Jacquart Mosaique Brut Rose NV
- Regular price
- $44.99
- Regular price
-
$69.99 - Sale price
- $44.99
- Unit price
- per
Type Champagne Blend
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Get to Know This Product
Where Michel Genet’s “9208” runs on a low, chalky, saline line, Jacquart Mosaïque Brut Rosé NV goes for a broader, more table-friendly profile, still polished, made to work across a greater range of foods and palates.
Jacquart is a very different kind of Champagne story. Founded as a grower cooperative, its roots stretch across the patchwork of Champagne itself: vineyards from the Montagne de Reims, Vallée de la Marne, Côte des Blancs, stitched together into a single, intentional expression. “Mosaïque” is a practical idea, not a poetic one. This blend shows how multiple sites add up to one deliciously cohesive whole.
In the glass, the style is generous and open. Where Genet leans linear and saline, Jacquart’s rosé opens generously—ripe strawberry, raspberry coulis, hints of peach skin and pink grapefruit, all carried on an expansive mousse. There’s a subtle roundness here, a softening generosity that comes from blending fruit-forward Pinot Noir with Chardonnay’s lift. The texture is supple and inviting, while remaining solidly dry and brisk—not sweet.
There is real structure underneath: a gentle bitterness of citrus pith, a whisper of spice and a clean, dry finish that reins everything in. If Genet feels like a wine made for the second glass at a long dinner, Jacquart feels made for the moment when people gather—as an aperitif before dinner, a bubbly hanging-out-with-the-pals wine, and for occasions when plates arrive without ceremony.
The contrast is less about quality than intention. Michel Genet’s “9208” is introspective, village-driven, quietly intellectual. Jacquart Mosaïque Rosé is blend-driven and intentionally broad. One asks you to lean in; the other meets you where you are. Both succeed, and they tell very different Champagne stories: one of chalk and restraint, the other of scale, blending and the art of making complexity feel effortless.

