In July 2023 we headed off to Champagne and Chablis with friends for a bit of wine tasting. Weather was decent, accommodation booked Nd tastings arranged. Some of the champagne and Chablis houses needed to booked or an introduction made by a friendly Master of Wine, whom the wife had been judging wine earlier in the year.
What was apparent by the end of the trip was the quality of the Premier Cru and Grand Cru wines and price was pretty fair considering the quality.
Champagne Guilleminot.
Excellent start to the tasting and at about £15 a bottle for the entry Bruts, great price. Good length and fresher style these were a move away from the heavy toasty and yeasty notes of your traditional Champagnes. Well worth trying if you prefer cremant sparkling wines but want the next step up.
Champagne Jeangout.
This smaller producer is another excellent champagne house making about 30,000 bottles a year. Fresher style again with crispness, freshness and subtle citrus flavours that made their Premier Cru stand out. At £23 a bottle not cheap, even by french standards but superb and worth the money.
Champagne Cattier.
Cattier was not a name I had heard of before the wife brought a bottle home to go with our Christmas day meal, but then make about 600,000 bottles of their range and 1 million bottles of the iconic Ace of Spades range, at £300 a bottle the Ace of Spades if seriously expensive. At £30 to £50 a bottle their main range is more affordable and great quality. Fresher than your usual Champagnes but with clarity and superb length these Premier Cru’s are classy. Their 2014 Vintage has a bit more traditional characteristics but the fruit is certainly there.
One very geeky fact is that they are putting NFC labels on their bottles very shortly, hold your NFC enabled phone next to the front label and it will open a Utube video that Cattier has produced. Thd video is pretty good too. Here we has a tour of their cellars, mind blowing, 3 levels and stretch for what seemed like miles.
La Chablisiene.
This is a large producer with a large range of Petit Chablis to Premier Cru and Grand Cru wines. The Petit Chablis was a bit disappointing, short on length and flavours. Their Premier Cru wines were very good though and we end up with 9 different Premier Cru bottles.
Domaine Gautheron.
Great range and excellent at all levels. Fresh, crisp and loads of citrus. The Petit Chablis was a great day to day wine and the Premier Cru were wonderful ‘occasion’ wines the Grand Cru we purchased will be laid down for the next decade.
Domaine Vrignaud Fourchaume.
Classy cellar room for the tastings matched the wine. Oozing quality over their entire range we probably should have purchased more than we did. At about £20 a bottle for their Premier Cru wines this matched the other producers but their were none I didn’t think deserved a silver or gold medal.