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Liqueur d’Expedition


The liqueur d’expedition is the liquid used to top up bottle fermented sparkling wines after they have been disgorged to remove all the dead yeast from the bottle & before they are re-sealed ready for packaging and sale.
The composition of the liqueur depends on the style being made.

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The liqueur d’expedition is the liquid used to top up bottle fermented sparkling wines after they have been disgorged to remove all the dead yeast from the bottle & before they are re-sealed ready for packaging and sale.

The composition of the liqueur depends on the style being made.

The base of liqueur is typically a wine, often the same wine that is being disgorged. The options for the base are limitless, some produces have a special solera or reserve wine that they use at this point to add complexity.

Sugar can be added, typically cane sugar, to balance acid or create a sweeter style like a demi-sec. This sugar is known as the dosage. Dosage ranges from nothing, with a low dosage anything below 5g/L. For the sweetest of the Champagne styles, the ‘demi-sec’ or half sweet between 30-50g/l of sugar is added.

  • Brut Nature or Dosage Zero = 0-3g/l – bone dry
  • Extra brut = 0-6 g/l – very dry
  • Brut = 0-12 gl – dry
  • Extra Sec or Extra Dry = 12-17 g/l – dry to medium dry
  • Sec or Dry 17-32 g/l – medium to medium sweet
  • Demi-sec or Rich 32-50 g/l – sweet

Sulphur may be added to protect the wine from oxidation.

Depending on where you are in the world a very small amount of cognac, sherry, or other secret ingredients may be added.

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Feeling Thirsty?

Faiveley is definitely a Domaine on the Ascention Mingling deep fruit tones evocative of red cherries and plums with notions of loamy soil, licorice, orange rind, rose petals and sweet spices, the 2020 Corton Grand Cru Clos des Cortons Faiveley is full-bodied, layered and multidimensional, with terrific concentration, tangy acids and a long, saline finish. This is extremely promising. William Kelley, The Wine Advocate 94-96 BH 92-94
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Auguste Clape Cornas 2018

Shiraz/Syrah | Rhône Valley, Cornas

Four in a Row for Clape with 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 all stunning vintages! Clape’s masterpiece is, of course, the classic Cornas, precisely blended from five to six cuvées of the oldest vines in the best sites. The backbone comes from Reynard, La Côte and Sabarotte. The old vines here are la Petite Syrah—the old clone considered by many to be the true Syrah—which creates a stunningly deep and complex wine that will develop for decades.
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Containing over 700 pages of in-depth writing, maps that are almost alarming in their detail, and incorporating newly commissioned and (literally) ground-breaking research into Bordeaux’s terroir, Janes Anson’s work is, by a margin, the most up-to-date and scientifically informed book in the Bordeaux canon. Indeed, with the bar set so high, this is a book unlikely to be surpassed in our lifetime (unless there is a second edition)! Anson has lived and worked in Bordeaux for almost 20 years