Explore the Underwater Veuve Clicquot Champagne Cellar Open to Visitors This Summer

Exclusive Veuve Clicquot Experience Summary

  1. Discover the history behind the “Cellar in the Sea” initiative.
  2. Join an exclusive tasting event on June 22 in Champagne, France.
  3. Experience a unique culinary journey and comparative tasting of Champagnes.

Only 28 guests are going to see it — here’s how you can be one of them.

Veuve Clicquot is back at it with another extraordinary adventure. Following the success of last year’s lavish trip from France to Italy aboard the Venice Simplon-Orient Express, A Belmond Train, the Champagne house is gearing up for another epic experience this summer, this time by sea.

Let’s rewind back to 2010, when unsuspecting divers came across a shipwreck off the Åland Islands in the Baltic Sea. The vessel dated back to 1840, but the real surprise was that 168 bottles of Champagne it had been transporting — 47 were Veuve Clicquot — remained preserved more than a century later due to the absence of light, a consistently cool temperature, and the water’s low salinity. Intrigued by this phenomenon, the Champagne maison decided to conduct its own experiment to uncover how bubbly ages underwater compared to traditional storage in crayères.

Vineyard of Veuve Clicquot and a set of bottles that were underwater in the sea cellar
Courtesy of Veuve Clicquot

Dubbed “Cellar in the Sea,” Veuve Clicquot began the program in 2014 by placing one batch of its Champagne in the maison’s chalk cellars in Reims and submerging a second identical set 131 feet below the Baltic Sea’s surface. Over the course of 40 years, the brand intends to hold several comparative tastings with experts and send samples to oenology universities in Reims and Bordeaux for scientific analysis. The first tasting happened in 2017, and now, for the very first time, guests are being invited to visit both sites and partake in an exclusive tasting led by chef de cave Didier Mariotti.

On June 22, up to 28 guests will be welcomed to Champagne, France, where Veuve Clicquot has called home since 1772. The day will start with a tour of Veuve Clicquot’s historic grand cru vineyards and lunch in the gardens of Veuve’s Manoir de Verzy, followed by tastings in the brand’s cellars. Following the visit, dinner will be held at Veuve Clicquot’s invite-only mansion, Hôtel du Marc, featuring free-flowing La Grande Dame, the company’s most prestigious cuvée, alongside discussions with CEO Jean-Marc Gallot and winemaker Gaelle Goossens. There are also six rooms available at Hôtel du Marc for an overnight stay, providing a truly once-in-a-lifetime experience, while others can stay at La Caserne Chanzy in Reims.

The next day, guests will fly to the Åland Islands and hop aboard Albanus for the island of Silverskår. Lunch aboard the two-masted schooner will be prepared by chef Filip Gemzell of Michelin-starred ÄNG. For a Midsummer Eve celebration, dinner will include live music, dancing, and a meal by Swedish chef Titti Qvarnstrom, formerly of Michelin-starred Bloom in the Park.

A boat submerging crates of Veuve Clicquot into the sea cellar
Courtesy of Veuve Clicquot; © Joann Pai

The third day will be the pièce de resistance, when guests head to Klobben to discover “Cellar in the Sea.” A comparative tasting led by Mariotti will feature the four cuvées selected for the experiment — Yellow Label Brut in 750 mL bottles and magnums, Vintage Rosé 2004, and Demi-Sec — providing an exclusive opportunity to taste the crayères and underwater bottles side by side. Experienced divers will also have the chance to descend into the sea with the treasure hunter to examine the Åland Vault — the specially designed container resembling a diving cage combined with a wine rack — that houses the project’s bottles. As the trip concludes, guests will enjoy one last gastronomic adventure by decorated chef Mathias Dahlgren before a final toast the following morning.

A row of bottles that have been aged differently
© Roman Jehanno
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