Alois
Lageder is a man of many refinements: the fifth-generation proprietor of a wine
estate dating back to 1823, and a gentleman with a keen intellect and a deep
respect for nature. His 125 acres of family-owned vineyards are cultivated
organically, sustainably and biodynamically. Those parcels are scattered
throughout the finest areas of the Alto Adige and South Tyrol, yielding single
vineyard wines with stunning purity of fruit.
However,
single vineyard wines are not the drink of the masses (nor is Sciava, Lagrein
or Moscato Giallo, the grapes grown on of some of Lageder’s dedicated sites). In
the wine industry, quality and quality seldom coexist. You either want to
produce the bottle people buy to celebrate their anniversary, or the one that
goes into their refrigerator every day. It’s hard to have it both ways.
His desire
to reach a wider audience first drove Lageder to forge long-term contracts with
90 local growers and produce a line of classic varietal wines. He took a
further step ten years ago and founded Cantina Riff, to answer a simple
question: could the elevated Lageder standards be applied to Pinot Grigio and a
Merlot/Cabernet blend that were both affordable and generally available in
retail stores?
The
underlying issue, of course, is whether anyone would care. Pinot Grigio has
replaced Chardonnay as the generic quaff of the moment, and public expectations
are low---in large part because of the popularity of Santa Margherita, which
tastes like grapefruit-flavored water mildly spiked with alcohol. Remember the New Yorker cartoon some years back of a
tanker truck with “Cheap White Wine” stenciled on its side? Getting people excited
about Pinot Grigio today is truly the impossible dream.
Even so,
Riff Pinot Grigio 2016 ($11) represents the intersection of quality and
quantity. The wine is blended by Lageder from vineyards in the foothills of the
Northeastern Italian Alps. Riff is German for reef, and the name signifies the
geological origin of those mountains: the coral reefs and fossilized limestone deposits
that remain from the bodies of water that covered the region in prehistoric
times.
The wine has
a light straw color and a sexy nose with aromas of citrus, melon and ripe tree
fruit. In the mouth, it displays mouthwatering acidity and vivid flavors of
lemon, lime, peach and green apple. Peach and melon flavors expand in the mid
palate and gain in intensity as the wine warms. The texture is nicely balanced
between crispness and amplitude, and the fruit lingers on a generous finish. In
addition to all the usual food pairings (hors d’oeuvres, finger food, fish and
shellfish), Riff would make an elegant companion to poultry and white meats,
and is a charming wine to sip on its own.