At Schweigen the Pfalz meets Alsace, with Cleebourg and Wissembourg a short drive across the French border. The Alsace wine route runs south from there through Marlenheim and the Vosges foothills to Strasbourg.
Pours: Alsace Riesling Grand Cru, Alsace Pinot Gris, Alsace Gewuerztraminer
Tip: Drive from Schweigen down to Wissembourg and Cleebourg on a single morning; the two villages give the cleanest read of the Alsace style closest to the Pfalz border.
South-east across the Rhine from the Pfalz, the Kraichgau and Badische Bergstrasse run south from Heidelberg through Heilbronn into Baden. The region anchors Germany's Pinot heartland alongside the Pfalz with a complementary house style.
Pours: Baden Spaetburgunder, Baden Weissburgunder, Baden Riesling trocken
Tip: Pair the Pfalz Spaetburgunder of Becker or Rings with a Baden Pinot trip into the Kraichgau; the Rhine-bridge drive from Speyer reads the contrast cleanly.
North-east of the Pfalz across Rheinhessen, the Rheingau runs along the south-facing Rhine slopes from Hochheim to Lorch. The two regions trade the title of Germany's classical Riesling heartland with very different stylistic registers.
Pours: Rheingau Riesling trocken, Rheingau Riesling Grosses Gewaechs, Assmannshaeuser Spaetburgunder
Tip: Take the Bingen-to-Ruedesheim car ferry across the Rhine to compare Pfalz and Rheingau Riesling on the same weekend; the river crossing is the prettiest stretch of the trip.
Two hours west of the Pfalz, the Middle Mosel around Bernkastel, Wehlen and Piesport bottles Germany's sharpest, slatiest, lowest-alcohol Riesling. The Mosel reads as the cool-climate counter-style to the warm Pfalz.
Pours: Mosel Riesling Kabinett, Mosel Riesling Spaetlese, Mosel Riesling Grosses Gewaechs
Tip: Make it an overnight rather than a half-day; the Middle Mosel sundial villages need at least two estate stops to read the slate spectrum.
North-east of the Pfalz on the warm sandstone slopes between Heppenheim and Darmstadt, the Hessische Bergstrasse covers around 460 hectares as Germany's smallest wine region. Bensheim anchors the route with the Staatsweingut as headline estate.
Pours: Hessische Bergstrasse Riesling trocken, Bergstrasse Weissburgunder, Bergstrasse Spaetburgunder
Tip: The Hessische Bergstrasse is small enough for a real half-day; combine Bensheim's Staatsweingut with a Heppenheim village tasting before driving back to the Pfalz.
East across the Rhine from the Pfalz, Heidelberg pairs a Baroque old town below a sandstone castle with a long Hauptstrasse of wine bars and restaurants. Pfalz and Baden bottlings dominate the city wine lists.
Pours: Pfalz Riesling at the Hauptstrasse wine bars, Baden Pinot at the Marktplatz, Local Sekt
Tip: Park at the Bismarckplatz and walk the Hauptstrasse from the Alte Bruecke to the Universitaetsplatz; the wine bars cluster around the side streets off the Marktplatz.