The best Champagnes and sparkling wines are made by méthode champenoise
Date: May 29, 2011
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Whether it is called Champagne or sparkling wine, what is really important is how the wine is made. The best Champagnes and sparkling wines are made by méthode champenoise which requires a secondary fermentation in the bottle.
This secondary fermentation is accomplished by adding a mixture of sugar and yeast, called the liqueur de tirage, to still wine. This wine is then bottled and capped, with a bottle cap similiar to ones found on beer bottles – not a cork. The yeast acts on the sugar and the resulting carbon dioxide remains trapped in the bottle. Quality sparkling wines are usually left on their yeast for several months, even up to six years. At the end of this process the cap is removed and replaced with the traditional cork with wire cage.
The important thing to remember is that the secondary fermentation happens in the bottle in quality sparkling wines. If you see the word “charmat” it means the secondary fermentation happened in a large tank, usually an indicator of a lesser quality wine.
Terms used in Méthode Champenoise Production:
Assemblage | A preliminary combining and blending of wines from different vineyards after the first racking. |
Bead | A bubble forming in or on a beverage; used to mean CO2 bubbles in general or sometimes to the ring of bubbles around the edge of the liquid. |
Blanc de blanc | Champagne made from white grapes. |
Blanc de noir | Champagne made from the juice of Pinot noir; may impart a light salmon color to the wine. |
Crémant | A very lightly sparkling, creamy, and frothy wine, usually higher in sugar content. |
Cuvée | Literally tubful or vatful, this refers to a particular blend to be used for sparkling wine. |
Dégorgement | The disgorging or removal of the plug of sediment which collected on the cork during riddling. |
Dosage | Same as dosage in English: an amount of sweetener added back to the bottle after dégorgement. |
Liqueur de tirage | The mixture of sugar added to the cuvée for the second fermentation. |
Méthode champenoise | Traditional champagne production method that promotes a second fermentation in the bottle. |
Mousse | Froth, foam; frothy or sparkling; used as a synonym with crémant. |
Pupitres | The hinged sloping racks used to hold bottles during the riddling process. |
Remuage | Refers to the riddling or turning of the bottles to dislodge yeast sediment and allow it to collect on the cork. |
Remueur | Refers to the person who riddles the bottles. |
Tirage | Refers to drawing off the base wine combined with sugar and yeast for second fermentation in the bottle or a tank. |
Vin de reserve | Some of the base wine held in reserve in which the sugar for the dosage is dissolved. |
Whether it is called Champagne or sparkling wine, what is really important is how the wine is made. The best Champagnes and sparkling wines are made by méthode champenoise which requires a secondary fermentation in the bottle.
This secondary fermentation is accomplished by adding a mixture of sugar and yeast, called the liqueur de tirage, to still wine. This wine is then bottled and capped, with a bottle cap similiar to ones found on beer bottles – not a cork. The yeast acts on the sugar and the resulting carbon dioxide remains trapped in the bottle. Quality sparkling wines are usually left on their yeast for several months, even up to six years. At the end of this process the cap is removed and replaced with the traditional cork with wire cage.
The important thing to remember is that the secondary fermentation happens in the bottle in quality sparkling wines. If you see the word “charmat” it means the secondary fermentation happened in a large tank, usually an indicator of a lesser quality wine.
Terms used in Méthode Champenoise Production:
Assemblage | A preliminary combining and blending of wines from different vineyards after the first racking. |
Bead | A bubble forming in or on a beverage; used to mean CO2 bubbles in general or sometimes to the ring of bubbles around the edge of the liquid. |
Blanc de blanc | Champagne made from white grapes. |
Blanc de noir | Champagne made from the juice of Pinot noir; may impart a light salmon color to the wine. |
Crémant | A very lightly sparkling, creamy, and frothy wine, usually higher in sugar content. |
Cuvée | Literally tubful or vatful, this refers to a particular blend to be used for sparkling wine. |
Dégorgement | The disgorging or removal of the plug of sediment which collected on the cork during riddling. |
Dosage | Same as dosage in English: an amount of sweetener added back to the bottle after dégorgement. |
Liqueur de tirage | The mixture of sugar added to the cuvée for the second fermentation. |
Méthode champenoise | Traditional champagne production method that promotes a second fermentation in the bottle. |
Mousse | Froth, foam; frothy or sparkling; used as a synonym with crémant. |
Pupitres | The hinged sloping racks used to hold bottles during the riddling process. |
Remuage | Refers to the riddling or turning of the bottles to dislodge yeast sediment and allow it to collect on the cork. |
Remueur | Refers to the person who riddles the bottles. |
Tirage | Refers to drawing off the base wine combined with sugar and yeast for second fermentation in the bottle or a tank. |
Vin de reserve | Some of the base wine held in reserve in which the sugar for the dosage is dissolved. |
SOURCE: http://www.californiachampagnes.com/methode_champenoise.html
Clark Wine Center was built in 2003 by Hong Kong-based Yats International Leisure Philippines to become the largest wine shop in Philippines supplying Asia’s wine lovers with fine vintage wines at attractive prices. Today, this wine shop in Clark Philippines offers over 2000 selections of fine wines from all major wine regions in the world. As a leading wine supplier in Philippines, Pampanga’s Clark Wine Center offers an incomparable breadth of vintages, wines from back vintages spanning over 50 years. Clark Wine Center is located in Pampanga Clark Freeport Zone adjacent to Angeles City, just 25 minutes from Subic and 45 minutes from Manila.
Wines from Burgundy, Bordeaux, Rhone, Loire, Spain, Portugal, Germany, Austria, Alsace, USA, Australia, New Zealand, Italy, South Africa, Chile and Argentina etc. are well represented in this Clark Wine Shop.
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