Familie Gehring

Winery Gehring

A good partner for the trade and gastronomy. Good service and clear innovative concepts, that are fun to work with. Traditional grape varieties with a modern wine style and unfussy clear features. Creative cuvées as brand wines and estate wines complete the range. The wines grow to 80% on the Red slope and show minerality with a fine acid structure. From 2014, there is not only Riesling, but also top red and white Pinots from Roter Hang. The quality philosophy: to produce wines with fruit and freshness that are long-lasting.

Weingut Gehring
Weingut Gehring
gehring_logo_internet, © Weingut Gehring
gehring_logo_internet

About us

  • Winemaker Theo Gehring
  • Vineyard-area 16 hectares
  • specialist trade

Contact details:

Weingut Gehring
Hans-Theo und Diana Gehring
Außerhalb 17 (B420 Nierstein-Dexheim) 55283 Nierstein

Visit us

Vinothek im Weingut Gehring

Vinothek Weingut Gehring

The Gehring winery is uniquely situated on a sunny hill with a view of the Rhine meadows to Mainhatten above the world-famous wine town of Nierstein. The name stands for renowned vineyards on the Rote Hang, whose grapes are turned into expressive award-winning top wines in Gehring's cellar. The small, fine vinotheque is part of a very hospitable ensemble of winery, wine tavern, mobile home park and holiday flat. Since 2001, Theo and Diana Gehring have been creating their dream of a winery there with a lot of hospitality and creativity. Recently, their daughter Gina, Nierstein Wine Queen 2020/21, has also enriched the range with her own line of wines. Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)

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Processed vineyards

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Niersteiner Ölberg

Niersteiner Ölberg (Oil mountain of Nierstein)

Biblical reference, oil mill or oily Rieslings?

Is the single vineyard named “Ölberg” because an oil mill once stood here? Or did the Ölberg get its name because of the oily consistency of the wines produced here? Does the site maybe have biblical references, named after a monastery? Anything is possible. The single vineyard is part of the "Roter Hang" but turns away from the river Rhein and faces south-southeast, situated above Nierstein. Partly very steep with a gradient of up to 60 percent. Like it is tpical for Roter Hang, the soil here is Rotliegendes, the iron oxide-containing, and landscape-defining red shining clay slate. The dominant grape variety is Riesling. In the middle of the vineyard: the Wartturm, a Nierstein landmark. Once a medieval signal tower from the 12th century.

> Discover the single vineyard by bike: https://www.rheinhessen.de/amiche-radweg

> Info about the Nierstein Wartturm: https://www.rheinhessen.de/a-wartturm-von-nierstein
> Wine events, winemakers and more: https://roter-hang.de/

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Niersteiner Hipping

Niersteiner Hipping

Tool, hill, goat? Nowadays a premium vineyard

The name of the vineyard is documented in a deed from 1753, as the vineyard property of various Nierstein vineyards. The origin of the name has not been definitively clarified. It could have come from Middle High German and once meant "hügell" (hill). Or it goes back to "Hippe", which means tool - or another version - goat. Did bleating goats once jump over the hill here? Who knows. Today, no goats bleat there any more - and the winegrowers have nothing to complain about either. This single vineyard site is of special value. World-class Rieslings thrive on the special red claystone called Rotliegenden. The "Alexander-von-Humboldt-Blick" is a viewing point located in the middle of the single vineyard site. In 1790, the naturalists Georg Forster and Alexander von Humboldt travelled by carriage from Mainz to Nierstein and reported on the red rock and the noble wine.

> Hike and audio to the Hipping station: https://roter-hang.de/weinerlebnis/hipping/ 
> Info about the Alexander-von-Humboldt view: https://rhein-selz-tourismus.de/rhein-selz-entdecken/die-entdeckung-des-tages/alexander-von-humboldt-blick.html 
> Discover the single vineyard by bike: https://www.rheinhessen.de/amiche-radweg 

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Niersteiner Pettenthal

Niersteiner Pettenthal

Boy's name? Toad migration? Rieslings of world fame!

A vineyard of world fame! As the name "Thal" (old German word for valley) suggests, this single vineyard site begins in the valley, directly by the river Rhein, and then climbs steeply up the "Roter Hang". This single vineyard site is the steepest section on "Roter Hang" - very valuable and extremely sought after by winegrowers. The cadastral name has existed since 1753. Where does the name come from? There are several interpretations. The most common variant would be the boy or family name Peter. It could also be derived from Pater, meaning monk. The vineyards were owned by the church for a long time. Or - as they say in Nierstein: "Petten" refers to toads that migrate to the springs and sump holes that emerge above. An indication of this is that an adjacent area is called "Stumpe Loch", which is probably derived from Sumpfloch. Whether ordinary boy's name or ordinary toad: the Rieslings, on the other hand, are not ordinary at all. They are mineral, expressive and capable of ageing. They grow on bare red clay sandstone and get plenty of sun all day long.

> Discover the single vineyard site by bike: https://www.rheinhessen.de/amiche-radweg
> More information about the vineyards of the "Roter Hang": https://roter-hang.de/roter-hang/weinlagen/

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