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Sachsen and Saal-Unstrut: Unearthing Germany’s exciting eastern regions

In the 35 years since German reunification, the wine regions of Saale-Unstrut and Sachsen have occupied little more than a footnote in the story of German viticulture. On a recent trip, Anna Lee Ijima found a young, bold new cadre of winemakers coming in from the cold.

Far-flung from the western heartland of Germany’s better-known wine regions, Saale-Unstrut and Sachsen are respectively, its most northerly and easterly wine regions.

Saale-Unstrut, stretching above the northern 51st parallel – alongside London and Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan – teeters at the northern limits of quality viticulture. Sachsen, just two hours east and a touch south by car, extends as far east as Brandenburg at Germany’s border with Poland.

Together, these two small and isolated regions account for less than 1% of Germany’s total annual wine production.


Anna’s pick of nine wines to try from Sachsen and Saal-Unstrut below



Sachsen and Saale-Unstrut: Nine wines to try


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