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Community Tasting History |
| Community Tasting Notes | | Tasted by timewithwine on 12/6/2014: Gift to Suzie, Whitney & Megan Moses during a visit to Donnie. It was a good visit. (435 views) | | Tasted by timewithwine on 11/27/2014: Just as it was 2 weeks ago. With duck, acorn squash soup, and crab cakes for Thanksgiving as we’re joined by GRY and MMS. (441 views) | | Tasted by timewithwine on 11/9/2014: While not the Prestige bottling this wine is so reliable and satisfying. The color is a solid straw-yellow gold. The lively mousse roils and lasts the length of the glass. Lean and loaded with mineral, citrus (with most of the citrus being white grapefruit), coconut and yeasty goodness. The mousse is all lacy. While not as creamy as the Prestige cuvee, the mouthfeel is full bodied and the finish lasts a long time. 12% alc. By itself and with winter root vegetable salad by Ian Boden. For DDB’s 50th birthday. (4 btls of the stuff!) (Karen Frank, Butch and Lynne Smiley, Doug and Marnie Sheets and Leslie Boden around the table. Highly Recommended. (435 views) |
| Diebolt-Vallois Producer websiteChardonnay The Chardonnay GrapeFrance Vins de France (Office National Interprofessionnel des Vins ) | Pages Vins, Directory of French Winegrowers | French Wine (Wikipedia)
Wine Scholar Guild vintage ratings
2018 vintage: "marked by a wet spring, a superb summer and a good harvest" 2019 vintage reports 2021: "From a general standpoint, whether for white, rosé or red wines, 2021 is a year marked by quality in the Rhône Valley Vineyards. Structured, elegant, fresh and fruity will be the main keywords for this new vintage." 2022 harvest: idealwine.info | wine-searcher.comChampagne Le Champagne (Le comité interprofessionnel du vin de Champagne) | Grandes Marques & Maisons de Champagne (Union des Maisons de Champagne)
France - When it comes to wine, France stands alone. No other country can beat it in terms of consistent quality and diversity. And while many of its Region, Bordeaux, Burgundy and Champagne most obviously, produce wine as rare, as sought-after and nearly as expensive as gold, there are just as many obscurities and values to be had from little known appellations throughout the country. To learn everything there is to know about French wine would take a lifetime. To understand and appreciate French wine, one only has to begin tasting them. Click for a list of bestselling items from all of France. Sub-Region:
Champagne - The French region of Champagne (including the cities of Rheims, Épernay, and Aÿ) was the first region in the world to make sparkling wine in any quantity. Today, the name of the region is synonymous with the finest of all sparkling wines, and wine-making traditions of Champagne have become role models for sparkling wine producers, worldwide. Surprisingly, the region of Champagne is now responsible for only one bottle in 12 of all sparkling wine produced. Styles of champagne range in sweetness ranging from an extra brut or brut 0, to the basic brut to demi sec to doux; some houses produce single vintage champagnes and others produce non-vintage (or incorporate wines/grapes of multiple vintages), often to preserve a specific taste; combinations of grape varietals; and colors, including a rosé. There are several sub-appellations, including the Valley of the Marnes river running from Épernay west, Massif de Saint-Thierry north and west of Rheims, Valley of the Ardre, the Mountains of Rheims (between Rheims and Épernay), Côte des Blancs, Côte de Sézanne, and Côte des Bar in the South. Champagne wine only uses three grape varietals (cépages): Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, and Pinot Meunier.ChampagneThe vineyards of Champagne on weinlagen-info |
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