1963 Taylor Vintage Port
Moderators: Glenn E., Andy Velebil
1963 Taylor Vintage Port
Although I have had many bottles of this wine, I had not had a '63 Taylor since October of last year. Seemingly a long time, it was worth the wait. I was at a friend's home while at one of my tasting group's monthly sessions. It was tete de cuvee Champagne night and this VP was the last wine of the evening, after a great line up of Bollinger, Salon and even a vertical of Krug. But after the bubbly and other white desserts had subsided, it was time for:
1963 Taylor Vintage Port - this showed a bit of evolution and the color showed a medium light pinkish red color and when looking at this wine, I thought it had not been decanted long enough, although I was not certain of the vintage nor producer at the time. I guessed a '66 Taylor and was then told it was Taylor but it did not look as if it had the bottle age of a '63.
This wine offered up wonderful and evolved notes of marzipan, hazelnuts and caramel. There was a bit of overt alcohol on the nose too but this bottle had only been open about 4 and a half hours when we started to drink it. The mouthfeel was soft and a bit hot from the spirity character but otherwise was quite soft and appealing. The palate delivered some soft and mature prune and raisiny nuances with a touch of caramel that was sweet and delicious. The finish was marred by the overt alcohol which was a distraction to the enjoyment, but I was still able to overlook it. This was a rather mature showing for the '63 and although it was clearly a British bottling with facsimile label, it was indiscernible as to which retailer had bottled it. The long length of the finish was great but again, the alcohol was a significant distraction. I enjoyed it anyway! 93 pts.
1963 Taylor Vintage Port - this showed a bit of evolution and the color showed a medium light pinkish red color and when looking at this wine, I thought it had not been decanted long enough, although I was not certain of the vintage nor producer at the time. I guessed a '66 Taylor and was then told it was Taylor but it did not look as if it had the bottle age of a '63.
This wine offered up wonderful and evolved notes of marzipan, hazelnuts and caramel. There was a bit of overt alcohol on the nose too but this bottle had only been open about 4 and a half hours when we started to drink it. The mouthfeel was soft and a bit hot from the spirity character but otherwise was quite soft and appealing. The palate delivered some soft and mature prune and raisiny nuances with a touch of caramel that was sweet and delicious. The finish was marred by the overt alcohol which was a distraction to the enjoyment, but I was still able to overlook it. This was a rather mature showing for the '63 and although it was clearly a British bottling with facsimile label, it was indiscernible as to which retailer had bottled it. The long length of the finish was great but again, the alcohol was a significant distraction. I enjoyed it anyway! 93 pts.
Last edited by Roy Hersh on Sun Aug 12, 2007 3:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Ambition driven by passion, rather than money, is as strong an elixir as is Port. http://www.fortheloveofport.com
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Thanks for your note, Roy. One of my favorite houses from one of my favorite years. I bought my first three bottles at the Ft. Worth Opera Wine Auction in 1994. I paid $115/bottle. Our guest auctioneer had donated 3 bottles from a London cellar. We drank them at special occasions including my brother's wedding and special dinners with some special friends. Those bottles are long gone but I recently found a new supply. Now I have two more '63 Taylor's to try.
Richard Henderson
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Those 1994 bottles were a relative bargain at $115 each. The replacments purchased earlier this spring of 2005 were $225, if memory serves. The very best deal on 1963 port in recent years was the Graham's Berry Bros which a local retailer closed out at $125 last fall.
As Roy recommends , go to Winesearcher and input vintage port, 1963. Several are popping up at $150-200. Taylor 63 starts at $225 U.S about $170 UK.
As Roy recommends , go to Winesearcher and input vintage port, 1963. Several are popping up at $150-200. Taylor 63 starts at $225 U.S about $170 UK.
Richard Henderson
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Ray,
I don't know if you get the e-mails from George Rhys in London. I recently got what I think was a very good deal from them on some 100 point Taylor 92 Half bottles. They seem to find good stuff regulary. Since you are right there in London, I would give them a call and see what they have in the inventory of 63 Taylor.
I don't know if you get the e-mails from George Rhys in London. I recently got what I think was a very good deal from them on some 100 point Taylor 92 Half bottles. They seem to find good stuff regulary. Since you are right there in London, I would give them a call and see what they have in the inventory of 63 Taylor.
Richard Henderson
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We can't go a whole day without a post on this board!!!
Ray,
What kinda price are your looking for? Save 30 quid a month in a port slush fund . In four months you have 120pounds , enough to buy a bottle of 1963 Taylor from some place in London, I would wager. Do that every month for a year and you have enough for 3 bottles.
Much more reliable than a lottery ticket.
Ray,
What kinda price are your looking for? Save 30 quid a month in a port slush fund . In four months you have 120pounds , enough to buy a bottle of 1963 Taylor from some place in London, I would wager. Do that every month for a year and you have enough for 3 bottles.
Much more reliable than a lottery ticket.
Richard Henderson
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I like your savings strategy ! Now if only those pesky kids wouldn't pester me about ps2 games 
It's my birthday in two weeks and I plan to open my sole bottleof 63- a Warres. Though some recent posts on this board have me feeling a bit worried as they've suggested all but the top ones are on a slide downwards.
any thoughts on decanting times ?

It's my birthday in two weeks and I plan to open my sole bottleof 63- a Warres. Though some recent posts on this board have me feeling a bit worried as they've suggested all but the top ones are on a slide downwards.
any thoughts on decanting times ?
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There seem to be soem eavesdroppers based upon the number of views of the topic on our conversation.
Roy recommends a lot longer decanting than I was accustomed . If I understand him, the extra time allows for the alcohol to evaporate and allows for a correction of the imbalance of alcohol over fruit.
Roy recommends a lot longer decanting than I was accustomed . If I understand him, the extra time allows for the alcohol to evaporate and allows for a correction of the imbalance of alcohol over fruit.
Richard Henderson
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If you don't mind another person chipping in on this - and hopefully not too late for your birthday bottle of port - I might be able to offer another option on decanting times.
I am often surprised by the time that Roy recommends for decanting, but I am firmly convinced that most ports improve in the decanter over a certain amount of time.
Like Ray, my birth year is 1963 and I have been lucky enough to have the Burmester, the Sandeman and the Taylor's from that vintage. (My birthday present this year will be a bottle of the Fonseca!) I have found that even these wines are robust enough to take a good few hours in decanter. In fact, the Burmester was the one I drank most recently and I committed a heresy in Roy's eyes in that I drank it over a period of about 5 days. What was amazing to me was the way the wine evolved over that time. My palate is not the most sensitive, but the wine was certainly not "off" by the time the last glass was drunk.
I tried my first sip straight after decanting, when the wine was alcoholic and fiery with little fruit showing through. I had my last sip 5 days later when the wine was warm, well balanced, very sweet and tasted of caramel ice cream.
I would be very suprised if that Warre's you have does not drink beautifully. In fact, if you live anywhere near Wokingham in Berkshire then give me a shout and I'll come round for your birthday and bring a bottle of the Sandeman '63 with me. We can try the two of them against each other!
In terms of price, currently the Taylors is retailed by Berry Brothers for £200 and the Fonseca for £208. Fine and Rare Wine have them for around £135 plus postage but you have to spend at least £200 with them.
Otherwise, just tell us all how the Warre '63 tastes!
Enjoy,
Alex
I am often surprised by the time that Roy recommends for decanting, but I am firmly convinced that most ports improve in the decanter over a certain amount of time.
Like Ray, my birth year is 1963 and I have been lucky enough to have the Burmester, the Sandeman and the Taylor's from that vintage. (My birthday present this year will be a bottle of the Fonseca!) I have found that even these wines are robust enough to take a good few hours in decanter. In fact, the Burmester was the one I drank most recently and I committed a heresy in Roy's eyes in that I drank it over a period of about 5 days. What was amazing to me was the way the wine evolved over that time. My palate is not the most sensitive, but the wine was certainly not "off" by the time the last glass was drunk.
I tried my first sip straight after decanting, when the wine was alcoholic and fiery with little fruit showing through. I had my last sip 5 days later when the wine was warm, well balanced, very sweet and tasted of caramel ice cream.
I would be very suprised if that Warre's you have does not drink beautifully. In fact, if you live anywhere near Wokingham in Berkshire then give me a shout and I'll come round for your birthday and bring a bottle of the Sandeman '63 with me. We can try the two of them against each other!
In terms of price, currently the Taylors is retailed by Berry Brothers for £200 and the Fonseca for £208. Fine and Rare Wine have them for around £135 plus postage but you have to spend at least £200 with them.
Otherwise, just tell us all how the Warre '63 tastes!
Enjoy,
Alex
Last edited by Al B. on Sun Apr 16, 2006 11:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.