
Taittinger Brut La Française is a blend of Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier wines from at least 35 villages. The high proportion of Chardonnay (40%) is unique among fine nonvintage Champagnes. The presses are located in the vineyard for immediate pressing of the fruit after the manual harvest, and the resulting must is cold fermented under temperature-controlled conditions. After resting until the end of winter, the wine is blended, and then the final cuvĂ©e undergoes a second fermentation in the bottle in Taittingerâs cool cellars. The aging of Brut La Française on the lees for almost 4 years more than doubles the legal minimum of 15 months. This extra time in the cellars allows the wine to reach the peak of aromatic maturity, and the result is a delicately balanced Champagne, known for its consistently excellent quality.
* Actual product may differ from image. Vintage shown may vary based on availability.
Our premium champagne selection is excluded from case discounts

Champagne Non-Vintage (NV) Champagne is the regionâs signature style and represents the majority of bottles produced, designed to deliver a consistent house character year after year rather than reflect a single harvest. Producers achieve this by blending wines from multiple vintagesâoften including a portion of reserve winesâalong with the classic grapes Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, and Pinot Meunier. NV Champagnes are typically fresh, balanced, and approachable, showing flavors of green apple, citrus, pear, brioche, and subtle toast, with lively acidity and fine bubbles. Aged longer on lees than most sparkling wines outside Champagne, NV bottlings offer impressive complexity and reliability, making them ideal both as an aperitif and for pairing with a wide range of foods. đ„

Champagne is a historic wine region in northeastern France famed for producing the worldâs most celebrated sparkling wines using the traditional method. Its cool climate and chalky soils give Champagne its signature freshness, fine bubbles, and precision, with classic grapes Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, and Pinot Meunier forming the backbone of most blends. Styles range from crisp, mineral-driven Blanc de Blancs to fuller, structured Blanc de Noirs, often showing notes of green apple, citrus, brioche, toasted almond, and chalk. Strict production rules, long aging on lees, and generations of expertise make Champagne not just a wine style, but a benchmark for elegance and celebration worldwide. đ„