FYI/FYE,
Interesting comments w/r/t/ restaurants charging 1/2 or even a third of
of the going retail bottle price for a glass of wine. Of course, w/
vintage champagne, that's still $40 a glass.
I don't know that we're doing anything this week.
We have an open invite to do a champagne brunch at Ursulas on
Sunday 19 November. $50 inclusive.
C,
J
WINE & SPIRITS
Sound of bubbly? Ka-ching!
By Corie Brown
Times Staff Writer
October 4, 2006
THE sommelier glides up to the table just as you sit down: a glass of Champagne to start?
If you find a Champagne aperitif irresistible . and who doesn't? . brace yourself.
Champagne-by-the-glass prices are soaring, as restaurants pour an expanding array of
luxury Champagnes. A $20 price tag for a glass of Champagne is standard these days; $40
and beyond is becoming common. At the Polo Lounge at the Beverly Hills Hotel, a 6-ounce
flute of 1999 Louis Roederer Brut Cristal will set you back $123.75. Yes, for one glass.
Yet even at these steep prices, Angelenos can't get enough Champagne by the glass.
It's a hot seller at the Polo Lounge, says Micah Paloff, beverage manager for the
restaurant; Champagne accounts for one-third of all wines sold by the glass there.
Nationally, Champagne sales are soaring. In 2004, the U.S. imported 2.2 million cases from
France, up 10% from the record-breaking 2 million cases sold during the millennium year of
1999. According to Jeff Nelson, regional manager in Southern California for
Laurent-Perrier, the pace hasn't let up.
Though it may seem outrageous to pay more than $100 for a glass of anything, these new
higher prices are in line with wine-by-the-glass pricing that has long been at play in
restaurants. With both sparkling and still wines, restaurateurs generally attempt to
recoup the cost of each bottle with the first glass they pour. In other words, if they pay
$20 for a bottle of Veuve Clicquot yellow label, they'll charge $20 for a glass. They
expect to pour four 6-ounce servings or five 5-ounce servings per bottle.
At most of the 80 Los Angeles area restaurants surveyed for this article, these standard
5- or 6-ounce pours are offered for prices that work out to approximately half the retail
price of the bottle. A handful of restaurants, including Spago, price their glasses of
Champagne at roughly one-third the retail price of the bottle. Sommeliers are quick to
point out that spoilage . leftover wine in a bottle that cannot be resold . is
significant.
Wholesale prices for wine generally represent a discount of 25%, which means restaurants
need deep discounts to get their prices in line with the "first glass" formula.
And they usually get them. It's smart marketing for the winery or Champagne house.
More people taste these wines, creating a greater opportunity for future sales.
Most of the pricier by-the-glass offerings around L.A. are well-known non-vintage
Champagnes such as Krug, Perrier-Jouet, Mo�t & Chandon, Taittinger, Laurent-Perrier
and Veuve Clicquot that retail for $30 to $50.
For the Cristal, a vintage t�te de cuv�e (a Champagne house's most prestigious
bottling), the retail price is closer to $230. Paying $123 for a glass of that at the Polo
Lounge may sound exorbitant, but it's actually a better deal than many inexpensive
still wines by the glass.
For instance, at Morton's, a West Hollywood restaurant, as well as at the Lodge
steakhouse in Beverly Hills, a glass of Poppy Pinot Noir is $10. Poppy is widely available
for $10 a bottle.
Still, with expensive Champagnes, restaurants make a tidy profit if they sell more than
two glasses per bottle. If the Polo Lounge sells four 6-ounce glasses of Cristal, it
charges $495. That means even if it paid just 25% below retail (without the benefit of a
deal with Roederer), the profit would be $322.50 . just for opening a bottle of Champagne
and pouring four glasses. Any restaurant kitchen would have to do some pretty fancy,
labor-intensive cooking to make that kind of profit.
Once upon a time, a glass of Champagne was a glass of Champagne. Now it can mean just
about anything. At Sona in West Hollywood, sommelier Mark Mendoza pours 3-ounce tasting
portions as well as 6-ounce glasses of Champagne. At ll Moro in West L.A., Valentino in
Santa Monica and Ford's Filling Station in Culver City, a glass means 4 ounces.
Big is beautiful at the Lodge, Capo in Santa Monica and Mastro's, where 7 ounces is a
glass. La Terza in West Hollywood, meanwhile, supersizes Champagne . there they pour an
ultra-generous 8 ounces of non-vintage Billecart-Salmon brut reserve into a
fatter-than-normal flute. The restaurant charges $14, while a bottle retails for about
$41, making it among the best Champagne by-the-glass values we found in town.
The wide variation can create confusion. Recently at the Lodge, a bartender poured a
4.5-ounce serving of non-vintage Krug Grande Cuv�e, insisting it was the restaurant's
largest by-the-glass pour available, listed on the wine list at $42. Sommelier Caitlin
Stansbury later apologized, saying the bartender used the wrong glass. (For this article,
we relied primarily on statements from sommeliers and wine directors regarding the volume,
in ounces, of their Champagne servings.)
*
Priced to impress
THE shift to more expensive Champagnes started five years ago as part of the overall
upgrading of wine-by-the-glass offerings in Los Angeles restaurants. In 2001, Spago was
among the first to cross the $20 threshold for a glass of Champagne, according to Kevin
O'Connor, Spago's wine director.
The larger Champagne houses seized the opportunity. "Champagne is a marketing driven
product, a status symbol," O'Connor says. Having it featured by the glass at
Spago was a marketing coup, so the Champagne houses started discounting their wines to get
them on the by-the-glass list.
Today, "suppliers are making deals right and left," O'Connor says. Spago
serves 6-ounce pours of 1999 Mo�t & Chandon ros� for $20. For a wine that retails for
about $65 a bottle, it's a bargain. "All of the Champagne houses are doing a
better job of hustling," says Kevin Travis, assistant manager at Boa in Santa Monica.
When he found a great deal on 1997 Laurent-Perrier brut Tours-sur-Marne, a wine that is
difficult to find in retail stores, he put it on the list at $20 for a 6-ounce pour. Boa
also offers a non-vintage Taittinger Prestige ros� for $26 a flute. That wine retails for
about $59 a bottle.
"Producers are realizing that we can go through cases of Champagne if they are
willing to drop their prices a little," Travis says.
At the Polo Lounge, the glitterati who visit the hotel from around the world, as well as
its super-rich regulars, think nothing of ordering Cristal by the glass, Paloff says. The
surprise is that the other half of the hotel's clientele . "the people who
merely act like they are rich and famous" . are spending just as freely on Champagne.
It's part of the affectation, he says.
Veuve Clicquot is the most requested Champagne, sommeliers say, even if people can only
remember the "yellow label."
"It offers brand confidence," says Peter Birmingham, wine director at
Norman's on Sunset. "Everyone who orders it feels sophisticated."
It's everywhere, and so are the prices. Pastis offers a 4-ounce glass for $13, while
Mastro's charges $25 for 7 ounces. Just looking at the standard 6-ounce serving, the
range starts at $18 for a glass at Ma'kai in Santa Monica and stretches to $24 for a
glass at Asia de Cuba at the Mondrian Hotel on the Sunset Strip. Its average retail price
is about $37 per bottle.
Veuve Clicquot is not a Champagne that sommeliers love. "Sommeliers know that the
best Champagnes are made by the guys who grow the grapes, the tiny producers who no one
knows about," O'Connor says. "These Champagnes are cheaper than Veuve
Clicquot's yellow label, but no one goes for them."
Krug, on the other hand, is a favorite. And the Lodge's Stansbury keeps it on her
wines by-the-glass list at $42 for a 7-ounce pour. "Most people who drink Champagne
drink it by the glass," she says. And she wants to offer them something memorable. At
$120-per-bottle retail, it's not something most people keep around the house.
This month, Capo and Spago say they will join the Krug-by-the-glass party. Spago plans to
offer a 6-ounce glass for $35; at Capo a 7-ounce pour will be $45. "Given the
opportunity, people are drinking better wines," says Rod York Bonios, wine director
for Capo and chef Bruce Marder's other restaurants. And they don't seem to mind
paying for them.
For Champagne, $40 is the new $20, says Aaron Elliott, sommelier at Ortolan in West
Hollywood. The restaurant is developing a cart to feature expensive bottles more
prominently.
The more big-name Champagnes a restaurant can boast, the better, says wine consultant
Bonnie Graves. The name-dropping game works well in a brand-conscious town like Los
Angeles. "In L.A., what you pour for Champagne reflects the quality of your whole
wine list," she says.
*
corie.brown(a)latimes.com
*
(INFOBOX BELOW)
Champagne by the glass vs. bottle
Restaurant: The Grill on the Alley
Price per glass: $18 Montaudon Brut N.V. (5 1/2 oz.)
Bottle (retail*): $20
--
Restaurant: Spago
Price per glass: $35 Krug Grande Cuv�e N.V. (6 oz.)
Bottle (retail*): $120
--
Restaurant: The Polo Lounge
Price per glass: $123.75 1999 Louis Roederer Brut Cristal (6 oz.)
Bottle (retail*): $23
* Approximate average
**
What's in a pour?
Not all glasses of Champagne are created equal.
8 ounces (La Terza)
7 ounces (Mastro's, the Lodge)
6 ounces (Spago, Polo Lounge, Providence,Sona, Norman's, Campanielle
5 ounces (Jer-ne, Nine Thirty, Belvedere, Hotel Bel-Air
4 ounces (Il Moro, Pastis, Bin 8945, Valentino
--
------------------------------ *
* Dr. James Lee Ellingson, Adjunct Professor jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, tel: 651/645-0753 fax 651 XXX XXXX *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *