Champagne
and Sparkling Wine Information
The type of sparkling wine
that can be truly called Champagne is made only from grapes of the Champagne
region of France.
Not only that, but French
law dictates that all sparkling wines made in that area must be made
by a special process called the traditional or champagne method. The
French term is méthod champenoise. Only then, can it be called
Champagne.
The European Union continues
to support and enforce protecting the Champagne name. In January, 2008,
Belgian customs agents destroyed 270 cases of California sparkling wine
destined for Nigeria because it was labeled "André Champagne."
Bubblies produced in other
parts of the world, even if they are created by the traditional method,
should be referred to as sparkling wines.
This does not necessarily
mean that they are of lower quality. It simply means that they would
not be referred to as Champagne. There are many high quality sparkling
wines made in other areas of the world.
Top Champagne
Producers
Many people know about the
two most popular of the fine Champagnes, Moët & Chandon's Dom
Perignon and Louis Roederer's Cristal, but here are a few more.
| Light Bodied |
Medium Bodied |
Full Bodied |
*
Laurent-Perrier
* Perrier-Jouët
* Taittinger |
* Charles Heidsieck
* Deutz
* Joseph Perrier
* Moët & Chandon
* Mumm
* Philipponnat
* Piper-Heidsieck
* Pol Roger
* Pommery |
*
Bollinger
* Delamotte
* Gosset
* Heidsieck Monopole
* Henriot
* Krug
* Louis Roederer
* Vueve Clicquot |
Wines with bubbles are associated,
for many people, primarily with festivities and celebrations. More precious
and complicated to make than still wines, they have traditionally been
considered as occasional extravagances. With higher acidity, more delicate
flavor, their unique palate tingle and lower alcohol than most table
wines, they are, however, some of the most versatile wines to accompany
food. Modern production techniques have brought sparkling wines to market
that are more affordable and accessible for everyday enjoyment.
Bubbles in wine were known
to vintners long before they could reliably capture and preserve this
phenomenon in the bottle. As a natural byproduct of the fermentation
process, carbon dioxide is released in the liquid to provide a "sparkle."
In the Northern climates, cold weather sometimes arrives early after
harvest, stopping fermentation before the sugar is completely used up.
Warm weather in the spring often causes it to start up again, resulting
in carbonated wine. The English imported wine in casks. They found also
that adding sugar to tart, acidic wine would often soon cause it to
sparkle and they developed a liking for it. English bottles were much
stronger than those in France and not as inclined to burst when the
pressure built up.
Early success making sparkling
wines in the French district of Champagne made its name famous, so much
so that "champagne" has become generic for sparkling wine,
to the eternal aggravation of the resident producers1. The Champagne
Appellation has some of the strictest, most exacting standards for growing,
producing and labeling of any area in all the wine world.
BASIC
RULES of CHAMPAGNE (since 1927)
1. Limited growing area:
Champagne Appellation includes less than 78,000 acres of vines (although
expansion is currently under consideration)
2. Only 3 grapes: Chardonnay, Pinot Noir & Pinot Meunier
3. Limited: vine spacing (between rows), vine density (between plants),
vine height, pruning, grape yields.
4. Required: hand harvesting.
5. Minimum age before release: 15 months for non-vintage; 3 years for
vintage.
The Méthode
Champenoise involves many specialized steps in both viticulture
and enology has taken centuries to evolve, through the contributions
of scores of inventors, innovators, and workers, both famous and nameless.
Modernization and refinement of the "traditional" sparkling
wine process continues to this day, although its beginnings are in antiquity.
Around the 1690s, a Benedictine
monk named Dom Perignon made some very significant
developments as cellar master at the Abbey of Hautvillers in Epernay.
His celebrated remark "I am drinking stars" brought him great
fame, but Dom Perignon did not, in fact, "invent"
Champagne. There is even a possibility he may have uttered
his phrase, not out of jubilation, but rather from remorse. It is fairly
certain that Frere Perignon long attempted to find a way to remove or
prevent the bubbles, before he accepted and embraced them. His innovations
of selective harvesting and blending probably were experiments towards
this end. His early contributions did provide the impetus to eventually
develop modern Champagne.
He had the idea to harvest
selectively, over a period of days rather than all at once, so that
only the ripest fruit was taken with each pass. He also is credited
with inventing the Coquard or "basket" wine press and using
it to make the first "Blanc de Noir." Another of his major
developments was to blend wines of different vineyards and varieties
to achieve better balance between their individual characteristics.
He was an excellent taster and his cuvée system is still followed
closely to this day by the house of Moêt & Chandon to produce
their finest Champagne.
Finally, although corks had
already been used by the Romans as closures for wine bottles, and the
seagoing and trading English had corks and made sparkling wine several
decades earlier than the landlocked Champagne area, Dom Perignon has
been credited with the idea of using string to secure these stoppers
in the bottles, thus retaining the sparkle for long periods of time.
Methode Champenoise
would not be as we know it without the significant developments and
improvements made by many others during the Nineteenth Century, including
Jean-Antoine Chaptal (quantified the proper amount of sugar to set the
alcoholic strength, c. 1801), Madame Nicole-Barbe Clicquot (inventor
of riddling and dégorgement, c. 1810), Jules Guyot (pioneer of
planting vines in rows, training vines onto trellises, and pruning methods,
c. 1835) Adolphe Jacquesson (inventor of the muselet, the wire cage/metal
cap contraption that retains sparkling wine corks, c. 1844), and more.
The traditional way of making
sparkling wine begins with the grape harvest, which is always early
in the season compared to the picking of still wines. Picking when sugars
are relatively low keeps the alcohol low, since secondary fermentation
will boost it later. Also, the youthful acids help to preserve the wine
over the long course of its development. The grapes are pressed immediately,
by-passing the crushing equipment, to avoid both oxidation and color
in the wine.
Cuvée
The initial fermentation takes place most often in stainless steel tanks,
although many varieties of container, from concrete vats to redwood
tanks, are used. After the usual period of three weeks or more, when
all of the natural grape sugar has been converted to alcohol, the wine
is "dry." While the wine rests in a cold environment, solids
and particles settle to the bottom. The clear wine on top is then racked
or siphoned off the murky lees. Sometimes it is aged in oak barrels
during or after this clarification and racking. The new wine is quite
weak in flavor, very tart and low in alcohol. It may then be blended
with stocks of older wine saved from previous vintages, to keep a consistent
"house" style, or cuvée.
At bottling, a small amount
of sugar that has been dissolved in old wine, along with special yeast
is added. This liqueur de tirage assures a uniform secondary fermentation
in the bottles. Until the application of three scientific contributions,
making sparkling wine could be more dangerous than making bombs. The
proper amount of sugar to add for balanced wine was quantified by Jean-Antoine
Chaptal in 1801; Pharmacist André François invented, in
1836, a way to measure the remaining amount of sugar in wine; and Pasteur
explained the fermentation process in 1857.
En
Tirage
Some producers now insert a small plastic reservoir, called a bidule,
which later aids in collecting and removing the sediment. After closing
with cork-lined metal crown caps, the bottles are stored on their sides
in cool cellars while the yeast ferments the sugar, boosting the alcohol
and producing the bubbles of carbon dioxide. At this point, the wine
is only half made, although the wine will become complete and reach
the consumer in this very same bottle. The cuvée is now en tirage.
This phase may span from two to several years. Meantime, the bottle
stacks are observed for the inevitable breakage that occurs; flawed
glass is sometimes unable to withstand the pressure that gradually increases
to 100 pounds or more per square inch.
The Second
Fermentation
There are
two main techniques for the second fermentation. The first one was developed
in order to greatly reduce the expense and time needed to produce the
wine. It is called the charmat (pronounced shar mah) method or tank
method.
The other method is the traditional
or champagne method. This is the preferred and only method that is used
to make true Champagne. It is a laborious process that involves the
second fermentation to take place in small bottles instead of a large,
closed tank.
If you're wondering how the
sparkling wine gets its bubbles, it's from the second fermentation.
After the base wine has been blended, more yeast and sugar is added.
Then the wine is sealed off (in bottles for the traditional method and
in a refrigerated tank for the charmat method).
Note: The cheapest sparkling
wines get their carbonation just like your colas do... with compressed
carbon dioxide blasted into the wine. This creates large bubbles that
are aggressive in the mouth and very short lived.
As the yeast consumes the
sugars, alcohol and carbon dioxide are produced. Since the carbon dioxide
cannot escape, it absorbs into the wine until it can be liberated by
some lucky fellow in the form of tiny, streaming bubbles.
After the yeast has finished
the second fermentation, it settles to the bottom and forms a sediment
called lees. In the charmat method, this is simply filtered out from
the tank. The traditional method involves turning over the bottles and
rotating them over a period of up to three months to allow all of the
lees to settle into the necks of the bottles. Then they are flash-frozen
and the sediment is removed as a frozen plug.
Remuage
During the secondary fermentation, sediments form from dead yeast and
solids left behind during the initial clarification procedures. Consolidating
the sediments for removal is another long process, known as remuage.
This sediment is very fine, sludgy and sticky. Removing it from the
bottle, without removing the wine, is a problem. Getting it to collect
in the neck, near the opening, is the first step. In 1805, Nicole-Barbe
Ponsardin Clicquot, became a young widow and head of a major Champagne
house. Seeking assistance from gravity, she cut holes in her kitchen
table, in order to invert the bottles. She found that shaking helped
loosen the sediments, although some still stuck to the bottle bottoms.
In 1810, she employed Antoine Muller and he improved the procedure by
beginning with the bottle at a 45° angle, gradually increasing the
angle with each shaking, until the bottom was up, the neck straight
down.
Wall-mounted gyropalettes.Traditionally,
the bottles are placed at a forty-five degree angle, necks-down, in
specially built "A-frame" racks, called pupitres. An experienced
worker grabs the bottom of each bottle, giving it a small shake, an
abrupt back and forth twist, and a slight increase in tilt, letting
it drop back in the rack. This action, called riddling,
recurs every one to three days over a period of several weeks. The shaking
and twist is intended dislodge particles that have clung to the glass
and prevent the sediments from caking in one spot; the tilt and drop
encourage the particles, assisted by gravity, to move ever more downward;
the time in between riddlings allows the particles to settle out of
solution again.
Computer-automated machines
called Gyropalettes accomplish the riddling chore in
batches, using movable bins containing hundreds of bottles rather than
by the individual bottle. Invented in Spain, they became common in all
sparkling wine producing countries the late 1970s. This mechanization
has meant saving time, space and production cost for the producers.
Hand riddling requires a minimum of eight weeks to complete; gyropalettes
finish the task in under ten days.
Portable gyropalettes.While
automation means that a bit of the romance of wine is lost for consumers,
this application of modern technology compensates by increasing product
consistency from bottle to bottle. Production cost savings also has
allowed the introduction of traditional method sparkling wines into
the lower price end of the market where formerly only bulk or mass-produced
wines competed.
Whether riddled by hand or
machine, in the end, the bottles are standing nearly straight upside
down, with the sediment now resting on the caps. Kept in this position,
the bottles are transferred to bins where they are stored, necks down,
until ready for shipping to market. The final operations that ready
the wine for sale are removing the sediment formed during aging, topping
up the contents, adjusting the sweetness level to the housestyle, replacing
the crown caps with corks, wire hoods, and finally, applying foils and
labels just before packing the bottles in cases for shipment.
Dégorgement
Removing the sediment from the bottles is a process called dégorgement,
or disgorging. The bottle necks are dipped in a solution of freezing
brine or glycol. This freezes a plug of wine and sediment in the top
of the neck. Skilled workers then invert each bottle as they uncap it,
releasing a small amount of wine as the plug of frozen sediment flies
out. The bottle is then topped up with a dosage of reserve wine, sweetened
to the right amount for the determined style, also known as the liqueur
d'expedition. Modern bottling lines accomplish these tasks mechanically
with amazing speed and precision. Méthode Champenoise takes normally
from two to five years to complete, depending on the house style.
In addition to the normal
smell and taste criteria of still wine, sparkling wine quality is judged
by the size of the bubbles (smaller is better), their persistence (long-lasting
is better) and their mouth feel (how well the bubbles are integrated
into the wine and the relative smoothness or coarseness of their texture).
There are, in fact, other
processes to put the sparkle in wine. Techniques have been developed
that are very different and, many would argue, inferior to the Méthode
Champenoise, based on sensory judgment. Twentieth century technology
brought, besides injected carbonation, the Charmat or "bulk"
process, and the "transfer" process.
Sparkling wine made by the
transfer process, follows the same procedure as Méthode Champenoise,
up to the point of bottling. The secondary fermentation does not take
place in the actual bottle sold to the customer. The wine is bottled
en tirage. However, immediately following secondary fermentation, the
fermentation bottles are emptied under pressure and the wine filtered.
This replaces the rémuage, riddling, and dégorgement steps.
The transferred wine is then bottled under pressure into a new set of
bottles that are shipped to market.
The major varietals used
for (French) Champagne are Chardonnay, Meunier, and Pinot Noir. Many
American producers of quality sparkling wines adhere to this list, although
very little Meunier is grown here. Other sparkling wine producers worldwide
can and do use anything from Thompson Seedless to various clones of
Muscat. Blanc de Blancs is used to designate white wine made only from
white (green) grapes; Blanc de Noirs is white wine made only from black
(red) grapes.
The Transfer Method,
invented in Germany, does not have a proprietary name (possibly because
no individual or commercial entity would claim it). On wines sold in
the United States, it is only announced by a deceptively subtle packaging
regulation. The label statement "Fermented in this bottle"
means Méthode Champenoise, whereas "Fermented in the bottle"
refers to the transfer process; so much for reading the fine print.
Transfer is considerably
less expensive and time-consuming than Méthode Champenoise. The
transfer method goes from harvest to bottling in as little as ninety
days, up to one year. Proponents claim the transfer method produces
a more consistent product from bottle to bottle; detractors say the
process strips flavor elements, especially yeast flavors. Many Champagne
makers commonly use the transfer method to produce any size bottle smaller
than 750 milliliter or larger than 1.5 liter.
Eugene Charmat,
a Frenchman, invented his process in 1907. Instead of individual bottles
to produce the secondary fermentation, he invented the glass-lined tank.
The wine stays under constant pressure in bulk, through the filtering
and bottling process, which takes as little as ninety days from picking
to bottling. Charmat is also known as the Bulk
Process.
Both the transfer and Charmat
process are time and money savers. There are knowledgeable wine critics
who contend that the different methods of producing sparking wine can
each produce equal quality product given the same fruit to begin with.
These critics are in the minority and commercial attempts at high quality
Charmat or bulk process sparklers are few and far between.
Differences between the processes
are readily noticeable in their end products. Both the transfer and
Charmat wines usually have larger, less-long-lasting bubbles. Méthode
Champenoise bubbles are usually more integrated into the wine and longer
lasting. Also, because of the additional time Méthode Champenoise
takes to clear the wine of sediment, the flavors of yeast autolysis
(chemical breakdown) add complexity and a creaminess to the wine that
is absent in the faster methods.
Style is determined by the
maker. There is a Common Market Standard for levels of residual sugar
(in parentheses) in sparking wines, but adherence is voluntary. Brut
nature (.0-.5%) should taste bone dry. Brut (.5-1.5%) should taste dry
with no perception of sweetness. Extra Dry (1.2-2.0%) tastes slightly
sweet and is a style invented for the American market that "talks
dry and drinks sweet." Sec (1.7-3.5%) literally translates to "dry",
but is noticeably sweet. No wonder the public is confused! Demi-Sec
(3.3-5.0%) is very sweet and Doux (over 5.0%) is extremely sweet. (see
our Tasting Notes)
French sparkling wine not
made in the Champagne region is labeled Vins Mousseux. Italians call
their most well-known sparkling wine Spumante, the most popular one
made in a sweet style with Muscat grapes grown around the town of Asti.
Prosecco is another Italian sparkling wine, made from grapes of the
same name, that has gained tremendous popularity since its introduction
to the American market in 2000. Sekt is the German designation for sparkling
wine. The Spanish call their sparkling wines Cava, if made by Méthode
Champenoise.
When labeling American sparkling
wines, producers don't conform to the European standards of dryness,
although they do follow the same hierarchy of nomenclature: "Natural"
is drier than "Brut", which is drier than "Extra Dry",
etc.. The general guide for American "champagne" is: the cheaper
they are, the sweeter they taste.
Most sparking wine is non-vintage,
which allows the winemaker to blend older wine with the new, to achieve
a consistent flavor style. These non-vintage dated wines are ready to
consume immediately and should be within one or two years. Slowly but
surely, they will begin to deteriorate; further aging does not improve
these wines at all.
Vintage-dated Champagne or
sparkling wine can usually benefit from some bottle-aging, provided
the consumer enjoys the older, richer, fatter, less vivacious flavors
that will ensue. There is generally no improvement more than ten years
beyond the vintage date, although there are cultists with curatorial
interest in old Champagne who might disagree.
Sometimes a Méthode
Champenoise producer will leave the wine en tirage for an extended period
of years and then bottle a "Reserve" or "Late Disgorged"
bottling. These wines are mostly vintage dated, usually a decade or
more old when released for sale, and also immediately ready to consume.
Consumers would do well to
realize that aging is an intrinsic part of the process of making sparkling
wine. The vast majority of sparkling wines, including true Champagne,
will lose both flavor and fizz after a couple of years in the bottle,
especially when not stored under optimum conditions. To celebrate that
special wedding anniversary, it is much better to enjoy a freshly-purchased
bottle of the same brand originally enjoyed than to suffer through one
saved from the event itself.
Things to
Know When Buying a Sparkling Wine
Champagne is more complex,
toastier, and has more and smaller bubbles than sparkling wines from
the charmat method because of its long term exposure to lees.
Sparkling wines may be high
quality, but the charmat method was chosen because it creates a fruitier
flavor from limited exposure to lees. An example would be Italy's Asti.
The sweetness of a sparkling
wine or Champagne ranges from:
* Extra Brut
(Brut Sauvage) - Totally dry
* Brut - Dry
* Extra Dry - Medium dry
* Sec - Slightly sweet
* Demi - Sec: Fairly sweet
* Doux - Sweet
Vintage Champagne
is made only from grapes harvested during a specific year. They only
make vintage Champagne during years where the grapes had exceptional
growing seasons and it is aged longer than non-vintage Champagne. They
can range from $35 - $50 a bottle.
Premium vintage Champagne
or prestige cuvée is made using only the best
grapes from top vineyards for that year and the Pinot Meunier variety
is often left out. They can range from $60 to hundreds of dollars.