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Champagne Bruno Paillard Blanc de Blancs Magnum 2006

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Art. # 1038

2006г. е щедра година за сорта Шардоне в Шампан. Гроздето е селектирано от най-добрите лозови масиви в сърцето региона. Бутилката отлежава 9 години на фините утайки.

Profile

  • Fruit
  • Body
  • Dryness
  • Freshness
  • Alcohol

Variety

Chardonnay

Flavours

  • Nuts Nuts
  • Citrus Fruits Citrus Fruits
  • Mineral Flavors Mineral Flavors
  • Tropical Fruits Tropical Fruits

Glass

Tulip glass

Serving Temperature

Cold Cold

Food pairing

  • Vegetables Vegetables
  • Fish Fish
  • Seafood Seafood

Maturity

Drink now

More about this product

Bruno Paillard

Bruno Paillard

Bruno Paillard comes from a family of merchants and wine producers since 1704. In 1975, only 27 years old, but with more experience in the Champagne trade, he founded his own company, without vineyards and wineries and without funding. He sells his car and starts producing Champagne in a winery for rent, carefully choosing grapes from independent producers. In 1994 he managed to buy his first vineyard - 3 hectares with Grand Cru classification in Oger, Côte des Blancs. From that moment until today, Bruno Paillard, with a lot of patience and perseverance, managed to reach 32 hectares, including 12 ranked Grand Cru. From the care of the vines to the precise production, Bruno Paillard is dedicated to making only the best Champagne - elegant, soft, with impressive purity and freshness. He manages to break into a business in which there has been no new player for a hundred years. Winique history and wine!

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Champagne

Champagne

The Champagne region is located to the northernmost of all the vineyards of France. The distinctive taste and purity of real champagne is certainly due to the calcareous soil and continental growing conditions. Unlike most other wines, it is characteristic of those from Champagne that the vintages of different years are blended to obtain a final product (non-vintage) or different wines from the same vintage are blended - in this case the wine is marked as vintage and its year is indicated on the label. This means, after all, that the quality of the champagne obtained depends very much on the balance between the quality of the grapes and the skills of the oenologists, which is why they are also promoted according to the name of the producer. Thus, in Champagne and around the world, the most famous names are Krug, Mumm, Bollinger, Veuve Clicquot, not to mention the well-known brands Dom Perignon, Moët & Chandon and Taittinger. The grape varieties in this region are Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier, which are present in different proportions in Champagne wines. The so-called Blanc de Blanc, made only from Chardonnay grapes, and Blanc de Noir, which is white champagne but made from red Pinot Noir grapes, are also often produced. A curious and little known fact is that in Champagne sparkling rose is made with a mixture of white and red wine, and not as is the standard for the production of rose wine.

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Chardonnay

Chardonnay

Chardonnay is the world's most famous white-wine grape and also one of the most widely planted. Of course, the most highly regarded expressions of the variety are those from Burgundy and California, but many high-quality examples are made in Italy, Australia, New Zealand and parts of South America. Describing the flavours of Chardonnay is not easy. This is not thanks to the complexity of the varietal itself but usually due its susceptibility to winemaking techniques - such as Malolactic fermentation which gives distinctive buttery aromas or Fermentation or maturation in oak barrels which contributes to the wine with smokey notes of vanilla, honey and even cinnamon, and not last the lees contact while in barrel imparts biscuity, doughy flavours. And all these incorporated with the varietal aromas of tropical (banana, pineapple and guava) to stone fruits (peach, nectarine and apricot), sometimes even citrus and apple notes. Climate plays a major role in dictating which fruit flavours a Chardonnay will have - warm regions (California, Australia ) make more tropical styles; temperate zones (southern Burgundy, New Zealand) - stone fruit notes, while the very coolest (Chablis, Champagne) lean towards green-apple aromas.

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