Tag Archive: sparkling wine

Champagne and sparkling wine–everything you need to know

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Champagne and sparkling wines like Cava or Prosecco are great wines to celebrate with. The good folks over at Snooth have assembled a comprehensive guide to sparkling wines. I highly recommend it.

More importantly, though, I recommend that you erase any idea from your mind that sparkling wines are only for special occasions. Any wine that you enjoy is a good enough wine to drink any time you want. This includes sparkling wines, and even Champagne. You do not need to wait for a special occasion to enjoy a bottle of sparkling wine. Indeed, opening a sparkler can turn an ordinary Tuesday night into a special night–for no other reason than it’s Tuesday.

Myth Busting: The truth about Dom Perignon

Dom Perignon, the abbot of a monastery at Hautvillers, France, is often credited with inventing Champagne. It’s a nice accolade, but unfortunately Dom Perignon is not the responsible party. In fact, Dom Perignon tried like mad to keep the wines from going fizzy since the fizzy wines had the tendency to make bottles explode.

The winemakers in the Champagne region were mortified that their wines developed this fizzy quality (caused by a stopped-and-restarted fermentation in the cold climate). When they figured there was no way to avoid the problem, they turned it into a marketing blitz and made Champagne into something special.

We’ll probably never know who actually decided that a sparkling wine would be sold as something special. But we do have a lot that we owe to Dom Perignon. His legacy is rightly deserved: he is responsible for creating the blending methods using older vintages that every Champagne house uses today. This blending technique is what allows the bottle of Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin that you enjoy today to taste the same as the one you had two years ago–even though the characteristics of each year’s wine change.

Dom Perignon may never have said that he was “drinking stars” (as one ad campaign put it), but we should be grateful that he spent his time working to make great wines rather than, say, writing music.

Real value in sparkling wines–Cava

Champagne is, of course, the benchmark when it comes to luxurious wines–at least in the minds of many. Wine enthusiasts know that Champagne is not limited to special occasions or luxurious events. Champagne can be enjoyed any time, even on a Tuesday night. (There is merit to the position that opening a bottle of Champagne makes any occasion special.)

The problem is, though, that you need to spend $30 to $40 to get a single bottle of good quality Champagne. Better Champagnes will cost upwards of that. That’s a lot of cash to blow on a Tuesday night wine, even for me. The problem becomes magnified if, like me, you enjoy sparkling wines a lot. Dropping $210 for a week’s worth of bubbly isn’t going to fly in many households.

There is, however, another choice, and a damn good one: Cava. One of the best known Cavas is Freixenet. Widely available, it’s a reliable producer and usually runs less than $10 per bottle. At that price, a week’s supply would run you only $70.

Another excellent Cava is Cristalino. It runs $10 per bottle or so, and you can obtain it in most markets.

There are certainly other Cavas out there worthy of your attention, and I’d love to hear about ones you’ve tried. So leave a comment and let’s build up a good Cava resource here!

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