A visit to Champagne Laurent Lequart
18th July 2017
I was very pleased to have the opportunity to meet Laurent Lequart from Champagne Laurent Lequart, a house with 10 hectares of vineyards located in the village of Passy Grigny that lays in the heart of the Marne Valley. A small family grower Champagne using local cooperative operations to collect and press its grapes (Dom Caudron cooperative which is a very modern and sleek operation serving varied labels in the immediate region) and then Laurent adds his own unique style of producing a selection of 10 labels under their brand.
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Passy Grigny is a fine example of a Champagne village with a community of several hundred including varied Champagne producers and one main cooperative. Champagne Laurent Lequart is a firm part of the wine growing community, four generations of family wine makers and with a mindset of quality of quantity via a production of approx 80,000 bottles per year. They are focused also on their organic wine-making techniques with focus on respecting todays environment and allowing as best as they can for nature to produce the quality that a label carrying the name of Champagne requires.
As with any wine it is mostly down to what is in the bottle and this is where Laurent’s passion comes alive. I was pleased to have a private tasting with Laurent and Kevin Sibille, who works closely with the Laurent Lequart brand, where I was able to experience their unique style of Champagne. Food pairing is always an important subject in my mind when ever tasting wines so I was pleased that Laurent held the same passion when I asked him some questions:
How important is food pairing to your selection of Champagne?
Today pairing food and Champagne is an important subject and I am pleased that more and more people are seeing Champagne as a perfect gastronomic wine for many foods.
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Can you suggest some fine food pairings to match with your wines?
Many of our wines pair perfectly with food. For example we have our brut reserve which I suggest pairs with fish dishes, fresh fruit salads and I would even say is the perfect match for that late breakfast / brunch. Our brut nature is great with lobster, tune and salmon. The extra brut I’d suggest to accompany white meats with creamy sauce, soft cheese and foie gras.
I was also lucky and appreciative to Laurent that he brought out a bottle of his vintage 2000. This wine has a blend of 50% pinot meunier and 50% chardonnay and has six month ageing in old oak barrels. The wine has a deep golden colour and lively mousse with an aroma of apricot pastry, honey and buttered toast. The taste is a toasty, creamy, brioche, yellow stone fruits experience with hints of coffee/cocoa in the length in mouth.
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Christopher Walkey
Co-founder of Glass of Bubbly. Journalist and author focused on Champagne & Sparkling Wines and pairing them with foods.