Wineries

Weingut Dr. Bürklin-Wolf – Biodynamic Riesling and an Estate-Own Vineyard Classification from Wachenheim

Robert KozinskiBy Robert Kozinski
July 18, 2026
buerklin-wolfpfalzriesling

Weingut Dr. Bürklin-Wolf in Wachenheim: biodynamic top Riesling from the Pfalz and its own P.C./G.C. classification based on the 1828 map. History, style & fact file.

The Essentials

  • 1One of the largest, oldest privately owned top estates in Germany – with roots reaching back to 1597.
  • 2Around 85 hectares in the Pfalz, overwhelmingly Riesling, farmed biodynamically to Demeter standards.
  • 3In 2005 it became the first German estate to convert fully to biodynamic viticulture (Biodyvin).
  • 4Runs its own vineyard classification with P.C. (Premier Cru) and G.C. (Grand Cru), derived from the 1828 Bavarian tax map.
  • 5Not a VDP member; the estate left the association in the 1990s and follows its own, Burgundy-inspired path.

Key Facts

Region
Pfalz – Wachenheim (Mittelhaardt), Germany
Founded
roots back to 1597; present name since 1875
Owner / Winemaker
Bürklin family; Bettina Bürklin-von Guradze (since 1990)
Vineyard area
around 85 hectares, overwhelmingly Riesling
Main grape varieties
Riesling
Wine styles
Dry, biodynamically produced Rieslings across four quality tiers
Classification
no VDP – estate-own P.C./G.C. system based on the 1828 map
Signature
Germany's first fully biodynamic top estate with its own grand-cru order

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Zusammenfassung

Weingut Dr. Bürklin-Wolf in Wachenheim is one of the largest, oldest and most respected privately owned top estates in the Pfalz – with roots reaching back to 1597. Across around 85 hectares, overwhelmingly Riesling, it produces uncompromisingly dry wines from the best sites of Forst, Wachenheim, Deidesheim and Ruppertsberg. Two things make the estate unmistakable: since 2005 it has been the first German winery to farm entirely biodynamically (to Demeter, or rather Biodyvin, standards). And it sorts its wines through an estate-own vineyard classification with P.C. (Premier Cru) and G.C. (Grand Cru), grounded in the Royal Bavarian tax map of 1828 – a Burgundy-inspired path away from the VDP, which the estate left in the 1990s.

Geschichte

The origins of the estate reach back to the year 1597 and thus to Bernhard Bürklin (1580–1636), whose Renaissance house from 1606 still stands in Wachenheim today. That makes Bürklin-Wolf one of the oldest family-run wineries in Germany. It received its present name in 1875, when Luise Wolf married the privy councillor Dr. Albert Bürklin and the two family names were joined.

Over generations Bürklin-Wolf grew into one of the region's defining estates – together with Bassermann-Jordan and von Buhl it was long counted among the "three Bs" of the Pfalz. The decisive turning point of its recent history came in 1990, when Bettina Bürklin-von Guradze took over the leadership. She steered the estate firmly towards top dry Rieslings, introduced the estate-own vineyard classification from 1994, and in 2005 made it the first German winery to convert fully to biodynamic farming.

Lage & Terroir

Bürklin-Wolf lies on the German Wine Route in the Mittelhaardt – that core of the Pfalz which stands for some of the best dry Rieslings in Germany. The climate is mild and sun-blessed; the Haardt ridge, the eastern edge of the Palatinate Forest, shelters the vines from weather extremes and gives the region an almost Mediterranean note.

Decisive is the diversity of the soils. Across the estate's 15 top sites the spectrum runs from red and yellow sandstone through basalt (as in the Forster Pechstein) to limestone, loam, clay, volcanic rock and gravel. The black basalt produces smoky-mineral, taut wines, while limestone and sandstone soils tend to yield fuller, elegant Rieslings. This small-scale geology is the reason each site shows a character of its own.

Stil & Philosophie

Bürklin-Wolf's stylistic ambition is to capture the terroir of each individual site as clearly as possible in the bottle. The wines are fermented spontaneously and, depending on the tier, aged in stainless steel or in large wooden casks; the result is precise, dry Rieslings with fine minerality, drive and great ageing potential.

The foundation for this is the consistently biodynamic work in the vineyard. As the first German winery, Bürklin-Wolf had itself certified in 2005 according to the principles of Demeter and the French association Biodyvin – the same body to which estates such as Domaine Leflaive belong. Compost, biodynamic preparations and the avoidance of synthetic treatments are meant to foster living soils and expressive, unadulterated wines.

The P.C. and G.C. classification

Because Bürklin-Wolf left the VDP in the 1990s, an estate-own system modelled on Burgundy sorts its wines into four tiers:

  • Estate wine (Gutswein): the entry level, from young vines and several sites
  • Village wine (Ortswein): wines with the character of one village
  • P.C. – Premier Cru: first-growth sites, marked with a trademarked "P.C."
  • G.C. – Grand Cru: the very top sites, marked with "G.C."

The basis for the classification is the Royal Bavarian land tax classification of 1828: a map drawn up at the time for tax collection assessed the vineyards of the Mittelhaardt and recorded which parcels delivered the highest quality. After years of research, Bürklin-Wolf found that today's best sites largely match those of 1828 – the Forster Kirchenstück was then the only vineyard with the maximum rating.

Bekannte Lagen & Weine

The range is clearly tiered: from estate Riesling through village wines to the grand-cru Rieslings (G.C.) from the best parcels. Among the estate's most famous sites are:

  • Forster Kirchenstück – often called the best Riesling site in Germany, top-rated in 1828
  • Forster Jesuitengarten and Forster Pechstein – the one full of finesse, the other smoky-mineral on basalt
  • Forster Ungeheuer – powerful and spicy
  • Wachenheimer Gerümpel and Wachenheimer Rechbächel (a monopole of the estate)
  • Ruppertsberger Gaisböhl – a sole-owned site (monopole) of Bürklin-Wolf
  • Deidesheim sites such as Hohenmorgen, Langenmorgen and Kalkofen

These wines regularly rank among the most highly rated dry Rieslings in Germany.

Auszeichnungen

Bürklin-Wolf consistently collects top marks in the leading wine guides (Falstaff, Gault&Millau, Eichelmann) and international tastings, and has for decades been regarded as a flagship for dry Pfalz Riesling. Far beyond the individual awards, however, the estate has acted as a pioneer: with its early conversion to biodynamics and its revival of the historic 1828 vineyard classification, Bürklin-Wolf has set benchmarks that many German top estates still look to today.

Frequently asked questions

What is Weingut Dr. Bürklin-Wolf known for?

Bürklin-Wolf is regarded as one of the largest and most tradition-rich privately owned top estates in Germany and stands for biodynamically produced, uncompromisingly dry Rieslings from the best sites of Forst, Wachenheim, Deidesheim and Ruppertsberg. The estate is also famous for its own, Burgundy-style vineyard classification with P.C. (Premier Cru) and G.C. (Grand Cru).

What do P.C. and G.C. mean at Bürklin-Wolf?

P.C. stands for Premier Cru (a first-growth site) and G.C. for Grand Cru (a grand-cru site). Bürklin-Wolf sorts its wines into four tiers – estate wine, village wine, Premier Cru and Grand Cru – drawing on the Royal Bavarian land tax classification of the vineyards from 1828, which recorded the best parcels of the Mittelhaardt.

Where is Weingut Dr. Bürklin-Wolf located?

The estate is based in Wachenheim on the German Wine Route, in the heart of the Mittelhaardt in the Pfalz. Its best vineyards are spread across the neighbouring villages of Forst, Deidesheim and Ruppertsberg.

Is Bürklin-Wolf a VDP estate?

No. Bürklin-Wolf is not a member of the Association of German Prädikat Wine Estates (VDP); it left the association in the 1990s. Since then the estate has classified its vineyards through its own P.C./G.C. system and nevertheless – or precisely because of it – ranks among the most highly rated producers of the Pfalz internationally.

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