Champagne is not only a bubbly, festive sparkling wine known for celebrations and hangovers, but also a lovely and lush region in France. Here countless winemakers continue the rich tradition of méthode champenoise, the method for making champagne wine. It is important for connoisseurs to note (and follow) the number one rule of the term “champagne”: don’t call any wine (especially sparkling wine) not made in the Champagne region of France “champagne,” an important designation for regional foods protected by the EU.
Champagne is made by a secondary fermentation in the bottle (with a little help from a dash of yeast and a pinch of sugar), which creates the titillating carbonation. It has an erroneous bad reputation for inducing headaches, but it is the cheap, sugary sparkling wine, wine with big “artificially” added bubbles, consumed in vast quantities at your cousin’s wedding that is the culprit. True champagne is made only with red Pinot Noir (or sometimes Pinot Meunier) and Chardonnay grapes and is delicate with small, fine bubbles. It makes a lovely addition to a warm afternoon or a rich meal. If you are staying in Paris, you shouldn’t neglect to travel for a day or two to the Champagne area. Reims is a spectacular city with a rich history located in the Champagne region. If you head this direction, you must visit Champagne Taittinger, a spectacular champagne wine house with English tours available for their wine cellar.
Are you looking for a hotel in Reims? Click here for more information: Kyriad Reims Nord - La Neuvillette.

Every time my wife's grandparents travel to Paris, they stay at the Hotel Bonaparte. When we prepared to head to Paris for our honeymoon, we followed their lead and book a room for three nights at the Hotel Bonaparte. The combination of price, location (in the heart of the upscale Latin Quarter), and charm (the same family has welcomed guests for four generations) is hard to beat. My wife and I love to walk and we could easily get to the big Paris attractions (The Louvre, Notre Dame, The Eiffel Tower) within a half hour. For those who prefer buses or subway, a bus stop is 50 meters from the hotel door and two metro stops are just down the street. If you travel one block east (to Rue des Canettes), a row of delicious and affordable restaurants cater to most palettes.
The town of Bayeaux, only a few kilometers from the beaches of D-Day, was the first French town to be liberated from the Nazis. The town has always been famous for the Bayeaux Tapestry, a seventy meter long embroidered that is almost one thousand years old. It takes several hours to see the tapestry since there is a photo display highlighting the tapestry and a film to see before actually seeing the tapestry. We ended up studying the tapestry for close to an hour since there wasn’t much of a crowd that morning. The tapestry really does read like a comic strip and the story of Harold’s betrayal is clearly told. It is truly remarkable how history can be captured in thread.
Just outside of Paris city limits, the steep Montmartre hill rises out of the northern part of the Right Bank, drawing artists and visitors since the end of the 19th Century. Still an active epicenter for artists, artistic culture and a bohemian life-style, the area has retained its deliciously sordid atmosphere and revelry. Many of the great artists of our past, including Dalí, Monet and Picasso, used Montmartre at one point or another for a working and living retreat from the confines of other more rigid societies of the time.
If you are looking for an excellent, conveniently located budget hotel in the Montmartre neighborhood of Paris close to easy walks down the Camps Elysees and the Eiffel Tower, the Elysees Opera Hotel is the best one I’ve found in the center of Paris. 
Post new comment / 0 Comments