Pierre Trichet - L'Héritage - Premier Cru - Blanc de Blancs

Pierre Trichet - L’Héritage - Premier Cru - Blanc de Blancs - NV - 75cl - Onshore Cellars

Pierre Trichet - L'Héritage - Premier Cru - Blanc de Blancs

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Provenance
Type
Country
Appellation
Producer
Technical
Grapes
ABV
12.5%
Serving
6° - 8° C
Food Pairings
SchalentiereKrabbenHummerZiegenkäseBrieCamembert

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Pierre Trichet

Pierre Trichet

Pierre Trichet is a Champagne producer based in the Champagne region of France. The house specializes in sparkling wines made according to the traditional méthode champenoise, focusing on...

Pierre Trichet is a Champagne producer based in the Champagne region of France. The house specializes in sparkling wines made according to the traditional méthode champenoise, focusing on Premier Cru vineyard sites within the region's classified vineyard hierarchy.

The Champagne appellation is renowned for its unique combination of chalky soils, cool continental climate, and strict production regulations that govern everything from grape growing to riddling and disgorgement. Premier Cru vineyards, which represent the second-highest classification tier in Champagne, are located in villages rated between 90-99% on the échelle des crus quality scale. These sites typically produce wines with greater complexity and aging potential than those from unclassified villages.

Pierre Trichet's current range demonstrates the classic Champagne approach to blending, working with the region's three primary grape varieties: Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, and Pinot Meunier. Their portfolio includes both a traditional multi-grape cuvée and a Blanc de Blancs expression made exclusively from Chardonnay, showcasing the versatility of Premier Cru fruit from their vineyard holdings.

Pierre Trichet
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Dom Pérignon soll 1668 die Herstellung von Schaumwein entdeckt haben; seine Technik wird heute weltweit angewendet, wobei die Champagne nach wie vor einige der besten Schaumweine hervorbringt....

Dom Pérignon soll 1668 die Herstellung von Schaumwein entdeckt haben; seine Technik wird heute weltweit angewendet, wobei die Champagne nach wie vor einige der besten Schaumweine hervorbringt. Die Champagne, Frankreichs nördlichste Weinregion, beherbergt heute 15.000 Winzer und 290 Weingüter. Für die Herstellung eines Schaumweins ist in der Regel eine Cuvée aus verschiedenen Rebsorten erforderlich: Weißwein (Chardonnay) für Frucht und Eleganz sowie die beiden Rotweine Pinot Noir und Pinot Meunier für Körper und Struktur.

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Champagne

Sekt

Champagne is a region in northeastern France, approximately 140 kilometers northeast of Paris, defined by strict geographic boundaries established under French appellation law. The region's cool continental climate...

Champagne is a region in northeastern France, approximately 140 kilometers northeast of Paris, defined by strict geographic boundaries established under French appellation law. The region's cool continental climate and chalky soils create conditions uniquely suited to sparkling wine production. The designation "Champagne" is legally protected and applies only to wines produced within these delimited boundaries using prescribed methods.

The region's chalky subsoil—composed largely of Cretaceous limestone—drains rapidly and reflects heat, helping to ripen grapes despite the cool climate. Three grape varieties dominate: Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, and Pinot Meunier, often blended together though Blanc de Blancs wines use Chardonnay exclusively. Champagne's signature method involves a secondary fermentation in bottle (méthode champenoise), where yeast and sugar create carbonation and develop complex flavors over time. Extended aging on the lees further develops texture and aromas. Producers classify vineyards into Premier and Grand Cru designations based on historical quality assessments, and finished wines are labeled by dosage level—ranging from Extra Brut (bone dry) through Brut, Sec, and Demi Sec (progressively sweeter).

Champagne wines are characterized by high acidity, fine bubbles, and layered complexity. Typical flavor profiles include green apple, citrus, and chalk minerality in younger or lighter expressions, evolving toward brioche, toast, and honey notes with bottle age. The interaction between the wine's acidity, the persistent effervescence, and the autolytic characters from yeast aging creates distinctive textural finesse that distinguishes Champagne from other sparkling wines produced elsewhere.

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