
Luxist readers from around the world have
nominated their favorite makers of champagne and sparkling wines. Here's the list of the top five that made the list of the world's best:
Cristal
For a champagne founded in the same year as the United States of America,
Louis Roederer's Cristal has changed remarkably little over the years compared to the country across the pond.
Founded in 1776 as Dubois Pere & Fils, the company was renamed after the founder's nephew,
Louis Roederer, who took over in 1833 and renamed the champagne house after himself. One of Roederer's greatest moves was expanding the brand into Russia. The champagne enjoyed years of success among well-heeled Russians, and Tsar Nicholas II eventually requested a special champagne to be made for the Imperial Court of Russia. The result was
Cristal, a sweet and delicious wine that broke with tradition – instead of being packaged in a dark bottle like, say,
Dom Perignon – Cristal came in crystal-clear bottles, hence the name. As legend has it, the transparency was a feature designed so that Tsar Nicholas could tell if somebody was trying to poison his bubbly.
Dom Perignon
France's King Louis XIV, called The Sun King because everything revolved around him, had an uncanny connection to the champagne that eventually found its way into his court. In 1694, Dom Perignon, the monk who developed the regal wine, had a goal to create the best wine in the world. Sure enough,
Dom Perignon became the most expensive wine sold in France that year. The 1921 vintage became the first prestige cuvée ever, with an initial batch sold in 1936. It has been served at all manner of glamorous occasions, including the Shah of Iran's 1959 wedding, as well as Prince Charles and Princess Diana's nuptials in 1981. Since
Dom Perignon is a vintage champagne, it's not made in years considered to be weak
.