• Articles,  Lifestyle

    Royal Wedding interview on Love Sport Radio

    Barking Mad: ITV’s Lorraine marries Prince Hairy & Meghan Barkles (dogs) on daytime TV Whilst literally every man and his dog has been wildly speculating about each fine detail of the 2018 wedding event of the year; from an estimated 16,000 glasses of champagne to the GBP50,000 fresh flowers, lemon and elderflower wedding cake – what we do know for sure is that in 2011 about 27 million Brits and 23 million Americans watched the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton, and that Metropolitan Police Security alone for the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s wedding cost British taxpayers GBP 6.35m. (source The Daily Telegraph) What will sparkle in those…

  • Articles,  Lifestyle

    Top 5 Champagnes For Romance

    Secret Agent of Seduction Somehow seduction and champagne have always been inexorably linked. Perhaps its down to eighteenth century royal courtesan Madame de Pompadour (favourite mistress to Louis XV). She was the first beauty to spruik champagne at royal court, famously proclaiming “Champagne is the only wine that leaves a woman beautiful after drinking it”. Her favourite brand Moet is still the number one selling champagne around the world today, but interestingly the current face of the brand is tennis legend Roger Federer. Or maybe its thanks to twentieth century classic cultural icon James Bond, still just as popular with global movie audiences today as he was back in the 1960s.…

  • Articles,  Taste Champagne,  Videos

    Champagne Veuve Clicquot

    DOMINIQUE DEMARVILLE – CHAMPAGNE VEUVE CLICQUOT Champagne Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin is one of the greatest success stories of the French industrial revolution. Founded by the intermarriage of two middle-class families with a background in textiles and driven to success by the passion and personality of the world’s first female entrepreneur, this remarkably successful Champagne House owns more than 300 hectares of vineyards, which supply about 30 per cent of its grape requirements. However it is the wine-making team led by talented Dominique Demarville’s trusted relationship with a network of hundreds of growers throughout the region (that is happy to supply its best grapes to Clicquot, knowing they will be made…

  • Articles,  Eat & Drink,  Special Events with CJ

    Adding Sparkle to Conference & Incentive Travel Magazine

    Delegates pop their corks at CIT Forum’s champagne discovery session hosted by Champagne Jayne Organised by Conference and Incentive Travel, the UK’s leading title for the meetings and events industry, the annual CIT Corporate Forum on January 23rd & 24th 2014 brought together the Top 100 UK suppliers and buyers in the global MICE industry for a series of best practice workshops, intimate industry networking sessions and lavish entertainment. Adding extra sparkle to this annual event, hosted over 2 days at privately owned Luxury Country Hotel and Spa Chewton Glen, 80 VIP guests were treated to a pre gala dinner champagne discovery masterclass by award-winning broadcaster Jayne Powell (better known…

  • Articles,  Beginner's Champagne Guide

    What is Champagne?

      The wine of Champagne was first mentioned in the history books in 496 when Bishop Saint Remi baptised Clovis, King of the Franks in Reims Cathedral. The region’s close proximity to Paris promoted its early economic success but also put the villages and vineyards in the path of marching armies on their way to the French capital. Today Champagne grapes are sourced from more than a hundred different villages and cultivated by some 18,000 growers with a strictly controlled 34,000 hectares in a very marginal wine producing area (50’N), where the average daily temperature during the growing season is 10.2′. Interestingly the major Champagne houses own just 10% of…

  • Articles,  Beginner's Champagne Guide

    Where is Champagne from?

    Champagne is the most famous wine region in France Let’s start by talking about location, location, location. It’s cold, it’s wet, it’s at the absolute extremity of feasibility for grape growing and, by the way, the crop will most likely fail on average once every three years. Yes, we’re referring to the magical ‘C’ word – that very special climactically challenged tiny corner of North Eastern France, less than an hour away from Paris, that is devoted to making one of the world’s most enduring luxury products. Fortuitously, grapevines are hardy plants, requiring only a mean temperature of 10ºC to function, which is just as well because the average daily…

  • Articles,  Eat & Drink

    Sydney Springtime Celebrations Uncorked with Taste Champagne!

      Taste Champagne September 1st not only marks the official start of Spring in the Southern hemisphere, but also Australia’s inaugural invitation to “Taste Champagne”, an exciting new annual champagne roadshow featuring latest release tastings from 52 champagne houses, growers and co-operatives. Hosted in Sydney and Melbourne by multi-award winning wine writer Tyson Stelzer, author of The Champagne Guide, this industry first event showcases the exceptional diversity of Champagne by presenting well-known global prestige brands such as Dom Perignon and Krug alongside accessibly priced family owned grower champagne gems such as Pierre Gimonnet and Laherte Freres. Morning and afternoon sessions are dedicated to media and trade visitors, but evening sessions in…

  • Articles,  Beginner's Champagne Guide,  How To?

    How To Open Champagne

    Top 5 Tips for Opening and Serving Champagne for Celebrations First, wipe the bottle with a clean cloth and show the champagne to everyone who will be drinking it. If you’re splashing out on the real thing then don’t hide your light under a bushel! PS watch the video demonstration above if you can’t be bothered to read all the tips below! Cheers CJ Tip No 1 Unwrap the top of the foil around the cork where it is already perforated and, holding your thumb over the cork to prevent it popping out, remove the wire muselet and metal cage by turning the twisted wire six times and lift this…

  • Articles,  Beginner's Champagne Guide,  How To?

    How to Serve Champagne

    The Chill Factor Champagne would not be champagne without the presence of those magical bubbles. They rise to greet you in lazy, delicate streams of sparkling splendour, tickling your nose with fantastic aromas and making your glass a sight to behold, even before the bubbles explode like fireworks on your tongue. Bubbles are an integral part of the pleasure of champagne appreciation and the rate at which they are released is determined by temperature. Serving champagne anywhere between 4.5ºC to 7ºC is perfect for a slow release of the mousse – but remember that if you serve a champagne too cold, all the aromatics will be suppressed and it will taste…

  • Articles,  Lifestyle

    Champagne Shopping Christmas Guide 2013

    Did you know we buy more than 10 million bottles of champagne at Christmas? Whilst the majority of champagne purchased at Christmas is for seasonal gifting – hence all the sparkly packaging with value adds like flutes, ice buckets, sabres and even a sound horn (to listen to Krug bubbles) which appear winking at you in specialist retailers from October onwards, thanks to intense competition at the consumer end of the market, the lead up to Christmas is also a great time of year for champagne lovers to stock up on both bargain everyday champagne rations and attractively priced vintage champagne for special occasions… There is literally a champagne for…