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.