
2023 Öömrang Estate Siegerrebe
A fragrant, semi-dry white from one of Washington’s most distinctive small estates — charming now, conversation-starting every time you pour it.
We love this wine for its easy charm and its sense of place. Siegerrebe is still a discovery grape for most drinkers, and Öömrang makes a version that feels both inviting and memorable: floral on the nose, gently off-dry on the palate, and long on the finish. It has enough aromatic lift for seafood and spiced dishes, but it stays polished and refreshing rather than loud. At $25 against a $64.99 winery-direct bottle, this is the kind of off-the-radar white that makes your summer lineup more interesting fast.
61.5% below winery direct
Why this bottle matters if you love aromatic whites
This is not another ordinary patio white. Siegerrebe is a genuine conversation bottle, and Öömrang gives it enough precision, pedigree, and sheer drinkability to make the case from first sip.

It offers something truly different
Most buyers have never spent meaningful time with Siegerrebe, which is exactly why this bottle is fun. It brings a floral, slightly exotic profile that feels fresh and original in a market full of familiar white grapes.
The estate has real credibility
Öömrang is not winging it. The estate has become known for German white varieties in the Puget Sound AVA, and the winery page shows a strong line of awards and a serious full-price positioning.
The style is crowd-friendly
Semi-dry whites can be a sweet spot for entertaining because they are easy to like. This one has enough softness for spice and enough freshness for seafood, which gives it range at the table.
The value gap is hard to ignore
The winery lists this bottle at $64.99. Getting into it at $25 creates a real savings story, not a fuzzy one.
The allocation opportunity
- Estate pedigree Öömrang grows these German varieties in a rare Puget Sound micro-climate shaped by a mountain rain shadow and mild maritime conditions.
- Award momentum This bottling is backed by a 100 Point Century Award plus 94-point recognition from Tasting Panel and Somm Journal.
- Buyer angle You are stepping into a rare varietal with strong story value, easy pairability, and a bottle price that sits dramatically below winery direct.
Awards that make the curiosity easy to justify
Öömrang has built real momentum in a short time, and this 2023 Siegerrebe shows why. The wine has both headline-worthy awards and the kind of aromatic personality that makes the scores feel earned.

A $25 pour against $65 winery pricing
Slash price $25 vs winery direct pricing and a verified back-vintage retail example.

The cleanest anchor is the winery itself: Öömrang lists the 2023 Estate Siegerrebe at $64.99. We also found a verified back-vintage retail example at $64.95, which keeps the pricing story remarkably consistent and reinforces that this is a genuine full-price estate wine, not a made-for-closeout bottle.
Compare the reference points here: Back-vintage retail example and Öömrang winery page.
That means you can open it for aperitif hour, bring it to a seafood dinner, or pour it for friends who think they have tried every aromatic white already — without feeling like you burned a premium-bottle budget.
ShopWineSlash lands this bottle at roughly 38% of winery direct. That is a substantial savings on a niche, estate-grown white with a real award trail.
A floral, semi-dry white with a polished finish
Think delicate flowers, soft orchard fruit, and a gently off-dry palate that never loses its lift.

Washington’s 2023 growing season began cool, delaying bud break, then caught up quickly with warmer weather in May before settling into a stretched, moderate finish in September and October. The crop was small statewide, but quality was reported as extremely high, which fits the lift, precision, and freshness this bottle shows.
White flowers lead, then soft peach, ripe pear, and a touch of tropical fruit. It is fragrant without turning syrupy.
Semi-dry and gently rounded, with low acidity and a long, easy finish that keeps the wine friendly and versatile.
A subtle herbal and mineral thread keeps the aromatics from drifting into sweetness alone.
Give it a few minutes in the glass and the floral notes widen while the fruit becomes a little more exotic and expressive.
Serve well chilled, around 45–48°F, when you want an aromatic white that can move from appetizers into dinner.
No decant needed. Just pop, pour, and let the glass warm slightly as you drink.
Enjoy it now for all of the floral lift and bright semi-dry charm.
The fruit should stay open and pretty, with a little more texture showing.
Hold only if you enjoy softer, more mellow aromatic whites. This wine is really about youthful energy.
Careful estate farming, handled for purity
The technical story here is simple: grow the right grapes in the right place, pick clean fruit, and let the variety speak clearly.

Estate-grown Öömrang’s white program is built around German varieties that thrive in its Puget Sound micro-climate. Siegerrebe is one of the estate’s signature grapes, and the family focuses on translating that aromatic personality with a clean, unforced style.
From vine to press The estate describes hand-tended vineyards, north-south row orientation for sun exposure, and fruit picked at peak ripeness before being pressed and fermented right on the property. That kind of direct control matters when the goal is freshness and purity rather than heavy winemaking.
What you taste The result is a wine that stays true to the grape: floral, lightly sweet-edged, low in acidity, and long in finish, without losing the clean profile that makes it easy to pair.
A family project turned serious Puget Sound estate
What started as a Thanksgiving basement experiment quickly grew into one of Washington’s most distinctive small white-wine stories.

Öömrang began in 2016 when Christine Stoecklein decided to make wine for a family Thanksgiving gathering. The results were strong enough to spark a bigger conversation, and by December of that year the winery was incorporated, with the first varietals planted in 2017.
Today the Stoeckleins farm an 85-acre property called Öömrang Hüs, with roughly 22 acres in vineyard and a clear focus on German white varietals. That focus gives the wines a distinct identity in Washington: they are not generic local whites, but a deliberate expression of German heritage in a West-side climate.
There is something compelling about a family choosing to go all-in on unusual grapes and then getting real critical traction for it. This bottle carries that sense of discovery in the best way.
A natural fit with spice, seafood, and summer flavors
The wine’s floral aromatics and soft semi-dry shape let it play across spice, herbs, shellfish, and fresh fruit accents with ease.
You do not need to overthink this one: pair it with dishes that love fragrance, a little sweetness, and a fresh finish.
Serve cold in a white-wine glass. No decant needed, though 5 to 10 minutes in the glass helps the floral notes bloom.
Thai Coconut Shrimp & Basil Curry
Creamy coconut, basil, and shrimp make a natural lane for this wine. The aromatics echo the perfume of the dish, while the semi-dry palate cushions the spice rather than fighting it.
Why it works: The gentle sweetness and floral profile help tame heat and bring out the wine’s soft orchard-fruit side.
View Recipe
Grilled Halibut with Mango Salsa
Halibut keeps the pairing clean and elegant, while mango salsa picks up the wine’s floral fruit character. It is bright, summery, and very much in the wheelhouse for this bottling.
Why it works: The mango and citrus accents amplify the wine’s aromatic lift, while the fish lets its delicate finish stay in focus.
View RecipeBuy this for the fragrance, pour it for the surprise factor.
Öömrang’s Siegerrebe is the kind of bottle that wakes up a white-wine lineup: unusual grape, real estate story, serious awards, and a very easy reason to open it now.
Pour it with crab, prawns, halibut, or shellfish when you want the wine to stay fragrant and refreshing.
If you like Gewürztraminer, off-dry Riesling, or other floral whites, this gives you something less common without becoming difficult.
At $25 against a winery-direct bottle near $65, the value case here is simple and unusually clean.
At $25 per bottle and $150 per 6-pack, this is a sharp way to buy into a rare Puget Sound estate white with a strong award story. Open it cold, pour it with seafood or spice, and enjoy the fact that it tastes like something different.