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FAMILIAL terroir

Gourmet Traveller

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June 2023

A French father and daughter has the wine world fizzing with their future-forward approach to producing Champagne. DANI VALENT joins some of the country’s leading wine experts to find out what the fuss is all about.

- DANI VALENT

FAMILIAL terroir

I’m tasting blood and iron and rose petals says wine buyer Isy Szyman, sitting back in reverie. The all-rounder at indie wine store Rathdowne Cellars has just sipped one of her ride-or-die Champagnes, the Egly-Ouriet Grand Cru Brut Rosé NV, poured at a masterclass special enough to draw 40 of Melbourne’s top sommeliers to Cutler & Co restaurant on a Monday afternoon.

The rosé is the sixth of 12 Egly-Ouriet Champagnes poured in four brackets of three to accompany an elegant, carefully matched fivecourse lunch by chef Jordan Clavaron. For the first hour, the air is electric. Bit by bit, sip by sip, restrained murmuring softens into grateful joy as more wines are poured and tasting glasses emptied – there are spittoons but few seem to be using them.

Egly-Ouriet is in the very top tier of grower Champagne houses, revered for its fastidious and refined sparkling wine made with grapes that owners Francis Egly and his daughter Clémence grow, tend and pick themselves. Clémence is the fourth-generation winemaker in her family, who established the estate in 1947.

“Today is beyond special, it’s once in a lifetime,” says James Broadway, sommelier and co-owner of Tedesca Osteria,

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