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    Winery in Ehrenhausen, Austria

    Familienweingut Tement

    1,555pts

    Slope-Set Estate Stays

    Familienweingut Tement, Winery in Ehrenhausen

    About Familienweingut Tement

    Familienweingut Tement is a Styrian wine estate in Ehrenhausen awarded a Pearl 4 Star Prestige rating in 2025. The property combines serious vineyard craft with winemakers' chalets scattered across its hillside terrain, offering a rare combination of immersive accommodation and estate wine access in Austria's southern wine country.

    Vines, Elevation, and a Place to Stay in Styria

    The road into the Tement estate climbs through rows of vines before the chalets come into view, positioned across the slopes rather than clustered at a single reception point. Southern Styria operates on a different logic from the Wachau or Kamptal: the hills here face Slovenia across a border that has shifted more than once, and the terraced vineyards carry that contested, hard-won quality in the soil. Familienweingut Tement sits at the centre of this geography, at Zieregg 13 in Berghausen near Ehrenhausen, and the winemakers' chalets distributed across the estate are not an afterthought to the wine programme but an extension of it. EP Club awarded the property a Pearl 4 Star Prestige rating in 2025, a designation that reflects the integration of accommodation quality with the estate's wine identity.

    What the Chalet Format Means in Practice

    Across Austria's premium wine regions, estate accommodation tends to fall into one of two categories: a room or two above the cellar door, or a purpose-built guesthouse at some remove from the production area. The Tement approach belongs to neither. The chalets are distributed across the vineyard itself, which means guests are physically inside the growing environment rather than adjacent to it. Walking the estate at dawn or dusk, with sight lines across the Slovenian border hills, offers a spatial relationship with wine production that a single building cannot replicate. This model is closer in spirit to what some Burgundy domaines have attempted in recent years, where accommodation is used to extend the conversation about terroir beyond the tasting room.

    For the wine-focused traveller, this format has a specific value: the property functions as a base for reading the landscape rather than simply drinking the wines. Southern Styria's signature grape, Sauvignon Blanc, expresses site variation in ways that become legible when you have spent time on the slopes. Tement's Zieregg vineyard is one of the most discussed single-vineyard sites in Austrian wine, and being resident on the estate during a visit shifts the encounter with that wine from abstract appreciation to something more grounded.

    The Regional Context: Southern Styria's Place in Austrian Wine

    Austrian wine's international recognition has largely been built on Grüner Veltliner and Riesling from the Wachau and Kamptal in the north. Producers such as Weingut Bründlmayer in Langenlois and Weingut Emmerich Knoll in Dürnstein have anchored that northern narrative for decades. Southern Styria reads differently: the continental climate softens toward Pannonian influence, slopes are steeper and more fragmented, and Sauvignon Blanc has established a claim to serious, age-worthy expression that few regions outside Bordeaux and the Loire have matched in recent critical discourse.

    Tement operates within this Styrian tradition without being reducible to it. The estate's position in the Sulz/Zieregg area gives it access to some of the sub-region's most discussed hillside sites. Other producers working the southern Styrian slopes, including Weingut Wohlmuth in Kitzeck and the nearby Weingut Gross in Ehrenhausen itself, form a peer set defined by elevation, site selectivity, and a commitment to white wine seriousness that distinguishes southern Styria from the more immediately accessible Pinot-and-rosé wines produced elsewhere in the region.

    The difference between these producers and the broader Austrian wine field is legible in how they price and allocate their single-vineyard wines. Like Weingut Pittnauer in Gols or Weingut Kracher in Illmitz, each of which has defined its own sub-regional identity, Tement's leading wines are positioned in the allocation tier rather than the open-market tier. This matters when planning a visit: the estate's most characterful bottles may not be available through standard retail channels, and an on-site stay provides access to wines that require a direct relationship with the producer.

    Philosophy Without Biography

    Southern Styria's leading estates share a set of commitments that have become consistent enough to constitute a house style for the sub-region: low intervention in the cellar, extended lees contact for white wines, and a long-term investment in individual vineyard blocks rather than a house blend approach. These are not personal eccentricities but structural choices shaped by the region's competition for critical attention in a market where Burgundy and Bordeaux dominate the conversation about site-specific fine wine.

    At Tement, these commitments are expressed through the Zieregg site, which has been the subject of sustained critical attention over the vintage series. The estate's approach to Sauvignon Blanc at this level is closer to what some northern Rhône producers do with Marsanne: an insistence that the grape can carry age and that the wine's primary expression is the site, not the variety. This is a minority position in global Sauvignon Blanc production, where aromatic accessibility and early drinking are the commercial norm. Tement's place in the argument for the opposite position is established and documented across multiple vintages.

    Visiting: Timing, Access, and Planning

    Southern Styria is accessible from Graz, which sits roughly 40 kilometres to the north. Visitors travelling from Vienna should plan for an approximately three-hour journey by road, or a combination of rail to Leibnitz and onward transfer. The estate address at Zieregg 13, Berghausen, places it in the hillside terrain above the valley floor, which means arrival by car is the practical default. Harvest season, running broadly through September and into October, provides the most direct encounter with the working estate, though the chalets operate outside that window as well. For wine-focused visits, contacting the estate directly to arrange tasting access is advisable rather than arriving speculatively. The 2025 Pearl 4 Star Prestige rating signals a property that has invested in the guest experience at a serious level, and the accommodation quality reflects that positioning.

    For those building a broader Styrian or Austrian wine itinerary, the estate works well as a southern anchor point. Weingut Heinrich Hartl in Oberwaltersdorf and producers further north such as Weingut Scheiblhofer in Andau fill out a circuit that covers the range of Austrian wine styles from south to east. Those extending beyond wine into spirits production can add 1310 Spirit of the Country Distillery in Sierning, 1404 Manufacturing Distillery in Sankt Peter-Freienstein, or A. Batch Distillery in Bergheim to the itinerary. For Ehrenhausen-specific guidance beyond the estate, our full Ehrenhausen restaurants guide covers the town's wider hospitality offer. For international comparison points in fine wine estate accommodation, Accendo Cellars in St. Helena and Aberlour in Aberlour represent different expressions of the producer-as-destination model that Tement has developed on its own terms in Styria. The 1516 Brewing Company in Vienna offers a different register entirely for those whose itinerary passes through the capital.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What's the vibe at Familienweingut Tement?
    The property is oriented toward rest and genuine immersion in a working wine estate. The chalets are distributed across the Zieregg vineyards rather than concentrated in a single building, which creates a quiet, unhurried atmosphere shaped by the surrounding landscape. It sits in Ehrenhausen, southern Styria, and earned a Pearl 4 Star Prestige rating from EP Club in 2025. It is not a resort in the conventional sense; it functions more as a base for serious engagement with one of Austria's most discussed white wine sites.
    What wines should I try at Familienweingut Tement?
    Southern Styria's signature variety is Sauvignon Blanc, and the Zieregg vineyard is the estate's most discussed site. The sub-region produces Sauvignon Blanc in a style oriented toward age and site expression rather than aromatic immediacy, placing it in a different register from New Zealand or South African expressions of the variety. The estate has no winemaker listed in public records, but the critical recognition built around the Zieregg wines across multiple vintages provides a reasonable guide to where to focus. Visiting the estate directly gives access to allocations not reliably available through retail.
    What's the defining thing about Familienweingut Tement?
    The integration of accommodation and vineyard is more complete here than at most Austrian estates. The chalets sit inside the vines rather than adjacent to them, and the Zieregg site's standing in southern Styrian wine means the context for what you are tasting is visible from where you are staying. The Pearl 4 Star Prestige rating reflects this integration. For price and booking specifics, direct contact with the estate is required, as neither is publicly listed.

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