Summary
Weingut Seckinger from Niederkirchen near Deidesheim is one of the most exciting young addresses in the Pfalz – and in all of Germany. The three brothers Jonas, Lukas and Philipp Seckinger have consistently reoriented the family business from 2012 and, within just a few years, led it to the top of the young German winemaking generation. Across around 30 hectares in the renowned sites of the Mittelhaardt, they have farmed organically since 2014 and biodynamically since 2018. Their dry, spontaneously fermented single-vineyard wines from Riesling and the Pinot family are made with minimally invasive cellar work and little sulphur – clear, precise and unmistakably shaped by the terroir.
History
The estate's roots lie in a classic Palatinate family business in Niederkirchen near Deidesheim. The decisive turning point came when the three brothers Jonas, Lukas and Philipp Seckinger took the helm from 2012 and step by step shifted the business towards its own estate-bottled wines and an uncompromising commitment to quality.
The path was determined: since 2014 the brothers have farmed their vineyards organically, and biodynamically since 2018. In parallel they expanded the single-vineyard range and sharpened their style. By the end of the decade the leading wine guides already regarded them as one of the fastest risers on the German wine scene – Jonas Seckinger was among the nominees for Falstaff's "Newcomer of the Year" in 2019. In a short time, the small family business has become one of the most closely watched young estates in Germany.
Location & Terroir
Niederkirchen lies on the German Wine Route (Deutsche Weinstraße) in the Mittelhaardt – that heartland of the Pfalz which stands for some of Germany's best dry wines. The climate is mild and sun-blessed; the Haardt escarpment, the eastern spur of the Palatinate Forest, shelters the vines from weather extremes and ensures long, balanced ripening phases.
The Seckingers' vineyards are spread across renowned sites around Niederkirchen, Ruppertsberg and Deidesheim. Decisive is the small-scale diversity of the soils: limestone, colourful sandstone (Buntsandstein) and loamy weathered soils yield, depending on the parcel, sometimes taut and mineral, sometimes fuller and more elegant wines. The biodynamic approach with cover crops and living soils aims to transfer this terroir into the wines as faithfully as possible.
Style & Philosophy
The brothers' style is deliberately restrained in the cellar and precise in the result. The grapes are hand-picked, the musts fermented spontaneously with the vineyard's own yeasts, and the wines aged with minimally invasive cellar work and little sulphur. Instead of technical effects, the focus is on clarity, drinkability and the signature of each site.
Their range runs from accessible estate wines through village wines to the ambitious single-vineyard Rieslings and Pinots. In parallel, the Seckingers make purist natural wines that consistently forgo additives and earned them a loyal following in the natural-wine scene early on. The programme is rounded out by finely made sparkling wines. Across all lines the idea stays the same: living, dry wines that let you taste their origin.
Notable Sites & Wines
The range is clearly tiered – from the entry level to the top wines from the best parcels. Among the estate's focal points are:
- Single-vineyard Rieslings from the Mittelhaardt, for example from Ruppertsberg and Deidesheim sites
- Pinot Noir (Spätburgunder) as the flagship red wine
- Pinot Blanc and Pinot Gris as well as Chardonnay from the Pinot family
- Natural wines and purist cuvées with minimal intervention
- Sparkling wine (Sekt) from the region's classic grape varieties
The single-vineyard wines regularly rank among the most closely watched young wines of the Pfalz.
Awards
Since the realignment, Seckinger has consistently collected top marks. Gault&Millau counted the brothers among the fastest risers on the German wine scene; Eichelmann named the estate "Riser of the Year". In the Falstaff wine guide the estate reaches four stars, and in the Vinum wine guide it ranks among Germany's best producers. Today Jonas, Lukas and Philipp Seckinger are among the defining names of a new, nature-focused winemaking generation in the Pfalz.
