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Bollinger ‘presses pause’ on Grande Année 2008 mags and Jeros
Such has been the demand for bottles of the recently launched Bollinger La Grande Année 2008, Mentzendorff, the Champagne house’s UK agent, has “pressed pause” on the release of magnums and Jeroboams of the fizz.
Mentzendorff is “pressing pause” on the release of Jeroboams of La Grande Année 2008
Speaking to db during a lunch at The Ledbury in London this week to mark the launch La Grande Année 2008 in the UK, Andrew Hawkes, managing director of Mentzendorff, said:
“We’re pressing pause on the release of magnums of Jeroboams of La Grande Année 2008 for a while – it could be weeks or months.
“The stock has been disgorged and we’re looking at ways to best manage it. The magnums and Jeroboams have been pre-sold to clients through major fine wine merchants.
“Bollinger used to keep its magnums and Jeroboams on the lees in its cellar for longer than its 75cl bottles, but the fine wine market has changed and the noise is there for a wine when it’s released, so we don’t want to miss the moment.
“We’re trying to find a way to strike a balance between capitalising on the buzz around the launch and releasing the larger formats when they’re ready.
“We need to manage the benefits of the buzz and make sure that the wine is available at the major fine wine merchants and on pour at top fine dining restaurants.”
Hawes described the release of La Grande Année 2008 as an “unprecedented success”.
“We’ve had enormous interest and demand has far exceeded supply. I find the 2008 vintage of La Grande Année more approachable than 2002. It has the signature Bollinger power and structure and is open and well balanced,” he said.
As for the perception of prestige cuvées among serious fine wine collectors, Hawes believes the best are now taken seriously as fine wines.
“The interest in prestige cuvée Champagne as a fine wine began with the 2002 vintage and the wines have since been increasingly desired by collectors to be aged and resold, which the market has not historically been accustomed to.
“Top Champagnes are unquestionably considered fine wines in their own right now and are a growing part of many businesses that used to be dominated by first growths,” Hawes said. “Prestige cuvées benefit from brand strength as they were brands before they were fine wines.”