, the Fursts were born and brought up in their
south-facing fields. A family of passionate traditionalists, the estate is run by Paul and his
son Sebastian (the 2nd and 3rd generations of Fursts to be at the helm). The 15-hectares of iron
rich terroir is farmed as it always has been: low-impact methods, reduced yields, meticulous
canopy management and staged selection passes, underscored by immense dedication. This is then
followed by long, gentle, elevage in oak barrels (between 12-20 months), for results which are
superb and highly acclaimed. Whether we are talking about their Pinot Noirs (Spätburgunder) or
dry Rieslings, both the red and whites produced by this estate are magical.
2014 was the “Wine of the Year”
Rudolf Furst has gone a long way to prove Robert Parker wrong. Parker is famously quoted as
saying “German Pinot Noir is a grotesque and ghastly wine that tastes akin to a defective,
sweet, faded, diluted red Burgundy from an incompetent producer.” His comments have perhaps been
in part responsible for the lack of interest or availability of Rudolf Furst wines in the US,
whereas British mega-fan Jancis Robinson ("Rudolf Fürst is an acknowledged Pinot Noir sage in
Germany.") might well be one of the reasons why the wines are hugely popular in Britain. Despite
their consistently high ratings (notably from Jancis), the wines remain reasonably priced; with
a 23% rise in approximately five years from 2014-2019. Today expect to pay around €100 in Europe
for a 2014 vintage, 92 points aggregate score and Germany’s “red wine of the year”.
Notable facts and vintages
- US news source Bloomberg, in their “German Pinot Noir Is the Buzzy Alternative to Pricey Burgundy” article describes Furst’s “...hard-to-find, expensive single vineyard pinots [are] among the finest in Germany.”
- When appropriate, Furst produces a highly investable Burgstadter Centgrafenberg Riesling Eiswein. The 2002 vintage was the latest release, which earned a Robert Parker’s Wine Advocate score of 96 points and is near (if not entirely) impossible to find.
- In 2018, Sebastian Fürst was named Falstaff Winemaker of the Year, Germany.