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Champagne ‘dosage’: not how much you drink, but the amount of sugar and why less is the new more

  • Changing tastes have seen liqueur d’expedition trend towards dry styles

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As consumer tastes have evolved, so too have champagnes.

The addition of dosage or liqueur d’expedition (a blend of reserve wine and cane sugar) is the finishing touch to champagne just before the cork goes in. It helps soften the acidity and adds roundness to the palate structure. The amount of dosage varies among champagne houses and will depend on a variety of factors, including house style, vintage character and market preferences.

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Most champagne today is labelled “brut”, meaning that it can contain up to 12 grams of sugar per litre. The wine does not taste overtly sweet, however, as the sugar is balanced with the acidity.

As consumer tastes evolve, champagne styles have followed suit, leading to drier styles emerging. An increasing number of houses are producing champagne labelled as “brut nature”, “pas dosé” or “dosage zéro”. This means that there is no additional dosage, and the wine must contain fewer than three grams of sugar per litre. Champagne labelled “extra brut” contains zero to six grams of sugar per litre.

Champagnes with low or zero dosage are great food wines and work especially well with delicate dishes. Here are a couple of producers who are taking the lead in producing high-quality champagne with lower levels of dosage.

Champagne Drappier Blanc de Blancs Signature Brut, HK$399

Drappier has been making champagnes for more than 200 years, and is now managed by seventh-generation Michel Drappier.

A blend of 95 per cent chardonnay and 5 per cent pinot vrai, which is believed to be a genetic mutation of pinot noir and is one of the varieties disappearing from Champagne. It adds flesh and roundness to the palate. Dosage is seven grams of sugar per litre.

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