Getting to know Moët & Chandon

Friday, 26 August, 2022
Wanted, Mark Smyth
A trip to the home of the famous champagne house, Moët & Chandon to understand its history and what makes it so special.

Moët & Chandon is arguably the most famous champagne in the world, which is not surprising when you consider that it was also the first champagne house on the main road through the village of Epernay in France, the centre of the champagne region.

Today it is the M in Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy (LVMH), but Moët & Chandon has been crafting champagne since 1743 and owns 1,180ha of the 34 300ha of vineyards across the area, a unique region where the European continental climate crosses with the climate from the Atlantic Ocean to create the perfect environment for growing grapes.

The pinnacle of the Moët & Chandon range is Moët & Chandon Imperial and who better to explain its culture to Wanted than winemaker Marie-Christine Osselin. Sitting in the tasting gardens behind the company’s popular visitor centre on Avenue de Champagne, she told us that Imperial was first created in 1969. Each year the winemakers take the best from the variety of wines and blend them together to create the vintage.

Three grapes are used — chardonnay, pinot noir and meuniet — which are then combined with a number of special reserve wines. No matter the harvest, Osselin says that Imperial must always taste exactly the same.

That was true for decades, but then in 2002 the decision was made to introduce Imperial Rose, which now accounts for 20% of Moët & Chandon sales. It went even further in 2011, creating Ice Imperial, something that might seem sacrilegious to many. However, cellarmaster Benoît Gouez told us that they realised many people were adding ice to their champagne, which dramatically alters the taste, so rather than ignore this they decided to make a variant that reacts to the ice in the way the house of Moët & Chandon would like.

To assess this, we obviously had to undertake a taste test, under the tutorship of sommelier Fernand de Britto. First though, the question of pronunciation. Everyone has their own way of saying Moët, but De Britto explained that it is always Muu-wet. We are not sure if the written version translates properly but what you need to know is that it is not Mo-a, or Mo-et. Now you know.

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