×

This wine has a per person limit. We do this as the wine is hard to find, very rare and/or incredibly sought after.

We do this to ensure that we are able to share the love with everyone!

We kindly ask that you do not abuse this limit by placing multiple orders. In the event that you place multiple orders - they will be canceled and subject to a 5% cancellation fee.

If you would like to request more than the allowable amount - we may be able to help - send us an email at info@thatcherswineconsulting.com

NV Eric Rodez, Cuvee des Grands Vintages Grand Cru, Ambonnay 1.5L

Regular price $225
/

NV Eric Rodez, Cuvee des Grands Vintages Grand Cru, Ambonnay 1.5L

Regular price $225
/

An ode to the Grande Cuvee, this is 30% Chardonnay, 70% Pinot Noir from vines of 39 years on average. 6 years blended together (focusing on 2008) with all having fermented in barrel without malo-lactic, and finished with 3g/L dosage.

PRE-ARRIVAL
12+ To Come

How Pre-Arrival Works

These wines are currently on the way to Thatcher’s Wine. We have sourced them from some of our clients' private cellars, our friends in Europe, direct from the domaine or through our other trusted networks. On each product you will note an estimated time of arrival. Understand that these are only estimates, and to ensure that your wine arrives safely it may be longer. Utilizing this method allows us to offer some amazing wines and gives you the opportunity to secure them earlier. Upon arrival at TWC you will receive a notification and we will ship the wines to you.


Add to Favorites

We’re currently updating


Please try refreshing your page or logging out. If this issue persists, please click the button below or email us at info@thatcherswine.com.


Same Day Pick Up At Thatcher's Wine - Warehouse

The wine is currently pre-arrival it will be ready for pick up once it arrives!

View store information


Early in my career, his bottles stuck out - a somewhat odd shape, a classy, understated label, and I remember the Head Sommelier musing, "Baby Krug!" In fact, Rodez did work for Krug and was tipped to follow their methods in several publishings around that time, leading to the familiar moniker among wine folk. Yet, though he does use barriques for much of his production, where he is most like Krug is the devotion to blending, and an insatiable search for quality. However, he is most unlike Krug in that his wines of such quality are extremely limited, so snap up whatever you can find!

Eric Rodez

Ever the agents of change, the Rodez family was one of very few growers in Champagne to produce their own wine in the time where negociants ruled the scene - the family roots date back more than 200 years in Ambonnay. Today Eric presides over 9 hectares of old Pinot Noir vines and 7 of Chardonnay vines in the village of AMbonnay, one of the grand villages of the region that the family has long called home, and where for a stint last decade Eric serves as mayor! He and his son Mickael represent the 8th and 9th generations to work the vines.

While he spent vintages in Burgundy, Beaujolais and the Rhone in his youth, Eric's passion for Champagne was raised exponentially when working at Krug. Notoriously masters of the art of blending, Eric adapted many of the techniques he learned in his stint with Krug to his own wines, and he routinely will blend in five to ten different vintages to his cuvees. Do not mistake these wines, however, to be oxidative or overtly rich; his old vines produce concentration with brilliant acidity, and he blocks the malo-lactic conversion which retains the freshness his wines are famous for. 

Ambonnay's contrast to its surrounding regions lies in its position and soil - it faces largely South-East and due East, making it differ from the due-South-facing Bouzy, where you find more overt richness. Ambonnay's soils are deep and clay-based, but with silex and chalk redolent throughout, which provides this mineral strike more akin to that of Meursault.

About 70% of Eric's wines are fermented in barrel, and the stock of back-vintages in the barrel room is enviable. Only when a vintage is deemed truly special from a particular plot is it made into its own bottling, and even then the release will come at least 5 years after the vintage harvest. As he progresses through sustainable and biodynamic viticulture, the wines have taken on a more clear and precise shape, while still having the profound vinosity that attracted us all to his wines in the first place!

Meet the Producer

Eric Rodez

Early in my career, his bottles stuck out - a somewhat odd shape, a classy, understated label, and I remember the Head Sommelier musing, "Baby Krug!" In fact, Rodez did work for Krug and was tipped to follow their methods in several publishings around that time, leading to the familiar moniker among wine folk. Yet, though he does use barriques for much of his production, where he is most like Krug is the devotion to blending, and an insatiable search for quality. However, he is most unlike Krug in that his wines of such quality are extremely limited, so snap up whatever you can find!

Ever the agents of change, the Rodez family was one of very few growers in Champagne to produce their own wine in the time where negociants ruled the scene - the family roots date back more than 200 years in Ambonnay. Today Eric presides over 9 hectares of old Pinot Noir vines and 7 of Chardonnay vines in the village of AMbonnay, one of the grand villages of the region that the family has long called home, and where for a stint last decade Eric serves as mayor! He and his son Mickael represent the 8th and 9th generations to work the vines.

While he spent vintages in Burgundy, Beaujolais and the Rhone in his youth, Eric's passion for Champagne was raised exponentially when working at Krug. Notoriously masters of the art of blending, Eric adapted many of the techniques he learned in his stint with Krug to his own wines, and he routinely will blend in five to ten different vintages to his cuvees. Do not mistake these wines, however, to be oxidative or overtly rich; his old vines produce concentration with brilliant acidity, and he blocks the malo-lactic conversion which retains the freshness his wines are famous for. 

Ambonnay's contrast to its surrounding regions lies in its position and soil - it faces largely South-East and due East, making it differ from the due-South-facing Bouzy, where you find more overt richness. Ambonnay's soils are deep and clay-based, but with silex and chalk redolent throughout, which provides this mineral strike more akin to that of Meursault.

About 70% of Eric's wines are fermented in barrel, and the stock of back-vintages in the barrel room is enviable. Only when a vintage is deemed truly special from a particular plot is it made into its own bottling, and even then the release will come at least 5 years after the vintage harvest. As he progresses through sustainable and biodynamic viticulture, the wines have taken on a more clear and precise shape, while still having the profound vinosity that attracted us all to his wines in the first place!


Vinous

Vinous

93

(70% Pinot Noir and 30% Chardonnay, all barrel-fermented; 4 g/l dosage; made from fruit grown in Ambonnay and aged on its lees for eight years before disgorgement; L09-13): Bright yellow-gold. An intriguingly perfumed nose evokes poached pear, orange zest, sweet butter and honey, along with a smoky quality and a chalky mineral overtone. Chewy, very deep citrus and orchard fruit flavors are complicated by suggestions of toasted brioche, white truffle and candied fig. Finishes very long and smoky, with resonating floral and mineral qualities. I'd serve this complex Champagne, which comprises wines from 15 different vintages dating back to 1995, with an indulgent, buttery poultry or shellfish dish.

What the Critics are Saying

Vinous

Vinous

93

(70% Pinot Noir and 30% Chardonnay, all barrel-fermented; 4 g/l dosage; made from fruit grown in Ambonnay and aged on its lees for eight years before disgorgement; L09-13): Bright yellow-gold. An intriguingly perfumed nose evokes poached pear, orange zest, sweet butter and honey, along with a smoky quality and a chalky mineral overtone. Chewy, very deep citrus and orchard fruit flavors are complicated by suggestions of toasted brioche, white truffle and candied fig. Finishes very long and smoky, with resonating floral and mineral qualities. I'd serve this complex Champagne, which comprises wines from 15 different vintages dating back to 1995, with an indulgent, buttery poultry or shellfish dish.