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The grape most synonymous with Franken, this is one of Martin's more serious terroir wines made with 100% Silvaner. The vineyard parcel (one of Martin's oldest planted in the late 80s) sits over a particular type of limestone the region knows as Muschelkalk. Rich in fossilised shells and century old marine deposits, it is highly calcareous and imprints precision acid and minerality to the finished wine.
To start the grapes were foot-trodden as whole bunches and macerated over the course of a day. After pressing, the first year was spend in old German oak barrels before a transfer to steel for a further 11 months with no additions at any stage. This patient, almost two-year ageing before bottling has yielded incredible results. An impressive wine of presence, purity and verve that we imagine will age beautifully over the coming years.
After nearly a decade living in Frankfurt, working in media and pouring wine at restaurant Emma Metzler on the side, Martin Hirsch returned home to Römerhof — a sleepy village in the north of Bavaria, and the family home for many years. His father made wine of the more conventional variety here, but it was at the restaurant that he had his first encounter natural wine — that special moment where the penny dropped and, as many who have shared the epiphany will attest, shifted his understanding of what wine could be.
It was the pandemic that sent Martin on the journey home as Frankfurt locked down. “When I stood in the vineyard after so many years in the city again, I felt like on LSD” he explains. “A spider descended from me, a deer ran through the lines – there was so much life, and that felt very good in that moment”. The pull of the land proved strong and it was around that time, with his father stepping away from winemaking, that Martin decided it could be possible to make wine of his own.
After a short internship with Franz Weninger over in Burgenland, He now farms a tiny 2.5 hectares of old vines around Kitzingen, planted over limestone and keuper – the mineral-rich sedimentary soil of the region that is a sort of hybrid of marl, clay and sandstone. In a part of Germany known for its long ripening season and scorching hot summers, this cooling earth provides balance and helps to preserve the bright, cleansing acids in the wine. Practising organics, he works with Dornfelder, Domina, Traminer, Ruländer (Pinot Gris) and of course the grape the region is best known for, Sylvaner.
In the cellar — a cool, old space beside the family home, previously used by his father — things are as pared-back as possible. Grapes are crushed by foot or direct pressed then fermented and aged in steel or old barrels for just short of one year before bottling. Not wanting to run before he could walk, Martin added just 10mg/l of sulphur to one of his debut vintage 2022 wines. For 2023 he has used nothing at all, getting closer to the essence of those wines that inspired him to begin.
For the most part, Martin learned by doing and now works among a small but growing group of like-minded young winemakers around Kitzingen. As is often the way with scenes like this that grow and develop in less prestigious wine regions, it’s an encouraging, collaborative community. Franconia is certainly a region to keep an eye on, and Martin is one of the new generation coming up.