Seek out the exciting wines from Somlo in Hungary
@rosemurraybrown
On a recent trip to Hungary, some of the most exciting wines I discovered came from the slopes of a lone volcanic hill two hours’ drive west of the capital Budapest.
The appellation of Somlo or Somloi (pronounced Shomlo) is Hungary’s smallest with 559 hectares of vineyard plots covering the slopes of an eroded core of an ancient sea bed volcano, which rises 432 metres from the flat Pannonian plain called Kisafold north of Lake Balaton.
“What makes Somlo special is a combination of unique basalt and tuff volcanic soil, temperate climate, diurnal temperature changes and indigenous grapes,” says Karoly Kolonics, one of the best growers in this tiny region.
Somlo is a very fragmented region with 1,200 grape growers, many of whom are weekenders tending small plots as hobbyists with an average of 0.5 hectares, but there are 30 full-time professional family wineries here now. Kolonics is one of Somlo’s serious producers with seven hectares of olaszrizling, harslevelu, furmint and the local speciality grape juhfark (another difficult one to pronounce: ‘you fark’) which excels on the warm south side of Somlo hill called Somlovasarhely.
Kolonics 2020 Furmint was one of the best wines I tasted on my trip. According to Kolonics: “Furmint in Somlo tastes different from Hungary’s other volcanic region in the far north east Tokaj; here in Somlo our distinctive basalt soils give vibrant lemon, honey and herby notes with firm structure and stony minerality.”
Another impressive artisan producer making an intense style of furmint in Somlo is Peter Wetzer, who works from his Sopron region base in the north. In Somlo he buys grapes from St Martin’s Chapel vineyard on the cooler eastern side of the hill with more wind blown loess showing the refreshing side of Somlo.
Somlo’s local speciality juhfark (meaning sheep’s tail) is a fascinating grape. It is one of the few native grapes which survived phylloxera, but it’s tricky to grow – there are just 100 hectares in the world, with 80 of them in Somlo.
Another producer whose juhfark particuarly impressed was Tornai, one of the biggest Somlo wineries with 60 hectares. Winemaker Akos Kamocsay works with both native and international grapes over different areas of Somlo: Iiona, Grofi, Apatsagi and Arany hills.
With grapes with pronounced acidity and minerality, it is no surprise Somlo is producing some of the country’s most exciting sparkling wines – known as ‘pezsgo’. The most impressive sparkling operation was set up by Jozsef Kreinbacher in 2002, now a big winery with 43 hectares on prime locations of Somlo hill, producing blends based on furmint and chardonnay.
Aside from sparkling wines, there are also interesting Somlo producers experimenting with orange and natural wines – like Stephan Spiegelberg and Tomcsanyi with 2.5 hectares on the western side of Somlo hill. This historic region is definitely one to watch in the future.
Sparkling
Classic Brut NV Kreinbacher
Current cuvée comes from 2018 vintage, although this is not stated on the label. It is light, crisp, clean fizz with creamy mousse – not quite as impressive as their much pricier furmint/chardonnay Prestige Brut. £24, Best of Hungary
White
Furmint 2020 Kolonics Star value
Very impressive price for this beautifully intense just off-dry furmint with zesty apple fruits, full rich textural palate with spicy undertones, softened by 11 months maturing in large acacia barrels – and a distinctive long finish.
£12.95 for 2019 vintage at The Wine Society
Furmint 2019 Peter Wetzer
Cooler eastern side of Somlo’s hill shows a more refreshing side of furmint, but with enough rich tropical fruit and spice to add intensity and richness to the palate with creamy length from long lees ageing.
£17.50, The Wine Society
Juhfark 2020 Kolonics Star buy
Another impressive wine from Kolonics – minerally, chalky dry, richly intense apple fruits with a long savoury dry palate.
£14.50 for 2019 vintage at The Wine Society
Juhfark 2019 Tornai Star buy
Stone fruits, soft rounded, minerally undertones with fabulous intensity and length – a great combination both nimble on its feet with enough weight and richness.
£22, Astrum Wine Cellars
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