Champagne has returned to the Formula 1 podium.
Last year, the sport's long-time sponsor Mumm left the sport, leaving drivers spraying bottles of fizzy Chandon on the podium instead.
However, McLaren sponsor Chandon actually makes sparkling chardonnay, ending F1's decades-long flirt with champagne.
The Washington Post reports that champagne is now back, with $3,000 (£2,300) bottles of 'Carbon' sprayed into the crowd by Sebastian Vettel, Kimi Raikkonen and Valtteri Bottas in Hungary.
The newspaper reports that every bottle that will be sprayed on the podium from now on "is coated in the same carbon fibre that F1 cars are made of".
"For me, this has great symmetry with Formula 1," said Carbon Champagne boss Alexandre Mea.
F1's champagne history dates back to 1950, when after a grand prix in the Champagne region of France, a large bottle was presented to the winner, but it was not until 1966 when, at Le Mans, Jo Siffert's accidentally shaken bottle was inadvertently sprayed into the crowd, starting the tradition.