Off to get a Crown now to wash away the awful taste in my mouth. Back again in June to see if the champagnes have improved. I cannot believe people rave on about the champagnes on offer and waste time and money to come and sample them....
Haha, well for some of us Champagne (and wine in general) is a career.
I'm only a jnr sommelier, but i've focused my studies in sparkling so this is my opinion on each of the offerings:
Bollinger NV: quite a full bodied champagne, great mousse with long finish and quite crisp acidity. What I like most about a NV Bollinger is that its quite powerful and has a big body for it's price point, so its one of those sparklings you either love or hate. The winemakers style is to let the pinot grape skins come into contact a little more than would usually do.
Eat With: I'd probably most like to drink this with the Salt & Pepper squid in the F lounge, and its full body means its probably the choice pick for heavier dishes like steak, or rich tomato dishes (but really you should just go for a red with that...)
Veuve Ponsardin: probably what most people will enjoy, quite an approachable wine with fairly neutral palette. Good on the nose, nice color and decent mousse if bottle kept closed properly. Medium-full body with toasty brioche flavours, and a bit of honey. Quite high autolysis with Veuve, so you get that bready kind of flavour. I'm a little biased, Veuve is not my favorite, I think its a bit over rated but its easy to drink, and by no means a bad champagne.
Eat With: I'd probably like to have this with sweet foods, dessert, cakes, fruit, etc.
Taittinger: very fruity, and citrus flavours come out on the nose, and follow nicely through to the pallete. From tattinger I tend to taste mostly apples, peach with a bit of citrus acidity, but not too much, it still remains quite a juicy and satisfying champagne. Quite a long finish. Drink this if you like juicy sav blancs.
Eat With: This would be quite nice with fish dishes, and light soups, or works as a good aperitif for most dishes.
Overall these are pretty good choices, if not a little safe. They've stuck to fairly big winemakers which is a shame because there are some great small wine makers in champagne i'd like to see get traction. And instead of offering mass-produced Vueve, why not support our local industry and serve a nice bottle of Tasmanian Arras (better than most vintage champagnes on the market).