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224,00€0,75 lUnit price 298,67€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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Blanc de Blances Limited Edition
260,00€1,5 lUnit price 173,33€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out -
Gosset Celebris Rosé Brut 2008
159,00€0,75 lUnit price 212,00€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out -
Gosset Celebris Rosé Brut 2008 OHK
189,00€0,75 lUnit price 252,00€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out -
69,00€0,75 lUnit price 92,00€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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269,00€0,75 lUnit price 358,67€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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Krug Rosé brut 26th Edition, Gift Box
399,00€0,75 lUnit price 532,00€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out -
249,00€
313,00€Unit price /UnavailableSold out -
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44,90€0,75 lUnit price 59,87€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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Dom Perignon P2 Vintage brut 2003
477,00€0,75 lUnit price 636,00€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out -
Bollinger R. D. Extra Brut 2008
390,00€0,75 lUnit price 520,00€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out -
68,90€0,75 lUnit price /UnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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499,00€0,75 lUnit price 665,33€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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348,00€0,75 lUnit price 464,00€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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498,00€0,75 lUnit price /UnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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368,00€0,75 lUnit price /UnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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119,90€0,75 lUnit price /UnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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110,90€0,75 lUnit price /UnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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139,90€0,75 lUnit price /UnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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182,00€0,75 lUnit price 242,67€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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Rarity1.100,00€1,5 lUnit price 733,33€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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Bollinger La Grande Année Rosé 2015
279,00€0,75 lUnit price 372,00€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out -
Dom Ruinart Blanc de Blancs 2010
249,00€0,75 l269,00€Unit price 155,63€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out -
Charles Heidsieck
Charles Heidsieck Blanc des Millénaires 2014
249,00€0,75 lUnit price 332,00€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out -
46,00€0,75 lUnit price 61,33€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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Krug Grande Cuvée 172ème Édition
247,90€0,75 lUnit price 330,53€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out -
Rarity
Louis Roederer Cristal brut 2016
259,00€0,75 lUnit price 172,67€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out -
670,00€1,5 lUnit price 446,67€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
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Savart Frederic Le Mesnil Sur Orger Blanc de Blanc 2022
530,00€1,5 lUnit price 353,33€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business days business daysSold out -
164,90€0,75 lUnit price 219,87€ / lUnavailableAvailable in 2-3 business daysSold out
Wines from Champagne
Champagne is typically produced by blending different grape varieties, vineyards, terroirs, and often different vintages. This so-called assemblage is the high art of Champagne production and ensures that a house's quality remains consistent from year to year. An exception is the vintage Champagne (Millésimé): It is produced exclusively from wines of a single harvest year.
A Blanc de Blancs is a Champagne made exclusively from white grapes – usually Chardonnay. In contrast, a Blanc de Noirs is made from white base wines from red grapes like Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier. Rosé Champagne gets its color when the cellar master adds a small proportion of red wine from Champagne.
The perlage, or fine carbonation, is created by a second fermentation in the bottle, where a small amount of sugar is added to the base wine. The resulting yeast deposit is removed before sale through a complex process. In this step, the Champagne also receives its dosage, i.e., the final amount of sugar: The most common variants are Brut (up to 15 grams of sugar per liter) or Extra Brut (less than 7 grams per liter).
Climate, Terroir, and Grape Varieties
Champagne is the northernmost wine-growing region, and the cool continental climate lays the foundation for the typical style of the wines; it preserves the natural acidity and creates the ideal basis for precise sparkling wine. Chalk and calcareous marl soils with a porous structure ensure perfect drainage, store water, and give Champagne a salty tension as well as a fine, long-lasting perlage.
The three most important grape varieties are Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, and Meunier, which have different effects on the style of the Champagne. Chardonnay gives the wine an elegant and taut texture, Pinot Noir provides structure and depth, and Meunier complements with floral and fruity notes.
Selected Champagnes
View allBlanc des Blancs and Rosé Champagne
Blanc des Blancs showcases the elegance of the Côte des Blancs: citrus clarity, fine perlage, and a salty length. Rosé Champagne combines freshness with Pinot fruit and a subtle structure – excellent with salmon, tuna tartare, or poultry with red berries. Both styles demonstrate how complex Champagne can be and how consistently the region pursues quality in every category. For discerning connoisseurs, it's also worth considering high-quality Cremant as an introduction to the world of sparkling wine.
About the Champagne Wine Region
Champagne, France's northernmost wine-growing region, is the origin of the world-renowned style of fine sparkling wine, known today simply as Champagne.
Champagne encompasses a wide range of origins and classifications. The region is broadly divided into Montagne de Reims, Côte des Blancs, Vallée de la Marne, and Aube/Côte des Bar. Each sub-region contributes its own character to the Champagne: from the cool, structured Pinot soul of Montagne de Reims, to the chalky Chardonnay precision of Côte des Blancs, to the charming Meunier fruit of the Marne.
Grand Cru villages such as Aÿ, Avize, Cramant, Le Mesnil-sur-Oger, or Bouzy enjoy an outstanding reputation. They represent particularly structured, long-lived Champagnes with depth and elegance – icons for the cellar and conversations at the table.
This diversity is key to Champagne's global success: The range extends from accessible non-vintage cuvées to rare prestige bottlings, complemented by Blanc de Blancs and Rosé Champagne.
Vineyard area, sustainability, and modern style
The Champagne vineyards are among the most important sparkling wine regions in the world. In recent decades, the region has consistently invested in precision and sustainability: careful harvesting, long yeast aging, single-parcel bottlings, and deliberately moderate dosage characterize modern champagne. Many houses and winemakers are working on biodiversity in the vineyard and energy-efficient cellar technology – ensuring the wines remain authentic, characterful, and consistent in their balance between structure and drinkability.
History & Champagne Houses
Viticulture in Champagne dates back to the Romans, who introduced cultivation to the region. After them, Catholic clergy took control of the vineyards, as wine represented a steady and lucrative source of income for the Church. As early as the High Middle Ages, wines from places like Reims, Aÿ, and Épernay – at that time mostly still or only slightly sparkling – were highly coveted, expensive, and even made their way to England.
There, in 1662, the physician Jean Merret published a method to make wine sparkle – even before Dom Pérignon, who is often mistakenly credited as the inventor of Champagne. Dom Pérignon did not enter the Abbey of Hautvillers until 1665, and the characteristic effervescence itself only developed in Champagne at the beginning of the 18th century. From this point on, however, Champagne began its worldwide triumph and became a symbol of joie de vivre and carefree elegance.
Today, Champagne houses such as Dom Perignon, Bollinger, Louis Roederer, KRUG, or Gosset are at the forefront in Champagne and represent this special region all over the world.
Champagne is fascinating, diverse, and emotional. Those who travel through Champagne experience a region that never stands still and yet honors its roots. Discover grand houses, elegant cuvées, and young grower Champagnes that will dominate conversations tomorrow. If you wish to buy Champagne, we accompany you with curated recommendations, outstanding offers, and expert advice – so that every bottle brings you the joy that Champagne has exuded for centuries.
Enjoy a refined selection of wines from various regions

Your personal wine contact - individual and regional
Whether rare vintages, large-format bottles or individual storage solutions – our team of experts will take the time to discuss your requirements. In person, by phone or by email.

