Left Continue shopping
Your Order

You have no items in your cart

Donnhoff, Niederhauser Hermannshohle Riesling Spatlese, 2024

White Wine from Nahe, Germany

$67.99

Get 10% off purchases of 12+ bottles of wine.
(Use code 10OFF at checkout.)
In stock and ready to ship

The Hermannshöhle vineyard in Niederhausen is one of the Nahe's most celebrated sites, known for producing wines of remarkable fruit intensity and mineral structure. This 2024 Spätlese (late harvest) from Helmut Dönnhoff captures the vintage's freshness while displaying the ripeness and complexity the site is famous for. Traditional fermentation and aging honor the vineyard's terroir distinctiveness, while natural yeasts and no filtration preserve the wine's full complexity. The 2024 shows honeyed stone fruit with the Nahe's characteristic slate minerality, medium sweetness balanced by bright acidity, and the silky texture that characterizes the finest Hermannshöhle selections. Ready to drink now or age gracefully for 15+ years as secondary flavors develop.

YOUR DELIVERY OPTIONS:

  • Same Day Delivery - Call us at (212) 477-1315 for more details.



Professional Reviews

Antonio Galloni

AG 97
"The 2024 Riesling Niederhäuser Hermannshöhle Spätlese, again made in small quantities due to frost, is from shale soils. Lemon and Reine Claude plum are pristine on the nose. The midpalate has a touch of crushed yellow peach flesh scented with lime. Despite its vivid slenderness and beautifully taut, measured nature, this has fill, poise and purity." -Anne Krebiehl, MW

What importer Skurnik Wines has to say about this wine...

Variety: Riesling
Region: Nahe
Vineyard: Niederhäuser Hermannshöhle
Soil Type: Argillaceous slate with limestone veins and volcanic elements
Fermentation & Élevage: Stainless steel vats and neutral 10+-year-old 1200L German stückfass from Hösch

Details

German Wines

Is there a better grape than Riesling? Is there a better value? Its fruit purity, its perfume, and its mineral nuance are all unparalleled. And for centuries, the top German Rieslings were priced accordingly: at least as expensive as the top red wines of Bordeaux and Burgundy. But nowadays you could spend a lifetime exploring Germany’s great Riesling-producing regions while staying well within your budget. You might take an occasional break to try Germany’s other white grapes or perhaps a glass of Spätburgunder (the local name for Pinot Noir). It’s time to get started!

Skip the Carousel