Four brothers and sisters – Geoffrey, Anastasia, Marie and Marceau – founded their vinegar company in 2023, and they called it Les Enfants de Bacchus because the family home where they grew up was in rue Bacchus, Hautvillers, in Marne (Grand Est).
In Champagne, annual quotas are set for how many kilos of grapes can be produced from each hectare of vines. This system protects the Champagne label, ensuring that quality remains high, and the market does not get flooded with cheaper, lower quality wines. This means, however, that every year at the end of the harvest, there are left-over grapes which are usually sent to a distillery.
As well as making vinegar, the siblings have other enterprises. Geoffrey and Anastasia are winemakers with their own labels, JM Gobillard et Fils, and Trouillard, respectively. Marie and Marceau run Marsault, which recycles empty champagne bottles into various decorative items for the home.
Making vinegar is fast. "It only takes 24 hours to make 20 litres of vinegar. We use a fermenter which heats the contents to 30°C. This produces millions of micro-bubbles which form the acetobacter bacteria which makes alcohol into acetic acid, which is how the grape juice turns into vinegar. Then we mature it in barrels for at least a year before we bottle it."
"Our boutique also sells things made by other local producers, and they can all be eaten on our terrace. We also offer champagne tastings (€5 per flute). Visits should be booked in advance by phone or email."