TN: 1907 Blandys Boal

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Eric Ifune
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TN: 1907 Blandys Boal

Post by Eric Ifune »

Been on a good run lately with Madeira.
Decanted. The bottle had a considerable amount of fine sediment adherent to the bottle. Decent cork.
One of the most visually appealing wines I've seen in a long, long time. Brilliant, deep red gold shot with green. Almost viscous with a depth of saturation of color rivaling the best robes of old Burgundy.
Deep rich aromas. Initally a bit of VA. Toasted walnuts and hazelnuts. Dried apples, figs, and dates. Also a citrus component with lemons, limes, and tangerine. Spicy, both savory and sweet, with cumin, nutmeg, allspice. Just a cornicopia of aromas.
Very rich on the palate as well. Quite sweet for a Boal, almost Malvasia sweetness but with huge, huge acidity. More citrus on the palate. Smoky. Enormous complexity and depth.
Very long with a bit of bitterness on the end.
I'm going to be stingy and give this only a 96 points. I'm guessing a day in decanter will raise this.
One of the best 20th century Madeiras I've had. Better than the Blandys 1920 and that's saying something.
Barry Sunderland
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Re: 1907 Blandys Boal

Post by Barry Sunderland »

Living the Madeira Dream...
Daniel Fraley
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Re: 1907 Blandys Boal

Post by Daniel Fraley »

I keep looking for the "drool" emoticon...
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Roy Hersh
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Re: 1907 Blandys Boal

Post by Roy Hersh »

Personally, I can say that I absolutely love this specific Boal. I remember opening one in my downstairs, a large room with 16' ceilings. The day after it was decanted my entire downstairs area smelled like roasted espresso and when the bottle was consumed, it was remarkable. Wish I had more!
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Matt K
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Re: 1907 Blandys Boal

Post by Matt K »

I count myself lucky to have one of these in my collection. A prized treasure.

It sounds like you went fairly straight to consumption after decanting - were you able to taste day/s afterwards for any changes?
Anything you'd do differently in terms of the decant/time?

I'm strategizing on how I'll handle mine when I find the opportunity to crack it. :)
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Eric Ifune
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Re: 1907 Blandys Boal

Post by Eric Ifune »

I decanted in the morning and drank that evening. The next day, some of the aggressive acidity had toned down a bit. Some of the angularity and smoothed out. I might have given it a point more in scoring. It only lasted another day before it was all gone. :mrgreen:
Matt K
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Re: 1907 Blandys Boal

Post by Matt K »

So do you think you'd give it 24 hours for 'primary' service if you were doing it again?

In your experience how long will a bottle of 1900-1920 last, in a desirable state, once opened?

I've been collecting some of these 'older' (all things being relative) bottles but mostly consuming my 1960's/NV product so I'm trying to decide on a general strategy for decant length. I've read so many different opinions...1-2 days, 1 hr per decade, etc.
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Eric Ifune
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Re: 1907 Blandys Boal

Post by Eric Ifune »

Usually I like a long decant time beforehand. I didn't the the 1907 because I didn't plan well enough in advance! :oops:
Mannie Berk's rule of thumb is one day for every decade in glass.
I've had wines that I've opened for months that have kept well. What I do is decant, clean out the bottle; and then double decant back into the original bottle once it's dry. I keep those tee type stoppers around to reclose. If you can get your hands on the D'Olivera's wooden ones, those are the best. I put them back in the cellar and have a nip or two every so often. The 1907 was an exception because I drank it up in one go over the course of a couple of days.
Back at the turn of the 20th century, the great American Madeira collectors kept all their wines in glass demijohns closed only with a watch glass over the top or a cloth loosely stuffed into the neck, mainly to keep the insects and vermin out. Definitely not airtight. They would pour out a decanter's worth when they wanted some.
Matt K
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Re: 1907 Blandys Boal

Post by Matt K »

Thanks Eric - that's very helpful.
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Bradley Bogdan
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Re: 1907 Blandys Boal

Post by Bradley Bogdan »

Eric Ifune wrote:Usually I like a long decant time beforehand. I didn't the the 1907 because I didn't plan well enough in advance! :oops:
Mannie Berk's rule of thumb is one day for every decade in glass.
I've had wines that I've opened for months that have kept well. What I do is decant, clean out the bottle; and then double decant back into the original bottle once it's dry. I keep those tee type stoppers around to reclose. If you can get your hands on the D'Olivera's wooden ones, those are the best. I put them back in the cellar and have a nip or two every so often. The 1907 was an exception because I drank it up in one go over the course of a couple of days.
Back at the turn of the 20th century, the great American Madeira collectors kept all their wines in glass demijohns closed only with a watch glass over the top or a cloth loosely stuffed into the neck, mainly to keep the insects and vermin out. Definitely not airtight. They would pour out a decanter's worth when they wanted some.
I'd love to see an inebriated rodent!


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Eric Ifune
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Re: 1907 Blandys Boal

Post by Eric Ifune »

I'd love to see an inebriated rodent!
More like a small hairy version of the Duke of Clarence!
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