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Champagne Brut Substance Blanc de Blancs NV 75cl

AOC Grand Cru | Côte des Blancs | Champagne | France
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NV
Critics scores
95 By Robert Parker
93 By Wine Spectator
Selosse’s NV Extra Brut Substance Disg. 04/2013 represents the current state of a solera begun in 1986 and based on the same two sites that inform his basic vintage bottling. (This cuvee is routinely disgorged in the last quarter of each year, but due to the theft of stocks when his cellar was broken into early this year, Selosse interpolated an additional small disgorgement.) “‘Substance’ expresses the blood line,” he explains “whereas ‘Millesime’ expresses individual personality.” There is a sweet as well as toasty sense of nut concentrates; an aura of autumn foliage; decadent lees character; as well as hints of beeswax, toasted buckwheat, peach kernel, smoky black tea, and of course flor. Yet amid all of those arguably oxidative or biologically evolved elements are succulent juiciness of white peach and fresh albeit bittersweet floral perfumes. That the base wines here are exposed to 70% new barrique is not in any way obvious, and what subtle suggestions of lanolin, spice or resin are present merely add new layers to this profoundly multifarious experience. Nor have controlled oxidation or new wood in any way deprived this cuvee of traits that cry out for mineral descriptors. I am forced to refer to “chalk,” “salt,” and “alkali” for lack of better choices, and to point to a maritime sense of depth that helps lead to mouthwatering as well as profoundly layered finishing savor. Insofar as one could both afford it and were lucky enough to locate bottles, this is a wine to return to and wonder about over the next several years, as well as, of course, on the basis of renewed disgorgements.
Producer
Champagne Jacques Selosse
One of the true icons in Champagne, the Jacques Selosse House of Champagne has taken the region by storm, surpassing past traditions with the force of brilliant new ideas and efforts. Established in 1949 by Jacques Selosse, his son Anselme, however, is the man responsible for Champagne’s most recent renascence. By the late 1970s, Anselme took over the Avize estate, following in his father’s reputation, Anselme has become one of the most fascinating vintners in the appellation. He is a unique, magnetic individual that takes a Burgundian approach to his wines. That includes low yielding vineyards, and organic viticulture to provide the purest, most intense fruits possible. His radical vinification processes utilize new and old oak to barrel-ferment each base wine separately. Harvested from 35 different plots, his 7.5-hectares stretch across most of the appellation, there are Chardonnay parcels in the Côte des Blancs — Avize, Cramant, Oger, Le Mesnil-sur-Oger — and a few Montagne de Reims plots, that are dedicated to growing Pinot Noir, as well as in Aÿ, Ambonnay and Mareuil-sur-Aÿ. This rather small producer consistently crafts some of the most compelling and original Champagnes in France.