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Taste Opulence With Style

Keeping the yellow tradition going Veuve Clicquot for its Brut Yellow Label has introduced

one of their finest wines Pinot Black and other reserve wines in a bright yellow shopping bag. Sewed with a saddle stitch finish this bag will keep your chilled champagne ready to drink for as many as two hours at an ideal temperature.

As the winters start all of us get geared up of working on the Christmas gift list and yes along with all this work there are a lot of celebrations as well. So this year celebrate your Christmas with the seasons first limited edition luxury champagne to hit markets is the Laurent-Perrier Cuve Ros. The champagne adorns a fully pink packaging, paying homage to the bubbly drink. So call up your loved over for a party and share this one of its kind spirit with ham and desserts.

Christian Ekstrom was the diver in question who said it was fantastic after tasting the champagne. He also said that it had very little bubble but tasted sweet and had strong tobacco smell. The shape of the bottle indicates that it was produced between 1772 and 1785. The experts are 98 % sure that the champagne was produced by Veuve Clicquot and it was probably being shipped to St Petersburg which was the capital of Russia at the time.

Perrier Jouet had the oldest champagne with them till now as some of the bottles in their cellar date back to 1825. It is still not very clear how many bottles are there in the wreckage. A Swedish champagne specialist, Richard Juhlin, has said that if the bottles are actually of the 18th century vintage then they could cost as much as $68,000 per bottle.


A bunch of divers in the Baltic Sea have discovered 30 bottles of bubbly which is thought to be the worlds oldest drinkable champagne in a 200-year-old shipwreck under the Baltic Sea.

The champagnes, which could date back to the 1780s, were discovered by divers from Helinski who found them perfectly preserved at a depth of 180ft near the remains of a sailing vessel.

According to the divers, the handmade bottle bore no label, while the cork said Juclar, from its origin in Andorra. A sample of the champagne has been sent to Moet & Chandon to test the champagnes age and authenticity. In fact they are 98% sure its Veuve Clicquot as they are the only ones to use the sign of an anchor on the cork.

According to experts, the shape of the bottle indicates they were produced in the 18th Century and are understood to be from Clicquot (now Veuve Clicquot). And if their ties to royalty are confirmed, each bottle could be worth $68,000 or several million.

by: Marry Williams.
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