
Diving Behind the Réflexion R.020
The newest champagne house you’ve never heard of
Since being bought by Campari Group in 2020 Champagne Lallier has burst onto the global drinks scene, finding a foothold in Australia with their Réflexion non-vintage in the arenas of fine dining and major events.
Thanks to the new chef de cave Dominic Demarville — who brings terrific pedigree from his time with the top job at Veuve Clciquot and Dom Pérignon — this tiny house has gained a new lovely lease on life. What makes it interesting is that way it’s shaking up the traditional model by making exceptional entry-level wine.
The Lallier R.020 is a blend with a pretty spectacular profile. The wine inside the bottles comes mostly from 2020’s harvest which makes up 81% of the Réflexion. The final wine show an intense floral and fruity character with delicate aromas on the nose and a mineral salinity on the palate. In this case the final wine is not a single vintage but a blend being topped up with 18% reserve wines from the 2018 and 2019 harvests to add intensity and depth. While it may seem unusual to peg a non-vintage to a year, it’s in keeping with a trend seen at the Chiquet brother’s brand Jacquesson and at Maison Krug -where blends or cuvées have become the flagship of the house.

In Australia Lallier has been smart as a fledging brand – forging first -rate partnerships with Qantas, Ferrari at the Melbourne Grand Prix. For launch it staged a major dinner event at White Bay Power Station in Sydney during the Sydney Biennale in conjunction with Maison Cartier’s Art Foundation. They have even gotten cosy on a weekend caviar and Champagne education at a retreat on Lizard Island Resort in Far North Queensland, treating in house guests to masterclasses and dégustation dinners.

Still, behind it all is a house that lays claims to very good plantings of Chardonnay and Pinot Noir plus a man at the top who feels confident pushing a multi-vintage approach to their non-vintage offering.
It may be a radical departure by industry standards but the Relfexion R.20 is designed to capture just one year and to then dial that up to the very best is can be by balancing it out with plenty of reserve wines from the cellar.

In the glass the decision making shows. There’s a confidence in paring back of the house style, less voluptuous and more nuanced than what came before.
The result is a highly sophisticated Champagne house with a stable of wines that feel modern, fresh mineral and a little more dry.
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