I think one of my big mistakes in life was to teach my son-in-law about Champagne and Sparkling wine. My depletion rate has doubled.

The intrigue for me to speak with Arnaud Werrich is hard to describe. I am fascinated with wine of course, but immigration as well. Who would pick their lives up to move to a new country to start a new career. I am jealous of this type of courage.

Arnaud isn’t just another winemaker crossing the ocean, chasing the “California dream.” He’s a scientist thrust into a world where centuries-old French mastery collides with New World rebellion—a tension that simmers in every bottle he produces. Does the Anderson Valley’s wild, fog-kissed landscape really have what it takes to rival Champagne, or is it a daring gamble that only nostalgia and romance can prop up? As Arnaud tells it, French tradition can be both an anchor and a shackle: the rules are clear back home, but on California soil, the future is written by those brave enough to experiment.

You’ll hear the friction between luxury and authenticity, the old guard of family-driven wineries and the crushing volume of global brands. Sparkling wine, once accessible and communal, now competes in a market distracted by fleeting trends—wine in a can, non-alcoholic fizz, and tourism feeding on lavish lifestyles rather than love of the land. Even the climate itself has become an antagonist, pushing vineyards toward crisis and innovation as Mother Nature rewrites the script.

This episode bubbles over with questions that demand answers.

Can a wine made in California truly capture the soul and mystique of Champagne, or will it always be an imitation in the eyes of the world?

As climate change creeps into every corner of the vineyard, how far can tradition stretch before something essential is lost?

Is luxury in wine defined by legacy, price, or the promise of sustainability—and who decides?

Will the next generation fall in love with wine, or abandon it for the next flash-in-the-pan beverage trend?

In a culture obsessed with exclusivity, can camaraderie and genuine connection survive, or is the wine table destined to become just another status symbol?

Listen in to follow every unresolved tension as Arnaud uncorks the answers—one story, one glass at a time.

Things we spoke about:

Louis Roederer: https://www.louis-roederer.com/

Roederer Estate: https://www.roedererestate.com/

Veuve Clicquot: https://www.veuveclicquot.com/

Taittinger: https://www.taittinger.com/

Chanel (wineries in Napa): https://www.chanel.com/

Château Lafite (Domaine Barons de Rothschild, referenced as "bottle of the feet" = Lafite): https://www.lafite.com/

Domaine Louis Jadot: https://www.louisjadot.com/

Girgich Hills Estate: https://www.grgich.com/

The French Laundry: https://www.thomaskeller.com/tfl

Bouchon Bistro: https://www.thomaskeller.com/bouchon-bistro

The Press Napa Valley: https://www.thepressnapavalley.com/

Anderson Valley (general tourism): https://www.andersonvalley.org/

Boonville Hotel (Anderson Valley): https://www.boonvillehotel.com/

The Madrones (Anderson Valley): https://www.themadrones.com/

Navarro Vineyards (Anderson Valley): https://www.navarrowine.com/

YouTube:  https://youtu.be/kJMBTWa7ntE

Note: Some businesses, such as Bartles & Jaymes and Armenians Sparkling Wine, were mentioned, but either do not have a dedicated website or are part of larger parent companies not specifically referenced by name.