The Widow Clicquot: The Story of a Champagne Empire and the Woman Who Ruled It (P.S.)
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| The Widow Clicquot: The Story of a Champagne Empire and the Woman Who Ruled It (P.S.) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Amazon Best of the Month, October 2008: With its trademark fizz and sparkling taste, champagne has long been the beverage of choice for those in a celebratory mood. From the artillery of popping corks on New Year's Eve to the clinking of newlywed glasses, a bit of the bubbly has locked arms with good cheer for centuries. Yet had it not been for the pioneering Barbe-Nicole Ponsardin, the libation deemed "the wine of civilization" by Winston Churchill might today be available only to the excessively wealthy or extremely lucky. Author Tilar J. Mazzeo toasts the élan of Champagne's Grand Dame with The Widow Clicquot, a fascinating story of the cunning bravery and good fortune that helped build the Veuve Clicquot brand. Widowed at age twenty-seven by the death of her husband François Clicquot, Barbe-Nicole assumed control of her family’s wine business amid the chaos of The Napoleonic Wars. That she became a prominent female leader in a male-dominated industry was one thing; building an empire amid savage political unrest was quite another. With passionate research and true admiration for her subject, Mazzeo pays homage to the beloved Widow from Reims and the remarkable weight her name still carries today. -Dave Callanan
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| 02-25-10 | 4 | (NA) |
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I really enjoyed learning about the Widow Clicquot and the development of the Champagne industry. I think of this book as having 3 acts...The first is a fascinating personal experience woven through the history of the French Revolution. The second outlines the amazing events of a strong woman taking over a business enterprise and building it to greater heights in a time of near total repression of women in business. Whereas the author does a great job on the first two acts, the third is a bit repetitive both in language and fact. I found it meandered a bit and was more reminiscent than analytical. Still, I highly recommend this book as a case study in widows surprising the world by taking over their family businesses. Other examples that interest me include Gert Boyle of Columbia Sportswear and Katharine Graham of the "Washington Post."
(Review Data Last Updated: 2010-03-17 00:15:08 EST)
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| 01-24-10 | 5 | (NA) |
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An excellent book with great information concerning the life and times that made the chapagnes of today possible.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2010-03-17 00:15:08 EST)
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| 01-06-10 | 5 | (NA) |
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Upon the death of her husband, Francois Clicquot , Barbe-Nicole Clicquot Ponsardin joined Alexandre Jerome Fourneux in a business partnership in 1806 and founded Veuve Clicquot Fourneaux & Co.. She immediately took an active role in the business, participating in the crafting of her own Champagne and within four years was in charge of the business which became Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin & Co.. The Widow Clicquot's risky decision to arrange to transport her wines from the 1811 or "comet" vintage to Russia for sale after the fall of Napoleon saved her company and led to the internationalization of Champagne. She continued at the helm of Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin & Co. until 1841, when at the age of 64 she retired. To this day, Champagne Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin is the only elite Champagne house with a woman (Madame Cécile Bonnefond) at the helm.
In the 1800s everyone knew of the Widow Clicquot, but few understand anything about the woman behind the yellow label. Scant details of her life have been preserved. Her personal letters did not survive and there is little biographical record. It is to the author's credit that she was able to recreate the life story and provide new insight about this unique woman. Mazzeo does write at times with considerable speculation, but her grasp of history makes the whole story very plausible. The book has extensive scholarly references and bibliography, but only one photo of the Widow Clicquot in her later years and no photos of early Champagne bottles or labels. This book is valuable for the educational information about Champagne that is interjected throughout its pages. Here are just a few of the little known facts about Champagne that I learned: * Champagne was discovered by the British, not the French. Sparkling wine appeared in England by the 1660s, decades before it was sold in France. Wine was shipped from France to England in wooden casks. The British wanted to better preserve the wine so they put the wine in bottles where the wine underwent a secondary fermentation. The British added sugar to the bottles, creating Champagne by the 1670s, a decade before it was produced in France. * Early on, in the 1790s, Champagne was a dessert wine, very sweet, served cold and brownish pink in color due to added brandy and skins of grapes. There were only blanc de noirs (white and red grapes). * Dom Pierre Perignon did not invent Champagne. That was a marketing ploy by the region's Champagne producers at the 1889 World Exhibition in Paris. In reality, Dom Perignon was given the task of getting rid of bubbles that were ruining still wines of the time. A secondary fermentation occurred in wines stored over the winter in sealed wood casks and when the weather warmed in the spring, a secondary fermentation occurred creating bubbles in the so-called "devil's wine." There was little market for sparkling wine at the time. Dom Perignon was a pioneer of blending. * The older a Champagne is, the smaller the bubbles become. Bubbles do not affect taste. Since vintage Champagne is aged extensively creating smaller bubbles, the quality of high quality Champagne is often attributed to small bubbles. * Vintage Champagne must be aged a minimum of 3 years, some of the best are aged 7-8 years. After disgorgement, Champagne rarely improves with cellaring. * The Widow Clicquot discovered remuage, a system of clearing Champagne yeast debris trapped in the bottle after secondary fermentation by riddling. * Barbe-Nicole Clicquot was one of the first winemakers to use labels on her bottles in 1814. * The signature of Barbe-Nicole Clicquot is on every orange label Champagne that bears her name. (Review Data Last Updated: 2010-02-06 02:41:55 EST)
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| 11-21-09 | 1 | (NA) |
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I could only get about 1/4 of the way through the book. The author repeatedly uses words and phrases like "must have", "surely", and "probably".
Either write a novel, or write a biography. If there's simply not enough material for a biography, don't waste my time. (Review Data Last Updated: 2010-01-13 06:44:41 EST)
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| 10-06-09 | 1 | 1\1 |
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Could have been condensed into 20 pages or less. It seemed like the author had difficulties finding ample original source material in her research -- which doesn't seem like her fault, because she seems like a decent scholar who worked hard and just came up against a dearth of info -- but instead of giving up or broadening her focus, she padded it like crazy to achieve the word count. Shame on the publishers for letting this come out as it is.
This is a speculative, repetitive, badly edited, boring book. If Mazzeo were a better writer, she might have been able to succeed in turning her frustrated quest for the widow into an interesting pseudo-memoir/pseudo-biography -- something like Geoff Dyer's fantastic "Out of Sheer Rage" but she can't pull it off by a long shot. Call the waiter and send it back. (Review Data Last Updated: 2009-11-27 02:21:23 EST)
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