These Eastern European Countries Are Home to Some of the Most Dynamic Winemakers Right Now

Thirty years ago, when the Berlin Wall fell and the Soviet bloc of Eastern Europe began to dismantle itself, few people were probably thinking it would change what wine they enjoyed the next time they went out to eat.

But today, one can stroll into the restaurant Freek’s Mill in Brooklyn, N.Y., and open a bottle from nations that didn’t exist 35 years ago; as a group they actually outnumber the offerings from California on the list. Eastern Europe’s wines have come into their own over the last few years, appearing on wine lists and store shelves across the United States.

Properly speaking, they have come back into their own. “They have hundreds, if not thousands, of years of winemaking history,” says Frank Dietrich of Blue Danube Imports, which specializes in the area. “Events in the 20th century—two World Wars and then the Soviet enterprise—did a lot of damage to quality wine production. Vintage by vintage quality has been improving, and people are finding their way back. It’s a very nice thing to see, and to taste.”

Countries bordering Western Europe, such as Hungary and Slovenia, were the first to reemerge. Hungary’s richly sweet Tokaji Aszu wine once earned accolades from figures like Voltaire, Queen Victoria, and Beethoven; in the 1990s, foreign investment poured in aiming to revive the almost-lost art of creating them. Among other examples, prestigious British wine writer Hugh Johnson founded the now award-winning Royal Tokaji Copmany, and American businessman Anthony Hwang established the Kiralyudvar wine estate in Hungary in 1997. Proximity to Austria’s wine regions on the western border also helped Hungary’s wine regions get back on their feet, providing an influx of knowledge and expertise.

Borders Between Wine Countries

Further south in Slovenia, the Brda region had actually been split in half by the Cold War; dividing vineyards—and even families—between Yugoslavia and Italy. On the latter side, private development continued and advanced, while the Yugoslavian government led their wine industry down a different, more industrial route.

“In former Yugoslavia, there was a push for cooperative cellars,” says Aleks Simčič, of the Edi Simčič winery in Slovenia. Authorities there and elsewhere in the Soviet Bloc reorganized vineyards to optimize mass production and volume, with little thought to quality. Redistribution of land back into private hands and some small experiments with privatized production began in the 1980s, but in most cases, local winemaking only really developed and began modernizing the ensuing decade. Edi Simčič, for example, began bottling their own wine in the 1990s, gradually expanding into exports aided by Slovenia’s acceptance into the European Union in 2004.