Champagne 101
- 1 (750 ml) bottle champagne
- fresh raspberry
- fresh peach slices
- apricot nectar or peach nectar
- orange juice
- Vintage vs. Non-Vintage Champagne: All Champagnes are made from grapes grown in France's northeastern region, the Champagne province.
- Most Champagnes are non-vintage: that is, they are made from a blend of grapes from different years, aged in the bottle for 18 months.
- Vintage Champagne is made with high-quality grapes from the same year; they must be aged three years before they are released.
- Champagnes from Dry to Sweet: In addition to classifying Champagne as vintage or non-vintage, 6 classifications are used to refer directly to the Champagne's sweetness:.
- Brut: dry, less than 1.5% sugar.
- Extra Sec: extra dry, 1.2 to 2% sugar.
- Sec: medium sweet, 1.7 to 3.5% sugar.
- Demi-Sec: sweet, 3.3 to 5% sugar (Served as a dessert champagne).
- Doux: very sweet, over 5% sugar (Served as a dessert champagne).
- Other Wines with Bubbles: Sparkling wines made by the same process can't be called Champagne unless they're made in their namesake French region.
- Chardonnay and pinot noir grapes are the main varieties used to make Champagne, and they're grown all over the world; many regions produce fine sparkling wines that are somewhat less expensive and more widely available than French Champagne.
- Italian Prosecco and Asti, Spanish Cava and German Sekt are all delicious varieties of sparkling wine.
- As a side note: the small clusters of grapes sold in the supermarket as "champagne grapes" are just using the cachet of the name: they're actually fresh zante currants.
- Serving Champagne: Chill the wine in the coldest part of your refrigerator.
- Open the bottle by twisting off the wire cage over the cork, keeping your thumb over the cork.
- Keep the bottle at an angle, with the cork pointing away from you.
- Grasp the neck of the bottle with a dry cloth; with your thumb over the cork, gently twist the bottle.
- You should feel the cork easing itself loose.
- Don't go for the dramatic pop: removing the cork should be almost soundless.
- Serve Champagne in clean, dry flutes--narrow glasses with tall sides--which show off the color and the fine bubbles while keeping the carbonation from dissipating.
- "Prime" the glasses by pouring a small amount of wine into the bottom of each glass, letting the foam subside before filling them fully.
champagne, fresh raspberry, apricot, orange juice
Taken from www.food.com/recipe/champagne-101-360805 (may not work)