Tom Archer wrote:
Recently bottled Colheitas tend come over to me as a little brash and uncouth, and I greatly appreciate the finesse and subtlety that comes from extended bottle age. Again though, this is a matter of personal preference..
Having just spent some time with my fellow UK Port loving friends, and having a lot of wood aged Ports, several things are apparent. Most UK'ers don't particularly care for wood aged Ports. Nothing wrong with that, just means more for me, but I suspect it's simply a matter of regional tastes and the perception from the UK merchants that there is no such thing as a wood aged Port that can match or beat a good VP in complexity. Most (again I say MOST) extended bottle aged wood-aged Ports become flabby, cloying, and overly sweet. Even a "young" Tawny can impress those who aren't big tawny drinkers.
We had two bottles of 1937 Cohleita's, a Quinta do Noval (B. 2006) and an AJS Colheita (B. sometime in the 1960's based on bottle design). Both sealed with a regular driven cork. The Noval had lots of acidity, depth, and complexity keeping it fresh and lively. The AJS was losing it's acidity, cloudy, cloying, and obviously past it's prime. Same for a 1910 Constantino Colheita bottled in 1971 and a 1934 Dalva Colheita bottled in 1973. It was obvious the extended bottle age hurt them and their best days long past. This mirrors my typical experience with extended bottle age Colheita's.
Of course there are exceptions to any thing...the 1900 Niepoort Colheita bottled in the early to mid 1970's was still fantastic. But Niepoort is one of the very few producers I've seen and tasted who's Ports seem to HOLD after bottling longer than most.
Back you to your quote Tom....I now see where you are coming from taste wise. You seem to prefer wood aged Ports bottled for an extended time when they have lost much of their searing acidity and become more VP like it terms of being more sweetness driven and less acidity driven.