Franck Bonville - Les Belles Voyes - Grand Cru

Franck Bonville - Les Belles Voyes - Grand Cru - 2014 - 75cl - Onshore Cellars

Franck Bonville - Les Belles Voyes - Grand Cru

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Regular price €73.80
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Type
Country
Appellation
Producer
Style
Brut
Technical
Grapes
ABV
12.5%
Food Pairings
ShellfishLobsterGoat CheeseGreen VegetablesFresh Herbs and Aromatic DishesCitrus-Based Dishes

Behind the bottle

Franck Bonville

Franck Bonville

Franck Bonville is a renowned champagne producer based in the Côte des Blancs region of France. The Bonville family has been producing champagne for over a century, and...

Franck Bonville is a renowned champagne producer based in the Côte des Blancs region of France. The Bonville family has been producing champagne for over a century, and their expertise is evident in the quality of their wines. The family owns 20 hectares of vineyards, which are planted with Chardonnay grapes, the primary grape variety used in the production of champagne.

The style of production at Franck Bonville is traditional, with a focus on quality and attention to detail. The grapes are hand-picked and carefully selected to ensure only the best fruit is used in the production of their wines. The wines are then fermented in stainless steel tanks, with a secondary fermentation taking place in the bottle. This process is known as the méthode champenoise, and it is the traditional method used to produce champagne.

The wines produced by Franck Bonville are of exceptional quality, with a focus on elegance and finesse. The Blanc de Blancs is a particular standout, made entirely from Chardonnay grapes and aged for a minimum of three years. This wine is crisp and refreshing, with notes of citrus and green apple. The Grand Cru is another excellent wine, made from grapes grown in the best vineyards in the region. This wine is rich and complex, with a creamy texture and notes of brioche and toasted almonds.

Overall, Franck Bonville is a producer of exceptional champagne, with a focus on quality and tradition. Their wines are elegant and refined, and they are sure to impress even the most discerning of wine drinkers.

Franck Bonville
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Champagne

In 1668, Dom Pérignon is said to have discovered how to make sparkling wine; today his technique is used the world over, although Champagne continues to make some...

In 1668, Dom Pérignon is said to have discovered how to make sparkling wine; today his technique is used the world over, although Champagne continues to make some of the finest. France’s most northerly wine region, Champagne is now home to 15,000 growers and 290 ‘houses’. A blend of grape varieties is usually required: white Chardonnay to add fruit and elegance, and two reds – Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier – to provide body and backbone.

Explore Champagne
Champagne

Champagne

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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