Rosé de Saignée 1er Cru Extra-Brut

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  • Champagne
  • Rosé
  • Unit
  • Boire/Garder
Reduced price! Rosé de Saignée 1er Cru Extra-Brut View larger
Rosé de Saignée 1er Cru Extra-Brut

Lovers of authentic Rosé Champagne will be delighted with this wine and its coral coloured robe, with an intense bouquet of red fruit and its persistence on the palate, its balance and notes of blood orange. Pleasure guaranteed.

Notes :
  • Gault & Millau 17,5/20
  • La Revue du Vin de France 16,5/ 20

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Wine characteristics

  • Vintage : Rosé de Saignée 1er Cru Extra-Brut
  • Year : NM
  • Appellation : Champagne 1er Cru
  • Colour : Rosé
  • Grape types : 100 % Pinot Noir
  • Soil : Vertus
  • Harvest : manual
  • Type of viticulture : biodynamic
  • Alcohol content : 12%
  • Contenance : 75cl

Tasting - Cellaring

  • Appearance : coral robe
  • Nose : steeped red fruit
  • Mouth : ample, red fruit and blood orange
  • Serving temperature : 8-10 °C
  • Cellaring : 2 years
  • Drink from : 2015
  • Winemaking process : de-stemming, running-off and fermentation in vats
  • Maturation : 2 years on racks

Food-matching

  • Food-matching : for pre-meal drinks, quail with cherries, sushi

Experts reviews :

  • Gault & Millau

    Rated wine : 17,5/20
  • La Revue du Vin de France

    Rated wine : 16,5/ 20

Domain :

This 16-hectare estate (50 plots) stands on the greatest terroirs of the Côte des Blancs: Vertus, Avize, Cramant… and Pierre Larmandier has run it with intelligence and respect for Nature since 2002 in a committed way without any gimmicks.

Appellation :

 

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The most northerly wine-growing region in France. This makes it ideal for developing sparkling wines that require a grape that is not too ripe so that the freshness of the bubbles is preserved.

The climate in Champagne is affected by two influences: oceanic and continental, which explains why the vintages lack evenness and regularity, depending on whether one or the other is in the ascendancy.

Main regions: Montagne de Reims, Côte des Blancs, Vallée de la Marne and Aube, which is detached, some 75 km to the South.

Most of the wines are sparkling, although there are also some still wines, such as Coteaux Champenois and the rare Les Riceys rosés. On average, total production is 320 million bottles.

The subsoil is mainly limestone, which has allowed hundreds of kilometres of galleries to be burrowed out, which are particularly well-suited to storing wine.

1 white grape (chardonnay) and 2 black grapes (pinot noir and pinot meunier) are used in the wines, some of which are blends, others made from a single grape type, usually chardonnay.

They are given a specific vintage when the production quality justifies it, or else the wines are made from 2 or 3 different years, which in turn add their own characteristics.

Champagne is marketed jointly by the major production houses (80% of exports) and individuals producers.

Best recent vintages: 2012 and 2008.

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