Full Review

Perrier-Jouët

Perrier-Jouët
2014 Belle Époque Brut, Champagne

Pair this wine with:
Chicken

Category: Champagne Tete de Cuvee

Date Tasted:
Country: France
Alcohol: 12.5% RS: .1%
95 Points
Gold Medal
Exceptional
$189

Perrier-Jouët
2014 Belle Époque Brut, Champagne

Pair this wine with:
Chicken

Category: Champagne Tete de Cuvee

Date Tasted:
Country: France
Alcohol: 12.5% RS: .1%
Yellow straw color. Aromas and flavors of white peach, raspberry vanilla nougat, red apple, and bosc pear with a round, finely carbonated, dryish medium-to-full body and a very long finish with notes of tangerine and lemon cream, red apple, raspberry and strawberry nougat, and hazelnut. Rich and well balanced with a rounded palate and excellent balance of red and white fruits; impress your bubbly loving friends.

Tasting Info

Wine Glass Style: Rich & Full
Aroma Aroma: white peach, raspberry vanilla nougat, red apple, and bosc pear
Taste Flavor: tangerine and lemon cream, red apple, raspberry and strawberry nougat, and hazelnut
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: Rich and well balanced with a rounded palate and excellent balance of red and white fruits; impress your bubbly loving friends.

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Champagne Tete de Cuvee

Wine Glass Champagne.jpg
Serve in a Champagne Flute
The tête de cuvée is the ultimate expression of a Champagne house and it is usually accordingly expensive and lavishly packaged. Overall the Champenois maintain an outstanding quality at this level, particularly from fine vintages. Tête de Cuvées may be Rosés or Blanc de Blancs or a conventional blend of Pinot Meunier, Pinot Noir, and Chardonnay.

Champagne has only one appellation: Champagne. Nonetheless, the region does have a highly developed Cru system that rates each vineyard for its potential quality. The appellation of Champagne is composed of five sub-regions, which contain communes rated as Grand Cru, Premier Cru, or bearing no cru designation. The Champagne from big-name producers that most consumers are familiar with is generally a highly blended product made from fruit sourced from many of Champagne's sub-regions. Such champagnes may contain significant amounts of Grand Cru fruit, particularly in the more prestigious cuvées. When one sees "Grand Cru" on a label, the name of the commune will also be marked. Such champagne is invariably a grower champagne from a small producer who owns holdings in one commune.