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Katherine C. Pearson, Editor, and a Member of the Law Professor Blogs Network on LexBlog.com

News of the old: World’s oldest bottles of champagne found

July 18, 2010

Divers have found 30 bottles of champagne thought to pre-date the French Revolution on the Baltic seabed.  When they opened one, they found the wine – believed to have been made by Clicquot (now Veuve Clicquot) between 1782 and 1788 – was still in good condition.  The bottle – whose shape indicates it was produced in the 18th Century – has now been sent to France for analysis.  If confirmed, it would be the oldest drinkable champagne in the world.  Diver Christian Ekstrom was exploring a shipwreck on the Baltic seabed when he found the bottles.  He took one to the surface, where he opened it and tasted it with his colleagues.  “It was fantastic,” he told the Reuters news agency.  “It had a very sweet taste, you could taste oak and it had a very strong tobacco smell. And there were very small bubbles.”  According to records, Clicquot champagne was first produced in 1772 but was laid down for 10 years, the French news agency AFP reported.  Experts think the remaining bottles could fetch high prices at auction

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