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Pol Couronne Brut Rosé, NV

Pol Couronne Brut Rosé, NV

Strawberry and redcurrant with lively bubbles, fresh acidity and a crisp, elegant finish
Regular price £32.00
Regular price £42.90 Offer price £32.00
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Optimal drinking window: 2026 - 2029

 

Pol Couronne's Brut Rosé is light, subtle and powerful at the same time.

The colour of this delightful rosé is lightly coppery, the bubble thin and light. You will find notes of red fruits, cherry. With beautiful effervescence, it is supple and round, and has notes of wild strawberries and raspberries that bring an aromatic finale. A wonderful apéritif, or why not try it with a tray of Iberian ham?

The Pol Couronne Champagne House was founded in 1887. For over a century, sustainable vineyard practices and winemaking traditions have been used to create characterful and high quality wines. Pol Couronne embraces the complexity of assemblage (the blending of the grapes within a wine) by working with vineyards across the Champagne region that best emphasise the character of each varietal. For example, the sandy-clay soils of Avize produce a special minerality within the Chardonnay grape that adds linearity and freshness to their wine.

"Our cuvee Brut Rosé is made with due respect for tradition. We select our best Pinot Meunier to produce a red Coteaux champenois which will bring this Brut Rosé its splendid colour. This champagne will win you over with its modernity."
JB Prevost

"The development of this cuvée is carried out with respect for traditions. We select our most beautiful Pinot Meunier to create a Coteaux champagne which will bring this magnificent colour to our Brut Rosé, a champagne that will seduce you."
Pol Couronne

• 27% Chardonnay, 26% Pinot Noir, 33% Pinot Meunier + 14% red Coteaux champenois (base Pinot Meunier)

 

Non-vintage Champagne is released ready to drink, and this rosé is no exception — the fruit is fresh, the mousse is lively, and there is nothing to be gained by waiting years. Over the next 12-18 months the primary red fruit will remain at its brightest and most expressive. Push it towards 2028 and the wine will start to settle into a slightly rounder, more biscuity register, which can be pleasant if that is your preference. Beyond 2029, the freshness that defines this style will begin to fade, and the wine is unlikely to develop meaningful secondary complexity to compensate. Drink it with enthusiasm and soon.

Tasting Notes

AppearancePale coppery salmon with a fine, persistent mousse and a delicate bead.

NoseFresh wild strawberry and red cherry up front, with a subtle earthy warmth from the Pinot Meunier base. There is a clean, chalky lift underneath that keeps everything bright and focused.

PalateLight-bodied but with more structure than the colour suggests — the Coteaux Champenois addition gives it a quiet grip. Raspberry and cherry sit alongside a creamy mid-palate, with the Chardonnay pulling the finish towards crispness and length.

FinishClean and refreshing, with a faint mineral note and a lingering red fruit echo.

Overall impressionA rosé Champagne that earns its structure rather than relying purely on charm.

Food Pairings

In the Marne, a glass of rosé Champagne before a Sunday lunch typically means charcuterie first — rillettes, thin slices of jambon de Reims, or a terrine de campagne with cornichons. Locals also favour it with the region's own potée champenoise, a slow-cooked pork and cabbage dish, where the wine's acidity cuts through the richness rather neatly. Further south towards Troyes, andouillette — the city's famously pungent tripe sausage — is a classic pairing that sounds alarming and works extremely well. Simpler pleasures include Chaource, the local soft cow's milk cheese, whose mild, creamy tang plays beautifully against the wine's red fruit and fizz.

We think this wine would go well with

Aperitif Canapés Smoked Salmon Blinis Prawn Cocktail Eton Mess Charcuterie Board Smoked Salmon

FAQs

What does Pol Couronne Brut Rosé taste like?

Fresh wild strawberry and red cherry dominate, with a clean mineral lift from the Chardonnay and a subtle earthy warmth from the Pinot Meunier. The mousse is fine and persistent, and the finish is crisp rather than sweet. It is light on its feet but has more structure than many rosé Champagnes at this price point.

How is the colour achieved?

Rather than a brief skin maceration, Pol Couronne makes a dedicated still red wine called Coteaux Champenois from Pinot Meunier, then adds 14% of that wine to the blend. It is a more labour-intensive approach than the alternatives, and it gives the wine its pale coppery salmon colour as well as a quiet structural depth.

When should I drink this wine?

Now through 2029. Non-vintage Champagne is designed to be enjoyed young and fresh, and this rosé is at its most expressive right now. The fruit and fizz will hold well for another three years, but there is no benefit to holding it beyond that.

What food works well with this wine?

Iberian ham is a natural match — the wine's acidity and red fruit cut through the fat and salt very cleanly. It also works well with soft cow's milk cheeses, smoked salmon blinis, or a simple charcuterie board. If you want something more substantial, try it with a light prawn or lobster dish.

How should I serve it?

Chill to 8-10°C before serving — around 20-25 minutes in an ice bucket does the job. Use a tulip-shaped Champagne glass rather than a flute to give the aromas a little more room. No need to decant.

Is it worth cellaring?

Not particularly. This is a wine built for pleasure now, and its defining qualities — bright fruit, lively acidity, fine mousse — are at their peak today. Cellaring beyond 2029 is unlikely to add complexity, and risks losing the freshness that makes it worth drinking in the first place.

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OUR GROWERS

Pol Couronne

We’ve worked with Pol Couronne for years now and the quality emerging from the house is nothing short of exceptional.

Owned and run by Jean-Baptise Prevost, the House actually dates back to 1887 and was founded by Pol Auguste Couronne, who was born in Hautvillers (of Dom Perignon fame) in 1862. Each of the wines have great depth, with a clear minerality running throughout – the intention is to maintain freshness, even if there is layer upon layer of complexity (which there is, even in the ‘entry level’ NV). There’s a reason why this quickly became our biggest selling Champagne house and has never been knocked of its perch.

Pol Couronne has publicly stated a commitment to sustainable viticulture across its sourcing vineyards. However, no specific third-party organic, biodynamic, or HVE certification has been independently verified for this producer at the time of writing.

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