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Widow Clicquot Story

Original price was: $675.00.Current price is: $625.00.

Champagne Veuve Clicquot Carte Jaune Experience uis based on three phases by tasting each Bottle with guide lines

The Carte Jaune champagne from VEUVE CLICQUOT is the signature champagne of the House, a champagne known throughout the world. It is the expression of the quality and style of this great House.

It is created from the blend of approximately 55 different Crus, 30 to 45% of which come from the extraordinary collection of reserve wines of the House. There is mainly Pinot Noir (50 to 55%) for the structure, then Chardonnay (28 to 33%) for finesse and elegance and Pinot Meunier (15 to 20%).

It has then rested for at least three years in the cellar to offer us strength and silkiness and reveal aromas of fruit as well as vanilla and brioche. Its aromatic intensity and intense freshness make it an ideal aperitif, but also an accompaniment to a meal to enhance a seafood platter, a fish tartare or a beautiful Parmesan.

The famous Barbe-Nicole Ponsardin, nicknamed « Veuve Clicquot », acquired some of the best vintages after her husband’s death in 1805, constituting an exceptional wine heritage that now covers 515 hectares.

« The great lady of Champagne » also innovated by creating the first blended rosé champagne.

Since 1877, Maison Veuve Clicquot has been dressing its bottles with a recognizable orange-yellow label, with an anchor, a symbol of hope, as a logo.

At Clicquot, the style is anchored by Pinot Noir, which gives rise to some of the most prestigious champagnes.

Veuve Clicquot Champagnes are fruity, harmonious and chic.

3 Bottles of gastronomy par excellence per BOND500 Pack experience, for which the House motto is: “Only one quality, the very first”

 

Description

The Incredible Story of The Grand Dame of Champagne:

The Widow Clicquot Movie  in Pairing with Champagne Veuve Clicquot Carte Jaune tasting Experience

It is there for weddings and graduations, anniversaries and new jobs, shimmering and effervescent in glasses raised in the air. Champagne is the magical liquid by which we mark life’s victories and milestones. Synonymous with celebration and luxury, it is harder to find a more highly regarded drink, or one with as storied a history.

Yet among all the old and renowned champagne houses of France, one stands above the rest. So much so, that when we think of champagne in general, the regal gold label of this particular brand comes to mind. We speak, of course, of the inimitable Veuve Clicquot

And while the story of Veuve Clicquot is doubtlessly one of wine, it is also the story of a woman. Veuve is the French word for widow, making the entire brand named after a woman: the company matriarch and “grand dame of champagne” Barbe-Nicole Ponsardin, the widow Clicquot herself. Yet despite her notoriety, Barbe-Nicole’s story, her life as an individual woman as well as company figurehead, has gone largely unexamined.

Until now, that is. Inspired by the 2009 book of the same name, Widow Clicquot is now a major motion picture directed by Thomas Napper (Pride & Prejudice, Atonement, The Darkest Hour) starring Haley Bennet (Swallow, The Magnificent Seven, The Girl on the Train.)

Early Life

Born in Reims, France in the heart of Champagne country in 1777, Barbe-Nicole was the eldest daughter of the affluent textile merchant Nicolas Ponsardin. Nicolas had significant social ambitions and sent his daughter to be educated at a prestigious convent along with the children of royalty. However, in July 1789 the French Revolution came to Reims and the daughters of the wealthy and royal were at risk of violence. The Ponsardins were desperate to get their daughter back, but to collect her in a carriage would be to make her an even more obvious target. According to family legend, the Ponsardin’s dressmaker snuck Barbe-Nicole out of the convent dressed in rags and took her through the riot-filled streets to be returned to her parents. Perhaps because of this incident, Nicolas changed his tune and, despite being a lifelong royalist, allied himself with the radical Jacobin party that called for an abolition of the monarchy.

A Marriage of Flavors

Despite having an arranged marriage, François and Barbe-Nicole shared a great love and admiration for one another.

In 1799 they had their only child, a daughter named Clémentine. François was the dreamy idealist to Barbe-Nicole’s logical pragmatist, and in those early days of marriage, they shared their hopes and aspirations for the family business. At the time, the Clicquot family wine business was quite minor. They purchased wines from local vintners and distributed them, but did not make their own, and the vast majority of their income came from textiles. François and Barbe-Nicole wanted to change that, both through beginning to make their own wines, and by selling larger quantities internationally.

Barbe-Nicole entered her business at an inopportune time, as Widow Clicquot author Tilar J. Mazzeo writes: “A century before, it was not impossible for middle-class women to participate in running the family enterprise. Most businesses then were still family affairs, run by an extended network of close relations. No longer. In nineteenth-century Europe, the combined forces of a postrevolutionary commodity culture, the rise of international manufacturing, and a new system of modern laws–the Napoleonic Code–meant a far narrower world for women.”

The Napoleonic Code cut women off from any kind of economic power, and yet there was an ambiguous grey space in the law for widows. “Widows had all the social freedoms of married women–and most of the financial freedoms of a man,” Mazzeo writes. “Under the laws of the Napoleonic Code, a married businesswoman had a shadowy legal existence…a woman entrepreneur could not defend even a simple contract without her husband’s permission. But as a widow…Barbe-Nicole could make her own decisions.”

After Francois’ death, Barbe-Nicole would wear dark mourning colors for the rest of her life, emphasizing her widowhood in order to retain financial freedom.

She also convinced her father-in-law Philippe to let her retain control of the business. In a tremendous show of trust, he also became her first investor.

War of Wines

Added to the mix was a fraught geopolitical climate of war and revolution. In 1805 Napoleon crowned himself emperor of France and began to amass troops for an invasion of England. In retaliation, Russia, Austria, and Sweden formed the Third Coalition and joined Great Britain in declaring war on France. In 1806 Napoleon established trade restrictions designed to inflict an economic stranglehold on his enemies. Suddenly, all the countries in which the Clicquots had hoped to sell wines had become the enemy and Barbe-Nicole had to navigate a complex network of blockades in order to sell internationally. Luckily, François had left her with a gift by the name of Louis Bohne. Louis was a brilliant salesman and devoted employee. Under Barbe-Nicole’s leadership, he also became her close friend, confidante, and even rumored lover.

Faced with nearly insurmountable challenges, Barbe-Nicole developed an incredibly risky plan that defied Napoleon’s trade restrictions. She sent 50,000 bottles from France to Amsterdam with Louis, who would bring them on to Germany, Scandinavia, and Russia. The wines arrived safely in Amsterdam, but tragedy struck in a matter of hours. The city was blockaded and the ports were closed. Nearly $3 million worth of Clicquot wine was forced to sit and wait in a humid Amsterdam basement while the bottles were slowly ruined. A Letter to Barbe-Nicole from employee Charles Hartmann upon returning to Amsterdam captures what a terrible loss this was: “I prayed to the Good Lord to let me find our wines in such a way that I could send you good news, but my prayers were not at all answered. I opened the first case with trembling hands…I took out a bottle, trembling I removed the straw and tissue paper, but rather than a clear and brilliant wine that I hoped for, I saw nothing but a deposit like a finger that I could not detach without shaking the bottle for a full minute.”

Worse news followed. Louis had set off to gather sales in Germany and Prussia only to find the entire market on the verge of collapse. He changed course to Russia but had to leave in 1807 after the Russians accused him of being a French spy. International tensions were high and by 1809 Europe would be on the brink of financial collapse. The select few who could afford to drink champagne would have been loath to consume anything French, seeing as Napoleon was largely responsible for the dire economic situation. Barbe-Nicole’s first attempt at running the business was an abject failure. She laid off every salesman save for Louis and was forced to sell her jewelry to pay the growers and field workers.

1811 would have been a triumph of a year. A comet roared across the sky, leading the growers to dub it “the year of the comet.” The harvest was fantastic and the wine was perfection, a true vintage year. But alas, there were no buyers to drink it.To get back at Napoleon for invading Russia the Czar instituted a ban on the importation of French wines transported in bottles. As Mazzeo writes, “Everyone knew that the target was champagne. It alone could not be transported in barrels; if it was, all the fizz would disappear. Napoleon had championed the champagne industry. Russia would destroy it.” As the war progressed, Russian troops moved into the French countryside and Barbe-Nicole had her sellers sealed up for fear of looting. Finally, in 1814, Napoleon abdicated the throne and went into exile, peace between France and Europe, and an opportunity for Barbe-Nicole to finally sell her wines, was nearly here.

The Great Wine Race

With this opportunity, however, came a new set of challenges. As soon as the trade restrictions were dropped, Europe, and Russia in particular, would be clamoring for champagne to toast the end of the war. Barbe-Nicole understood that whoever got to Russia first would be the one to corner the market, so she chose to run the blockade one last time before international trade was even restored. Working in complete secrecy, with only Louis as her conspirator, Barbe-Nicole sent thousands of bottles of the incredible vintage from the year of the comet by ship to Russia. Louis set off with the wines, and Barbe-Nicole took an even greater risk by sending a second shipment of wines before knowing if the first would arrive safely.

Thankfully, Louis did not fail. He and the 1811 vintage arrived safely in Russia where they were besieged at the ports by people begging to buy Widow Clicquot wines at exorbitant prices Barbe-Nicole could only have dreamed of. Overnight, Widow Clicquot wines became a phenomenon, not only in Russia but across Europe. Her wines were used to toast the king of Prussia’s birthday, and Czar Alexander declared he would drink nothing else.

Louis wrote home that the success was due to: “Your judicious manner of operating, your excellent wine, and that marvelous similarity of our ideas, which produced the most splendid unity and action and execution–we did it well, and I give a million thanks to the bounty of the divine Providence who saw fit to make me one of his instruments in your future well-being–and no trials in the world will stop me from doing it again, to justify the unlimited confidence you have placed in me, which has produced such happy results. Certainly, you merit all the glory possible after all your misfortunes, your perseverance, and your obvious talents.

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