Demeter CertifiedECOCERTNaturalScherwiller
Pierre and Jean Dietrich rebuilt their Scherwiller estate as Domaine Achillee in 2014 in a straw-bale cellar, Demeter biodynamic and making low-intervention native-yeast wines with minimal sulphur, a recognised Alsace natural-wine address.
Tip: The straw-bale cellar is itself worth a visit; ask for the low-sulphur Riesling and Pinot Noir cuvees to taste Achillee's natural-wine end of the range.
Biodynamic PracticingECOCERTNaturalAmmerschwihr
Frederic Geschickt runs this 1576-founded Ammerschwihr estate as a recognised Alsace natural-wine address, organic since 1998 with skin-contact whites and zero-sulphur cuvees alongside Kaefferkopf Grand Cru bottlings.
Tip: Ask for a side-by-side of the skin-contact Pinot Gris and a conventional Kaefferkopf Riesling; allocations move through natural-wine specialists.
Demeter CertifiedECOCERTNaturalPfaffenheim
Jean-Pierre Frick in Pfaffenheim was an early Alsatian biodynamic convert in 1981 and has produced zero-sulphur cuvees since the 1990s. The estate is a long-running Alsace natural-wine address, Biodyvin-certified with low-intervention winemaking.
Tip: Frick's zero-sulphur Pinot Blanc and Riesling are the calling cards; the Steinert and Vorbourg Grand Cru bottlings sit at the top of the range.
Demeter CertifiedECOCERTNaturalWettolsheim
Demeter-biodynamic Barmes-Buecher in Wettolsheim was an early Alsatian voice for native-yeast, low-sulphur winemaking and is widely cited alongside natural-wine producers despite holding full biodynamic certification.
Tip: The Hengst Grand Cru wines are the precise, expressive end of the range; the Cremant d'Alsace is a low-sulphur traditional-method sparkler.
Demeter CertifiedECOCERTTurckheim
Like many top Alsatian whites, Zind-Humbrecht's wines are typically unfined or use mineral fining agents (bentonite) rather than animal-derived fining. The estate's biodynamic and minimal-intervention philosophy makes most cuvees suitable for vegans.
Tip: Ask the estate to confirm fining practice vintage by vintage; fine white Alsace is often vegan-friendly thanks to bentonite or no-fining protocols.
Demeter CertifiedECOCERTKaysersberg-Vignoble
Biodyvin-certified Domaine Weinbach uses mineral fining (bentonite) where needed rather than animal-derived agents, and many cuvees are unfined. The estate's biodynamic farming and minimal cellar handling make the wines suitable for vegans.
Tip: Confirm fining vintage by vintage at the cellar; the Riesling Cuvee Sainte Catherine and Schlossberg Grand Cru are reliably vegan in current releases.