Champagne J.M Gandon
JM Gandon, a new artisanal voice from the Vesle Valley
Branscourt, family heritage and Champagne revival
Located in Branscourt, in the discreet Vesle Valley, Victor Gandon embodies a new generation of Champagne winemakers who are taking over family estates with a more precise, lively, and deeply artisanal vision. The estate is part of a long family history: that of his agricultural great-grandparents, then his father Jean-Marie Gandon, a winegrower, to whom the project pays tribute today through the initials JM.
The vines mainly rest on Upper Ypresian and Cuisian soils, rich in marine fossils, with plots of Pinot Noir and Meunier planted at high density, some of which are from massal selection dating back to the 1970s.
Thoughtful viticulture, unadulterated vinification
For several years, vine work has been evolving towards a much more attentive approach to natural balances: soil cultivation since 2013, no herbicides, no insecticides, strict limitation of copper, and constant adaptation to the vintage's climatic conditions.
In the cellar, vinification follows the same logic of precision and restraint: gentle pressing, spontaneous fermentations, no chaptalization, long aging on lees in barrels of different sizes, without fining or filtration. The Champagnes are produced without seeking effect, with extremely low, or even non-existent, dosages depending on the cuvées.
A terroir-driven Champagne, taut and profoundly contemporary
The wines of JM Gandon primarily seek to faithfully capture the year and the place. With no reserve wines, each cuvée becomes a direct photograph of the vintage, carried by the natural freshness of the Vesle Valley and by a structure built around Pinot Noir.

