Wine with Personality!

Product information

Larmandier Bernier Rosé de Saignée Brut 1er Cru NV

Pinot Noir from Vertus, Champagne, France

$203

$193ea in any 3+
$183ea in any 6+
Closure: Cork
Real Champagne Rosé is a rare beast. This is truly special, incredible harmony, depth, spice & savouriness.

Description

Most Rosé Champagne is tricked up white with a bit of red wine added for colour along with a heap of sugar because the fruit if not good enough to stand on it’s own. Larmandier-Bernier’s is a real Rosé, made by leaving the juice in contact with the skins for 2-3 days before pressing. Finished with an extremely low dosage of 3g/l.

Along with Clouet’s Rosé, this is the one to try!

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Check out all of the wines by Larmandier-Bernier

Why is this Wine so Yummy?

Winemaking

The term Saignée means to bleed.

This cuvée is produced from the Pinot Noir and Pinot Gris grapes picked in Vertus, where the two varieties grow together in the same plot of old vines. It’s made by macerating the berries for a few days, a technique not commonly used in Champagne.

Larmandier-Bernier’s Rosé being run-off skins – Pic by Larmandier-Bernier

In it’s earlier days Larmdier-Bernier’s Rosé often had the colour of a light red wine with serious structure. Over time it has become more refined. This is serious wine made with intent. The complexity and harmony are outstanding. The balance perfect.

The fruit comes from a cool site in Vertus, perhaps known more for exceptional Chardonnay, less so for, Pinot Noir.

This tells us something of the quality of the vineyard and the approach Larmandier-Bernier have towards their sites. They see themselves as custodians of the land. Their meticulous, holistic approach sees them growing exception Pinot Noir.

Grower Champagnes

I don’t know who coined the term “Grower Champagne”, when you see it, make sure you take a second look before you move on. Champagne producers are split into three groups:

  1. Houses that make over-cropped boring fizz, battery acid with bubbles and a bit of alcohol.
  2. Bigger houses that are pushing hard to make yummy wine, own some of their vineyards, buy a lot of grapes and have some exceptional super cuvées (top wines – think Dom Pérignon).
  3. Grower producers that grow 100% of their grapes themselves and make wines that have bags of personality.

Larmandier-Bernier sits comfortably in the Grower group. Doing all the little 1 percenters in the vineyard and winery that make the difference between a drink and a pleasure fest!

Visit the vineyards and you’ll see horse-drawn ploughs and during the pruning and harvesting seasons the same faces year after year. That kind of continuity just makes for deep knowledge and empathy for the vineyards that = great wine.

In the winery, the effort goes in with the use of old oak barrels and foudré, large format barrels reaching into the 1000’s of litres each. Lees stirring, re-suspending yeast from fermentation that has settled to the bottom of the barrel to add extra creaminess and complexity. Use of carefully crafted reserve wines in the blends. Reserve wines are older wines that are a blend of several different years, often stored in foudré. Their use imparts complexity and a generosity that you wouldn’t see in the wine until it had been aged for much longer in bottle were it not for their use.

All of these things only have a positive impact when the fruit is of quality, has the depth to handle oxygen contact and be improved by it rather than fall apart.

Combined the effort in the vineyard and winery result in layered, complex, yummy wine, with bags of personality.

“The Larmandier-Bernier Champagnes are some of the purest and most utterly engaging wines being made in the region today. I can’t recommend them highly enough.” Antonio Galloni

“Few growers’ ranges in Champagne are as consistently outstanding as that of Larmandier-Bernier” Andrew Jefford, The New France

“In a region where vineyard work is not always given the priority it deserves, Larmandier-Bernier is a model of what can be achieved through conscientious and diligent care in the vines.” Peter Liem

About Larmandier Bernier

Like Egly-Ouriet and Selosse, Larmandier-Bernier has been rated as one of Champagne’s top 5 producers by Andrew Jefford in his celebrated work, The New France, [Mitchell Beazley]. This estate is meticulously run by Pierre Larmandier and his wife Sophie. Pierre’s family have owned vineyards in the Côte des Blancs since the Revolution. The estate is now 15 hectares, predominantly in Vertus, at the Southern tip of the Côte des Blancs, yet there are also holdings in Cramant, Chouilly, Oger & Avize. The vineyards are biodynamically worked (almost unheard of in Champagne) and the average age of the vines is 35 years (most Champagne vineyards are considered ‘old’ and due for replanting at 25 years). Yields are kept very low by Champagne standards, 50 hl/ha on average.

In the winery the approach is classic “minimalist” with indigenous yeasts, long, slow ferments of up to two months and very little sulphur. A mixture of fermenting vessels are utilised including large oak vats and even barriques. Very low dosage levels too and the dosage is designed to be as neutral as possible. Sometimes, as is the case in the “Terre de Vertus” there is no dosage at all. In other words, everything is designed to maximise the expression of the vineyard, commune and vintage. The resulting wines are wonderful expressions of their origins, fine and delicate, yet with and a mineral intensity that keeps you coming back, sip after sip. Peter Liem (champagneguide.net) has written: “Larmandier-Bernier is one of the finest estates in the Côte des Blancs, producing wines of unusual detail and clarity of expression. The style is for champagnes that are dry, minerally and terroir-driven, emphasizing purity and finesse over richness or sheer power.”Such purity and minerality could only come from the man that Laurent d’Harcourt, MD of Pol Roger, recently dubbed “The Ayatollah of quality” and his impeccably tended vineyards.

Where in Champagne are Larmandier-Bernier’s Vineyards

Based in Vertus Larmandier-Bernier’s vineyards are dotted throughout the Côtes des Blancs with thin top soils over chalky bedrock. The Longitude comes from a string of vineyards that run in a line north to south in the villages of Vertus, Cramant, Oger & Avize.

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The map below shows the main sub-regions of Champagne

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From left to right Champagne vineyards by Soil Type, Aspect and Dominant Varietal

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Where in the world does the magic happen?

Larmandier-Bernier Champagne, Avenue du Général de Gaulle, Vertus, France

Vertus
Champagne
France