Dear friends,
Fellow Champagne fans have no doubt noticed
that in the case of a nonvintage (multi-vintage) wine there’s no way to
tell, just from looking at the bottle, what was the base year and what is/are
the other year(s) in the blend. Turns out the reason why there’s no
way to tell is not just the secretiveness of
Peter Liem reports in today’s blog
post that the Champagne grower-producer Pascal Doquet “took the time to
design a [back] label that could fit all of the necessary information [pictured
in the blog; the label indicated the bottle contained a 1999-98-96 blend, as
well as bottling and disgorgement dates and dosage, plus don’t drink when
pregnant and other warnings required by law], printed it up and sent it off to
his American importer. Looks great, right? Wouldn’t you be
thrilled if all champagnes had this level of detail on the label? Well,
you’re not going to see this label on any of [Doquet’s] bottles, as
it was rejected by the American authorities. The reason is that in the
Aren’t you glad the TTB and Homeland
Security are keeping you safe from learning too much?
Cheers,
Russ