Champagne Ruinart Blanc de Blancs 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056
On September 1, 1729, Nicolas Ruinart, a cloth-maker from Reims like his father, opened his first account book devoted to bubble wine. 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056 He is 33 years old. 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056 This account book is a birth certificate: that of the first Champagne House ever created. 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056 The first bottles are intended for its traditional customers, who buy sheets and fabrics. 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056 But Nicolas Ruinart is a wise and refined businessman. 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056 He endorsed the pioneering vision of his uncle. 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056 History proves him right. 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056 Six years later, the Maison Ruinart abandoned the trade in fabrics to devote itself to the champagne trade. 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056 It will now be his only vocation. 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056 170 bottles sold in 1730, 3,000 bottles in 1731, 36,000 in 1761. "In the name of God and the Blessed Virgin", writes the enterprising nephew at the head of his account book. 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056 For more than two centuries, the Ruinart family, ennobled and become Ruinart de Brimont in 1817, animated the House with the same consistency. 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056 Each generation reveals a Chef of House with particular talents whom he puts at the service of the lineage. 6b11bd6ba9341f0271941e7df664d056