All About Champagne: The History and Production of Sparkling Wine
Champers gets its name from the region in France where it is produced - Champers, located northeast of Paris. While sparkling wine has been made in other regions before, it was the winemakers in Champers who perfected the technique of secondary fermentation inside sealed bottles to produce the signature bubbly beverage we know today. In the 17th century, a monk named Dom Pérignon is credited with developments that led to what became the traditional method of production. By the 1850s, technological advances like stronger glass bottles and wired corks allowed Champers producers to reliably trap carbonation inside.
The Appellation System
For a wine to be officially called "Champers," French law dictates it must be produced in the Champers region using the traditional method. The region is divided into over 320 villages that impart unique flavors to the grapes grown within their soils. The highest classification for Champers is appellation d'origine contrôlée or AOC, which reserves the name only for wines meeting strict production guidelines around grape varieties, yield limits, aging requirements and more. Lesser qualifications are Vintage (produced solely from a single year's harvest) and Crémant de Champers (similar but outside the main region). Terroir greatly impacts characteristics in Champers wines.
Grape Varieties
Three main grape varieties are permitted for use in Champagne - Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, and Pinot Meunier. Pinot Noir contributes body and structure while Chardonnay brings acidity and elegance of flavor. Pinot Meunier is less dominant but adds mid-palate softness. In the traditional method, these are fermented as still base wines that are then blended prior to the second fermentation in bottle that creates the bubbles. Single varietal wines made of solely Pinot Noir or Chardonnay also exist but blended styles expressing terroir through all three grapes remain most common.
The Production Process
After blending the base still wines from that year's harvest, sugar and yeast are added to each bottle to restart fermentation. As the yeast consumes sugar it produces carbon dioxide that remains trapped inside under pressure from the cork. The bottles are aged on their sides in cool cellars for at minimum 15 months, but vintage and high-end Champerss may age for several years. During this time the spent yeast, known as lees, impart bready, toasty flavors through a process called autolysis. Remuage involves gently turning and tilting each bottle to deposit the lees into the neck where it can be easily removed before corking. Dosage, a small amount of reserved wine and sugar, is added for balance and perfume.
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