Nothing sensational... Just a glass of Fonseca Bin 27.
There are so few places that stock any so I don't get the opportunity to order it often. Usually I have to bring it myself.
We don't eat out all that often, but when we do eat out I generally order a Port if it's available on the menu. I don't remember what the last one was, though.
Last night - a bottle of Fonseca 1963 VP. Good price, too (well below anything on wine-searcher - which was quite a nice surprise).
Only downside - we didn't have time to decant it - but when we saw it on the menu, we immediately ordered the bottle and got it into decanter, so it had 4 hours of soak time by the time we packed up for the night - we like to take our time with fancy meals.
It was lovely - Phyllis scribbled tasting notes all over the menu, which we brought home with us. I'll try to get her to post a tasting note.
Luckily, I live in Portugal, so there's Port everywhere (although I rarely see it being drunk).
I'll often have a glass of port at the end of a meal, or in a café after the meal - not being a big fan of beer, and the wine often being of questionable quality, its my regular drink.
Of course, I'm not talking top notch port here - at somewhere between 80 eurocents and three or so euros, I wouldn't expect it to be.
The local café is currently offering São Pedro Das Aguias Tawny - a pleasant drink which I enjoy.
Who knows what he'll get when that's finished - it changes all the time.
At least now I'm a regular he no longer offers to put ice in it for me!
Pretty rare for me as very few places around me have good Port lists. Or the bottles have been opened months so I typically pass. Sad really. But it's their own fault as most never put them on the wine list. Or they're on a side second wine list that few know to ask about.
Andy Velebil wrote:Pretty rare for me as very few places around me have good Port lists. Or the bottles have been opened months so I typically pass. Sad really. But it's their own fault as most never put them on the wine list. Or they're on a side second wine list that few know to ask about.
Snap. Though I'm very occasionally tempted by a glass of LBV in a restaurant, and have had a nice Ch94 with food while passing through London on business.
I stayed at and ate at the Alderley Edge Hotel last week. They have a pretty decent wine list which can be a bit expensive but also has some decent prices on it. They were willing to show me the cellar where they kept their wine stock and then to open and decant a bottle of Taylor 1966 for me to enjoy by the glass, saying that their regulars would finish off the rest if I didn't drink the bottle myself.
It was very good, but I did leave some for the regulars.
Christopher and I shared a very nice bottle of Offley Boa Vista 1977 at The Bung Hole in London a few weeks ago. At £85 it was not inexpensive, but it was good value for a mature VP from a restaurant wine list.
I ordered a Borges vintage from 2005, at a very fancy restaurant north of Copenhagen, dull, dull and absolutely utterly dull. The bottle was half full, and could have been Opend for many weeks. I told the waitor, that the Port was a no go, and That I looked forward to the weekend (I had already placed on death row a Borges 1920 for me and a Dear uncle) where I would have absolutely Extreme plessure waiting.
I send the picture to the waitor.
The Cockburns 1963, was Our second bottle.....
Allan Engelsted Laurents wrote:I ordered a Borges vintage from 2005, at a very fancy restaurant north of Copenhagen, dull, dull and absolutely utterly dull. The bottle was half full, and could have been Opend for many weeks. I told the waitor, that the Port was a no go, and That I looked forward to the weekend (I had already placed on death row a Borges 1920 for me and a Dear uncle) where I would have absolutely Extreme plessure waiting.
I send the picture to the waitor.
The Cockburns 1963, was Our second bottle.....