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Bérêche et Fils

Bérêche et Fils

Raphaël Bérêche gets more meticulous with every vintage. As an obvious beneficiary, his Brut Réserve has never tasted finer. “I used to want to shock a little bit,” he says, referring to the buzzing, nervous texture and punchy phenolic character of earlier versions. Today, the wine is considerably more seamless and elegant.  

 

It is, perhaps, Bérêche’s decision to eliminate the taille from the Brut Réserve which is paying the most obvious dividend. The taille—the press fraction closest to the seeds and the skin—represents 20% of the pressed juice and is the most bitter. Meanwhile, longer aging on lees before bottling, now split between 60% in oak and 40% in tank, is only imparting more finesse. 

 

He also credits his newest parcel, a beautiful Chardonnay vineyard in Trépail, with bringing more acidity and crystalline freshness. This, in turn, has allowed him to dial back further in the cellar, where he does not block malolactic with sulphur. 

 

“It’s a special cuvée for us,” he says. “This might be the first wine from my family that many people will drink, so we must tell people what we stand for. It takes a lot of passion.” Bérêche’s evolution with this single wine could also serve as an allegory for the entire range, which, increasingly precise and focused, stands out as one of Champagne’s most star-studded. A stellar set of wines, indeed.  

The Wines

Champagne Bérêche et Fils Brut Réserve Vieilles Vignes Non Filtrée NV (Base 22. Disg Nov 2024)

Champagne Bérêche et Fils Brut Réserve Vieilles Vignes Non Filtrée NV (Base 22. Disg Nov 2024)

This cuvée has become synonymous with the kind of extreme quality that can today be expected from Champagne’s finest estates. The current release is based on the 2022 vintage and was disgorged in November 2024. Like its predecessors, the release comprises 65% fruit from the base vintage, with the balance from the two previous years. The blend is split between 35% Pinot Noir from Montagne de Reims (specifically Ludes, Trépail and Ormes), 35% Chardonnay from sites across Montagne de Reims and Vallée de la Marne and 30% Meunier from Mareuil-le-Port in Vallée de la Marne. Ludes and Trépail provide the tension, offsetting the depth and texture of the Marne fruit and reserve wines. The average vine age is 40 years.

The hard-harvested fruit ferments naturally in barrel before aging in barrel and tank. After bottling, the wine spends 36 months sur lattes in the Bérêche cellar, and finally, is disgorged by hand (!) with around 5 g/L dosage. This is the kind of fastidious attention to detail you would expect from the finest prestige cuvées, and it shines through in the quality of the wine. Antonio Galloni (Vinous) is spot-on when he writes: “Although most readers probably associate Bérêche with some of their higher-end bottlings, the Brut Réserve is a real rock star.” The style is taut and focused; the wine’s natural density and texture are superbly balanced by crystalline acidity and smoky mineral resonance. Simply, it’s one of the most compelling introductions to elite grower Champagne on the market.

“The NV Brut Réserve (base 2022) is such a classy wine. This release, based on 2022, is all finesse. Cranberry, mint, white pepper, slate and dried flowers all grace the palate. Stylistically, the Brut Réserve has evolved into a more refined Champagne than what was the norm just a few years ago. The one thing that is evident, though, is a slightly harder texture vis-à-vis the other wines in the range, likely because of aging on crown cap rather than cork.”
91 points, Antonio Galloni, Vinous
“The NV Brut Réserve is the foundational wine at Bérêche, and the latest release is based on the 2022 vintage, incorporating a 40% perpetual reserve component, uniting the freshness of the northern slopes and the maturity of the hot, dry vintage. Bursting from the glass with aromas of nectarine, orange zest and brioche, it's medium- to full-bodied and ample, with considerable density, underpinned by racy acidity and concluding with a chalky finish. The Brut Réserve has seen the most refinements in recent years as it no longer incorporates tailles and now features Chardonnay from Trépail; technically, this means that the pH is lower and the acidity is higher. It’s one of the most reliable entry-level NV bottlings on the market.”
92 points, Kristaps Karklins, The Wine Advocate
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Brut Réserve Vieilles Vignes Non Filtrée NV (Base 22. Disg Nov 2024)
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Grand Cru Aӱ 2016 (Disg. Nov 2023)

Champagne Bérêche et Fils Grand Cru Aӱ 2016 (Disg. Nov 2023)

Champagne authority Peter Liem writes that “among all Champagne villages, Aӱ is the most historically esteemed… Today, its terroir is still just as storied, and its grapes are sought after by winemakers across the region.” It is perhaps no surprise that the poet Alfred de Vigny declared in 1853 that “the mousse of Aÿ radiates happiness”. From a Grand Cru where Pinot Noir reigns supreme, Bérêche’s cuvée is sourced from less than a hectare of 40+-year-old vines at 280 metres’ elevation in the cool parcels of Brise Pot and Froide-Terre, bordering Mutigny in Grande Vallée de la Marne, where thin topsoils (at a maximum of 30cm) rest over dense Campanian chalk. 

Pinot Noir (75%) and Chardonnay (25%) fermented slowly in barrels and aged on lees in bottle for 78 months. The dosage was under 3 g/L. It’s a striking, penetrating Champagne whose depth of crystalline white fruits and soft spices is matched by its sinewy, chalky length and cut-glass precision. A flat-out stunner. 

“The 2016 Extra-Brut Aÿ Grand Cru is all class. Bright and focused to the core, with striking understated energy, the 2016 is a jewel of a wine. Crushed rocks, mint, slate, white flowers and white pepper soar out of the glass, supported by clean mineral notes that bring it all together on the vibrant finish. The blend of 75% Pinot Noir and 25% Chardonnay on chalk is magical. Dosage is 2.95 grams per liter”.
97+ points, Antonio Galloni, Vinous
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Grand Cru Aӱ 2016 (Disg. Nov 2023)
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Grand Cru Cramant 2018 (Disg. Jul 2023)

Champagne Bérêche et Fils Grand Cru Cramant 2018 (Disg. Jul 2023)

The Cramant Grand Cru is a Blanc de Blancs sourced from two small plots: Le Bateau in the northeast of the village and the Chemin de Châlons plot (of Selosse fame) at its southern extreme. The vines are owned and expertly managed by Florent and Julien Mignon. The grapes from these great terroirs, with their chalky soils and 40-plus-year-old mass-selection vines, strike an incredible balance between structure, finesse and fruit intensity. This cuvée was vinified with indigenous yeasts in barrel and spent 54 months on lees before disgorgement. The dosage was 3.3 g/L.

“The 2018 Extra-Brut Cramant Grand Cru (from Bateau and Chemin de Chalons) is creamy, sensual and quite expressive in this tasting. It's a classy, understated wine with good depth and textural intensity, especially for the year. Apricot, fresh yellow flowers, graphite, spice and dried flowers build nicely. There's a bit of tightness on the finish, which is why I would prefer to cellar this for a year or two. The textural resonance here is admirable.”
94 points, Antonio Galloni, Vinous
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Grand Cru Cramant 2018 (Disg. Jul 2023)
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Grand Cru Mailly-Champagne Blanc de Noirs 2018 (Disg. Jul 2023)

Champagne Bérêche et Fils Grand Cru Mailly-Champagne Blanc de Noirs 2018 (Disg. Jul 2023)

The Bérêche brothers purchased this magnificent plot in 2011. It’s the estate’s first and most prized Grand Cru. Situated between Ludes and Verzenay in Montagne de Reims, Mailly’s chalky subsoil and predominance of north-facing slopes bring out a unique mineral freshness in Pinot Noir. Vincent and Raphaël are no strangers to Mailly; previously, as much as 70% of their Montagne cuvée was drawn from this Grand Cru. Raphaël describes his decision to jump on the offer of a 0.4-hectare parcel of 60-year-old Pinot Fin vines rooted in the rich clay and chalk of the Les Chalois vineyard as the easiest of his life.

The wine was vinified with indigenous yeasts in oak barrels up to 600 litres in size. It spent 48 months under cork before disgorgement. The dosage was 3.8 g/L. This wine is the only independent bottling of the Mailly Grand Cru we have come across, and it gives us a taste of what we have been missing. In style, it’s an incisive and super-pure Champagne with an array of flavours stretching out over citrus oil, stone fruit and herbal notes, as well as a distinctive aniseed/liquorice note.

“The 2018 Extra-Brut Blanc de Noirs Mailly-Champagne Grand Cru is powerful, deep and expressive, its mid-weight structure notwithstanding. Kirsch, mint, cedar and tobacco lend notable aromatic presence. The lighter style of the year is evident, yet this offers plenty of textural resonance and supporting structure that opens over time. As is so often the case with wines from Mailly, the Pinot is marked by a distinctive sauvage character.”
93 points, Antonio Galloni, Vinous
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Grand Cru Mailly-Champagne Blanc de Noirs 2018 (Disg. Jul 2023)
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Ludes Premier Cru Le Cran 2017 (Disg. Jul 2024)

Champagne Bérêche et Fils Ludes Premier Cru Le Cran 2017 (Disg. Jul 2024)

Driven by Vincent and Raphaël’s desire to bottle “a true picture of the [Ludes] terroir,” Le Cran was first made in 2004. They chose two of their finest old-vine Premier Cru parcels planted by their grandfather, which now have an average age of 50 years. These sites, rich in limestone and chalk, are the highest in Ludes. The blend is equally split between Chardonnay and Pinot Noir—the former from the west-facing vineyard of Les Hautes Plantes, planted in 1969, while the Pinot comes from 1973 vines planted in the east-facing lieu-dit of Les Vignes Saint-Jean.

Le Cran is arguably the most smouldering, mineral and tightly wound of the Bérêche single-vineyard wines. Viticulture and vine age result in lower yields of concentrated fruit, balanced by super-low pH, naturally racy acidity and intense chalky minerality. The current release is jaw-dropping. A wine like this will go with anything delicious (even if the dream match would be oven- or BBQ-roasted fish). Le Cran is vinified with indigenous yeasts in oak barrels up to 600 litres in size. The current release aged for 72 months in the cellar, mostly on lees in bottle under cork. Dosage for the 2017 was around 3 g/L.

“The 2017 Extra-Brut Le Cran is a bit soft in this release. Apricot, chamomile dried flowers and spice open first, followed by tropical overtones and a kiss of reduction. Overall, this is a fine effort in a very challenging vintage.”
93 points, Antonio Galloni, Vinous
“The 2017 Le Cran Ludes Premier Cru, produced from equal parts Pinot Noir and Chardonnay sourced from three parcels in Ludes, is typically among the most dependable offerings from Bérêche. The vines, rooted in shallow soils with a mere 30 centimeters of topsoil above chalk bedrock, benefit from both western and eastern exposures. Disgorged in July 2024 with a dosage of three grams per liter, the wine opens with an expressive bouquet of pear, honeysuckle and rye bread, mingling with toasted nuts and exotic fruit. On the palate, it is generous and charming, marked by tangy acidity and a vivid saline touch."
92 points, Kristaps Karklins, The Wine Advocate
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Ludes Premier Cru Le Cran 2017 (Disg. Jul 2024)
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Ludes Premier Cru Le Cran 2017 (Disg. Jul 2024) (1500ml)

Champagne Bérêche et Fils Ludes Premier Cru Le Cran 2017 (Disg. Jul 2024) (1500ml)

Driven by Vincent and Raphaël’s desire to bottle “a true picture of the [Ludes] terroir,” Le Cran was first made in 2004. They chose two of their finest old-vine Premier Cru parcels planted by their grandfather, which now have an average age of 50 years. These sites, rich in limestone and chalk, are the highest in Ludes. The blend is equally split between Chardonnay and Pinot Noir—the former from the west-facing vineyard of Les Hautes Plantes, planted in 1969, while the Pinot comes from 1973 vines planted in the east-facing lieu-dit of Les Vignes Saint-Jean.

Le Cran is arguably the most smouldering, mineral and tightly wound of the Bérêche single-vineyard wines. Viticulture and vine age result in lower yields of concentrated fruit, balanced by super-low pH, naturally racy acidity and intense chalky minerality. The current release is jaw-dropping. A wine like this will go with anything delicious (even if the dream match would be oven- or BBQ-roasted fish). Le Cran is vinified with indigenous yeasts in oak barrels up to 600 litres in size. The current release aged for 72 months in the cellar, mostly on lees in bottle under cork. Dosage for the 2017 was around 3 g/L.

“The 2017 Extra-Brut Le Cran is a bit soft in this release. Apricot, chamomile dried flowers and spice open first, followed by tropical overtones and a kiss of reduction. Overall, this is a fine effort in a very challenging vintage.”
93 points, Antonio Galloni, Vinous
“The 2017 Le Cran Ludes Premier Cru, produced from equal parts Pinot Noir and Chardonnay sourced from three parcels in Ludes, is typically among the most dependable offerings from Bérêche. The vines, rooted in shallow soils with a mere 30 centimeters of topsoil above chalk bedrock, benefit from both western and eastern exposures. Disgorged in July 2024 with a dosage of three grams per liter, the wine opens with an expressive bouquet of pear, honeysuckle and rye bread, mingling with toasted nuts and exotic fruit. On the palate, it is generous and charming, marked by tangy acidity and a vivid saline touch."
92 points, Kristaps Karklins, The Wine Advocate
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Ludes Premier Cru Le Cran 2017 (Disg. Jul 2024) (1500ml)
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Brut Réserve Vieilles Vignes Non Filtrée NV (Base 20. Disg. Feb 2024) (3000ml)

Champagne Bérêche et Fils Brut Réserve Vieilles Vignes Non Filtrée NV (Base 20. Disg. Feb 2024) (3000ml)

This cuvée has become synonymous with the kind of extreme quality that can today be expected from Champagne’s finest estates. The current release is based on the 2020 vintage and was disgorged in February 2024. Like its predecessors, this release comprises 65% fruit from the base vintage, with the balance from the two previous years. The blend is split between 35% Pinot Noir from Montagne de Reims (specifically Ludes, Trépail and Ormes), 35% Chardonnay from sites across Montagne de Reims and Vallée de la Marne and 30% Meunier from Mareuil-le-Port in Vallée de la Marne. Ludes and Trépail provide the tension, offsetting the depth and texture of the Marne fruit and reserve wines. The average vine age is 40 years.

The hard-harvested fruit ferments naturally in barrel before aging in barrel and tank. After bottling, the wine spends 36 months sur lattes in the Bérêche cellar, and finally, disgorgement by hand (!) with just under 6 g/L dosage. This is the kind of fastidious attention to detail you would expect from the finest prestige cuvées, and it shines through in the quality of the wine. Antonio Galloni (Vinous) is spot-on when he writes: “Although most readers probably associate Bérêche with some of their higher-end bottlings, the Brut Réserve is a real rock star.” The style is taut and focused; the wine’s natural density and texture are superbly balanced by crystalline acidity and smoky mineral resonance. Simply, it’s one of the most compelling introductions to elite grower Champagne on the market.

“The NV Brut Réserve is bright and finely sculpted right out of the glass. There's terrific purity and energy running through the Brut Réserve. Crushed red berry fruit, white pepper, crushed rocks and mint all race out of the glass. This release is based on 2020, with a good bit of reserve wine (35%) that serves to create terrific balance. The 5.5 grams of dosage is not at all felt.”
93 points, Antonio Galloni, Vinous
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Brut Réserve Vieilles Vignes Non Filtrée NV (Base 20. Disg. Feb 2024) (3000ml)
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Brut Réserve Vieilles Vignes Non Filtrée NV (Base 21. Disg Nov 2024) (1500ml)

Champagne Bérêche et Fils Brut Réserve Vieilles Vignes Non Filtrée NV (Base 21. Disg Nov 2024) (1500ml)

Disgorged November 2024. This cuvée has become synonymous with the extreme quality that can today be expected from Champagne’s finest estates. The current release is based on the 2021 vintage and was disgorged in June 2024. Due to the low yields of 2021, the new release comprises 55% fruit from the base vintage, with the balance from the two previous years. The blend is split between 35% Pinot Noir from Montagne de Reims (specifically Ludes, Trépail and Ormes), 35% Chardonnay from sites across Montagne de Reims and Vallée de la Marne and 30% Meunier from Mareuil-le-Port in Vallée de la Marne. Ludes and Trépail provide the tension, offsetting the depth and texture of the Marne fruit and reserve wines. The average vine age is 40 years.

The hard-harvested fruit ferments naturally in barrel before aging in barrel and tank. After bottling, the wine spends 36 months sur lattes in the Bérêche cellar, and finally, is disgorged by hand (!) with around 5 g/L dosage. This is the kind of fastidious attention to detail you would expect from the finest prestige cuvées, and it shines through in the quality of the wine. Antonio Galloni (Vinous) is spot-on when he writes: “Although most readers probably associate Bérêche with some of their higher-end bottlings, the Brut Réserve is a real rock star.” The style is taut and focused; the wine’s natural density and texture are superbly balanced by crystalline acidity and smoky mineral resonance.

“The NV Brut Réserve (base 2021) is a bit unusual in this release, in that reserve wines account for 45% of the blend because the base year was so challenging. It’s an approach that worked out well though, as the finished wine is gorgeous. Pear, apricot, white flowers, spice, mint and almond all grace this nuanced, classy NV Champagne. Floral overtones appear later to lift the finish.”
91 points, Antonio Galloni, Vinous
Champagne Bérêche et Fils Brut Réserve Vieilles Vignes Non Filtrée NV (Base 21. Disg Nov 2024) (1500ml)

“This is a stellar set of wines from brothers Raphaël and Vincent Bérêche. There’s a seriousness, a sense of purpose, that runs through all these wines. This is especially evident in the Champagnes from more challenging years. The preference is to pick on the riper side, with aging on cork and bottling with minimal low dosage for virtually all the wines.” Antonio Galloni, Vinous, April 2025

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