Yesterday was also fun, but being a Colheita guy it just wasn't the same for me.Glenn E. wrote:Saturday Night
1977 Dow (to compare to the one over the holidays that managed to hide its corkedness)
1977 Fonseca (100 points WS!)
1977 Taylor (one of "Roy's 12")
1985 Fonseca (another of "Roy's 12")
1985 Graham
1994 Fonseca (100 points WS!)
1994 Taylor (100 points WS!)
1994 Vesuvio

I was rather surprised to find that I liked the 1994s better than the 1985s and 1977s. The tannins in them are massive and make your tongue feel like it's wearing a wool sock, but their fruits are also massive and hedonistic. If the tannins would recede just a little bit I'd be drinking these every day! But as they currently stand I can't do much more than sip them or my face will implode from the pucker.

Of the two flights of 1977s, my favorites were the Ferreira in the first flight (over the Warre, Dow, and Smith Woodhouse) and the Fonseca in the second flight (over the Gould Campbell, Graham, and Taylor). I liked the Ferreira because it was pleasant and approachable, and (at least for me) had the most identifiable secondary flavors. It had a very slight edge to start with, but that faded instantly into a pleasant warmth. This is the Port you'd drink in front of the fire on a cold winter's night. I liked the Fonseca in the second flight because it was so perfectly integrated and had a fun blend of spices and candy apples (minus the cinammon). There was also a twinkle in the color that made me think it was winking at me.

The bottle of 1977 Dow's we had for this event was corked just like the one I had at Christmas, which is to say that I couldn't tell it was corked but everyone else seemed to be able to. At Christmas, Roy didn't notice it was corked until the second day. The fruit in this wine is very powerful and able to hide the TCA at least for a while. Several people commented that this bottle of the Graham's wasn't showing well at all, so it's possible it would have rated higher for me if it had been a better bottle.
We also had two flights of 1985s. I liked the Smith Woodhouse in the first flight (over the Offley, Warre, and Dow) and the Burmester in the second flight (over the Martinez, Fonseca, and Graham). We then tasted a "mystery" Port, which was badly corked. After several comments around the table, I realized it has to be a 1983 Cockburn. Sure enough, that it was. I really enjoyed tasting it, though, because it's the only time I've ever been able to detect a corked wine. I must be practically immune to the stuff, because others around the table were physically recoiling when they smelled it.

The Burmester deserves mention because in retrospect it's pretty amazing to me that it beat out the F85 and the G85. Those are two amazing wines that are well known by practically everyone, but on this night the Burmester just had that little something something that put it over the top. I noted it as mustard, but thinking back it was more of a mustard powder than actual bottled/jarred mustard. For me it just gave the wine and additional richness and roundness that the others didn't have. The G85 was my second favorite of the flight, relegating the F85 to third. I'd be happy to share a bottle of any of them, though - it was really pretty close.
After dinner we served the 1994s, and they were huge. HUUUGGGEEE! You should need a license to drink these bad boys.
My notes for the first flight are cryptic because I just couldn't get past the wall of tannins and fruit. Every sip made me pucker and try to suck the tannins back off my tongue. I did manage to note some chocolate in the Dow's, but in the end the Taylor Fladgate won the flight (over the aforementioned Dow, and Smith Woodhouse, and a Ramos Pinto Quinta da Ervamoira). I'm not sure that the Taylor Fladgate actually deserves the 100 points that Wine Spectator gave it, but it's really good. And it's only going to get better, so stock up if you can find it.
The second flight was even more stunning if you can believe that. 1994 Vesuvio. 1994 Fonseca. 1994 Graham's. Move the Taylor Fladgate into this flight and you'd be in Port heaven.
For me the Vesuvio was a disappointment, but that caused people to drop their silverware when I said it.

The Graham was the stunner for me, though. Rich, fruity, full, bold, tannic, well-structured... think of all the words you use to describe an astounding Port and insert them here. It had a mildly sour note similar to the mustard in the Burmester, and that may be what pushed it over the top for me. I also noted dark chocolate and cherries. It was a huge wine, but still drinkable. Well... sippable. Nothing in the 1994 flights was truely "drinkable" because you'd choke on your own tongue as it swelled up due to the tannins.

To rank them, I'd have to go something like this:
1994 Graham
1994 Taylor
1994 Fonseca
1994 Vesuvio
1985 Burmester
1985 Graham
1977 Fonseca
After that things start to get fuzzy.

Gotta run... time to get ready for DAY THREE!!!