Billecart-Salmon at VOMO Fiji

Champagne Billecart-Salmon at VOMO Fiji
 A truly magical experience, enjoying Billecart-Salmon champagnes at the exclusive VOMO Island Resort with a specially curated menu designed to highlight both the unique location and the premium champagnes.

 

 


Trade Masterclass & Lunch - “The Evolution of Billecart-Salmon: Purity, Patience, Precision”

Join us at Koji restaurant for an exclusive tasting, hosted by Sebastien Papin of Maison Billecart-Salmon and Brandon Nash.

During this masterclass and lunch, you will be guided through the evolution of this exceptional Grand Marque Champagne house, with a significant focus on their recent efforts to strengthen their house style and ensure quality always remains at the forefront of their endeavours.
Tasting Line-up:

  • Welcome Drink:
  • Charles le Bel 'Inspiration 1818' Brut
  • Lineup:
  • Billecart-Salmon Le Blanc de Blancs
  • Billecart-Salmon Le Rosé
  • Billecart-Salmon Le Réserve
  • Billecart-Salmon 2013 Vintage Brut
  • Billecart-Salmon 2008 Nicolas Francois cuvée

Seats will be limited. Please contact Brandon to reserve your spot today.

“When you make internationally renowned champagne for 206 years you don’t have to rock the boat, but that’s exactly what Billecart-Salmon has done with the new releases of their flagship non-vintage champagnes. If you’re already a fan of Billecart-Salmon, prepare to love them even more. If you haven’t tried Billecart-Salmon before, it’s time to discover this legendary Grand Maison.

Philip Roufail

Learn more about the recent changes that guests will taste through before time over on our release, here.


One Day In 1911...

7 July, 2025In New Releases, News, Wines

One Day in 1911...

At Champagne André Clouet

“For those in the know, the rare cuvées of André Clouet are immensely sought-after. You can’t buy these champagnes year-round in Australia, because they quickly sell out as soon as a shipment lands.”

– Tyson Stelzer, Acclaimed Wine Writer & Champagne Expert

We have covered André Clouet in detail before, through the lens of various new cuvées we’ve brought on. If you want to learn about these, here are the links; 

When we first brought on Champagne André Clouet in 2017, we were astounded at the way it managed to capture the hearts and the palates of both our staff and customers immediately.

At the time, we had only brought on their NV Grandé Reserve Brut – a 100% Pinot Noir Champagne from their family vineyards in Bouzy and adorned with an intricate blue and gold label designed in 1911. It wasn’t one of the ‘big’ Champagne names but it was one that carried with it a lot of respect, with a detectable electric undercurrent of intrigue reserved for only the most ‘boutique’ and ‘in-the-know’ producers.

We soon added their No.5 Brut Rosé and their V6 Experience cuvées to the line up, who have in time also garnered a passionate group of fans here in NZ. Then, earlier this year we ordered a few hundred bottles of his Blanc de Blancs – Chalky – which sold out by word of mouth within two hours of booking the stock, a 2005 Vintage bottling of their ‘Dream Vintage’ and the 2015 “Millésimé Empire” (Symphony Cap Leopard).

Which brings us to today, and also kind of brings us back in time, to one day in 1911…

“His champagnes offer that something else, without the Hollywood budget, yet with pyrotechnics all of their own.”

– Tyson Stelzer

‘Un Jour de 1911’ Grand Cru by André Clouet

In Clouet’s words, this wine is a “Champagne fairytale’…

“Once upon a time, a few precious bottles were hidden away in a small cellar for more than 80 years. By a stroke of luck they were found and became the inspiration for a champagne tribute to the Golden Age we like to call “Un jour de 1911”. (Translation: “One day in 1911”).

We were overcome with sentimental nostalgia when we recovered those bottles, saving them from oblivion. Memories of old Aunt Jenny came flooding back. She had always spoken about them with a sparkle in her eye, remembering their presence at every resplendent celebration and happy occasion during those dazzling early years of the 1900s.

Carefully packed with straw, protected in their wooden cases, each bottle was beautifully dressed with a gold foil collar, painstakingly applied by hand and shapely suggestive of a woman’s plunging neckline. Belle Époque graphic design on the labels transported us back to the Golden Age of France, a time of prosperity, optimism and creative freedom when the arts began to flourish.

The House of André Clouet invites you to enjoy Un jour de 1911 the revival of a rediscovered gem from one of the best vineyards in the world. Working with the finest craftsmen, we bring you the magical renaissance of champagne production from the 1900s.”

Champagne André Clouet

“Un Jour de 1911” Grand Cru (One Day in 1911)

  • 100% Grand Cru Pinot Noir (Bouzy)
  • Dosage: 4.0 g/L
  • 12% Alc.
  • 50/50 blend of three vintages (including one great millésime at least 10 years old) and reserve wines from a solera system
  • Aged 100% on the lees in Barrels for 120-150 months
  • This 100% Pinot Noir cuvée, with its brilliant golden color, combines maturity and complexity with intensity and elegance. It is a rich, well-balanced Champagne. Its mineral tension and persistence on the palate make it a first choice for elaborate dishes.

Robert Parker’s The Wine Advocate, 96 Points (2021): “The NV Un jour de 1911… is another 100% Bouzy Pinot Noir with an ancient label design. The shining golden-colored cuvée combines ripeness, complexity and finesse with intensity and elegance on both the nose and palate. It’s a powerful and rich yet very fine and balanced Champagne with great freshness and complex length. It is juicy and intense but also highly delicate, and its mineral tension and persistent finish make it a first-class wine for elaborate dishes. A great Champagne, with a label that doesn’t give any more detailed information regarding vintages or disgorgement date, but we know it’s always a 50/50 blend of three vintages (including one great millésime at least 10 years old) and reserve wines from a solera system. I tasted the wine as a Brut with Clouet’s German importer in Bremen. You shouldn’t drink it too early, as it would be a waste of its talents. Drink 2021 – 2033.”

Falstaff, 95 Points (2020): “Rich, bright golden yellow. Intense bouquet, brioche notes, ripe stone fruit, dried apple and a little nougat. Complex, full-bodied with exotic hints of ripe pineapple on the palate. Very finely tuned mousse, salty underlay, with fresh acid structure. A creamy honey touch on the finish, full-bodied with noteworthy length. Very good ageing potential. Great.”

James Suckling, 95 Points (2021): “A rich and expansive champagne with tons of mature aromas of dried fruit (apricots!) and candied orange. Teeters on the edge of decadence, but has enough vitality to stay on the right side of that line. Plenty of textural complexity on the palate and a long, chalky finish that keeps giving and giving. Spot-on balance. Drink or hold.”

Champagne André Clouet

The Clouet family history in Bouzy dates back to the 1400s. Before their vinous adventures, the Clouet ancestors were the appointed printers for the French monarchs. Over the next 200 years and through several generations, the family slowly accumulated vineyards in Bouzy before finally, in 1741 they first started to make Champagne. Cellars were dug into the chalky soils and the family set down their roots officially in the town they’d spent several centuries in under the watchful eye of one André Clouet.

“During Creation, when God grew weary of sculpting the mountings, razing the deserts and firing up the volcanoes, he treated himself to a few moments of pleasure. He designed a little earthly paradise called Bouzy.”

André Clouet’s descendants took over his estate, ensuring that it remained in the family. The property had aged but has now been modernised, and the team working to perpetuate the House of André Clouet is inspired above all by the desire to preserve the personality of its champagnes. 

“Jean-François is deeply rooted in the heritage of his village,” explains Tyson Stelzer in his book, The Champagne Guide 2020-2021 Edition VI, “He still possesses his family’s request for a deed for the purchase of land in Champagne by their ancestors in 1689 and a letter from the 1820’s requesting an order of Rosé to be sent to Paris.” 

A story the family loves to tell is that of André Clouet’s memorable interaction with Marie Antoinette. In 1770, the future Queen of France visited the vineyards in Bouzy and a dinner in her honour was organised in a castle not far from the village. Andre Clouet was in attendance and decided to entertain the guests at the Queen’s table by adding a few drops of red wine from their vineyards to the white wine. Known as “Bouzy Rouge,” this Vin des Sacres, was the red wine served to celebrate the crowning of the French Kings.

On that night, it’s said the ladies’ eyes began to sparkle with amazement as the white wine became pink!

The men raised a toast to the Queen and André Clouet proclaimed: “This is how we perfect Pinot Noir in Champagne! Now the Burgundians will just have to deal with it!”

A few years later, a cousin placed an order for some of this ‘pink wine’, but sparkling this time, for her “crazy English friends!”

📷 : Lena Granefelt for Andre Clouet

Jean-François Clouet 

Jean-François is the larger-than-life current generation of the Clouet line and is at the helm of this family estate. Growing up amongst the vines, the vineyards are in his blood. He’s been described as many things – a wizard, a wonder, a ringmaster… and all of these may be true but there’s no doubt his legacy will also recognise him as a phenomenal vigneron. 

“One of the living rock stars of Champagne, Jean-François choreographs every element of his business with his inimitable flair and accomplishment…”

– Tyson Stelzer

A fun story he enjoys telling pertains to the tanks and barrels that age the wines;

“When I was a little boy, I loved walking around the wine-making cellar. In my imagination, the enormous wine tanks transformed and became champions, guardians, protectors of the wine…

My Heroes! Creaking, wheezing, groaning, squealing, sweating… sometimes they even seemed to be laughing! I watched the noisy show, as some were gushing from their nozzles, while others were being filled up. I grew up learning to play with my heroes who live in the wine-cellars.

Each has its own name and personality to share and their attributes come alive in the wines:

Superman, Zeus, and Thor lend their power to the Cuvée Grande Reserve.

Laser, D’artagnan and Zorro transmit their intensity, tension and minerality to the Brut Silver.

Sophie Marceau, Heather Locklear and Michelle Pheiffer flirt beautifully with the Rosé.

Rocky comes out swinging to make a Dream Vintage!

As I blend to create champagne, I work to find the perfect balance of characteristics that come from all my remarkable, dauntless heroes: the Stainless Steel Giants.”

Listen to Tyson Stelzer…

You can choose to take our word for it when it comes to Clouet’s brilliance, but if you don’t then you must listen to Tyson Stelzer.

Already quoted a few times in this piece, he is a multi-award winning wine writer, television host and producer and international speaker. Tyson has been named The International Wine & Spirit Communicator of the Year, The Australian Wine Communicator of the Year and The International Champagne Writer of the Year. He is the author and publisher of seventeen wine books, contributor to many wine magazines, a frequent judge and chair at Australian wine shows and a presenter at wine events in 12 countries.

All this to say: he knows his wine and is great at articulating the magic where mere mortals fall short!

“Jean-François is a courageous visionary and an ebullient creative with the nous to bring his dreams to completion and the humility to gather round him the talent to make it happen.”

In 2017, Tyson published an article titled “Is this the most underrated champagne grower of all?” which is a poetic and beautiful summation of this Champagne House, which we’ve detailed below, or that you can read here.

“It’s always puzzled me that the remarkable, terroir-expressive champagnes of André Clouet never seem to come up among the rockstar growers of Champagne. And yet on the basis of his current cuvées, I have again anointed this little grower in the grand cru village of Bouzy among the top six growers in Champagne. This of course places him among the top sparkling growers on earth. My scores rank him equal to Dom Pérignon, Louis Roederer and Taittinger. And that’s mighty company!

For those in the know, the rare cuvées of André Clouet are immensely sought-after. You can’t buy these champagnes year-round in Australia, because they quickly sell out as soon as a shipment lands. Cru Bar in Brisbane recently told me of a pallet arriving and selling before the staff even had time to unpack it into the store.

I am always intrigued that something of the personality of the maker is translated into the character of all great wines. In this, the wines of Jean-François Clouet capture a profound and intriguing juxtaposition.

The man and his cuvées are deeply rooted into the multilayered and convoluted history of Champagne, arguably more than any other. He is the privileged custodian of eight hectares of estate vines in the best middle slopes of Bouzy and Ambonnay, the epicentre of pinot noir in Champagne. His family heritage in Bouzy extends back to 1492 and they have been making their own champagnes here since the early 1700s.

Every time I introduce new friends to Jean-François, he doesn’t first show us through his winery or cellars, doesn’t walk us through rows of vines, or even pour his champagnes. He takes us to the top of the vineyards, on the edge of the forest overlooking Bouzy, and recounts the remarkable sweep of history that has played out in view of this place over two millennia, and the role his own family has played in the stories: Attila the Hun, the Battle of the Catalaunian Fields, the birth of the monarchy, the crusades, the Templars, Marie Antoinette. ‘To understand Champagne you need to understand its political history,’ he says.

It’s a history that lives on in his champagnes, both in spectacularly classical labels designed by his great grandfather in 1911 (harking back to the family’s printer heritage, making books for the king since 1491), and in a traditional approach in the vineyards and the cellar. ‘I like the idea of the work of human hands in pruning, performing the same actions as my grandfather and even the Romans, who planted vines here 2000 years ago.’

Such deep heritage makes for a striking contrast to the flamboyant personality of Jean-François, dubbed by one of my recent guests as ‘a combination of winemaker and circus ringmaster.’

He is daringly creative, with a distinctly modern twist to his approach. It is his goal that some day none of his champagnes will have any dosage at all, an ideal that he rightly describes as revolutionary.

His are rich and concentrated expressions of pinot noir, wines of deep complexity, multifaceted interest and engaging character, yet with remarkable restraint and sense of control. Tasting after tasting confirm my impression that this small and relatively unknown grower ranks high among Champagne’s finest practitioners of pinot noir — and represents one of the best value of all.

And yet for all of his success, this extroverted young chef de cave doesn’t take himself too seriously. ‘Champagne is always for flirting!’ he grins.

Visits with Jean-François are always recounted as a highlight by my little tour groups in Champagne, and it has long been my dream to introduce my knowledgeable and entertaining friend in Australia.”


Egly-Ouriet

Champagne Egly-Ouriet: Finest of the Fine Cult Growers

Champagne Egly-Ouriet: Finest of the Fine Cult Growers

Egly-Ouriet

Egly-Ouriet (Egg-lee Ou-ree-yair) is to Champagne-lovers what a Steinway is to pianists, or a Phillipe Dufour is to watch collectors. That is to say, for those in the know, the mere mention can make the heart skip a beat and eyebrows nudge upward.

Rather than relying on heavy marketing or drama, they’re all about boutique excellence – maintaining extraordinary quality yet somehow retaining a sense of what one could only describe as ‘intimacy’. You won’t find Egly-Ouriet umbrellas outside eateries, nor will you find pyramids of it on a shop floor. Hell, they don’t even have a website. No, you’ll find an Egly, perhaps just one, or two if you’re lucky, quietly on the shelf. “Is that bottle glowing?” you’ll think, “And are those angels singing?” No, to your average drinker the bottle isn’t glowing and a Top 100 playlist is on, but to you, the Champagne aficionado – the heavens may as well be opening.

“Cult” is the word often bestowed upon producers like Egly, for good reason. The products they release are rare, undeniably impressive and opinions are overwhelmingly positive with broad consensus, so without further ado, let us initiate you into the world of Egly-Ouriet…

Egly-Ouriet - The Vines

Brandon visits Egly-Ouriet

Egly-Ouriet is a revered ‘Récoltants-Manipulant’ or grower champagne, meaning they make their champagnes from vineyards they own themselves. They’re situated in Ambonnay where they own 8 hectares, with another 4 hectares scattered across Bouzy, Verzenay and Vrigny in the Montagne de Reims.

They grow all three champagne varieties and, with the exception of Vrigny, the other vineyards are all Grand Cru status. The vineyards are all on south or south-east facing slopes which helps them achieve good annual ripeness – an incredibly important detail for custodian, Francis Egly, “From vines averaging more than 45 years of age, Egly harvests at full maturity, typically at 12 or 13 degrees of potential alcohol, extremely ripe for Champagne, and never chaptalises. His goal is to harvest grapes as ripe as possible, and he cites the best vintages as those of high maturity, naming under-maturity as Champagne’s biggest problem.” Tyson Stelzer explains in his 2018/19 edition of The Champagne Guide.

Although not wanting to be labelled as an organic or biodynamic producer, Francis follows very natural practices and is determined the wines are clean and pure, reflecting the terroir of the Montagne de Reims whilst protecting the precious environment around them.

Egly-Ouriet - The Hands

As important as the vines are the hands that tend them, and attached to these digits of distinction is Francis Egly, the fourth generation working these vineyards. Each generation has followed the trend of vinifying more of their own grapes with each changeover, recognizing the quality of their holdings and increasing their investment over time.

Egly-Ouriet

Francis took the mantle from his father in 1982, working alongside him in the cellar, before in the 1990s taking a more influential position making decisions, and has bottled the entire harvest of 100,000 bottles ever since. His father Michel had been bottling a small portion – around ⅓ – of the harvest since the 1970s, and his grandfather before him, Charles, bottled miniscule amounts just for family and friends since the 1950s.

Francis is described in many ways – meticulous, exacting, creative, even maniacal in regards to his viticultural dedication – but a word one could never use for Francis would be showy. He has a reputation of being somewhat quiet and almost elusive. A man of few words, he prefers to let his Champagnes do the talking. On the occasions he can be tracked down (usually in the vines) he speaks quietly, confidently and entirely in French.

He is the epitome of an artisan, whose work speaks so profoundly for his skill you’d be forgiven for thinking he just accidentally fell into worldwide renown, but the opposite is true. If you picture the quintessential french farmer heading off at sunrise, not to be seen again until dark, you’d be about right. He just wants to quietly get on with making some of the most revered drops in the market and he works hard to uphold that reputation.

Champagne writer, Yuri Champaniaque, calls him ‘mysterious,’ before congratulating the ‘Wine Challenge’ podcast for conducting perhaps one of the more in-depth interviews with Francis Egly around. “The estate has earned some reputation, so in a way, I would say that these days making mistakes is not an option…” Francis explains to them, and that he knows that people expect a certain calibre from the Egly-Ouriet estate and endeavours to provide that.

On the matter of the future of the estate, he explains to Alex, the interviewer, that there’s hope for a fifth generation but he doesn’t like to push them, “My children have come back to work with me, I’m particularly careful not to put pressure on them, because that wouldn’t be helping them… I have two children, a son who is 24 and a 26 year old daughter. Both of them have now helped me on the estate and I’m really proud of it. It’s a success to have them coming back, and I think they’re going to find their place here. It’s quite easy because my son likes to work the land, so he’s keen on working in the vines and Clémence [his daughter] likes the vineyards too, of course, and she too participates in all the work in the vines, but she’s also more involved in the commercial side of our activities and that suits her perfectly. So we’ve actually reached an easy balance.”

Egly-Ouriet

Egly-Ouriet - The Wines

Egly Ouriet’s champagnes are well-known for their bold but beautiful style.

“His aspiration is ‘elegance and strength, but never heaviness.’ He says champagne is like a bird; ‘it has to stay aromatic and light,”

explains Tyson Stelzer. Francis reiterates this concept again on the podcast, “We’ve had a Burgundy-like approach, if I may say so. The idea is to first have more full-bodied wines. We found that maybe some champagnes lacked a little bit of structure, or lacking in body. So we try to make rather stronger champagnes.”

Some of Egly-Ouriet’s stand out practices include mature picking, extra long ageing and very low dosage.

In speaking to The Wine Anorak, Francis asserts that “The complexity of the wine and the terroir expression increases with time on lees,” says Francis. “We will never change this,” he says, although adds that if it does change, they will go longer, not shorter.

Egly-Ouriet
Egly-Ouriet

All cuvees sit for a minimum of 36 months (as opposed to legal minimum of 18) before disgorgement. This contributes to the rich complexity of the Egly-Ouriet champagnes. The Grand Cru VP or ‘Viellisement Prolongee’ (prolonged aging) sits in state for 70 months, giving it amazing powerful, intense flavours whilst still retaining wonderful elegance.

Every label of Egly-Ouriet’s Champagnes bears the house philosophy, “This champagne is the expression of a “family” style that comes first and foremost from perfectly tended vineyards. The quality of grapes, the precision of blending and long elevage in the cellar allows us to offer you non-filtered champagnes in the purest champagne style,” along with disgorgement dates, terroirs and the number of months on Iees.

Our 2025 Allocation

We are thrilled and immensely privileged to be given a small allocation of these revered, rare and dazzlingly pure champagnes, expected to land in May;

Egly-Ouriet Les Premices

NV Egly-Ouriet Brut ‘Les Premices’

  • ⅓ Chardonnay, ⅓ pinot noir, ⅓ pinot meunier from a 3.5 hectare plot in Trigny
  • Base wines aged in stainless steel, aged 36 months on lees
  • 1 g/L dosage
  • 93 Points – Jamie Goode’s The Wine Anorak:
    “Complex aromatics with nuts, toast, aniseed and a touch of wax. This has nice weight on the palate with rich citrus and pear fruit and a slight salinity. Ripe, textural and nicely complex. This might be their entry-level wine, but it’s fantastic.”

Egly-Ouriet Brut Tradition Grand Cru

NV Egly-Ouriet Brut Grand Cru

  • 70% Pinot Noir and 30% Chardonnay from Ambonnay, Bouzy and Verzenay
  • 100% barrel fermentation, fifty-two months on lees
  • 1 g/L dosage
  • 95 Points – Decanter
    “Although this appears as the ‘house’ non-vintage, in character it is more akin to a vintage wine that needs some time on cork. Tasted young, the saturated fruit—apricot, spiced apples, grilled lemons—is already expressive, yet not fully unsprung. Based on 2018 with 40% reserves back to 2016, the heat of 2018 is in the fruit profile rather than weight or grip, and is more about persistence than pure power, underlined by the oak élevage yet not coloured by it.”

Egly-Ouriet Brut Les Vignes de Bisseuil 1er Cru

NV Egly-Ouriet Brut Les Vignes de Bisseuil 1er Cru

  • 70% Chardonnay, 15% pinot noir, 15% pinot meunier
  • Aged 51 months on lees
  • 2 g/litre dosage
  • 95 Points – Jamie Goode’s The Wine Anorak
    “It’s a new wine for Egly-Ouriet, from a 1.5 hectare vineyard they bought 10 years ago, next to Ay, but this is the first release because the vineyards were still rented out for a while… Despite the higher than normal Chardonnay content this is still Egly in style. Powerful and lively with lovely depth of flavour: spice, crystalline citrus, a hint of salinity, with depth and concentration but also freshness. Very fine.”

Egly-Ouriet Les Vignesde Vrigny

NV Egly-Ouriet Brut Les Vignes de Vrigny 1er Cru

  • 100% Pinot Meunier from vines bought by Francis’ wife, Annick
  • Aged 36 months on lees
  • 2 g/l dosage
  • 93 Points – Wine & Spirits Magazine
    “Presented with barely any dosage (two grams per liter), this is a savory Champagne with the broad texture of the variety. The flavors are rich and mature, with scents of cider apple and coriander, a subtle spice and the mushroom notes of sourdough. Sit with it for a while and that richness reveals red fruit depths, the wine growing racy and brisk.”

Egly-Ouriet VP Grand Cru

NV Egly-Ouriet Extra Brut V.P Grand Cru

  • 70% Pinot Noir and 30% Chardonnay
  • Aged 84 months on the lees
  • 3 g/l dosage
  • 98 points – Tyson Stelzer
    “Power meets effortless calm as Champagne’s three finest pinot noir crus unite with breathtaking expression of lifted violet perfume and sensational purity of red cherry and strawberry fruit. Chardonnay injects energy and definition into a mouthfeel that bores to the core of grand cru chalk, intricately and seamlessly entwining a palate of glittering minerality of the finest texture. Magnificently defined acidity is at once bright, youthful and energetic, yet simultaneously ripe, full and integrated… Francis Egly has bottled the ultimate expression of the refinement and towering magnificence of Ambonnay, Bouzy and Verzenay.”

Egly-Ouriet Brut Rose Grand Cru

NV Egly-Ouriet Brut Rosé Grand Cru

  • 70% Pinot Noir, 30% Chardonnay
  • Aged 48 months on the lees
  • 2 g/l dosage
  • 95 Points – Jeb Dunnuck
    “Also brilliant, the lighter salmon-hued NV Grand Cru Brut Rosé has a captivating nose of orange blossom, toasted bread, honeysuckle, dried flowers, and spice. With flawless balance, medium to full body, integrated acidity, building richness, and a great, great finish, this is another spectacular wine in the lineup to drink over the coming 10-15 years or so.”

Egly-Ouriet Blanc de Noirs Grand Cru VV

NV Egly-Ouriet Grand Cru Blanc de Noirs V.V. (“Vieilles Vignes”)

  • 100% Pinot Noir
  • Aged 64 months on lees
  • 98 Points – Tyson Stelzer
    “Hedonistic aromas of black cherries, plum pie and violets erupt in grand cru red Burgundy proportions, backed with notes of dark chocolate and exotic spice. In sheer volume, depth and persistence, this cuvee pushes champagne into another world. Yet, crucially and mesmerisingly, it is never for a moment heavy or blowsy, pulled exactingly into tight line by gorgeous, bright yet perfectly ripe and generous acidity. With barely a foot of topsoil before the chalk, the mineral character of this hallowed site speaks articulately in softly salty tones that will stir the depths of your soul.”

Egly-Ouriet Brut Millesime Grand Cru

2015 Egly-Ouriet Grand Cru Millesime

  • 70% Pinot Noir and 30% Chardonnay from 40-year-old vines in Ambonnay.
  • Aged 96 months on lees
  • 1 g/l dosage
  • 96 points – Jeb Dunnuck
    “Ripe and fruity on the nose, with aromas of black cherries, fresh violets, savory saline, and a hint of umami richness. The palate is full-bodied, with no phenolic bitterness, and never feels overtly savory. Pure, juicy, and inviting, it’s lovely and long on the palate, with a very pretty finish and a refined mousse that just frames the wine. It has a delicate note of toast that it needs time to harmonize, but I love what they have done with this vintage. Drink 2025-2045.”
  • Previous releases of the Millesime have achieved coveted 100 point scores from Robert Parker’s The Wine Advocate, reinforcing the quality to expect of Egly’s vintage bottlings. The 2013 was one of these, “Francis Egly has produced another profound Champagne with the 2013 Brut Grand Cru Millésime… Wafting from the glass with scents of Anjou pear, crisp yellow apple, freshly baked bread, clear honey, iodine and fresh mint, it’s full-bodied, ample and pillowy, with a layered, concentrated and effortlessly balanced core of fruit, uniting precision and sensuality to compelling effect. Girdled by racy acids and animated by a delicate pinpoint mousse, it concludes with a long, penetrating finish. Is this the most elegant wine Egly has produced to date? It’s certainly among the most compelling that this high quality but initially underrated Champagne vintage has delivered.”

Critics

Don’t just take our word for it! Egly-Ouriet has impressed the most discerning palates in the world;

“Egly-Ouriet enjoys a cult status shared by no other grower on the Montagne de Reims. This tiny, pristine operation in Ambonnay deserves its acclaim, capturing the profound complexity, intensity and grandeur of the Montagne’s finest terroirs without sacrificing the precision that underlies the most revered champagnes. These are ravishingly vinous sparkling wines, consistently among the most exactingly balanced of Champagne’s power set, handcrafted by a creative, thoughtful artisan who painstakingly tends his vines naturally to low yields and full maturity. To uphold the calibre of his non-vintage cuvees even in the wake of the harrowing 2011 season calls for wizardry I have witnessed from no other grower or house. On this basis, Egly-Ouriet remains the finest grower in Champagne right now, and my only 10/10 grower.”
Tyson Stelzer’s 2018/19 Edition of The Champagne Guide

“Egly-Ouriet remains one of Champagne’s leading small growers… It is one of the reference-point growers in Champagne, with a deep selection of wines that offer remarkable transparency to site, vintage and variety.”
Antonio Galloni for the Wine Advocate

“Far from resting on the considerable and merited laurels that he has accrued over a 30-year career, Francis Egly has continued to refine and improve. The last decade’s innovations include refrigerated press pans to immediately cool the must in ever-warmer vintages, a peristaltic pump to handle his wines even more gently and a once-again expanded cellar that gives him the space to work still more precisely. Just like his work in the vineyards, investment in the winery has been incessant. Starting from next to nothing when he began in the 1980s, today Egly holds some 700,000 bottles in reserve wines and wine maturing sur lattes—equivalent to seven times his annual production… But the devil is in the details; no winemaker in Champagne is more precise or meticulous, from vineyard to cellar. These latest releases once again come warmly recommended.”
William Kelley for The Wine Advocate

“Francis Egly has done it again. I’ve written at length in the End of April 2021 Issue 254 of The Wine Advocate about this estate’s perfectionist methods and distinctive philosophy. Recent releases from Egly have been consistently nothing short of spectacular, but even so, I was unprepared for quite how good the 2013 vintage has turned out at this address.”
William Kelley for The Wine Advocate

Few producers can equal Francis Egly in skill and experience, and larger houses cannot hope to emulate the cultivation norms…”
Michel Bettane, The World’s Greatest Wines

“What Larmandier-Bernier achieves with Chardonnay, so Egly-Ouriet manages for Pinot Noir: wines of riveting purity and concentration.”
Andrew Jefford, The New France

Egly Ouriet has been awarded 3 stars, the highest rating, in Le Classement by La Revue du Vin de France. Le Classement is a ranking of the 1300 best domaines in France and only 56 domaines in France have 3 star status. Only 5 champagne houses have 3 star status including Egly Ouriet together with Krug, Salon, Jacquesson and Selosse.


If there is one Grower Producer you should try, it’s Egly-Ouriet. Not only does it reflect the terroir, but the time, love and thought put into it by its producer Francis Egly.


Gallery: Billecart-Salmon Masterclass with Sebastien Papin

Gallery: Billecart-Salmon Masterclass with Sebastien Papin

Auckland

@Panacea

@SidArt

Tauranga


All in a Name: Billecart-Salmon's New Visual Identity

All in a Name: Billecart-Salmon's New Visual Identity

A new look and improved quality for Billecart’s already legendary NV cuvées.

An old favourite, a new identity. In its unwavering pursuit of excellence, Maison Billecart-Salmon takes yet another step forward in the quality and precision of its blends.

“When you make internationally renowned champagne for 206 years you don’t have to rock the boat, but that’s exactly what Billecart-Salmon has done with the new releases of their flagship non-vintage champagnes. If you’re already a fan of Billecart-Salmon, prepare to love them even more. If you haven’t tried Billecart-Salmon before, it’s time to discover this legendary Grand Maison.”

Philip Roufail

The Process

At Billecart-Salmon, the release of each wine is approved by a dedicated tasting committee. It is composed of eight members, four of whom represent three generations of the Billecart family. The committee thus ensures that each champagne offers the best of the House’s style. The family is supported by talented collaborators such as Florent Nys, chief winemaker and Denis Blée, vineyard and wine director.

In 2019, the Tasting Committee embarked on a comprehensive re-evaluation of the ever-popular and ‘most impressive NV’ (according to Jancis Robinson) Brut Réserve cuvée. This aligned with the development of a ’library’ of reserve wines spearheaded by Florent in 2018.

This library allowed Billecart-Salmon to take a new approach to dosage. With more than 50 exceptional wines in a dedicated vat house and reduced doses of sugar (‘dosage’) allow them to release a finer and purer expression in their final champagnes.

Chief winemaker, Florent creates specific “liqueurs” from these reserves for each blend in order to magnify the character of the wines, which are then approved by the tasting committee during blind tastings.

William Kelley for Robert Parker’s The Wine Advocate visited the House in 2022 and noted the work and their potential;

“Another development is investment dedicated to increasing the proportion of reserve wines, which now routinely surpasses 50% for the Brut Réserve (it was more like 35% not long ago). Recent releases from Billecart have been excellent and show all that work very clearly, and surely the upward trajectory will be perpetuated if the house continues to invest in agronomic improvements. Fans of Billecart’s elegant, pillowy but precise style will be delighted by everything…”

The Range

Billecart’s attention to detail extends beyond Brut/Le Réserve – their full range of non-vintage cuvées have been reviewed in the same vein;

  • The Brut Rosé will become Le Rosé
  • The Brut Sous Bois will become Le Sous Bois
  • The Brut Blanc de Blancs will become Le Blanc de Blancs

Billecart-Salmon NV Le Réserve

Was ‘Brut Réserve’

What’s Different:

  • An extended ageing time on lees, increased from an already astonishing average of 30 to 50 months. The minimum ageing requirement for NV cuvées in Champagne is just 15 months.
  • A reduced dosage for greater purity and expression of terroir.
  • More depth with 15 vintages in the bottle.
  • A larger proportion of wines vinified in barrels, adding richness and density.
  • A second wine (Inspiration 1818) was introduced to lift average quality across the board for the house NV range

Fans are already aflutter, with ‘Word on the Grapevine’ calling it “the new benchmark non-vintage champagne”;

“This scale of investment is largely unrivalled amongst grand marques, in part because so many are beholden to shareholders or management, being family-owned and managed liberates long-term vision from quarterly returns. The resultant Le Réserve is a showstopper… Don’t walk, run to taste this new benchmark non-vintage champagne.

When you make internationally renowned champagne for 206 years you don’t have to rock the boat, but that’s exactly what Grand Marque (Great Brand) Billecart-Salmon has done with the new releases of their flagship non-vintage champagnes. The Brut Reserve NV, soon to be called “Le [Réserve],” remains a blend of 40% Meunier, 30% Chardonnay, and 30% Pinot Noir, but now incorporates a perpetual blend (62%, 2006-2018) for the first time, adding depth and complexity, and the dosage has dropped from 8g/l to 3g/l, resulting in a much drier and refined style of champagne. In addition, the base vintage (38%) is from the fantastic 2019 “solar” harvest, which produced ripe grapes with high levels of acidity. The majority of wines (92%) were fermented in stainless steel tanks and a small but consequential amount (8%) were fermented in oak casks. Finally, the Brut Reserve only went through partial malolactic fermentation to preserve the freshness of the 2019 vintage. Disgorged in the spring of 2023. If you’re already a fan of Billecart-Salmon prepare to love them even more. If you haven’t tried Billecart-Salmon before, it’s time to discover this legendary Grand Maison. – Philip Roufail

Billecart-Salmon NV Le Rosé

Was ‘Brut Rosé’

  • 33% Pinot Noir, 43% Chardonnay, 24% Meunier
  • Low-temperature vinification in stainless steel tanks
  • Ageing on lees: 36 months
  • Extra Brut dosage (4.7 g/L)

“Based on the 2020 vintage, Billecart-Salmon’s signature rosé appears to be on its finest form of recent years under cellar master Florent Nys, full of fragrant, crunchy redcurrant, red cherry and orange fruit with an alluring hibiscus-like floral lift and subtle green peppercorn spicing. The Meunier wraps the intensity of the vintage base in a little softness that keeps the focus on effortless ease (helped by the selection of delicate Chardonnays and young, fresh reserve wines), all adding up to a rosé of immediacy and charm, sweet-natured without sweetness and fragrant without overt fruitiness.”
– Decanter, 92 Points

 

“The NV Brut Rosé (base 2020) is another wine that points to the progress Mathieu Roland-Billecart has made here in recent years. Pliant, creamy and super-expressive, this edition is striking. It has a good bit of textural richness and is fresher than the 2018 tasted alongside it. Of course, some of that may be as simple as time in bottle. Pomegranate and grapefruit are laced into the brisk, finely cut finish.”
– Vinous

Billecart-Salmon NV Le Sous Bois

Was ‘Brut Sous Bois’

  • 48% Pinot Noir, 30% Chardonnay, 20% Meunier
  • Low-temperature vinification in oak casks
  • Ageing on lees: 5 years
  • Extra Brut dosage (2 g/L)

“Based on the 2016 vintage with 26% réserve wines from eight different vintages, Billecart-Salmon’s NV Sous Bois exhales a delicate, toasty bouquet of mirabelle, tangerine, white fruits, ripe orchard fruits and baked bread, mingled with delicate notes of vanilla pod. Medium to full-bodied, round and creamy, it’s perfectly balanced with a vinous, fleshy core of fruit and a delicately toasty finish complemented with gastronomic bitterness… Since Mathieu Roland-Billecart’s arrival in 2018, the estate has expanded its barrel program, focusing on the best terroirs for cuvées like Brut Réserve and Brut Sous Bois…
– Yohan Castaing for The Wine Advocate

Billecart-Salmon NV Le Blanc de Blancs

Was ‘Brut Blanc de Blancs’

  • 100% Chardonnay from the four Grand Cru vineyards of the Côte des Blancs: Avize, Chouilly, Cramant, Mesnil-sur-Oger.
  • Low-temperature vinification in stainless steel tanks
  • Ageing on lees: 5 years
  • Extra Brut dosage (1.7 g/L)

“The NV Brut Blanc de Blancs Grand Cru is showing beautifully today, with aromas of confit citrus, pear, herbs, orchard fruits, pastry and brioche. Medium to full-bodied, it is round and supple with the delicate, bright tension that is the signature of Billecart-Salmon. Perfectly balanced and offering a vinous, toasty and elegantly long finish, it’s based on the 2017 vintage with 23% from 2016. Vinified and matured in stainless steel, it spent five years on the lees in bottle before being disgorged with a dosage of 1.7 grams per liter.”
– Yohan Castaing for The Wine Advocate

My Origin

Unlock the secrets of your cuvée with MyOrigin.

Your digital tool to discover the Champagne you’re about to taste, down to every last detail: grape varieties, dosage, disgorgement date, number of vintages contained in each cuvée, total sugar and food pairings. Billecart-Salmon reveals everything in full transparency thanks to the 6-digit number located on the back label of your bottle.


New from Billecart-Salmon: Rendez-Vous No. 6

Rendez-Vous N°6 by Billecart-Salmon 

11 October, 2024In New Releases, News, Wines

Rendez-Vous N°6 by Billecart-Salmon

A Limited Global Release

New from Billecart-Salmon: Rendez-Vous No. 6

“Precise, New, Bold, each new release will epitomise an exceptional terroir and a champagne grape variety as well as the art of a meticulous winemaking”

Billecart-Salmon website

Hold on to your hats, Champagne aficionados, because this brand new release from famed Billecart-Salmon may be the most profound Blanc de Blancs of your life! 

When it comes to champagne, at D&N we fall very hard for mineral, incisive Blanc de Blancs. The chalkiness, the electrifying acidity, the sense that you’re practically drinking the region’s limestone soil. We can’t get enough of it. 

Now, our prestigious champagne Maison, Billecart-Salmon has intensified those extraordinary Blanc de Blancs qualities and shot them into another stratosphere with its limited global release of Rendez-Vous N°6 

“Billecart-Salmon is in the very top echelon of Champagne houses – it is one of only four awarded the 10/10 rating”

Tyson Stelzer, Acclaimed Champagne Specialist

We know Champagne is never just a simple glass of fizz… As soon as the cork flies, the first sip reveals a wine of fascinating complexity. For even the most modest cuvée, a bevy of blending decisions, multi layers of history and the incalculable climate of this northern corner of France all come into play. 

This is never truer than at prestigious champagne Grande Marque Billecart-Salmon where, the maison has been on a 7 generation quest for excellence, by constantly experimenting with new ideas and methods to highlight the unique quality of its wines and terroirs.

The Billecart-Salmon Rendez-Vous Collection

About the Billecart-Salmon Rendez-vous Collection

Mathieu Roland-Billecart, explains: “Billecart-Salmon experiments all the time, whether it’s in the vineyard or in our vinification process. What that means is that we try new things to further improve the quality wherever we can [ ]” And this is what the Rendez-Vous series is all about. 

Launched in 2020, the range was created after cellar experiments conducted by the House’s Tasting Committee to assess the evolution of select grape varieties and exceptional terroirs. The most remarkable were chosen and highlighted through this Collection, offering a unique tasting experience in a very limited edition.

The N°6 champagne is made from grapes from one of the most emblematic Grand Cru villages of the Côte des Blancs. The wines of Mesnil-sur-Oger are remarkable for their great tension. This is Chardonnay of unequalled purity and minerality. This stunning release may just be Champagne in its most thrilling form.

“The Billecart family doesn’t rest on its laurels.”

– Decanter, Stephen Brook

Marrying Precision with Purity in Chardonnay

The Billecart-Salmon Rendez-Vous N°6 series release was created to provide a platform for Champagne’s exceptional terroir and a premier grape variety, Chardonnay, and the meticulous art of winemaking.

Precision and Purity of Identity is at the very core of Rendez-Vous N°6. Crafted with an attentive focus on fruit purity and flavour balance, it stands out with its aromatic nose of ripe fruit and spring blossoms. On the palate, tension and tactility emerge, elevated by a seductive chalky imprint and radiant complexity. It is characterized by a pale gold colour with green tints that delights in the glass.

Chardonnay Grapes, ready for champagne vinification

Remarkably, this is fruit taken exclusively from the 2014 vintage. This wine benefits from a slow and meticulous ageing on lees during a period of 82 months. A very selective approach is used, based on the concentration of the fruit and achieving the ultimate balance of flavours.

Let’s talk about the 82 months cellaring! 

Billecart-Salmon is famously slow to release all their wines – with over three to four years in cellars the non-vintage champagnes really blossom, staying around twice as long as the fixed regulations of the appellation. The vintage cuvées patiently wait ten years before they begin to reveal their maturity. Allowing time to play its role is behind the grandeur of all Billecart-Salmon champagnes.

The Billecart-Salmon vineyards

Champagne aficionados will truly appreciate that this a major commitment to our drinking pleasure. A prestige bottle really only starts to strut its stuff after the innumerable calculations of the tasting team and the cellar master indicates that the Champagne is entering its most exciting drinking window.

All the crystalline precision you expect from Grand Cru Blanc de Blancs is here in the Billecart-Salmon Rendez-Vous N°6 along with a serious amount of power.

We didn’t get much, so secure some for yourself before it’s gone – Don’t hesitate – Go deep.

Since 1818, over 7 generations of the Billecart-Salmon family, each member has endeavoured to continue the family tradition, staying faithful to the same motto:

“Give priority to quality, strive for excellence”.

Billecart-Salmon's Les Rendez-Vous No. 6

Billecart-Salmon Rendez-Vous N°6 NVChampagne, France

Appearance
Its luminous gold colour offers a radiant, sparkling finish that gives way to a fine persistent bubble.

Aroma
Its sensory development leans on distinguished aromatic floral notes, which speaks to its great minerality of fruits (white roses, jasmine and the flesh of citrus fruit). Its sensual, meringue flavour is based on white pome fruit (tart pear and clementine juice). It is the perfect expression of subtly disciplined Chardonnay, meticulously matured on the lees.

Palate
A captivatingly tense tactile sensation is dominated by a chalky, seductive spirit (double cream, almond powder and tender nougat). A radiant complexity combined with a characteristic touch of salinity of the great terroirs of the Côte des Blancs. A delicate finish with hints of bergamot, iodine and white pepper

  • From – Florent NYS, oenologist and Billecart-Salmon’s Chief Winemaker.
  • 100% Chardonnay from Mesnil-sur-Oger from the Côte des Blancs, year 2014
  • 100% Grand Cru
  • Vinification in stainless steel tanks
  • Maturation on lees / in cellar: 82 months
  • Dosage: 5.6 g/l

Check Availability

André Clouet the Dream Vintage

André Clouet: Champagne Dreams

27 August, 2024In New Releases, Wines

André Clouet: Champagne Dreams

André Clouet Dream Vintage Champagne

“For those in the know, the rare cuvées of André Clouet are immensely sought-after. You can’t buy these champagnes year-round in Australia, because they quickly sell out as soon as a shipment lands.”
Tyson Stelzer, Acclaimed Wine Writer & Champagne Expert

When we first brought on Champagne André Clouet in 2017, we were astounded at the way it managed to capture the hearts and the palates of both our staff and customers immediately.

At the time, we had only brought on their NV Grandé Reserve Brut – a 100% Pinot Noir Champagne from their family vineyards in Bouzy and adorned with an intricate blue and gold label designed in 1911. It wasn’t one of the ‘big’ Champagne names but it was one that carried with it a lot of respect, with a detectable electric undercurrent of intrigue reserved for only the most ‘boutique’ and ‘in-the-know’ producers.

We soon added their No.5 Brut Rosé and their V6 Experience cuvées to the line up, who have in time also garnered a passionate group of fans here in NZ. Then, earlier this year we ordered a few hundred bottles of his Blanc de Blancs – Chalky – which sold out by word of mouth within two hours of booking the stock…

Which brings us to this announcement. We are so excited to announce the upcoming arrival of a new VINTAGE cuvée.

“His champagnes offer that something else, without the Hollywood budget, yet with pyrotechnics all of their own.”
– Tyson Stelzer

Dream Vintage by André Clouet

André Clouet, Dream Vintage 2005

Everyone knows vintage Champagne has a little something extra to offer – we’ve blogged about it pretty extensively before, which we’ll touch on here but like all his cuvées, André Clouet adds extra to that extra.

In their own words; “The Dream Vintage collection is a masterful gourmet retrospective dedicated to the great vintages of Champagne. This collection is crafted with a base of Chardonnay, known for its elegance and finesse. The equipment is reminiscent of the great Cadillac classics: Fiesta Red, Chrystal Green, Ebony Black, and other colors that make big dreams come true.”

Even though André Clouet is known for its Pinots, they are far more than a one-grape pony. The 2005 vintage produced remarkable Chardonnays, with aromas of white flowers, citrus fruit and mineral notes. A cold, dry winter was followed by a moderate spring, favouring good growth. After a variable summer, a heat wave at the end of August accelerated ripening. The September harvest took place under ideal conditions, with sunny days and cool nights.”

Tyson Stelzer spoke to Clouet in his Champagne Guide 2020-2021 Edition VI about the creation of the series, “‘Growers on the Côte des Blancs make a national sport of finding red wine for rosé on the Montagne de Reims, and I prefer to swap than sell – so I amassed a cellar of Côtes des Blancs chardonnay.’ Not wanting to change the style of his existing cuvées by blending, he instead conceived a new range, which he dubbed ‘Dream Vintage,’ of between 2000 and 4000 bottles of blanc de blancs each season.”

Champagne André Clouet

Dream Vintage Grand Cru 2005

  • 100% Grand Cru Chardonnay (Blanc de Blancs)
  • Dosage: 2.4g/L
  • No oak
  • 12% Alc.
  • Label: Classic Cadillac inspired Fiesta Red

A golden yellow hue and brimming with luscious golden delicious apple and pineapple fruit, true to this warm vintage. It’s a spicy and rich style and it relies on this generosity in order to carry the dry phenolic grip and coffee and cocoa notes of the season.

Champagne André Clouet Dream Vintage Grand Cru 2005

James Suckling, 93 Points (2022): “If you like mature champagnes then this has a lot of depth and offers a lot of pleasure. Tons of nutty character (also a touch of peanut) and plenty of toasty notes, the dried-fruit aromas very much in the background. Long and intense finish that’s properly dry. 100% chardonnay. Drink now.”

Lobenberg, 95-96+ Points (2023): “The 2005 vintage gave the Chardonnay wines exceptional quality. Fresh, noble and with a long finish. They develop aromas of white flowers, citrus fruits and mineral notes. Enjoyable early and yet long-lasting.”

Tyson Stelzer, 90 Points (2020): “Jean-François prefers his 2005 Dream Collection to 2008. Both accurately articulate the mood of their contrasting seasons, the 2005 is already a golden yellow hue and brimming with luscious golden delicious apple and pineapple fruit, true to this warm vintage. It’s a spicy and rich style and it relies on this generosity in order to carry the dry phenolic grip and coffee and cocoa notes of the season.”

Champagne André Clouet

André Clouet Champagne, established 1911

The Clouet family history in Bouzy dates back to the 1400’s. Before their vinous adventures, the Clouet ancestors were the appointed printers for the French monarchs. Over the next 200 years and through several generations, the family slowly accumulated vineyards in Bouzy before finally, in 1741 they first started to make Champagne. Cellars were dug into the chalky soils and the family set down their roots officially in the town they’d spent several centuries in under the watchful eye of one André Clouet.

“During Creation, when God grew weary of sculpting the mountings, razing the deserts and firing up the volcanoes, he treated himself to a few moments of pleasure. He designed a little earthly paradise called Bouzy.”

André Clouet’s descendants took over his estate, ensuring that it remained in the family. The property had aged but has now been modernised, and the team working to perpetuate the House of André Clouet is inspired above all by the desire to preserve the personality of its champagnes. 

“Jean-François is deeply rooted in the heritage of his village,” explains Tyson Stelzer in his book, The Champagne Guide 2020-2021 Edition VI, “He still possesses his family’s request for a deed for the purchase of land in Champagne by their ancestors in 1689 and a letter from the 1820’s requesting an order of Rosé to be sent to Paris.” 

A story the family loves to tell is that of André Clouet’s memorable interaction with Marie Antoinette. In 1770, the future Queen of France visited the vineyards in Bouzy and a dinner in her honour was organised in a castle not far from the village. Andre Clouet was in attendance and decided to entertain the guests at the Queen’s table by adding a few drops of red wine from their vineyards to the white wine. Known as “Bouzy Rouge,” this Vin des Sacres, was the red wine served to celebrate the crowning of the French Kings.

On that night, it’s said the ladies’ eyes began to sparkle with amazement as the white wine became pink!

The men raised a toast to the Queen and André Clouet proclaimed: “This is how we perfect Pinot Noir in Champagne! Now the Burgundians will just have to deal with it!”

A few years later, a cousin placed an order for some of this ‘pink wine’, but sparkling this time, for her “crazy English friends!”

Jean-François Clouet 

Jean-François is the larger-than-life current generation of the Clouet line and is at the helm of this family Estate. Growing up amongst the vines, the vineyards are in his blood. He’s been described as many things – a wizard, a wonder, a ringmaster… and all of these may be true but there’s no doubt his legacy will also recognise him as a phenomenal vigneron. 

“One of the living rock stars of Champagne, Jean-François choreographs every element of his business with his inimitable flair and accomplishment…”
– Tyson Stelzer

A fun story he enjoys telling pertains to the tanks and barrels that age the wines;

“When I was a little boy, I loved walking around the wine-making cellar. In my imagination, the enormous wine tanks transformed and became champions, guardians, protectors of the wine…

My Heroes! Creaking, wheezing, groaning, squealing, sweating… sometimes they even seemed to be laughing! I watched the noisy show, as some were gushing from their nozzles, while others were being filled up. I grew up learning to play with my heroes who live in the wine-cellars.

Each has its own name and personality to share and their attributes come alive in the wines:

Superman, Zeus, and Thor lend their power to the Cuvée Grande Reserve.

Laser, D’artagnan and Zorro transmit their intensity, tension and minerality to the Brut Silver.

Sophie Marceau, Heather Locklear and Michelle Pheiffer flirt beautifully with the Rosé.

Rocky comes out swinging to make a Dream Vintage!

As I blend to create champagne, I work to find the perfect balance of characteristics that come from all my remarkable, dauntless heroes: the Stainless Steel Giants.”

Jean-François Clouet, illustrated youth

The 2005 Vintage

Vintage champagne remains the ultimate luxury libation: favoured by wine collectors, investors, wine geeks and of course, the rich and famous. Looking at the labels on bottles of bubbles on shop shelves you’ll not likely see a year written on many. That’s because most champagne is non-vintage (NV), or ‘Champagne sans année’ as the French more attractively describe it. Non-vintage champagne is made from a blend of two or usually more harvests and accounts for the vast majority of champagne production. Vintage Champagne – or more correctly, ‘millésimé’ – has to be 100% from the year indicated on the label and, as a result, is more variable in style. It is, in effect, a true expression of one single harvest and accounts for less than 5% of the champagne production. 

A brief search shows a number of reports on how the 2005 vintage fared but one consistently mentioned trait was that the chardonnays were the standout grape for the season – fabulous news for this Grand Cru blanc de blancs.  

In 2018, Decanter rated the 2005 vintage as 4/5  “As we write, we believe the 2005 harvest will provide the opportunity of making some superlative blends… and probably vintage champagne…Initial tasting sessions have confirmed that the Chardonnays are indeed excellent wines.”

Wine Spectator rated the vintage as an overall 90, “Open-knit and approachable versions capable of short-term cellaring; Chardonnay fared best.”

Wine Searcher dubbed the vintage “Excellent” and advised “Overall, the 2005 Champagne vintage was excellent but perhaps stopped short of outstanding. The very best wines are likely to still be drinking well now.”

Listen to Tyson Stelzer… 

You can choose to take our word for it when it comes to Clouet’s brilliance, but if you don’t then you must listen to Tyson Stelzer. 

Already quoted a few times in this piece, he is a multi-award winning wine writer, television host and producer and international speaker. Tyson has been named The International Wine & Spirit Communicator of the Year, The Australian Wine Communicator of the Year and The International Champagne Writer of the Year. He is the author and publisher of seventeen wine books, contributor to many wine magazines, a frequent judge and chair at Australian wine shows and a presenter at wine events in 12 countries. All this to say: he knows his wine and is great at articulating the magic where mere mortals fall short!

“Jean-François is a courageous visionary and an ebullient creative with the nous to bring his dreams to completion and the humility to gather round him the talent to make it happen.”

In 2017, Tyson published an article titled “Is this the most underrated champagne grower of all?” which is a poetic and beautiful summation of this Champagne House, which we’ve detailed below, or that you can read here.

“It’s always puzzled me that the remarkable, terroir-expressive champagnes of André Clouet never seem to come up among the rockstar growers of Champagne. And yet on the basis of his current cuvées, I have again anointed this little grower in the grand cru village of Bouzy among the top six growers in Champagne. This of course places him among the top sparkling growers on earth. My scores rank him equal to Dom Pérignon, Louis Roederer and Taittinger. And that’s mighty company!

For those in the know, the rare cuvées of André Clouet are immensely sought-after. You can’t buy these champagnes year-round in Australia, because they quickly sell out as soon as a shipment lands. Cru Bar in Brisbane recently told me of a pallet arriving and selling before the staff even had time to unpack it into the store.

I am always intrigued that something of the personality of the maker is translated into the character of all great wines. In this, the wines of Jean-François Clouet capture a profound and intriguing juxtaposition.

The man and his cuvées are deeply rooted into the multilayered and convoluted history of Champagne, arguably more than any other. He is the privileged custodian of eight hectares of estate vines in the best middle slopes of Bouzy and Ambonnay, the epicentre of pinot noir in Champagne. His family heritage in Bouzy extends back to 1492 and they have been making their own champagnes here since the early 1700s.

Every time I introduce new friends to Jean-François, he doesn’t first show us through his winery or cellars, doesn’t walk us through rows of vines, or even pour his champagnes. He takes us to the top of the vineyards, on the edge of the forest overlooking Bouzy, and recounts the remarkable sweep of history that has played out in view of this place over two millennia, and the role his own family has played in the stories: Attila the Hun, the Battle of the Catalaunian Fields, the birth of the monarchy, the crusades, the Templars, Marie Antoinette. ‘To understand Champagne you need to understand its political history,’ he says.

It’s a history that lives on in his champagnes, both in spectacularly classical labels designed by his great grandfather in 1911 (harking back to the family’s printer heritage, making books for the king since 1491), and in a traditional approach in the vineyards and the cellar. ‘I like the idea of the work of human hands in pruning, performing the same actions as my grandfather and even the Romans, who planted vines here 2000 years ago.’

Such deep heritage makes for a striking contrast to the flamboyant personality of Jean-François, dubbed by one of my recent guests as ‘a combination of winemaker and circus ringmaster.’

He is daringly creative, with a distinctly modern twist to his approach. It is his goal that some day none of his champagnes will have any dosage at all, an ideal that he rightly describes as revolutionary.

His are rich and concentrated expressions of pinot noir, wines of deep complexity, multifaceted interest and engaging character, yet with remarkable restraint and sense of control. Tasting after tasting confirm my impression that this small and relatively unknown grower ranks high among Champagne’s finest practitioners of pinot noir — and represents one of the best value of all.

And yet for all of his success, this extroverted young chef de cave doesn’t take himself too seriously. ‘Champagne is always for flirting!’ he grins.

Visits with Jean-François are always recounted as a highlight by my little tour groups in Champagne, and it has long been my dream to introduce my knowledgeable and entertaining friend in Australia.”


'Chalky' Champagne from André Clouet

André Clouet: The Champagne of Chalk and Kings

André Clouet: The Champagne of Chalk and Kings

A look at one of our most enchanting winemakers through the lens of his new cuvée, Chalky

'Chalky' Champagne from André Clouet

“For those in the know, the rare cuvées of André Clouet are immensely sought-after. You can’t buy these champagnes year-round in Australia, because they quickly sell out as soon as a shipment lands”

– Tyson Stelzer, Acclaimed Wine Writer & Champagne Expert

When we first brought on Champagne André Clouet in 2017, we were astounded at the way it managed to capture the hearts and the palates of both our staff and customers immediately, casting a spell over everyone it encountered and wrapping us up in an instant vinous infatuation – we simply had to have it. 

At the time, we had only brought on their NV Grandé Reserve Brut – a 100% Pinot Noir Champagne from their family vineyards in Bouzy and adorned with an intricate blue and gold label designed in 1911. It wasn’t one of the ‘big’ Champagne names, but it carried with it a lot of respect and a detectable electric undercurrent of intrigue, reserved for only the most ‘boutique’ and ‘in-the-know’ of producers. We pretty quickly added their No.5 Brut Rosé and their V6 Experience cuvées to the line up who in time, have also garnered a passionate group of fans here in New Zealand.

And now, seven years after adding this historic and revered house to our stable, we are so excited to announce the upcoming arrival of a new cuvée. NV Chalky is perhaps the most beautiful, clean, minimalist and frankly, instagrammable bottle we’ve laid our eyes on, and it houses the first Blanc de Blancs cuvée from the king of Pinot Noir, proving this producer is more than a one-grape pony.

“His champagnes offer that something else, without the Hollywood budget, yet with pyrotechnics all of their own.”

– Tyson Stelzer, Acclaimed Wine Writer & Champagne Expert

Chalky by André Clouet

‘Chalky’ draws reference to the very soils which made Champagne famous.

“No matter what I do, chalky soil is stuck to the soles of my shoes. It’s been a part of me since I was a child!”

– Jean-François Clouet

The Chardonnays that make up this cuvée grow one-third on the southern slopes of the Montagne de Reims and two-thirds on the Côte de Blancs.

Chalky is a particularly noteworthy addition to the Clouet lineup in that it’s a deviation from their cornerstone varietal, Pinot Noir. The other cuvées Clouet produces are all Blanc de Noirs from their vines in Bouzy, where Pinot Noir thrives. Jean-François – the winemaker and descendant of the domaine’s namesake, André Clouet – is never one to shy away from a challenge. Known for his uncanny knack at extracting balance, flavour, texture and character from this varietal – he’s also a big, charismatic and inherently curious personality. So while the pivot away from Blanc de Noirs may be intriguing, for anyone that knows about Jean-François Clouet, it’s really no surprise at all and perhaps even less surprising, is the fact he’s nailed it.

The Chalky Blanc de Blancs was aged for an astonishing 72 months on lees – or six years. The base wines of this initial NV release come from the “late-ripening, almost brutally brilliant year” (Lobenburg) 2013. Disgorgement was in 2021, with a dosage of 6g. The resulting wine is creamy, mineral and – you guessed it – chalky.

Chalky Champagne by André Clouet

Champagne André Clouet Chalky Blanc de Blancs Brut NV

  • 100% Chardonnay (1/3 from the southern slopes of the Montagne de Reims, 2/3 from the Côte de Blancs)
  • Ageing: 72 Months On Lees
  • Dosage: 6g/L
  • 12% Alc.
  • Best Drinking: 2024 – 2035

A bright golden colour. Powerful nose of lightly candied fruit and spice. Notes from the aromas accelerate on the palate with added notes of ginger bread with sweet citrus. Expect a lively, salty, mineral inflected wine.

Perfect for an aperitif or with fresh oysters.

Sally Hillman: “Taking to the Chardonnay vines with the precision of a Renaissance sculptor, Jean-François Clouet carves a brand-new, pure and flawless Blanc de Blancs cuvée from Champagne’s deep, chalky bedrock.”

Falstaff Magazine, 93 Points: “Medium golden yellow. Quite classic on the nose with citrus notes, exotic fruit nuances of mango and passion fruit. Elegant on the palate with a fine mousse, a noticeable impression of sweetness and a certain minerality. Complex even in the long aftertaste with smoky nuances.”

Lobenberg Wine Guide, 96 Points: What does 200 million years of manifest minerality taste like? Jean-Francois Clouet put the answer in this bottle. A completely new wine in Clouet’s portfolio, bottled in a special white-coated bottle with a matching box in a chalk cliff design… As the name suggests, Chalky tastes like the salty-chalky purism of the chalk soils of Champagne, but it wouldn’t be a Clouet if it didn’t also exude a wonderful, melting charm and seductive appeal. 200 million years of minerality poured into the bottle as liquid chalk, what a smooth, delicious mineral hammer!”

Why Chalk?

There’s two elements to the Champenois love affair with chalk; the vines and the cellars.

Ripening with André Clouet

The Vines:

Chalk (limestone) makes for a naturally high pH, alkaline-rich soil, with neutral shades of white, grey or beige that can also reflect sunlight to promote photosynthesis. It’s origins began over 200 million years ago, after the Jurassic sea levels receded and tectonic shift exposed an array of fossilised shells, coral and other debris that had accumulated and formed calcified sediments on the ancient sea floor. These remains give limestone its distinctive chemical makeup, called calcium carbonate.

This calcium carbonate content is extremely beneficial for vines. First, it offers incredible water retention capabilities while simultaneously permitting excellent drainage. Secondly, calcium rich limestone soils tend to have a higher pH than other soils, which translates to easier nutrient absorption and higher acidity levels in fruit that aids age-ability to the wines. Third, the high calcium content in limestone also helps berries fight off diseases. When calcium content in soils is low, grapes begin to prioritise their inner health rather than skin health, which in turn, makes clusters more susceptible to disease and rot.

All of this to say, fruit grown in limestone soils generally has bright acidity and solid structure, which then lead to wines of serious age worthy potential. (Read more about soil types and their impacts on vines here).

The etched-in '1741'

The Cellars:

Clouet explains, “Chalk is the protector of champagne as it ages, allowing itself to be dug into deep underground cellars, where the precious nectar can safely mature, tucked away from the light and fluctuations in temperature.”

Clouet’s cellar, where all of their cuvées age, was dug under their home in the 1700s. They have recently undertaken a project to expand their winemaking facilities and cellars, which is still in progress now.

Champagne André Clouet

The Clouet family history in Bouzy dates back to the 1400’s. Before their vinous adventures, the Clouet ancestors were the appointed printers for the French monarchs. Over the next 200 years and through several generations, the family slowly accumulated vineyards in Bouzy before finally, in 1741 they first started to make Champagne. Cellars were dug into the chalky soils and the family set down their roots officially in the town they’d spent several centuries in under the watchful eye of one André Clouet.

Champagne André Clouet

“During Creation, when God grew weary of sculpting the mountings, razing the deserts and firing up the volcanoes, he treated himself to a few moments of pleasure. He designed a little earthly paradise called Bouzy.”

André Clouet’s descendants took over his estate, ensuring that it remained in the family. The property had aged but has now been modernised, and the team working to perpetuate the House of André Clouet is inspired above all by the desire to preserve the personality of its champagnes.

“Jean-François is deeply rooted in the heritage of his village,” explains Tyson Stelzer in his book, The Champagne Guide 2020-2021 Edition VI, “He still possesses his family’s request for a deed for the purchase of land in Champagne by their ancestors in 1689 and a letter from the 1820’s requesting an order of Rosé to be sent to Paris.”

A story the family loves to tell is that of André Clouet’s memorable interaction with Marie Antoinette. In 1770, the future Queen of France visited the vineyards in Bouzy and a dinner in her honour was organised in a castle not far from the village. Andre Clouet was in attendance and decided to entertain the guests at the Queen’s table by adding a few drops of red wine from their vineyards to the white wine. Known as “Bouzy Rouge,” this Vin des Sacres, was the red wine served to celebrate the crowning of the French Kings.

On that night, it’s said the ladies’ eyes began to sparkle with amazement as the white wine became pink!

The men raised a toast to the Queen and André Clouet proclaimed: “This is how we perfect Pinot Noir in Champagne! Now the Burgundians will just have to deal with it!”

A few years later, a cousin placed an order for some of this ‘pink wine’, but sparkling this time, for her “crazy English friends!”

Jean-François Clouet

Jean-François Clouet, winemaker for André Clouet

Jean-François is the larger-than-life current generation of the Clouet line and is at the helm of this family Estate. Growing up amongst the vines, the vineyards are in his blood. He’s been described as many things – a wizard, a wonder, a ringmaster… and all of these may be true but there’s no doubt his legacy will also recognise him as a phenomenal vigneron.

“One of the living rock stars of Champagne, Jean-François choreographs every element of his business with his inimitable flair and accomplishment…”

– Tyson Stelzer

A fun story he enjoys telling pertains to the tanks and barrels that age the wines;

“When I was a little boy, I loved walking around the wine-making cellar. In my imagination, the enormous wine tanks transformed and became champions, guardians, protectors of the wine…

“My Heroes! Creaking, wheezing, groaning, squealing, sweating… sometimes they even seemed to be laughing! I watched the noisy show, as some were gushing from their nozzles, while others were being filled up. I grew up learning to play with my heroes who live in the wine-cellars.

“Each has its own name and personality to share and their attributes come alive in the wines: Superman, Zeus, and Thor lend their power to the Cuvée Grande Reserve.

“Laser, D’artagnan and Zorro transmit their intensity, tension and minerality to the Brut Silver.

“Sophie Marceau, Heather Locklear and Michelle Pheiffer flirt beautifully with the Rosé.

“Rocky comes out swinging to make a Dream Vintage!

“As I blend to create champagne, I work to find the perfect balance of characteristics that come from all my remarkable, dauntless heroes: the Stainless Steel Giants.”

Listen to Tyson Stelzer…

You can choose to take our word for it when it comes to Clouet’s brilliance, but if you don’t then you must listen to Tyson Stelzer.

Already quoted a few times in this piece, he is a multi-award winning wine writer, television host and producer and international speaker. Tyson has been named The International Wine & Spirit Communicator of the Year, The Australian Wine Communicator of the Year and The International Champagne Writer of the Year. He is the author and publisher of seventeen wine books, contributor to many wine magazines, a frequent judge and chair at Australian wine shows and a presenter at wine events in 12 countries. All this to say: he knows his wine and is great at articulating the magic where mere mortals fall short!

“Jean-François is a courageous visionary and an ebullient creative with the nous to bring his dreams to completion and the humility to gather round him the talent to make it happen.”

In 2017, Tyson published an article titled “Is this the most underrated champagne grower of all?” which is a poetic and beautiful summation of this Champagne House, which we’ve detailed below:

“It’s always puzzled me that the remarkable, terroir-expressive champagnes of André Clouet never seem to come up among the rockstar growers of Champagne. And yet on the basis of his current cuvées, I have again anointed this little grower in the grand cru village of Bouzy among the top six growers in Champagne. This of course places him among the top sparkling growers on earth. My scores rank him equal to Dom Pérignon, Louis Roederer and Taittinger. And that’s mighty company!

“For those in the know, the rare cuvées of André Clouet are immensely sought-after. You can’t buy these champagnes year-round in Australia, because they quickly sell out as soon as a shipment lands. Cru Bar in Brisbane recently told me of a pallet arriving and selling before the staff even had time to unpack it into the store.

“I am always intrigued that something of the personality of the maker is translated into the character of all great wines. In this, the wines of Jean-François Clouet capture a profound and intriguing juxtaposition.

“The man and his cuvées are deeply rooted into the multilayered and convoluted history of Champagne, arguably more than any other. He is the privileged custodian of eight hectares of estate vines in the best middle slopes of Bouzy and Ambonnay, the epicentre of pinot noir in Champagne. His family heritage in Bouzy extends back to 1492 and they have been making their own champagnes here since the early 1700s.

“Every time I introduce new friends to Jean-François, he doesn’t first show us through his winery or cellars, doesn’t walk us through rows of vines, or even pour his champagnes. He takes us to the top of the vineyards, on the edge of the forest overlooking Bouzy, and recounts the remarkable sweep of history that has played out in view of this place over two millennia, and the role his own family has played in the stories: Attila the Hun, the Battle of the Catalaunian Fields, the birth of the monarchy, the crusades, the Templars, Marie Antoinette. ‘To understand Champagne you need to understand its political history,’ he says.

“It’s a history that lives on in his champagnes, both in spectacularly classical labels designed by his great grandfather in 1911 (harking back to the family’s printer heritage, making books for the king since 1491), and in a traditional approach in the vineyards and the cellar. ‘I like the idea of the work of human hands in pruning, performing the same actions as my grandfather and even the Romans, who planted vines here 2000 years ago.’

“Such deep heritage makes for a striking contrast to the flamboyant personality of Jean-François, dubbed by one of my recent guests as ‘a combination of winemaker and circus ringmaster.’

“He is daringly creative, with a distinctly modern twist to his approach. It is his goal that some day none of his champagnes will have any dosage at all, an ideal that he rightly describes as revolutionary.

“His are rich and concentrated expressions of pinot noir, wines of deep complexity, multifaceted interest and engaging character, yet with remarkable restraint and sense of control. Tasting after tasting confirm my impression that this small and relatively unknown grower ranks high among Champagne’s finest practitioners of pinot noir — and represents one of the best value of all.

“And yet for all of his success, this extroverted young chef de cave doesn’t take himself too seriously. ‘Champagne is always for flirting!’ he grins.

“Visits with Jean-François are always recounted as a highlight by my little tour groups in Champagne, and it has long been my dream to introduce my knowledgeable and entertaining friend in Australia.”

That Packaging Though… 🤩

André Clouet

The (beautiful) elephant in the room here is undoubtedly the phenomenal packaging that Clouet’s Chalky is presented in.

You don’t have to look far to see where the inspiration was drawn from (really, just take a look at the cellars!), but the execution is simply as much of a visual masterpiece as the phenomenal juice it holds, and brilliantly announces the kind of ‘simple done well’ beauty that one can expect when opening the bottle.

They’ve taken ‘Chalky’ quite literally, and made the bottle and its gift box look like… well.. Chalk. But they’ve done it with stunning accuracy and still managed to weave the signature Clouet label branding through.

It’s sleek, minimalist, and draws the eye with its sheer modesty and sophistication. Frankly, we can’t imagine a situation where this bottle wouldn’t look divine. It’s the ideal bridal Champagne (imagine the wedding photos!) or celebratory tipple at any event. Little black dress? How about little white champagne…


Chardonnay Day Wine Tasting

Join our D&N Auckland team this International Chardonnay Day to celebrate the queen of white wines - Chardonnay! Taste four different Chardonnays from our portfolio from four regions, representing just some of the fantastic styles of wine this incredible variety can make.

The Line up
  • Twenty Acres by Bogle Chardonnay (California, USA)
  • Johner Estate Lime Hill Vineyard Chardonnay (Wairarapa, NZ)
  • Maison Louis Jadot Bourgogne Chardonnay (Burgundy, France)
  • Domaine Testut Petit Chablis (Chablis, France)

Date: Thursday, 23rd May, 2024
Time: 6:30pm
Location: Dhall & Nash Tasting Space

 


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