| Delhi Wine Club organised an interesting Champagne  Masterclass by the Brand Development Manager Thomas Didier of Mumm's followed  by guided tasting and drinking two NV Champagnes fromPernod Ricard.  If the most recent couple of back-to-back events of the  Delhi Wine Club were extrapolated, Tuesdays would take a new meaning- Champagne  Tuesdays as our President Subhash Arora had christened  them while  organising this event and the previous dinner with champagnes from Louis  Roederer last week at Hotel Imperial.  Champagne has traditionally been associated with celebration  and good cheer and with the well to do in India showing an increasing  propensity to celebrate in style, it’s no wonder that this market is now being  viewed differently by Champagne producers –Mumm’s being the latest to showcase  its signature Champagnes at an exclusive tasting for members of the Delhi Wine  Club. With some 8 million bottles being shipped out of its cellars  every year to over a hundred countries, G H Mumm & Co is the third largest  producer of Champagne in the world. Traditionally, India was very much way down  in the Mumm pecking order with miniscule quantities being rationed every year.  However in recent years with Italian Prosecco and Spanish Cava now very much on  an aerated wine drinker’s choice list, Champagne producers have been  looking at new markets. Mumm’s is one of the oldest Champagne producers having  commenced serving discerning European palates with quality Champagne way back  in 1827. Now a part of the Pernod Ricard Group, the reputation Mumm’s has  created since then, preceded us as we settled down in the My Humble House at  the Maurya Sheraton for a guided tasting by Lignier. After a presentation on Mumm’s, conducted with typical  French panache and aplomb, Thomas Lignier demonstrated how to  successfully “pop” a Champagne bottle clean, with one rapier movement  of a sword and then yet again, incredibly, with the edge of a wine glass .On  both occasions the cork in its pristine gold foil and wire restraint came away  undisturbed - don’t try this at home unless you have deep pockets as the  learning curve can be very expensive!! It was a limited tasting restricted to the two Non Vintage  Champagnes –the Cordon Rouge and the Rose –which are now being marketed in  India. The Cordon Rouge, with its distinctive red sash signifying its linkage  to the legendary French Légion d'honneur decoration, has been given a rating of  90 points from the Wine Spectator. A blend of Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier, the  Cordon Rouge is fresh and fruity with a long supple finish and definitely a cut  above some of the Champagnes available in India currently. It has the potential  to become one of the top choices for a Champagne drinker and the cases they  shift will largely depend on the price it is rolled out at. We were also fortunate to sample a Rose –just enough to  reinforce Mumm’s reputation as a versatile Champagne producer. With the Pinot  Noir (60%) dominating the other two varietals in the blend, the result was a  fruity and well structured Rose.  Our club president, Subhash Arora proposed the vote of  thanks to Thomas Lignier for a delightful and educative morning and as we  trooped off towards the snacks, I ran into Chef Akshay of the Maurya who told  me with a glint in his eye “try the snacks with the champagne and you’ll be  surprised” And what a surprise it was – Not only was it the first time  I had eaten dhokhla and khandvi at the Maurya in the last 25 years but it was  also the first time I was going to do so with a glass of Champagne! And did I  enjoy it? Sure I did- the Cordon Rouge paired excellently with the gram flour  based snacks and the fruitiness of the Champagne beautifully offset the salty  sourness of the dhokhla and the sharpness of the coconut and coriander in the  khandvi.  I did make another discovery -a chilled glug of Champagne is  a great douser of the after effects of eating too much green chilli that comes  with the dhokhla!! Champagne is indeed a very versatile drink when it comes to  pairing with food though I would draw the line at desserts. It was a great job by Chef Akshay and Ajay Gothwal of Pernod  Ricard in putting together an educative afternoon which was thoroughly enjoyed  by about 25 of our Club members who chose to take time out of their busy work  day and come for the noon tasting.  Next time you are invited into the oh-so- genteel drawing  rooms of our well heeled countrymen who can afford to serve Champagne  and see dhokhla and khandvi on the pass- arounds to accompany your Mumm’s,  remember you read about it here first  as we were one of the first ones to  enjoy the combo flavour!! Arun Batra Member, Delhi Wine Club  |