Three years of chalk-cave patience. Ten seconds of explosive joy. Hand-riddled sparkling wine from a single Loire Valley estate.
At 5:30 in October, the mist still sits low between the rows. The pickers move quietly — they've learned the grapes bruise if you rush them. Each cluster passes through two hands before it reaches the basket: the picker's, then the sorter's. Nothing mechanical touches the fruit until it's ready to give itself up.

"The grapes decide when. We just show up."

A whole-cluster Coquard press, the oldest in the valley. No enzymes, no additives — just gravity and patience. The first fraction, the cuvée, runs at under one bar of pressure: pale gold, barely cloudy, already carrying the chalk mineral that will define the wine three years from now. We stop pressing before the skins give anything up. Restraint is the first ingredient.
The caves were carved from Tufa limestone in the sixteenth century — the same chalk that feeds the vines above. Down here it's 12°C year-round, and the silence is total. Each bottle rests at a precise 45° angle in a riddling rack, turned by a quarter-turn every morning by our cellar master, Thierry. He does this by feel, not by schedule. The sediment knows when it's ready to fall.

"Thierry has turned every bottle in this cave for twenty-three years. He doesn't count them anymore. He just listens."

The terrace faces west. At 18:30 in July, the last light catches the rising column of fine bubbles and turns them copper. The involuntary smile happens before the glass even reaches your lips. We've watched it happen three hundred times. It never gets ordinary.
"By now, you've already imagined yourself here.
The form simply asks when."
Three experiences. Limited to twelve guests each. No payment required to reserve — we'll confirm within 24 hours.
"We booked the Harvest Day for our sommelier study group. Thierry spent forty minutes explaining a single riddling decision. Nobody checked their phone once. That's saying something for twelve Master of Wine candidates."

"The private label magnums for our gala were a conversation piece all evening. Three clients asked for the estate's card."

"We chose our wedding pour here. The sparrow was on the label. Our guests still ask about it two years later."
