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Louis Brochet

Louis Brochet Les Plantes Coteaux Champenois Blanc

Louis Brochet Les Plantes Coteaux Champenois Blanc

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Regular price £56.00
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A rare still Chardonnay from Champagne, sourced from a single parcel in Écueil on the Montagne de Reims. “Les Plantes” comes from carefully farmed, low-yielding vines on clay-limestone soils, and is vinified and aged for two years in oak barrels, without filtration, a patient approach that reveals a deeper, more Burgundian side of Champagne terroir.

Expressive and quietly complex, it opens with notes of citrus, white flowers and subtle buttered oak, alongside a gentle herbal edge. The palate is rounded yet precise, balancing creamy texture with bright acidity and mineral tension, finishing long, saline and refined.

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Tasting Notes

Citrus, White Flowers, Butter and Flint

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Louis Brochet

Style: Winery

Country: France

Region: Champagne, Montagne de Reims

Champagne can sometimes disappear into a fog of prestige marketing and expensive fonts. Louis Brochet feels considerably more grounded than that. Family-run grower Champagne with proper vineyard roots and wines that prioritise balance over spectacle.

The estate sits in Écueil, a Premier Cru village on the Montagne de Reims, where the Brochet family have been growing grapes for several generations. Pinot Noir plays a major role here thanks to the local chalk and clay soils, though Chardonnay and Meunier also appear throughout the range depending on the cuvée.

Stylistically, the wines lean fresh and precise rather than heavily oxidative or aggressively rich. Expect citrus, orchard fruit, toasted brioche and fine mineral texture underneath the bubbles. The rosé wines in particular tend to carry proper red fruit character without tipping into sweetness, which is harder to pull off than people think.

There’s also a strong sustainable farming approach running through the estate now, with increasing focus on biodiversity and lower-intervention vineyard work. Thankfully the wines still taste like Champagne first and philosophy second.

Grower Champagne generally remains one of the more rewarding areas of wine once people start exploring beyond the giant luxury houses. Producers like Louis Brochet give you more regional identity, more vineyard expression and usually slightly more personality in the glass too.