Champagne

Champagne

Bio
Champagne Olivier Horiot - Cuvée Petit Meslier - Vendange 2017  – Sku: 1223017 – 5
Olivier Horiot
Champagne AOP
€99.00
COUP DE COEUR
Champagne Jacques Lassaigne - Magnum Les Vignes de Montgueux - Extra Brut Blanc de Blancs – Sku: 12186 – 4
Jacques Lassaigne
Champagne AOP
€99.00
Bio
Champagne Olivier Horiot - Cuvée Petit Meslier - Vendange 2016 – Sku: 1223016 – 13
Olivier Horiot
Champagne AOP
€99.00
95/100 RVF
Champagne Jacquesson - Cuvée n°741 D.T – Sku: 1233413 – 8
Jacquesson
Champagne AOP
€99.00
Champagne Chartogne Taillet - Saint-Thierry # 20 - Extra Brut  – Sku: 1214620 – 26
Chartogne-Taillet
Champagne AOP
€99.00
Bio
Champagne Olivier Horiot - Cuvée Arbane - Vendange 2017 - Brut Nature  – Sku: 1221117 – 3
Olivier Horiot
Champagne AOP
€102.00
Bio
Champagne Vouette et Sorbée - Textures R20 – Sku: 1249620 – 3
VVouette et Sorbée
Champagne AOP
€105.00
Bio
Champagne Olivier Horiot - Cuvée Arbane R16 – Sku: 1221116 – 5
Olivier Horiot
Champagne AOP
€105.00
94/100 RVF
Champagne Jacquesson - Cuvée n°742 D.T – Sku: 1233414 – 7
Jacquesson
Champagne AOP
€110.00
CLUB AVANTAGE
Bio
Bérêche et Fils - Coteaux Champenois blanc 1er Cru Les Monts Fournois 2019 – Sku: 1234119 – 2
Bérèche & Fils
2019
Coteaux-Champenois PDO
€110.00
96/100 RVF
94/100 B+D
Champagne Agrapart - Minéral 2018 Extra Brut Grand Cru  Bionnes - Champ Bouton  – Sku: 1232418 – 18
Agrapart
2018
Champagne AOP
€119.00
93/100 RVF
Bio
Françoise Bedel - Comme Autrefois 2007 – Sku: 1254007 – 1
Françoise Bedel
2007
Champagne AOP
€122.00
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Champagne: make your cellar sparkle

It rhymes with special occasions and celebrations, with elegance and refinement. Champagne and its fine golden bubbles are as much an invitation to contemplate as to taste. Renowned throughout the world, it is nevertheless produced on a group of plots of land gathered essentially around Reims and Epernay, where the most beautiful cellars and the most prestigious Champagne houses are located. Before raising your glass, we suggest you learn more about this sparkling wine.

General presentation

Champagne, the sparkling wine that inevitably rhymes with celebration and refinement, is produced in the region whose name it bears. The three main grape varieties used to make it are Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Meunier, grown on some 30,000 hectares of vineyards. According to the traditional Champagne method, Champagne is a blend of these grape varieties, to which may be added Arbane, Petit Meslier, Pinot Gris vrai (Fromenteau) and Pinot Blanc vrai. This is one of the characteristics of Champagne: here, blending is of prime importance, both in terms of the grapes and the vintages of the cuvées.

In Champagne, vines have been cultivated since ancient times, and it was in the 17th century that a naturally "sparkling" wine was discovered, thanks in particular to the use of the wine bottle and the cork. At the same time, the famous Dom Pérignon blended grapes from different vintages and grape varieties for the first time, and laid the foundations for the sparkling process, which is essential for wine to be effervescent.

Since then, champagne has proudly acquired its letters of nobility. Great houses have made their prestigious brand name resound throughout the world: Ruinart, Bollinger, Laurent-Perrier, Mumm, Pannier, Taittinger, Veuve Clicquot... to name but a few. Smaller houses and winegrowers also produce quality champagnes and enliven this landscape with their know-how and their vision for the future.

The Champagne vineyards

The area in which Champagne is produced is clearly delimited by a law of 1927. There are 4 main production areas:

  • The Côte des Blancs (Marne) and the Côte de Sézanne: south of Epernay, this is the most famous Champagne region. Here the chardonnay reigns supreme, and is used to produce exceptional blanc de blancs champagnes.
  • The Montagne de Reims (Marne): between Epernay and the south of Reims, the pinot noir dominates. The power and nobility of the champagnes make the reputation of this region.
  • The Marne Valley (Marne, Aisne and Seine-et-Marne): the majority of the vines in this region, located to the west of Epernay, are miller grapes and pinot noir. It offers a great diversity of champagnes.
  • The Aube vineyards and the Côte des Bar: this region is located much further south and is often considered a second-rate terroir. However, it is the source of wines of character and complex aromas.

The Champagne vineyard has 30,000 hectares of vines, spread across these 4 large areas, each very different from the other. More than 630 communes make up the northernmost vineyard in France.

An appellation and terroirs

Champagne is the only region in France that has only one appellation. Some 320 crus benefit from the AOC Champagne. However, the mention of origin is not compulsory. The 34,000 hectares of vineyards are divided into more than 270,000 parcels, each with its own particularities. This unique fragmentation gives rise to a wide variety of terroirs and crus. These are classified into three categories:

  • The "Grands Crus": 17 villages have this appellation. These are the most prestigious and most sought after. Among them, we can mention Aÿ, Louvois, Oger, Puisieulx or Verzenay.
  • The "premiers crus": 42 villages are concerned, including Bezannes, Champillon, Coligny, Mutigny, Sacy, Trépail, Voipreux...
  • The "other crus".

The Champagne vineyard is also the source of "still" wines, i.e. wines that do not sparkle: the Champagne hillsides and the Riceys rosé.

How to choose a champagne?

Here is some information that will help you to better understand the world of champagne and to make your choice. First of all, you should know that different types of champagne are offered:

  • Blanc de blancs: this champagne is made only from chardonnay.
  • Blanc de noirs: only pinot noir, pinot meunier or a blend of these two grape varieties give birth to this champagne.
  • Rosé: only champagne can be rosé because of the blending of white and black grapes.
  • Vintage: vintage champagnes are rare, as it is usually a wine that blends different grape varieties, but also vintages of different years. A vintage champagne must be made from grapes from the same year, from one or more grape varieties, and must have aged for at least 3 years in the cellar.
  • Extra-brut, brut, doux, demi-sec...: this indication reflects the sugar concentration of the champagne, i.e. the quantity of "liqueur de dosage" that has been added to the wine before its final corking. The term "doux" refers to a champagne containing more than 50g of sugar per litre, while a champagne is called "extra-brut" when it contains between 0 and 6g of sugar per litre. When the wine has no added sugar and contains less than 3 g/l of sugar, the words "brut nature", "dosage zéro" or "non dosé" can be added.

On their label are initials that allow you to identify the bottler:

  • RM, Récoltant Manipulant: the winegrower cultivates his vines, vinifies his harvest and elaborates his champagne which he bottles and markets under his own name/brand.
  • RC, Récoltant Coopérateur: the winegrower entrusts his grapes to the cooperative and recovers them after the 2nd fermentation in the bottle to then market his production under his name/brand.
  • NM, Négociant Manipulant: a company buys grapes from winegrowers, vinifies them and elaborates its champagne.
  • CM, Coopérative de Manipulation: members bring in their grapes and the winery presses, vinifies and blends them. The wines are then sold under the cooperative's name or a common brand.
  • SR, Société de Récoltants: these are groups of producers who market their production under a common brand.
  • MA, Marque d'Acheteur: the retailer, like a supermarket, markets a champagne which it has not produced.

Alongside the great and prestigious brands of champagne, you will find a rich mosaic of references, more or less confidential, and which will also make the moments during which you will taste them sparkle.

Le vignoble

Agrapart

"Le domaine Agrapart s'étend sur 12 hectares au cœur de la côte des Blancs (Avize, Cramant, Oger et Oiry pour les grands crus, Avenay Val d'Or, Coligny et Vauciennes pour les premiers crus).

Benoît Lahaye

"Benoit Lahaye est l'un des vignerons les plus doués de sa génération. Installé sur Bouzy il est maintenant rejoint par ses fils Étienne et Valentin. Il possède ainsi 4,5 hectares de vignes conduites en briodynamie, avec l'aide de sa jument Tamise et du chien Bacchus.

Bérèche & Fils

"Raphaël et Vincent Bérèche plongent dans leurs racines vigneronnes depuis cinq générations. Ils figurent parmi les acteurs les plus dynamiques du vignoble champenois et perpétuent la tradition familiale engagée depuis le XIXe siècle.

Billecart-Salmon

"Incarnant la 7e génération, le brillant Mathieu Roland-Billecart a repnis le flambeau de cette maison de Mareuil-sur-Aÿ, deux fois centenaire et toujours familiale depuis sa création en 1818.

Bollinger

Champagne Bollinger, a virtuoso of Champagne wines

Caillez Lemaire

Virginie and Laurent Vanpoperingh cultivate with passion 7 hectares in the areas of Damery and Cumières in the Marne Valley. The cuvées all have an elegant and fine profile and have the particularity of being aged entirely or partially in barrels.

Chartogne-Taillet

De Sousa

"Installée à Avize depuis trois générations, la famille De Sousa vient de célébrer ses 20 ans de biodynamie. En compagnie de son épouse Michelle et de ses trois enfants revenus au domaine, Erick poursuit sa quête de l'excellence dans cet esprit familial.

Dehours & Fils

"The range of these champagnes, built mainly around the meunier grape, is flawless. The Grande Réserve expresses marvellously an autumnal character based on a frank, tonic and hyper digestible fruit. (...) In 2009, the two parcels dosed in extra brut reach a remarkable level" RVF Guide 2018

Dom Pérignon

"Dom Pérignon est probablement le vin de Champagne le plus insaisissable. Ces émotions reposent sur une sélection brillante, très rigoureuse et un savoir-faire chirurgical.

Egly-Ouriet

"À la tête ce domaine familial d'Ambonnay, Francis Egly est un conducteur de vignes et un vinificateur hors pair. Précurseur incontestable au sommet de la hiérarchie champenoise, il a su choisir les meilleurs gestes au vignoble et fait des choix d'élaboration très personnels.

Françoise Bedel

Henri Giraud

Henri Giraud Champagnes belong to the Champagne elite. From the great terroirs of Ay and with part of the production vinified in oak barrels from the Argonne forest, Champagne Henri Giraud symbolises the exceptional Champagne wine; greedy, vinous, with a unique style and extreme complexity... To be tasted at least once in your life...

Jacquesson

Champagne Jacquesson, a house not to be missed

Krug

"La maison appartient depuis 1999 au groupe LVMH. Elle est la plus brillante illustration de l'art de l'assemblage et figure très singulièrement au sommet de l'appellation.

Larmandier-Bernier

The Larmandier-Bernier family estate is located on the Côte des Blancs in Vertus, and is composed of 16 hectares (3.5 of which are Grand Cru) and no less than 50 separate plots, which have been biodynamically managed since 1999. On these privileged terroirs, the grape varieties are 85% Chardonnay and 15% Pinot Noir with an average age of the vines of 33 years.

Roederer

Ruppert Leroy

Selosse

Anselme Selosse is one of those "artist-winemaker-farmer" who transcends his universe.

Ulysse Collin

"Olivier Collin, revenu au domaine familial en 2003 après des études de droit, fait merveille parmi les adresses qui font bouger la Champagne des vignerons.

Vouette et Sorbée

"La Champagne a encore du mal avec le “bio” : 0,7 % du vignoble. Même si Vouette et Sorbée ne fait pas partie des “domaines historiques” de la biodynamie champenoise (tels Beaufort, Fleury, Bedel…), Bertrand Gautherot s’y adonne dans l’Aube dans la joie et la bonne humeur d’une ferme où il favorise la diversité du vivant." RVF Guide

La Closerie - Jérôme Prévost

Emmanuel Brochet

Olivier Horiot

"On dénichera chez cet artisan engagé la plus intéressante déclinaison de rosé des Riceys et de coteaux-champenois (non filtré), vinifiés par lieu-dit : ils retrouvent la vivacité végétale et la finesse aromatique des pinots noirs septentrionaux, jadis largement produits dans la région.

Jacques Lassaigne

"Le petit vignoble de Montgueux détonne au sein de la Côte des Bar où le pinot noir est planté sur des marnes kimméridgiennes. Sur cette croupe calcaire située à une dizaine de kilomètres à l’ouest de Troyes, le chardonnay est roi.

Janisson-Baradon

"Avec un vignoble implanté sur les coteaux cernant Épernay, les deux frères Maxence et Cyril Janisson, à la suite de leur père Richard, élaborent des champagnes d’une grande franchise.

Laherte Frères

"Aurélien Laherte dirige avec rigueur, talent et sensibilité ce petit domaine familial situé à Chavot, sur les coteaux sud d'Épernay. Le vignoble comprend des belles parcelles de craie affleurante sur ce village champenois mais s'étale également du côté du Breuil, de Boursault et de la Côte des Blancs.

Marie Courtin