Piper Heidsieck Cuvée Rosé Sauvage NV
I find the history of Champagne fascinating. Each time I look for information I am inevitably found some time later down a virtual rabbit hole of family dynasties and disputes, political unrest, royal coronations, haunted cellars, war-time devastation and more. The modern day soap opera has nothing on 18th, 19th and 20th-century Champagne.
The longer the history, the more fascinating the story. When you consider that Piper Heidsieck is one of the oldest champagne houses founded in 1785 by Florens-Louis Heidsieck, you know stories abound. Heidsieck understood the power of influence when it came to a luxury product. He presented his first ever cuvée personally to Marie Antoinette stating that it was “a cuvée worthy of a queen”. Apparently the Queen fell in love with the first sip and became an ambassador for Heidsieck. Granted, that patronage didn’t last long due to significant historical factors, but the Heidsieck brand continued to be beloved by nobility with 14 royal or imperial courts issuing Piper Heidsieck royal warrants by the early nineteenth century.
Piper Heidsieck remains a household name today and to survive in any industry one needs to evolve and take risks, including new products and doing things differently. Sauvage means ‘wild’ and truly this wine is a rosé quite unlike a lot of others you might find in Champagne. Straight away the colour is deep and bold, the nose is lovely with layers of strawberry and chocolate. It’s the first sip when this wine truly reveals itself; it manages to be rich, ripe, fresh, intense, soft and powerful all at the same time, creating a symphony of flavour in the mouth. Full bodied, perfectly structured and timelessly elegant. (A)