It is also quite tricky to come to terms with the Champenois’ idea of drinking mature vintage Champagne with game & red meat, but very often it does work surprisingly well. Examples include cold roast game birds with moderately youthful vintage Champagne – try something like Billecart Salmon Brut 1998 (subtle, complex and medium bodied with creamy vanilla flavours) with cold roast partridge or similar. However, the region’s most exclusive restaurants have also developed a repertoire of lighter dishes, often cooked in champagne sauces (think Pan-fried Sea Bream with Leeks in a Champagne & Caviar Sabayon). For these a classic non-vintage Champagne will often be a greater match than even the finest single year wine.
There are, however, some rather more obvious and heavenly food & wine marriages with Champagne. For example a classy absolutely bone dry Champagne such as Laurent Perrier Ultrabrut (light, supremely elegant, refreshingly tart, minerally and with a beautifully lime and elderflower hint to the finish) with Oysters (“Brut†Champagnes, the vast majority, are lightly sweetened to off-set their piercing acidity). As everyone knows, some sweet wines can work with savoury dishes – the classic pairings of Sauternes with Foie Gras or Roquefort spring to mind. Using Demi-Sec champagne with imagination can give some heavenly results, for example Seared Scallops served with such as Pol Roger’s splendid “Rich†Demi-Sec (perfectly balanced with hints of ginger, cream and baked apples) – it must however be an exemplary example as cheap sweet fizz simply won’t do a delicate seafood dish justice.
Gravadlax, Smoked Salmon and even delicate Smoked Trout work well with Chardonnay dominant Champagne blends such as Ruinart “R†NV Brut (stylish crisp with biscuitty hints but apple & citrus flavours). Another delightful quality of Champagne is that it is one of few wines that can be enjoyed throughout the day without either ill effects or a guilty conscience! Indeed breakfast is a perfect time to crack open a bottle, and if wine at that time of day seems a shade too much then try Bucks Fizz made with freshly squeezed orange juice and a Champagne with plenty of tangy fruit with a zippy mousse such as Perrier Jouët NV. Good Brut champagnes with some weight such as Louis Roederer Brut Premier NV (smoky, rich, complex and restrained) with more black grapes in the blend work well with Thai and Asian flavours where hot, sour, salty and sweet are often found together. These flavours risk making a Brut champagne taste a little sweeter & more bland so complementing the food perfectly – in this instance a Demi-Sec would be a complete mis-match!
“I drink it when I’m happy and when I’m sad.
Sometimes I drink it when I’m alone.
When I have company I consider it obligatory.
I trifle with it if I’m not hungry and I drink it when I am.
Otherwise I never touch it, – unless I’m thirsty.â€