I like the Moet & Chandon White Star...just about $20-25 I think but it tastes more expensive!!! Perrier Jouet in the flower bottle is pretty too if you are doing a champagne bar!
White Star was the best bang for your buck. Sadly, they don't make it anymore.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/11/d...nes-that-leave-the-sweetness-behind.html?_r=0
Technically speaking, brut Champagnes can range up to 12 grams of residual sugar per liter. Thirty years ago, most brut Champagnes sold in the United States were at the higher end of this range. Whatever lip service Americans paid to dry wine, they preferred a sweet roundness in their Champagnes. For years, in fact, one of the most popular Champagnes sold in the United States, Moët White Star, was not even a brut but a sweeter extra dry.
But as Americans became more accustomed to drinking wine, they began to prefer dryer styles, as did many people around the world. For years now, mass-market Champagne producers have been reducing the sweetness levels of their wines. In 2012, Moët stopped selling White Star in the United States, replacing it as its flagship Champagne with Impérial, a brut.
Lucky you. It sold out very quickly when they discontinued it. I used it for parties and holidays. Also, it was good for champagne cocktails and punch. The Imperial just isn't quite the same.I still have several bottles including one in my refrigerator. Bought maybe a dozen for a party years ago and only a few wanted any. It's OK. It was designed to be a bit on the sweet side compared to the typical brut Champagne that others produced. One wine shop employee told me that it was specifically made for the US market and American tastes.
The party was almost 10 years ago - seems like someone bumped up this thread...


Lucky you. It sold out very quickly when they discontinued it. I used it for parties and holidays. Also, it was good for champagne cocktails and punch. The Imperial just isn't quite the same.
I drink Verdi all the time.
You can get it at beer & wine stores, and some of the nicer grocery stores carry it also. Its a crisp and sweet champagne.
They are now making them in flavors, but I like the original just as much.
Of course it's not the same. However, they're trying to appeal to wine snobs.
:Chateau Ste Michelle makes some very good bubbly in various levels of sweetness and runs around $15.00. Chandon Extra Dry Riche is yummy too for around the same price.
I think they also go by Extra Brut (the dryest, least sweet), Brut, Extra Dry, Sec, and Demi Sec, (the extra dry to Sec being medium sweet) and Demi Sec (the sweetest option).
There are a lot of tasty champagnes in the $10 range.
Cooks comes to mind.
And of course, unless they are from the correct region of France, they aren't champagne, they are sparkling wine.[/QU
I would not buy Cooks even for mimosas. It's the Boone's Farm of the sparklings. It's like sugar water with bubbles and will make you very sick if you drink too much due to all the sugar.
The party was almost 10 years ago - seems like someone bumped up this thread...