Full Review

Perrier-Jouët

Perrier-Jouët
NV Grand Brut, Champagne

Pair this wine with:
Chicken

Category: Champagne Brut NV

Date Tasted:
Country: France
Alcohol: 12.5% RS: .1%
95 Points
Gold Medal
Exceptional
$64

Perrier-Jouët
NV Grand Brut, Champagne

Pair this wine with:
Chicken

Category: Champagne Brut NV

Date Tasted:
Country: France
Alcohol: 12.5% RS: .1%
Yellow straw color. Aromas and flavors of baked yellow apple, marcana almonds, lemon, peach, and raspberry turnover, and honeyed pastry dough with a round, finely carbonated, dryish medium body and a very long finish that shows overtones of apricot and peach, green apple and tart strawberry, raspberry, and red apple skin. A beautiful Champagne blend leaning into the red berry flavors that will make this a delicious aperitif as well as an easy companion for a wide range of dinner courses.

Tasting Info

Wine Glass Style: Rich & Full
Aroma Aroma: baked yellow apple, marcana almonds, lemon, peach, and raspberry turnover, and honeyed pastry dough
Taste Flavor: apricot and peach, green apple and tart strawberry, raspberry, and red apple skin
Sweetness Sweetness: Dryish
Enjoy Enjoy: Now-3 years Enjoy on its own
Recipes Pairing: Oven Fried Chicken, Chicken Kebobs, Cobb Salad
Bottom Line Bottom Line: A beautiful Champagne blend leaning into the red berry flavors that will make this a delicious aperitif as well as an easy companion for a wide range of dinner courses.

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Champagne Brut NV

Wine Glass Champagne.jpg
Serve in a Champagne Flute
Non-Vintage Brut is the most important category of Champagne. The vast bulk of Champagne is Non-Vintage and the healthy sales of this category are what keeps the Euros flowing in the region. A typical Non-Vintage cuvée will be composed of wine from two of the most recent vintages blended together, with a very small amount of older vintages. The demanding task of a champagne blender is to keep a typical house style by blending many different batches of wine. Quality does vary, at least from year to year if not batch to batch. A succession of good vintages will result in great Non-Vintage champagne with inverse consequences for a run of lesser years.

At the bottling stage Champagne is nearly always sweetened by the addition of a small sweetened dose of wine, called the dosage. The vast bulk of Champagne (including all Vintage releases) is of the "Brut" level of dryness: Dry to the palate though very lightly sweetened. The exact level of dryness of a brut style will vary from producer to producer, but is generally between 0 and 1.2% residual sugar.