Showing posts with label sparkling wine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sparkling wine. Show all posts

Friday, 7 October 2016

Celebrate National Champagne Week 2016

We have officially entered National Champagne Week 2016. Running from 1st to 7th October, this unique event gives you a chance to celebrate your love for France’s signature sparkling wine!

Brits and Champagne

We Brits love Champagne. Our fondness for Brut Champagne even helped popularise this style of France’s famous sparkling wine all over the world during the 20th Century. We in the UK drink more Champagne than anyone outside of France, according to Harpers, consuming 40m bottles on average per year.
Read this article in full with Ideal Wine Company.

Friday, 9 September 2016

What’s The Difference Between Sparkling Wine And Champagne?

Is Champagne a sparkling wine? What’s the difference between the two? Ideal Wine Company investigates.

Types of sparkling wine

The term ‘sparkling wine’ refers to all products which are made via secondary fermentation – the process by which wines are carbonised. But wine-makers worldwide have developed various methods for producing sparkling wine, with some regions becoming famous for these signature products.
Gradually, bodies in various sparkling wine regions established rules to govern how their signature products can be made. Therefore, Champagne is a type of sparkling wine, which is made via specific rules. Other popular types of sparkling wine include Prosecco, Cava and Cremant. Below we explain the key characteristics which define these types of sparkling wine.

Champagne

Produced in the French region of the same name, Champagne is perhaps the most famous of all sparkling wines. Champagnes can only be made from three different types of grapes: Chardonnay, Pinot Meunier and Pinot Noir. Furthermore, these sparkling wines get their bubbles via the traditional secondary fermentation process, where the carbonisation takes place inside the bottle.

You can read this article in full with Ideal Wine Company.

Thursday, 4 August 2016

Five Faux Pas YOU could be making with Champagne

Champagne is synonymous with luxury, making it the perfect celebratory drink. But you need to follow certain rules when consuming Champagne, to make the most of this decadent product. Ideal Wine Company reveals five faux pas’ to avoid when serving and drinking Champagne at your next celebration.

Storing in freezers


Chill your bottle before drinking Champagne, as this wine tastes best when served at around 6-8 degrees. If you’re pressed for time, you may be tempted to store your botte in the freezer to get it really cold, really quickly. This works for dry whites but if you leave Champagne in the freezer too long, the bottle could explode due to its high bubble-content.  Instead, chill in the fridge and serve with ice.


Opening quickly


It is vital that you learn how to open a bottle of Champagne properly. Many people feel tempted to open bottles quickly, so they can see the cork ‘pop’ out like it often does in movies. Unfortunately if you take this approach, the cork could zoom across the room and injure someone, with the drink shooting out of the bottle. Always open gently!

Read the full blog on the Ideal Wine Company Blog site.

Monday, 25 April 2016

What Are The Types of Champagne Producer?

Recently, Ideal Wine Company revealed how to read a Champagne label. Within this article, we pointed out that on the label you will see a two letter code, which refers to the type of Champagne producer that made the product. Delving deeper into this subject, here we outline the seven different types of Champagne producer you may encounter when consuming this luxury tipple.

Récoltant Coopérateur (RC)

Referred to on bottles with ‘RC,’ this code means that the grower-producer behind the Champagne in question made the product at a Co-Op facility, but sells it under their own label.  Co-Ops are villages in the Champagne region of France which provide growers with the necessary sparkling wine making equipment, if they don’t have these tools to hand in order to produce their vintage.




Négociant Distributeur (ND)


These Champagnes, noted on bottles with the code ‘ND,’ refer to a buyer. In these cases, some other party grows the grapes and makes the final product. Afterwards the buyer purchases the product and labels it, before distributing the vintage to the general public.


Marque d’Acheteur (MA)


Otherwise known as “buyer’s own brand,” Marque d’Acheteur is shortened to ‘MA’ on Champagne labels. This code refers to a large retail chain or restaurant that buys a fully made Champagne from another producer. However, they sell the product under their own label.

Société de Récoltants (SR)


The term Société de Récoltants is used to describe a union of Champagne growers. Here, the union shares resources to make their products, but they are not a Co-Operative. The growers within this association sell their products, with the marker ‘SR’ on bottles, under their own private labels.

Récoltant Manipulant (RM)


If you see the code ‘RM’ on a Champagne label, the product in question is a Récoltant Manipulant. Otherwise known as ‘grower Champagne’ this code refers to growers who make Champagne from their own grapes. Typically, at least 95% of an RM’s grapes will come from the grower’s estate.


Coopérative Manipulant (CM)


In many ways, a Coopérative Manipulant shares similarities with a Récoltant Manipulant and a Récoltant Coopérateur. These Champagnes, marked out with the code ‘CM’ on labels, are made by Co-Operatives comprised of growers, with all the grapes they produce pulled together to make bottles released under a joint CM label.



Négociant Manipulant (NM)


The majority of major brands, such as those behind many of our Champagnes, are Négociant Manipulant producers. Referred to as ‘NM’ Champagnes, these describe producers who buy all or some of their grapes from other growers. Anything less than 94% estate fruit must be labelled an NM.


Try out your knowledge



If you know the type of producer behind your Champagne, you can find out more about how the final product was made and marketed, allowing you to cultivate a deeper understanding of your purchase. Now you know how to interpret Champagne producer codes, why don’t you put your new knowledge to the test? Buy the Salon 1999 from Ideal Wine Company and use the label to find out which kind of producer was behind this brilliant bottle of Champagne! 

Monday, 25 January 2016

Courvoisier Announces Global Champagne Cocktail Competition

The Ideal Wine Company has learned that Cognac house Courvoisier has decided to launch its first global bartender competition. Entrants will be asked to whip up a new Champagne Cocktail recipe.

Vital ingredient


Champagne is so much more than the most prestigious sparkling wine in the world. The protected French product is incredibly versatile, which means you can use it to make a number of delicious alcoholic concoctions. For example, mix it with a sugar cube and some Cognac and you can create a gorgeous Champagne Cocktail. Add a little juice and you can turn it into a spooky Pomegranate Champagne Cocktail - perfect for Halloween!

Courvoisier competition


Historic Cognac company Courvoisier recently decided to see just how creative some of the most talented bartenders in the world can get with the classic Champagne Cocktail. Online wine and spirit publication Harpers reported that the house has launched a competition which will task entrants to come up with a new twist on the drink using the Courvoisier VOP product.

There’s one catch; they must use the Golden Age of Paris to inspire their creation. Generally defined as the period between 1870 and 1910, the Golden Age of Paris refers to the years where the arts flourished in the French capital, just before the horrors of World War One. The competition will serve as an extension of the brands current ‘The Toast of Paris Since 1889’ marketing campaign.

“Looking forward.”


The event will be split into stages. First, bartenders from the same country will go head-to-head. Entries from the UK must be submitted by 25th March 2016. Courvoisier will choose the six best entrants, who will compete against each other in a semi-final in London the next month. The UK winner will go on to compete in the global final in May 2016. They’ll also get the chance to visit the famous Courvoisier Chateau in Jarnac, France, where the brand was first founded.

And for the global winner? They’ll receive a special blend of Courvoisier Cognac from 1889, which will be presented to them in an engraved crystal decanter. Commenting on the launch of the campaign, Chris Anderson, Maxxium UK’s (which owns Courvoisier) marketing controller for the luxury brands said: “We are looking forward to seeing how leading bartenders across the country recreate the Champagne Cocktail and represent the Paris Golden Age with Courvoisier at the centre.”

Give it a go



Here at the Ideal Wine Company, we can’t wait to see what they come up with. If this has inspired you to try creating your own version of the Champagne Cocktail, why don’t you buy the Krug 1988 from the Ideal Wine Company? This smooth, delicious sparkling wine will help you craft a killer concoction! 

Tuesday, 28 July 2015

Sparkling Red Wine Roars Back Into Fashion!

Stop the presses! The Ideal Wine Company has discovered something that’s set to change the life of every wine enthusiast in the world. It’s OK to drink sparkling red wine again!

Sparkling wine


What do you think of when you hear the words “sparkling wine?” If you’re anything like us, you think of a premium bottle of sparkling white like the first-rate Champagnes sold by the Ideal Wine Company.

However, what many people don’t know is that you can also buy sparkling reds. These vintages combine the full-fruited flavour of a hearty red with the traditional tang of a carbonated creation, to produce a bottle that contrasts opposing elements to provide you with a unique drinking experience.

Wine trends


Believe it or not, sparkling reds were the height of fashion back in the 70’ and 80’s, however they faded into the ether of social obscurity during the 90’s. Yet trends always come zooming back into style if they’re given enough time, and according to the Telegraph, this is what’s currently happening to sparkling reds.

The publication reported that online supermarket chain Ocado has named sparkling red wine “the red wine style for 2015.” The firm elaborated by explaining that the ever-important British middle classes have started to desert the style of wine that has characterised tastes over the past decade, Prosecco, in favour of sparkling red.

“Red wine of 2015.”


Ocado buyer Julian Twaites explained: "With Prosecco and rosé wine still in favour, it’s no surprise that this equally light and fresh wine is now proving increasingly popular with shoppers."
He went on to comment: "The real breakthrough came with sparkling Shiraz from Australia – it had been bubbling for a while there, became niche in the mid-Eighties in the UK but is now being rediscovered by customers."

Buy Australian wines



The Ideal Wine Company hasn’t quite caught up with the times just yet, but we do have a fantastic selection of Australian wines that you’re destined to love. Why don’t you buy the Hobbs 2006 today? This unique bottle will provide you with a wine-drinking experience you’ll never forget!