Purchased during 2012 FTLOP Harvest Tour at Sogevinus (at that time) new visitor center in Gaia just across the big bridge from Porto. Basically, straight from Sogevinus to our cellar at home. Tried it after 45 minutes decanting, but that was too early. 1.5 hrs appeared to be the best, although with a relatively short drinking window afterwards.
37.5 cl. T-cork. Perfect sealing. Bottled 2011. Decanted 1.5 hrs. Amber/yellow transparent colour with a tiny touch of green. Dry aroma including bitter almonds, spices and dandelion. Full body. Powerful, concentrated white port with significant bitterness and citrus (close to lemon) and some orange peel. Plenty acidity (acidity did not improve with longer decanting than 1.5 hrs). Very long aftertaste. Probably the driest old white port I have tasted. 86 pts.
NV Burmester 30 year old white port
Moderators: Glenn E., Andy Velebil
NV Burmester 30 year old white port
- Attachments
-
- Burmester white port 30 yrs + 40 yrs .jpg (342.51 KiB) Viewed 321 times
Last edited by Rune EG on Thu Sep 07, 2017 10:54 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Andy Velebil
- Posts: 16817
- Joined: Tue Aug 02, 2005 4:49 pm
- Location: Los Angeles, California, United States of America - USA
- Contact:
Re: NV Burmester 30 years white port
I was surprised to see the score after reading the note. It sounded better than the score you gave it. What were the short comings?
Andy Velebil Good wine is a good familiar creature if it be well used. William Shakespeare http://www.fortheloveofport.com
Re: NV Burmester 30 years white port
In my tasting note I wrote amongst others:
"........with significant bitterness and citrus (close to lemon) and some orange peel. Plenty acidity (acidity did not improve with longer decanting than 1.5 hrs)."
"Significant bitterness" and "Plenty acidity" were the central descriptions of this white port. The combination was so strong that I felt 86 pts was what I experienced.
Fortunately the Burmester 40 year old white was in a different league (93 pts)!
"........with significant bitterness and citrus (close to lemon) and some orange peel. Plenty acidity (acidity did not improve with longer decanting than 1.5 hrs)."
"Significant bitterness" and "Plenty acidity" were the central descriptions of this white port. The combination was so strong that I felt 86 pts was what I experienced.
Fortunately the Burmester 40 year old white was in a different league (93 pts)!
- Andy Velebil
- Posts: 16817
- Joined: Tue Aug 02, 2005 4:49 pm
- Location: Los Angeles, California, United States of America - USA
- Contact:
Re: NV Burmester 30 years white port
Thanks for the explanation. With the rush for many companies to release these old White's when almost all used to say they had no old white Port hasn't always worked out. In my experience, they fall into one of two distinct camps...good and not good. There rarely seems to be a middle ground, as in the 90-92 point range.Rune EG wrote:In my tasting note I wrote amongst others:
"........with significant bitterness and citrus (close to lemon) and some orange peel. Plenty acidity (acidity did not improve with longer decanting than 1.5 hrs)."
"Significant bitterness" and "Plenty acidity" were the central descriptions of this white port. The combination was so strong that I felt 86 pts was what I experienced.
Fortunately the Burmester 40 year old white was in a different league (93 pts)!
Andy Velebil Good wine is a good familiar creature if it be well used. William Shakespeare http://www.fortheloveofport.com