Full Review

Perrier-Jouët

Perrier-Jouët
NV Grand Brut, Champagne

Pair this wine with:
Chicken

Category: Champagne Brut NV

Date Tasted:
Country: France
Alcohol: 12.5%
93 Points
Gold Medal
Exceptional
$65

Perrier-Jouët
NV Grand Brut, Champagne

Pair this wine with:
Chicken

Category: Champagne Brut NV

Date Tasted:
Country: France
Alcohol: 12.5%
Yellow straw color. Aromas and flavors of toasted and salted hazelnut, golden delicious apple, mixed red bramble berries, and lemon zest with a satiny, lively, effervescent, dry medium body and a tingling, interesting, medium-length finish that presents notes of lemon zest, lemon curd on red apple, salted brioche, and green apple and flowers. Citrus and sea salt forward, this crisp palate pleaser will provide as an amazing aperitif or oyster and shell fish pairing at your next dinner soirée.

Tasting Info

Wine Glass Style: Crisp & Lively
Aroma Aroma: toasted and salted hazelnut, golden delicious apple, mixed red bramble berries, and lemon zest
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with notes of lemon zest, lemon curd on red apple, salted brioche, and green apple and flowers
Sweetness Sweetness: Dry
Enjoy Enjoy: Now-3 years on its own and with food
Recipes Pairing: Oven Fried Chicken, Chicken Kebobs, Cobb Salad
Bottom Line Bottom Line: Citrus and sea salt forward, this crisp palate pleaser will provide as an amazing aperitif or oyster and shell fish pairing at your next dinner soirée.

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Champagne Brut NV

Wine Glass Champagne.jpg
Serve in a Champagne Flute
Non-Vintage Brut is the most important category of Champagne. The vast bulk of Champagne is Non-Vintage and the healthy sales of this category are what keeps the Euros flowing in the region. A typical Non-Vintage cuvée will be composed of wine from two of the most recent vintages blended together, with a very small amount of older vintages. The demanding task of a champagne blender is to keep a typical house style by blending many different batches of wine. Quality does vary, at least from year to year if not batch to batch. A succession of good vintages will result in great Non-Vintage champagne with inverse consequences for a run of lesser years.

At the bottling stage Champagne is nearly always sweetened by the addition of a small sweetened dose of wine, called the dosage. The vast bulk of Champagne (including all Vintage releases) is of the "Brut" level of dryness: Dry to the palate though very lightly sweetened. The exact level of dryness of a brut style will vary from producer to producer, but is generally between 0 and 1.2% residual sugar.