ClassificationAlsace AOC
VarietalsPinot Blanc, Auxerrois

Tip: Felix Meyer's Kaefferkopf and Wineck-Schlossberg Grand Crus are the bottles to chase, but the basic Pinot Blanc is the gateway under twenty euros.

More budget wines in Alsace

Vincent Stoeffler Pinot Noir Tradition ★ 4.1

Alsace AOCPinot NoirEUR 15-20 retail

Vincent Stoeffler of Barr makes a serious, lightly-oaked Pinot Noir Tradition at a friendly price. Red cherry, light grip, a clean cool-climate red, evidence that Alsace's Pinot Noir is now worth taking seriously at every tier.

Tip: Serve a touch cool to lift the red-cherry fruit; the same domaine's Kirchberg de Barr Grand Cru Pinot Noir is the next step up if you fall for the style.

Henry Fuchs Sylvaner ★ 4.0

Alsace AOCSylvanerEUR 10-14 retail

Ribeauville's Henry Fuchs makes a dry, crisp Sylvaner in the family's old-school style, a wine that has all but disappeared from many domaines' lineups. Green apple and a saline bite under fifteen euros.

Tip: Sylvaner is the old soul of Alsace; this bottle is the case for not letting the variety drift out of fashion, pair with onion tart or shellfish.

Domaine Loberger Pinot Blanc ★ 4.0

Alsace AOCPinot Blanc, AuxerroisEUR 11-15 retail

Bergholtz's Loberger family makes a soft, generous Pinot Blanc that lands as a quiet wine-route bargain. Pear and saline finish, the kind of wine that disappears at table with no fuss for well under fifteen euros.

Tip: Bergholtz sits in the southern Haut-Rhin near Soultzmatt; Loberger's range is far easier to taste at the cellar than the village's bigger neighbours.

Trimbach Riesling Classic ★ 4.3

Alsace AOCRieslingEUR 15-22 retail

Trimbach's house Riesling, dry, taut and stony, is the easiest serious entry to Alsace. Built on fruit from across Ribeauville's slopes, it remains the benchmark dry Alsace Riesling well under twenty-five euros.

Tip: This is the wine to drink with choucroute or tarte flambee; the Reserve label is a step up but the basic Riesling is the value buy.

Leon Beyer Riesling Reserve ★ 4.3

Alsace AOCRieslingEUR 16-20 retail

Leon Beyer's flagship cuvee, a dry Riesling built for the restaurant trade in a famously austere house style. Lemon-pith, gunflint and a long mineral finish, served in three-star Michelin rooms across France for decades.

Tip: Beyer's Riesling is more austere than most rivals; serve a touch cool with shellfish or sushi, and try side by side with a Trimbach to see the village's two great house styles.

Wolfberger Cremant d'Alsace Brut ★ 4.0

Cremant d'Alsace AOCPinot Blanc, AuxerroisEUR 10-14 retail

Wolfberger is a major Cremant d'Alsace producer and the Brut is a reliable supermarket value. Crisp apple and brioche from a Pinot Blanc and Auxerrois base, traditional-method, comfortably under fifteen euros.

Tip: Use this as the house aperitif fizz; the rose version is also under fifteen euros and useful with charcuterie, while the cuvee Prestige is the small step up.

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