When Jean Trimbach of Alsace in France first met Egon Muller of the Mosel Valley in Germany in the mid-1980s, the wine world was not the interconnected community that it is today. These two world-class riesling makers were young men in their 20s, sent to New York City by their families to live for several months and build a market for riesling wines in the United States.
Both families used Seagram Chateau & Estate Wines as their U.S. importer, so when they arrived in the city to start working the market they were thrown together for sales visits and tastings. “I never had German wine before,” Trimbach admitted, “but Chateau & Estate had all the best German wines and only one from Alsace – ours.”
The two often worked side by side, became friends and apparently enjoyed their freedom in New York because, Trimbach said cryptically, “We started doing foolish things together.”