Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1
GRAND DUCHY OF LUXEMBOURG 249

The market town of Larochette, huddled in a verdant glen formed by the River Ernz Blanche


Larochette 6


20 km (12 miles) N of Luxembourg
City. Road Map F4. * 1,500. @
n Chemin J.A. Zinnen 33; 837038.
http://www.larochette.lu.

A pleasant market town in the
valley of River Ernz Blanche,
Larochette has more than 800
years of history, centring upon
its castle set on a rocky sand-
stone crag that dominates the
town. This location gave the
town its name: Larochette is
French for The Small Rock.
In German, the town is Fels
(Rock). Extensive ruins of the
11th–16th-century Château de
Larochette, destroyed by fire

in 1565, cover the top of the
crag. Located here is Palais
des Hombourg, the medieval
palace of two noble sisters
who married brothers from the
House of Homburg in 1338–45.
Restoration of the castle has
begun with the now complete
Maison de Créhange, an
impressive evocation of a
14th-century fortified resi-
dence named after a family
that inhabited this part of
the castle. Looping out from
the town are some 30 km
(18 miles) of walking paths.

P Château de Larochette
Tel 837497. # Easter–Oct:
10am–6pm daily. &

THE WINES OF LUXEMBOURG
Appreciated by wine enthusiasts for their dry, fresh flavours,
Luxembourg wines have little of the cloying fruitiness some-
times associated with northern white wines. The Romans
are said to have brought wine grapes to the Moselle valley,
and the local grape variety Elbling may date right back to
that era. The vines grow in a string of 28 town and villages
lining the left bank of the river between Schengen and
Wasserbillig. Slopes here are sunny and the climate is cool,
favouring white wine grapes. The main varieties are Rivaner,
Auxerrois Blanc, Elbling, Riesling, Pinot Blanc and Pinot Gris.
Chardonnay and Gewürztraminer also make an appearance.
Pinot Noir is grown to make rosé and a small amount of
red wine. A sizeable proportion
of the harvest is used to make
the sparkling wine Crémant
Luxembourgeois, and there
are three types of sweet wines:
vin de glace, vin de paille and
vendanges tardives. Some 80
per cent of the total white wine
production is consumed in
Belgium, and much of the rest
is sent to Germany to be made
into sekt (sparkling wine).

and producers on the Route
du Vin (Wine Road) along the
river offer wine tastings and
tours, for instance at Remich,
Wormeldange, Grevenmacher
and the wine cooperatives
of Wellenstein. Just north of
Wellenstein, among the win-
erys of Bech-Kleinmacher, is
a charming wine and folklore
museum, the Musée A Possen.
This has furnished rooms in
a set of 400-year-old wine-
making buildings and includes
wine tasting among its draws.
The town of Ehnen, in the
commune of Wormeldange, is
the site of the Musée National
du Vin, which explains wine-
making pro cesses, again
with tastings.
The wine-growing village
of Schengen is where the
Schengen Agreement was
signed in 1985 by European
ministers, loosening the border
controls between participat-
ing countries.
Cruises offer an agreeable
way to see the extensive
Moselle Luxembourgeoise.
The cruise-boat Princesse
Marie-Astrid runs a daily
schedule between varying
destinations – with return trips
by coach – from late March to
late September. Details are
avail able from the Greven-
macher tourist office.


E Musée A Possen
Keeseschgaessel 2, Bech-
Kleinmacher. Tel 23697353.
# Easter–Oct: 11am–7pm Tue–Sun.
& 7 = http://www.musee-possen.lu
E Musée National du Vin
Route du Vin 115, Ehnen.
Tel 760026. # Apr–Oct: Tue–Sun.

Barrels stacked in a wine
cellar of the Moselle valley
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