Lacourte-Godbillon Mont Ames- Migreats Premier Cru 2015 (6 Bottles) Ecueil, France

$1,553.00 GST Included

AUSTRALIA WIDE SHIPPING INCLUDED

This champagne is a single-varietal Blanc de Noirs from Pinot Noir. The vines come from 55-year-old Sélection Massales in the Mont Âme parcel with chalky soils and Migerats with loose clay soils in the Cru Les Mesneux in Ecueil, Montage de Reims.

The base wine was aged in 300-litre barrels after pressing and spontaneous fermentation. Nothing was stabilised or filtered or fined. The wine was bottled and aged for five years sur lattes matured and disgorged on 13.4.21. It has 1 gram of dosage. There are 1,742 bottles and 30 magnums.

Color: Intense straw yellow with light copper reflections and a relaxed mousseux.

Nose: The M.A.M. 2015 is an open, elegant and complex champagne from the start, bringing just the right balance of citrus fruit from ripe grapefruits and citrus as well as red berries and chalkiness. Its bouquet is also reminiscent of creamy nougat on very lightly warmed brioche. This is more than appetising, and it all seems finely interwoven and exudes nobility.

Palate: This noble character is also evident on the palate, where the fruit appears ripe and juicy and brings a fine extract sweetness to the champagne, so that it requires no more than 1 gram of dosage. The fruit is sensual, reminiscent of ripe pome fruit as well as stone fruit, oranges and lemon sorbet. Again, there is the hint of nougat and the sweet yeast dough, a red Pinot aspect of raspberries and red nectarines. There is also a hint of chalkiness and lime, which is not scratchy, however, but is integrated into a creamy texture. The champagne seems complex and straightforward on the palate, again very balanced and so inviting that the bottle is emptied faster than expected.

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Description

About Lacourte Godbillon: Ecueil, France

The LACOURTES, my father’s side, and the GODBILLONS, on my mother’s side, began by growing grapes. Just like the generations before them, they sold all their crop to the big and famous champagne houses.

Was it a passion? Maybe… but more than anything else it was sheer hard work. As my grandmother used to say: ”we were often in the vineyards from 5 in the morning until 8 at night!”. And the children would join them to help after school.

A reason for living? Most probably… With the ultimate objective being the honour of buying a plot of vines as soon as they were able to.

In 1947, shortly after returning from the war, they began a new adventure: producing and marketing champagne under the names LACOURTE-LABASSE and GODBILLON-MARIE. They were soon filling their customers’ car boots with bulk orders!

The first harvest from my parents was 1968. They gradually set up their business and established the LACOURTE-GODBILLON brand. At first it was no more than a few thousand bottles. Bottling and disgorgement would be done at the back of a courtyard… But the most important thing was my father’s understanding that the best champagne was made only from top quality work in the vineyard. His whole career was dedicated to this ethos.

Richard and I took the big step in 2006 when we left our executive city jobs to come back to the vineyard of our home. This new wine making life has been a total revelation!

The PREMIER CRU village of Écueil is situated on the western flank of the “petite Montagne de Reims”. Our 20.5 acres of vineyards is planted 85% to Pinot Noir and 15% to Chardonnay, all of it in Écueil except for just 1.2 acres in the neighbouring village of Les Mesneux. Our vines have an average age of 30 years.

Winemakers from all over the Montagne district have long bought Pinot Noir vine plants from Écueil. There was even a school here where they could learn how to graft these stocks. Up until a few years ago we bought Pinot Noir plants from the local nursery. From now on, we will be implementing our own ”massal selection” of the best plants for cuttings in our own parcels of vines, in order to preserve this heritage.

This particular terroir is characterised by an incredibly diverse sub-soil. Some parts are predominantly sandy over the deep chalk, others composed of “sparnacian” clay and shallow chalk at the bottom of the hillsides, similar to the soils of Les Mesneux.

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