Re: Vintage Port Soil Aging Question
Posted: Wed Aug 24, 2011 6:06 pm
BTW, which is the other Sousao-heavy port?
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Vesuvio's Capela which was 30% Sousão.Marco D. wrote:BTW, which is the other Sousao-heavy port?
The question I've yet to get an answer about is why did Sousoa, that from many accounts was so prominent before Phyloxera, fall so far out of favor after Phyloxera and is now rarely mentioned. If anyone knows or has any theories on why I'd love to hear them.Marco D. wrote:I remember reading that Sousao has a dark pulp and adds a deep, dark color to the wine, although it tends to lose the color fairly rapidly... Although some are not convinced about this rapid loss.
Accurate accounts of the first half of the last century are hard to come by and producers have only started planting vineyards by grape variety quite recently, why do you say it fell out of favour?Andy Velebil wrote: The question I've yet to get an answer about is why did Sousoa, that from many accounts was so prominent before Phyloxera, fall so far out of favor after Phyloxera and is now rarely mentioned. If anyone knows or has any theories on why I'd love to hear them.
FWIW, Nacional can't really be called Sousão "heavy" because Sousão is only the 7th grape in the blend. I can't find the exact percentages, but if I had to guess I'd put Sousão at no more than maybe 5%. It's only "heavy" relative to other Ports, most of which contain no Sousão at all. (According to Noval the Nacional blend contains Touriga Nacional, Francesa/Franca, Tinto Cão, Tinta Roriz, Barroca, Amarela and Sousão. Since that's not in alphabetical order I assume it's in order of content.)Andy Velebil wrote:Vesuvio's Capela which was 30% Sousão.Marco D. wrote:BTW, which is the other Sousao-heavy port?
I have a number of books from the early to mid 1800's and they reference Sousao quite a lot as being a predominate grape for VP's. Then by the early 1900's there was barely any mention of it anymore.Daniel R. wrote:Accurate accounts of the first half of the last century are hard to come by and producers have only started planting vineyards by grape variety quite recently, why do you say it fell out of favour?Andy Velebil wrote: The question I've yet to get an answer about is why did Sousoa, that from many accounts was so prominent before Phyloxera, fall so far out of favor after Phyloxera and is now rarely mentioned. If anyone knows or has any theories on why I'd love to hear them.
The first (and there have not been much work done since...) study focusing on grape varieties dates from 1981, prepared by João Nicolau de Almeida and José Rosas, and identified 5 recommended grape varieties that do not include Sousão (Touriga Nacional, Aragonês, Touriga Franca, Tinta Barroca, and Tinto Cão).
Off-topic: Sousão is widely planted in the Vinho Verde region, where it is known as Vinhão, and is the base of most red Vinho Verde. In the Douro Quinta do Vallado and Dona Berta make interesting Sousão monovarietals (not Port).
A great read on it, thanks for posting it. While Noval says it rarely makes it into the regular VP, with only 1/2 a hectare I'm sure a fair amount ends up in the NN.Eric Menchen wrote:Can I link to Jancis Robinson? If so, here's a good read on Sousão:
http://www.jancisrobinson.com/articles/ ... 908_3.html
.It has very high natural acidity, a very useful trait in the Douro where the wines often have relatively low acidity due to the soil and the excellent hot ripening conditions. In fact our regular maturation studies done last week (to fix our picking dates) showed Souzão giving double the acidity of the mainstream varieties.