
Winery Jules BrochetLes Champs aux Buissons Coteaux Champenois
This wine generally goes well with pork, rich fish (salmon, tuna etc) or shellfish.

Food and wine pairings with Les Champs aux Buissons Coteaux Champenois
Pairings that work perfectly with Les Champs aux Buissons Coteaux Champenois
Original food and wine pairings with Les Champs aux Buissons Coteaux Champenois
The Les Champs aux Buissons Coteaux Champenois of Winery Jules Brochet matches generally quite well with dishes of pork, rich fish (salmon, tuna etc) or shellfish such as recipes of pizza cone, sardines moroccan style or pike dumplings with shrimp sauce.
Details and technical informations about Winery Jules Brochet's Les Champs aux Buissons Coteaux Champenois.
Discover the grape variety: Pinot noir
Elegant reds, light in colour with silky tannins, showing strawberry, cherry and raspberry aromas, evolving to forest floor, mushroom and spice with age. Fresh acidity, delicate finish. Star of the Côte d'Or (Romanée-Conti, Chambertin, Volnay), pillar of Champagne (Blanc de Noirs) and signature of Oregon, Central Otago and Sonoma Coast. An early-ripening Burgundian variety, one of the world's greatest.
Informations about the Winery Jules Brochet
The Winery Jules Brochet is one of of the world's greatest estates. It offers 4 wines for sale in the of Coteaux Champenois to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Coteaux Champenois
Champagne AOC for still wines produced in the Champagne area, from the same grape varieties. Fine and taut flagship reds with signature notes of red cherry, wild strawberry, raspberry, flowers and chalky mineral touch, light tannins and lively palate — Pinot Noir signature at Bouzy and Ambonnay as reference (Bouzy red). Whites: taut Chardonnay (citrus, white flowers, chalk). Cool marginal climate for red.
The wine region of Champagne
World benchmark sparkling wines: fine bubbles, citrusy tension, notes of brioche, toasted almond, white flowers and white-fleshed fruits after ageing on lees. Three grapes blended or solo: fleshy Pinot Noir (38%), fruity Meunier (33%), chiselled Chardonnay (28%). From straight Blanc de Blancs to vinous Blanc de Noirs, from non-vintage Brut to age-worthy Millésimé. AOC since 1927, 34,300 ha on chalk, 17 Grands Crus and 44 Premiers Crus.
The word of the wine: Table wine
Everything that is not VQPRD (European designation for all appellation wines: quality wine produced in a specific region). In principle, the bottom of the ladder. But, as in Italy a decade ago (Vino da Tavola), this category is also a refuge for wines that are out of the ordinary, whose producers refuse to accept certain grape variety or vinification dictates.











