Mosel QbARieslingEUR 7-10 retail
An honest, fruity, medium-sweet co-op Riesling from the Bernkastel collective site: lemon and apple, crisp and easy, the inexpensive everyday face of the Mosel.
Tip: Co-op bottlings like this are the value floor of the Mosel; chill hard and pour as an undemanding party Riesling.
Mosel Riesling HochgewaechsRieslingEUR 9-13 retail
A step up from basic QbA: a single-varietal steep-slope Hochgewaechs Riesling from the co-op, with riper fruit and more slate grip at everyday prices.
Tip: Look for the Steillage and Hochgewaechs labels on co-op wine; they guarantee steep-slope fruit and higher must-weight at a friendly price.
Mosel QbA trockenRieslingEUR 16-22 retail
The slate-coded estate Riesling from a biodynamic Marienburg grower: a dry, savoury wine capturing red-slate character at an organic estate's entry level.
Tip: Busch's coloured-slate trocken wines are the affordable way into a serious biodynamic Mosel estate before its single-parcel GGs.
Mosel QbA trockenRieslingEUR 15-19 retail
The dry estate Riesling from a revived ancient Enkirch winery, named for the dynamite that built the terraces: fresh, dry and slatey from a serious address.
Tip: Detonation is the gateway bottling at Immich-Batterieberg; a brilliant introduction to dry old-vine Enkirch slate Riesling.
Ruwer QbA trockenRieslingEUR 14-18 retail
The estate-level dry Riesling from the monopole Gruenhaus slope in the Ruwer: cool, precise, herb-and-citrus Riesling from a historic German vineyard.
Tip: The Monopol trocken is the value entry to a centuries-old monopole estate; it shows the Ruwer's cool elegance without the GG price tag.
Mosel QbA trockenRieslingEUR 15-20 retail
A dry estate Riesling from a Demeter-certified Reil grower on steep Mullay-Hofberg slate: pure, low-intervention, savoury Riesling at an affordable price.
Tip: Melsheimer's entry trocken is a great-value taste of certified biodynamic Mosel before stepping up to the single-site bottlings.