Tasting
Vincent Couche's Brut Nature 2015 earns a daily medal from La Revue du vin de France
La Revue du vin de France has awarded a daily medal to Vincent Couche's Brut Nature 2015, recognising this zero-dosage champagne from the Champagne region.
What happened
La Revue du vin de France has presented a daily medal to Vincent Couche for his Brut Nature 2015, a vintage champagne produced in the Champagne region. The award was issued on 2 June 2026. The wine is a Brut Nature expression, meaning it carries zero or minimal dosage — a style that demands precision in the vineyard and the cellar, as no added sugar is available to correct imbalances at the disgorgement stage.
Why it matters
Recognition from La Revue du vin de France carries considerable weight within the French wine trade and among informed consumers. A daily medal from this publication serves as a reliable signal of quality, directing attention towards producers whose work might otherwise remain beneath the radar of a broader audience. For a Brut Nature expression — a category that leaves the wine entirely exposed to the character of its base material — such an accolade is particularly telling. It affirms that the 2015 vintage, as interpreted by Vincent Couche, stands on its own merits without the cushion of dosage. Awards of this kind also reinforce a producer's reputation over time, lending credibility to future releases and strengthening relationships with buyers, sommeliers, and collectors alike.
Context
The Brut Nature category has grown in prominence as interest in lower-intervention winemaking has increased across the champagne landscape. Wines carrying this designation contain no more than three grams of residual sugar per litre added at disgorgement, and in many cases none at all. The 2015 vintage in Champagne was shaped by the conditions of that particular growing season, and its character is now fully expressed in a wine that has had time to develop in bottle. Vincent Couche's decision to release a vintage-dated Brut Nature from that year reflects a commitment to showcasing the specificity of a single harvest rather than blending across multiple years. The award from La Revue du vin de France places this wine within a recognised framework of quality assessment, offering consumers and trade buyers a point of reference when navigating the expanding world of grower and producer champagnes.