http://www.wine-searcher.com/m/2014/05/pink-champagne-comes-of-age
Pink Champagne Comes of Age
[image: Rosé Champagne sales have been booming for more than a decade]
© Fotolia | Rosé Champagne sales have been booming for more than a decade
*Tom Stevenson *selects the best rosé Champagnes to enjoy over the summer
and reveals why it remains so expensive.
Posted Tuesday, 27-May-2014
In March 2004, Jancis Robinson MW confessed her bewilderment at the
continuing vogue for pink Champagne, despite its “often dire” quality. Yet
10 years on, this style, which used to be no more than a very fleeting fad,
is more popular than ever.
The last vogue for Champagne
<http://www.wine-searcher.com/regions-champagne> rosé was in the mid-1980s
and was created by one man, Allan Cheesman, when he selected Charbaut
<http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/guy+charbaut+brut+rose+champagne+france>
to supply the U.K. supermarket Sainsbury’s with a Champagne rosé
<http://www.wine-searcher.com/regions-champagne+rose> for its own-label
range.
“*The firms that do make pink Champagne seldom serve it to their
guests.... Indeed, pink Champagne, in the Champagne district, is considered
somewhat of a question délicate, and is best avoided.*" - Patrick Forbes,
MD Moet UK, (1967)
Cheesman suggested to his marketing people that they should emphasize the
fact that this particular Champagne had been made by saignée method, where
naturally colored juice is bled off the black grapes and fermented, in
contrast to the more widely used method of blending in a little red wine to
create the desired color. The marketers put their muscle behind it and the
wine was a runaway success.
It sparked a trend for rosé and the Champagne industry thought it was onto
such a winner that it began boosting production. But the problem with
Champagne is that it requires such a long lead time. In 1989, just as the
cheapest, youngest new batch of pink Champagne began trickling onto the
market, demand began to stall and by 1991, when everyone was ready to
release the increased volume, a recession had hit, sales evaporated, and
the Champenois were left with huge stocks of rosé that gradually turned
orange and unsaleable.
By the late '90s, sales of rosé had plummeted. Gradually sales crept up so
that by 2004, when Robinson wrote her piece, rosé wines made up 5 per cent
of total sales and now they are 10 percent. At first the Champenois were
wary but, after 17 years, I think it is safe to say that Champagne rosé is
experiencing more than a temporary peak in sales. Almost every producer has
at least one rosé in its range. Pink is no longer a fad.
*Improvements*
One advantage of rosé becoming a permanent feature is that it has given the
Champenois an opportunity to improve the production process. When rosé was
an occasional whim, not only did most producers look no further than their
standard, pre-prepared brut cuvée to color up, they also just grabbed the
nearest Coteaux Champenois
<http://www.wine-searcher.com/regions-coteaux+champenois> red to do the job.
Furthermore, since very few houses made their own red wine, most were left
with no alternative but to purchase red wines through the region's
brokerage system. As the production of Champagne rosé increased, so the
price of red wine jumped and, with more demand than supply, speculative
producers joined the fray, causing quality to decline.
Even long-standing suppliers within Champagne’s bulk-wine market produced
sub-standard reds that generally had insufficient color, questionable
aromatics and too much tannin. As demand continued, the uncertainty of
supply and influx of increasingly less-desirable red wine from speculators
galvanized the larger players to invest in their own dedicated red
winemaking facilities.
Interestingly, the first red winemaking facilities came on stream in 2004,
the very year that Robinson complained of Champagne rosé’s “often dire”
quality.
[image: Champagne is the only appellation where red and white wine can be
blended to make rosé]
© iStock | Champagne is the only appellation where red and white wine can
be blended to make rosé
*Which is best?*
How many times do we read that blending a little red wine into a white is
illegal for the production of most rosés throughout the E.U. or that the
saignée or maceration method of making Champagne rosé is somehow
intrinsically superior?
The inference is that because blending is illegal it must be wrong and thus
inferior, but that in itself infers that all E.U. regulations are
intrinsically correct or, at the very least, sensible. Both maceration and
blending methods can make rosés that are light or deep colored, rich or
delicate, and can show great finesse or a rustic character. Neither method
has any intrinsic advantage, but in my experience there are far more color,
phenolic and oxidative issues in rosés that have been produced by some form
of mass maceration.
*Best Rosé Tip:* As many rosés are sold in clear glass bottles to show
off their color, never buy any bottle that is on the shelf, as light,
especially fluorescent light, can degrade methionine (found naturally in
wine) into nasty-smelling dimethyldisulphide in just 60 minutes. Always
make sure your bottle has never been removed from its carton.
*Why is Champagne rosé disproportionately expensive?*
There are additional costs to be borne by producers ring-fencing
lower-yielding vines and developing red winemaking facilities, but whatever
excuses along these lines you read, that is all they are. The premiums were
in place prior to those developments.
The truth is that following the implosion of the market in 1991, many
Champenois put a premium on their sales of Champagne rosé to cover the cost
of being left with stock. Currently the difference in cost is roughly 20
percent for non-vintage and anywhere between 50 and 100 percent for iconic
prestige cuvées. Initially, it was a simple, precautionary business
decision and, if the public wanted rosé under those conditions, they would
have to be prepared to pay for it, which they obviously were.
Now, however, after 17 years of steadily growing sales, the Champagne rosé
market is no longer the risk it once was and arguably the premiums are no
longer warranted, but they will never disappear. Anyone who imagines that
any business trying to build and enhance the current and future reputation
of its wines (whether it is a Champagne house, Gaja in Piemonte or
Screaming Eagle in California) is going to drop its prices once it has
established a secure foothold in the market is not living in the real world.
[image: Stevenson's selections]
© Wine-Searcher | Stevenson's selections
*Six of the best*
*Best prestige Champagne rosé:*
2002 Dom Pérignon Rosé Brut
<http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/dom+perignon+rose+brut> A lovely melange
of coffee, chocolate and toast, building on exquisitely mellow mandarin
fruit.
2002 Deutz Cuvée William Deutz Rosé Brut
<http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/cuvee+william+deutz+rose+brut> Very
pale, with gorgeous fruit and finesse. Not just delicious, but classy too.
2002 Roederer Cristal Rosé
<http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/roederer+cristal+rose> Beautiful
pale-peach color, with crisp Chardonnay-underlaid Pinot fruit on the palate
and a very silky, long finish.
*The greatest non-vintage Champagne rosé:*
Charles Heidsieck Brut Rosé Réserve
<http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/charles+heidsieck+brut+rose+reserve>
Very pale, almost old gold color, with lovely toasty aromas and deliciously
fresh yet mellow, crystallized orchard fruit flavors, and a lovely,
low-pressure, silky mousse.
*Best boutique producer Champagne rosé:*
Dosnon & Lepage Récolte Rosé
<http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/dosnon+lepage+recolte+rose>Very pale
pink-gold color with lifted strawberry aromas. Made for drinking, not
keeping and nothing wrong with that.
Bruno Paillard Première Cuvée Brut Rosé
<http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/bruno+paillard+premiere+cuvee+brut+rose>
Very, very pale old-gold color with flecks of platinum. Youthful aromas are
reflected on the palate. Will be twice the wine if kept just 6-18 months.
--
James Ellingson cell 651 645 0753
Great Lakes Brewing News, 5219 Elliot Ave, Mpls, MN 55417
James(a)BrewingNews.com BeerGovernor(a)gmail.com