The "Champagne Event For Girls Only" is a lively annual celebration tailored exclusively for women, offering the...

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Club We Love Bubbles: Collect points with every purchase
The "Champagne Event For Girls Only" is a lively annual celebration tailored exclusively for women, offering the...
Curious about crafting your own bubbly at home? While the secret techniques behind Mumm or Veuve Clicquot remain...
The Louis Roederer website offers a truly immersive experience, setting itself apart from typical champagne brand...
This charming sterling silver champagne bottle charm is a thoughtful and elegant gift for the special woman in your...
Champagne Billecart-Salmon’s website offers a refreshing experience rooted in elegance and simplicity. From the very...
We're all used to hearing of ancient relics discovered in attics, priceless vase's that look dull and uninteresting fetching thousands, and paintings that defy the odds and go on to sell for millions, but when was the last time champagne made the headline news for similarly prestigious reasons?
All that changed in a matter of hours recently, though, when it was revealed that a diving team had come across as many as 100 or more bottles of long-forgotten champagne while investigating a ship-wreck off the coast of the Aland Islands, Finland.
The champagne – an early Veuve Clicquot, believed to date back to the period of time when Louis XVI ruled, providing the experts' analysis is correct – is now set to go down in the history books forever, knocking an 1825 bottle of Perrier-Jouet off its top-spot as the world's oldest drinkable champagne.
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