Ahead of Champagne Day on Friday 23 October 2020, we are sharing 20 champagne facts to celebrate this week.
On Monday we shared famous champagne quotes and tomorrow we will give you champagne recommendations from French wine importers for Champagne Day proper. We intended to bring you this article yesterday but we may have had a little too much champagne… hic!
Broaden your champagne knowledge with our 20 champagne facts.
20 Champagne facts
1. The cage around the cork is called a muselet which translates to muzzle.
Well, the French word for a muzzle, that is. A muselet is a wire cage that keeps the cork cozied inside the bottle until you’re ready to pop it open. This keeps your Champagne bottle and its effervescent contents sealed tight to prevent leaking.
2. Size does matter… for bubbles and bottles
Smaller bubbles are best
Champagne bubbles are traditionally smaller than the bubbles found in other sparkling wines and it is said that it is a sign of a finer champagne or sparkling wine.
Tyson Stelzer says:
“The fewer impurities in the still wine and the cooler the cellar in which this fermentation occurs, the smaller the bubbles.
Tiny bubbles are easy to discern in the mouth as they produce a finer bead than the larger bubbles created by coarse juice, fast fermentation or carbonation.”
But the magnum, double the volume of a regular champagne bottle is best
Champagne is said to taste better when it comes from a magnum rather than the 750ml bottles we are accustomed to owing to the fact that the neck size is the same. Therefore the space between the cork and the champagne itself is the same for both sized bottles.
“The magnum bottle is the best bottle for Champagne,” Vitalie Taittinger, artistic director of Champagne Taittinger, says. “That’s where you have the best ratio between air and wine and where the aging potential will be at its best.”
3. Magnums are released later than their 750ml counterparts.
“Using a magnum for making a Champagne slows down the aging process, which is why magnums are always released later that a 750-milliliter bottle of the same vintage,” Laurent Fresnet, cellar master of Champagne Henriot, says.
That means that Champagne magnums you can buy now are likely from older vintages than their standard-sized equivalents, so you have the opportunity to experience aged Champagne without cellaring it for years.
4. There are almost 1,000,000 bubbles in your champagne flute!
Gérard Liger-Belair studied the question of how many bubbles are in a standard champagne glass and determined there were almost 1,000,000.
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jp500295e
5. Champagne flutes are out, tulip glasses are in
Champagne flutes are great for showcasing the stream of bubbles from the bottom to the top of the glass but a wide tulip shaped glass that curves back in towards the top, when not filled to the brim leads to slower bubbles. Slower bubbles mean slower delivery of aromas and time for complexity to develop.
6. Science of champagne
There have been many scientific studies about champagne. Here are just a few:
On the Losses of Dissolved CO2 during Champagne Serving
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/jf101239w
170 year old champagne analyzed
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/cen-09318-scitech3
The Physics and Chemistry behind the Bubbling Properties of Champagne and Sparkling Wines: A State-of-the-Art Review
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jf048259e
Champagne Experiences Various Rhythmical Bubbling Regimes in a Flute
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jf061250n
7. Some of the most well-known champagne houses were founded or run by widows.
You’ve no doubt heard of Veuve Clicquot, but perhaps you didn’t know that Veuve is French for widow and is named after the widow of Francois Clicquot, Barbe-Nicole Clicquot née Ponsardin.
The Veuve Clicquot champagne house is responsible for three significant champagne advancements. Barbe-Nicole:
- invented rosé Champagne;
- is said to be behind the modern champagne bottle shape; and
- invented the process of riddling which is still used today: Riddling is the method of turning the bottle to avoid cloudy sediment that stagnated in the champagne and makes champagne clear.
A few other notable widows who ran champagne houses are
- Lily Bollinger née Emily Law de Lauriston Bourbers who took over Bollinger after her husband’s death in 1941: Her cuvée R.D. from the 1952 vintage released in 1967 left a legacy that is still resonating generations later. R.D. stands for recently disgorged. It took a less common practice
- Jeanne Alexandre Louise Pommery née Melin of Pommery who is credited with creating the taste we associate with brut champagne today.
- Mathilde Emilie Perrier inherited the champagne house after the death of her husband Eugène Perrier, at which time she named it after herself Veuve Laurent-Perrier and took Madame Pommery’s work further by creating the Grand Vin sans sucre (the great wine without sugar)
8. Deciphering champagne label codes
You may have noticed letters on your champagne label but might not know what they mean. Now you will:
NM: Negociant-Manipulant – Producer who buys grapes in volume to make Champagne.
RM: Recoltant-Manipulant – Grower who also makes Champagne; may also buy or sell grapes.
CM: Cooperative-Manipulant – A cooperative of growers who also make and sell Champagne under their own labels.
RC: Recoltant-Cooperateur – A grower selling wine made by a coop
ND: Négociant Distributeur – A company selling Champagne that it did not make
MA: Marque d’Acheteur – Buyer’s own brand
9. The most expensive champagne is Goût de Diamants and costs $1.8M USD
In 2013, Goût de Diamants (which means taste of diamonds) entered the champagne market with the launch of its most expensive champagne designed the highly acclaimed luxury designer Alexander Amosu.
The bottle was custom-made for one of Goût de Diamant’s private clients.
10. Why ships are “christened” with it –
There has always been some form of ceremony to mark the launch of a new ship. The Babylonians chose to sacrifice oxen, while the Vikings offered slaves to their sea god. Both believed these acts would bring them good luck and safe travel.
The modern practice of christening vessels with sparkling wine involves a lot less killing and dates back to 1891, when Britain’s Queen Victoria launched Navy cruiser HMS Royal Arthur by smashing a bottle of Champagne against it.
Prohibition in the United States meant that ships were christened with water for a period of time. But 1922 saw the return of champagne’s use in ship christenings in the USA.
Read on for 10 more champagne facts below!
11. Perhaps the Titanic was doomed from the start as the traditional good luck bottle-breaking ceremony did not occur before its launch.
White Star Line didn’t christen any of their ships as they didn’t believe in the practice. So rumours that the Titanic was christened with champagne but the bottle didn’t break are false.
12. Which champagnes were served aboard the Titanic?
- 1907 Heidsieck Gout Champagne; and
- Henri Abelé champagne
were among those served on the Titanic.
13. Inspired by bottles found from shipwrecks under the sea, some champagne (and wine) makers are ageing their bottles under the sea
Champagne Drappier has been experimenting with sea-ageing of its champagnes.
And also…
14. Champagne sabrage comes from Napoleonic times
Sabrage became a popular champagne opening technique in France when Napoléon’s army visited many of the aristocratic domains.
It was just after the French Revolution and the sabre was the weapon of choice of Napoleon’s light cavalry (the Hussars). Napoléon’s victories across Europe gave them plenty of reason to celebrate. During these parties the cavalry would open the champagne with their sabres.
Madame Clicquot is said to have regularly entertained Napoleon’s officers in her vineyard, and as they rode off in the early morning with their complimentary bottle of champagne, they would open it with their sabre to impress the rich young widow.
15. Champagne sabrage records
Some champagne facts about sabrage in numbers:
66: the greatest number of champagne bottles sabered in one minute as officially recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records. Ashrita Furman (USA) is the holder of the title which he gained at the Sri Chinmoy Centre, Jamaica, Queens, on 2 August 2015. Ashrita used an “Arabian sabre” with a 13-inch blade for the feat.
623: the greatest number of champagne bottles sabered simultaneously. This occurred at the Sciabolata del Santero in Santo Stefano Belbo in Italy on June 2016.
16. Cellarmasters used to wear iron masks to protect themselves from exploding bottles
Champagne bottles regularly exploded under pressure during the fermentation process and iron masks were protection from this scary event.
17. German man Georg Christian Von Kessler set off on a quest to create a non-breakable bottle for champagne and sparkling wine – and succeeded
After losing 4,000 bottles of his German sparkling wine, about half of his production, Georg Christian Von Kessler headed to the Buhlbach glassworks in the remote Baiersbronn valley of the Black Forest.
Glassmaker factory owner, Johann Georg Böhringer and his colleague Franz K. Klumpp, created the modern Champagne bottle, called the ‘Buhlbacher Schlegel,’ which would become the industry standard bottle. The bottle’s innovative feature was called the ‘Stülpboden’ a punt or inverse indentation created to strengthen Champagne bottles, allowing more even distribution of pressure.
18. Champagne may not have been the first bubbly made.
There is a lot of evidence to suggest that the Limoux region was making sparkling wine well before Dom Pérignon’s time.
Records kept by the Benedictine monks of the Abbaye de Saint Hilaire mention sparkling wine in 1531.
19. It’s rare to see a year written on a champagne label – because the grapes from multiple vintages
In an effort to create a consistent product and to ensure they can create a champagne each year regardless of the quality of that year’s grape harvest, most champagne houses create NV (non-vintage) champagnes. That allows them to use grapes from various vintages to create their cuvées, which allows for a consistent champagne year in, year out.
20. Reims, the capital of the Champagne region has over 250 kilometres (155 miles) of champagne cellars lie beneath Reims, holding around 200 million bottles!
Pommery alone is said to have between 23 – 25 million bottles in 18km of underground cellars!
So there you have it: 20 champagne facts to consider ahead of champagne day as we celebrate Champagne Week all day long.
Did you learn anything new? Do you have any champagne facts you’d like to share?