Tag Archives: champagne

Lance McCullers Jr. injured by champagne bottle

Astros starter Lance McCullers Jr. has given new meaning to the phrase “champagne problems.”

The right-hander was lined up to start Game 3 of the American League Championship Series at Yankee Stadium on Saturday, but he will start Game 4 instead. Why? McCullers said he was pushed back after being hit on the elbow by a champagne bottle and sustaining a small cut during the team’s clubhouse celebration in Seattle following Game 3 of the ALDS.

“I’m OK. It’s just a little bit of swelling, not a huge deal,” McCullers said.

“Earlier in the week, we thought it would be beneficial to give me some days off, let everything settle down and give me an extra day to go [in] Game 4. It was really no one’s fault. It was just an accident, so it’s not a huge deal.”

McCullers reported no problems during a 35-pitch bullpen session Friday and will match up against Yankees left-hander Nestor Cortes in Game 4.

This isn’t the first odd injury of the 2022 postseason. Phillies reliever David Robertson was forced to miss the NLDS against the Braves after straining a calf muscle while celebrating Bryce Harper’s home run in Game 2 of the team’s Wild Card Series in St. Louis.

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Santiago Cúneo drinks champagne live on air to toast queen’s death

An Argentinian television host uncorked a bottle of champagne and toasted the death of Queen Elizabeth II live on air on Thursday — happily declaring that “the old b–ch has died.”

Santiago Cúneo, a Buenos Aires-based politician and journalist, was hosting a TV show when Buckingham Palace announced the passing of the 96-year-old monarch.

In a clip of his show which went viral online, Cúneo is seen surrounded by white and blue balloons representing the colors of Argentina’s flag.

Argentinian television host Santiago Cúneo drank a bottle of champagne live on the air to celebrate the passing of Queen Elizabeth II on Thursday.
Twitter/@porquetendencia

He pours himself some bubbly and starts eating finger sandwiches as the chyron flashes a message which reads: “The old bag of sh-t has died.”

Cúneo heaped scorn on the deceased British queen and celebrated her passing, saying that “the old b–ch has died.”

“She’s done for good,” he said on the air. “Loud applause for Satan who has finally taken her.”

Cúneo joyfully delcared that “the old b–ch has died” after news of the queen’s passing broke on Thursday.
Twitter/@porquetendencia

The broadcaster’s outburst is an apparent expression of anti-British animus in Argentina, which stems largely from the 1982 Falklands War, when the UK dispatched a naval task force to retake control of the Falkland Islands after the Argentines invaded.

Despite the past grievances, Argentina’s government officially mourned the queen’s passing, saying that it “accompanies the British people and her family in this moment of grief.”

Cúneo, a member of the ruling Justicialist Party in Argentina, is no stranger to controversy.

In 2018, he was fired by the cable news channel Cronica TV after he was accused of spouting anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, including an alleged plot to create a Jewish state in parts of Argentina and Chile.

Buckingham Palace announced the death of the 96-year-old monarch on Thursday.
WireImage

While some Twitter users laughed at Cúneo’s mockery of the queen’s death, others denounced him, saying that he does not represent Argentina.

“I am Argentinian and this guy doesn’t represent me. We are sorry for this loss,” a Twitter user wrote.

The queen’s death was met with mockery and glee elsewhere on social media where many Twitter users summoned their anti-British animus as well as their distaste for monarchies and royal families.

Jeff Bezos, the Amazon co-founder one of the world’s richest people, blasted a Carnegie Mellon professor who tweeted that she hoped the queen suffered an “excruciating” death, citing British colonialism in the developing world.

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50 Cent’s Sire Spirits lost millions to cheating employee: court docs

50 Cent got taken for big bucks by an employee who secretly pocketed millions from the rapper’s champagne and cognac biz, according to court papers.

The Queens-born rapper, whose given name is Curtis Jackson, launched his Branson Cognac in 2018 and Le Chemin du Roi, or The King’s Path, champagne in 2019, through his company, Sire Spirits.

The booze doesn’t come cheap, with the cognac selling for $200 and up and the bubbly going for $150 or more.

But the the company’s director of Brand Management, Mitchell Green, was jacking up prices and getting kickbacks from wholesalers to the tune of $2.2 million in so-called “agency fees,” according to Manhattan Federal Court records.

50 Cent launched Branson Cognac in 2018.
Branson

Green only confessed to the scheme in February 2020, “after two years of embezzling from Sire Spirits,” because he was being extorted by someone who threatened to expose him. The company fired him and took him to arbitration.

An arbitrator found Green liable for the money he pocketed, along with another $948,096 paid to a wholesaler, and ordered him to pay another $2.7 million in attorneys fees, costs and damages for a whopping total of $6.2 million, court records show.

A Manhattan judge confirmed the arbitrator’s decision in June. Attorneys for Green didn’t respond to a message seeking comment.

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You’ll shoot your eye out: Popped champagne cork ejects CO2 at supersonic speeds

Andy Roberts/Getty Images

The pop of a champagne cork turns out to have something in common with a rocket launcher, according to a recent paper published in the journal Physics of Fluids. Scientists from France and India used computer simulations to reveal what happens in the microseconds after uncorking a bottle of champagne in full detail. They discovered that in the first millisecond after the cork pops, the ejected gas forms different types of shockwaves—even reaching supersonic speeds—before the bubbly settles down and is ready to imbibe.

“Our paper unravels the unexpected and beautiful flow patterns that are hidden right under our nose each time a bottle of bubbly is uncorked,” said co-author Gérard Liger-Belair of the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne. “Who could have imagined the complex and aesthetic phenomena hidden behind such a common situation experienced by any one of us?”

Liger-Belair could imagine it, for one. He has been studying the physics of champagne for years and is the author of Uncorked: The Science of Champagne. He has gleaned numerous insights into the underlying physics by subjecting champagne to laser tomography, infrared imaging, high-speed video imaging, and mathematical modeling, among other methods. 

According to Liger-Belair, champagne’s effervescence arises from the nucleation of bubbles on the glass walls. Once they detach from their nucleation sites, the bubbles grow as they rise to the liquid surface, bursting and collapsing at the surface. This reaction typically occurs within a couple of milliseconds, and the distinctive crackling sound is emitted when the bubbles rupture. When the bubbles in champagne burst, they produce droplets that release aromatic compounds believed to enhance the flavor further.

Also, the size of the bubbles plays a critical role in a really good glass of champagne. Larger bubbles enhance the release of aerosols into the air above the glass—bubbles approximately 1.7 mm across the surface. And the bubbles in champagne “ring” at specific resonant frequencies, depending on their size. So it’s possible to “hear” the size distribution of bubbles as they rise to the surface in a glass of champagne.

Enlarge / Time sequence showing details of a cork expelled from a champagne bottleneck stored at 20° Celsius captured through high-speed imaging.

Gérard Liger-Belair

As we’ve reported previously, champagne is usually made from grapes picked early in the season, when there is less sugar in the fruit and higher acid levels. The grapes are pressed and sealed in containers to ferment, just like any other wine. CO2 is produced during fermentation, but it’s allowed to escape because what you want at this stage is a base wine. Then there is a second fermentation, except this time, the CO2 is trapped in the bottle, dissolving into the wine.

Striking just the right balance is critical. You need about six atmospheres of pressure and 18 grams of sugar, with just 0.3 grams of yeast. Otherwise, the resulting champagne will either be too flat, or too much pressure will cause the bottle to explode. You also need the right temperature, which influences the pressure inside the bottle. That high-pressure COis finally released when the cork is popped, releasing a gas plume mixed with water vapor that expands out of the bottleneck and into the ambient air.

Previous experimental work by Liger-Belair and his colleagues used high-speed imaging to demonstrate that shock waves formed when a champagne cork was popped. With the present study, “We wanted to better characterize the unexpected phenomenon of a supersonic flow that takes place during champagne bottle uncorking,” said co-author Robert Georges of the University of Rennes 1. “We hope our simulations will offer some interesting leads to researchers, and they might consider the typical bottle of champagne as a mini-laboratory.”

Based on those simulations, the team identified three distinct phases. Initially, as the bottle is uncorked, the gas mixture is partially blocked by the cork, so the ejecta can’t reach the speed of sound. As the cork releases, the gas can then escape radially and hit supersonic speeds, forming a succession of shock waves that balance its pressure.

Those shock waves then combine to form telltale ring patterns known as shock diamonds (aka thrust diamonds or Mach diamonds after Ernst Mach, who first described them), typically observed in rocket exhaust plumes. Finally, the ejecta slows down to subsonic speeds again when the pressure drops too low to maintain the required nozzle pressure ratio between the bottleneck and the edge of the cork.

The research is relevant to a wide range of applications involving supersonic flow, including ballistic missiles, wind turbines, underwater vehicles—and of course, a rocket launcher. “The ground that moves away from the launcher as it rises in the air then plays the role of the champagne cork on which the ejected gases impact,” the authors explained. “Similarly, combustion gases ejected from the barrel of a gun are thrown at supersonic speeds onto the bullet. The problems are faced with the same physical phenomena and could be treated using the same approach.”

DOI: Physics of Fluids, 2022. 10.1063/5.0089774  (About DOIs).

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Champagne shortage ahead of New Year’s Eve due to supply chain issues

Wine industry experts are warning that holiday revelers may be hard-pressed to find their favorite brands of bubbly this New Year’s Eve due to supply chain issues affecting the global market.

The shortage is due to a “perfect storm” of logistical disruptions, including shipments backlogged at U.S. ports and a lack of delivery drivers all while trying to meet massive holiday demand, according to Alison Napjus, senior editor of Wine Spectator.

“It’s not even just that basic transportation issue. We’re also looking at things like shortages of the cage that goes on top of your bottle, labels, boxes to put wine in,” Napjus said on Fox Business’s “Mornings with Maria.”

“So you put that all together with the huge increase in demand we’ve seen for champagne this year [and] for other sparkling wines and of course, the holiday season, and it could be tough to find some of your favorite labels this year.”

A report from Wine Enthusiast Magazine predicted that the impact of the champagne shortage may last for years. 

According to the outlet, Comité Interprofessionnel du Vin de Champagne (CIVC) – the French region’s trade organization –  reported that demand for Champagne dropped 18% by volume in 2020. In response, the CICV capped production limits for the year at 25 percent less than its 2019 limits.

“The initial decisions made by importers to slow—or even more drastically, to stop—importing wines is really a larger issue than the supply chain,” Thatcher Baker-Briggs, a retailer, importer and owner of Thatcher’s Wine Consulting, told the magazine.

A report predicted that the champagne shortage issue may continue to be felt for years.
EPA/Remko de Waal

However, towards the end of 2020 at the holiday season and into 2021, demand increased once again. Champagne’s harvest was marred with horrible weather issues throughout 2021, including out-of-season heat waves, frost, and torrential summer rains, according to Wine Enthusiast.

Demand for wine increased since the beginning of the pandemic as Americans opted to drink a glass of wine at home instead of going out to a bar or restaurant, putting additional strain on the industry.

Dr. Kaan Kurtural, a viticulture specialist with the University of California Davis, told Fox News in October that there is a bottle shortage also affecting the industry.

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Asset bubbles? Champagne outfizzes Big Tech and bitcoin in 2021

LONDON, Dec 24 (Reuters) – You might be tempted to pop corks if you’ve invested in vintage champagne this year – the most coveted bottles have outperformed all major financial market assets, from Big Tech to bitcoin.

Online platforms that allow you to trade desirable wine, champagne and spirit vintages, much like stocks or currencies, have seen record activity and bumper price movements this year.

Data from LiveTrade, which runs the “Bordeaux Index” of drinks, showed champagne accounted for 15 of the 20 top price rises on the platform in 2021.

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The charge was led by Salon le Mesnil’s 2002 vintage, described by its producer as “captivating like a samurai sword”. It has surged more than 80% in value in 2021 on both LiveTrade and another wine platform Liv-ex, and currently sells for roughly 11,700 pounds a bottle ($15,700).

That beats bitcoin’s 75% rise and is nearly five times more than the 18% made by the NYFANG+TM stocks index (.NYFANG) of Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, Google, Tesla and Microsoft which have powered world equity market gains of late.

Taittinger’s Comtes de Champagne 2006 also sparkled, along with Krug’s 2002 and 1996 vintages, with price rises of more than 70%, while the Krug 2000, Bollinger La Grande Année 2007, Cristal Rosé 2008 and Dom Pérignon P2 2002 have seen rises of 54%-55%.

LiveTrade CEO Matthew O’Connell said several factors had fuelled a boom in fine-wine trading this year – “from low interest rates and high levels of savings accumulated by the wealthy during numerous global lockdowns, to a growing focus on hard assets in the face of rising inflationary pressures”.

Champagne benefited early in the year as it was exempt from the 25% U.S. tariffs put on European wines by Donald Trump’s U.S. administration which were then suspended shortly after Joe Biden took over.

Cristal’s 2012 and 2013 champagnes were the most-traded bottles of the year overall, LiveTrade said, followed by leading fine wine, the 6,450-a-bottle Lafite Rothschild 2014.

The prized claret brand’s stellar performance was driven by normally less coveted “off” vintages – namely 2011, 2012, 2014 and 2017 – all of which enjoyed 25% plus sales growth.

A record 220,000 bottles were traded this year on LiveTrade at an average bottle price of about 230 pounds ($308.50) apiece. A tenth of all bottles traded saw their prices rise by over 30%.

The Champagne 50 index was the top-performing sub-index in the Liv-ex Fine Wine 1000, up 33.8% year-to-date.

($1 = 0.7455 pounds)

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Champagne outperforms big tech and bitcoin

Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Pravin Char

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Jeff Bezos Interrupted William Shatner’s Profound Speech To Spray Champagne

William Shatner visited space Wednesday in a brief trip he called “the most profound experience I can imagine.”

In an emotional conversation with Blue Origin and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos afterward, he sought to translate raw emotion into words and reflect on what had just occurred.

But it seems Shatner’s post-flight demeanor varied wildly from the expectations of Bezos, whose first instinct was not to join Shatner in a somber reflection on the significance of space ― but to cut him off mid-thought so he could drench some wealthy people in Champagne:

“Give me a Champagne bottle, c’mere. I want one,” Bezos says in a video of the moment, gesturing to a woman on the periphery who gamely brings one over.

“I want to hear this,” he adds while talking over Shatner, before offering him the open bottle: “Here, you want a little of this?”

Shatner scratches his head and gazes at the ground, declining Bezos’ offer. Bezos then gives the bottle a hearty shake and proceeds to spray it all over amid celebratory screams.

The moment struck a chord on Twitter:

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‘Shampanskoye’ supply from France halted after Putin says champagne is Russian

Renowned winemaker Moet Hennessy said Monday that its champagne shipments to Russia were suspended after President Vladimir Putin signed a law on Friday saying the term “champagne” is allowed to be used only for “Russian champagne.”

“These provisions lead to a temporary suspension of deliveries of products to assess the impact of this new law,” Moet-Hennessy spokeswoman Anne Catherine Grimal said, according to state news agency RIA-Novosti.

Moet Hennessy is part of French luxury goods group LVMH and known for such brands as Moet & Chandon, Veuve Clicquot and Dom Perignon.

Renowned winemaker Moet Hennessy said Monday that its champagne shipments to Russia were suspended after President Vladimir Putin signed a law on Friday saying the term “champagne” is allowed to be used only for “Russian champagne.” (iStock)

CHINA, RUSSIA EXPLOITING UNITED NATIONS TO PUSH BACK AGAINST US INTERESTS, REPORTS SAY

For most aficionados, a sparkling wine can be called champagne only if it comes from the region of France with that name and is made under certain regulations. 

Since Soviet times, champagne — “shampanskoye” in Russian — has been used as a generic term for a wide range of sparkling wines, some of which contradict champagne’s luxury image by selling for as little as 150 rubles ($2) a bottle.

The law has sparked controversy: Even the head of one of Russia’s major winemakers thinks the law goes too far.

“For me, there is no doubt that real champagne comes from the Champagne region in France,” Pavel Titov, president of Abrau-Dyurso, told RIA-Novosti. “It is very important to protect Russian wines in our market and provide them with comprehensive patronage. But the legislative measures taken must be reasonable and not contradict common sense.”

The French champagne industry group asked its partners to pause all Russian shipments.

“The Champagne Committee deplores the fact that this legislation does not ensure that Russian consumers have clear and transparent information about the origins and characteristics of wine,” group co-presidents Maxime Toubart and Jean-Marie Barillère said in a statement.

Wine consultant Anna Chernyshova helps the rich build spirits collections.

“My phone has been ringing off the hook,” she told the AFP news agency. “Me and my clients are thinking what to do next.”

She thinks the new law is nonsense.

“How will they walk back on it?” she told AFP. “So many officials love this champagne.”

Since Soviet times, champagne — “shampanskoye” in Russian — has been used as a generic term for a wide range of sparkling wines, some of which contradict champagne’s luxury image by selling for as little as 150 rubles ($2) a bottle.
(iStock)

Drinks market expert Vadim Drobiz doesn’t think the law is a big deal. 

“If there is no Moet, there won’t be a state coup and Russian elites will not commit suicide,” Drobiz told AFP.

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The law is now being ridiculed severely. 

“Now it’s necessary to ban Scots and Americans from using the word ‘whisky,’” joked restaurateur Sergei Mironov. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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French champagne industry group fumes over new Russian champagne law

PARIS/MOSCOW, July 5 (Reuters) – France’s champagne industry group on Monday blasted a new Russian law forcing foreign champagne producers to add a “sparkling wine” reference to their bottles and called for champagne exports to Russia to be halted.

The law, signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday, requires all foreign producers of sparkling wine to describe their product as such on the label on the back of the bottle — though not on the front — while makers of Russian “shampanskoye” may continue to use that term alone.

The French champagne industry group called on its members to halt all shipments to Russia for the time being and said the name “champagne”, which refers to the region in France the drink comes from, had legal protection in 120 countries.

“The Champagne Committee deplores the fact that this legislation does not ensure that Russian consumers have clear and transparent information about the origins and characteristics of wine,” group co-presidents Maxime Toubart and Jean-Marie Barillere said in a statement.

French Trade Minister Franck Riester said he was tracking the new Russian law closely, in contact with the wine industry and France’s European partners.

“We will unfailingly support our producers and French excellence,” he said on Twitter.

Moet Hennessy, the LVMH-owned French maker of Veuve Clicquot and Dom Perignon champagnes, said on Sunday it would begin adding the designation “sparkling wine” to the back of bottles destined for Russia to comply with the law.

LVMH (LVMH.PA) shares were down around 0.2% on Monday afternoon, underperforming the Paris bourse, which was up 0.34%.

Shares in Russian sparkling wine maker Abrau-Durso (ABRD.MM) were up more than 3% after rising as much 7.77% in early trade.

Abrau-Durso president Pavel Titov told Radio France Internationale on Saturday his firm does not have sparkling wines that would be called “champagne” in its portfolio and said he hoped the issue would be resolved in favor of global norms and standards.

“It is very important to protect the Russian wines on our market. But the legislation must be reasonable and not contradict common sense … I have no doubts that the real champagne is made in the Champagne region of France,” he said.

Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Leigh Thomas in Paris and Alexander Marrow in Moscow;
Writing by Geert De Clercq
Editing by Alison Williams, Andrea Ricci and Catherine Evans

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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