Any White port
LBV's from 2011
30 YO
But after a short time, I got confused
![Pointless [dash1.gif]](./images/smilies/dash1.gif)
The rest is history. My Best experience was a 1977 Cask sample from Van Zeller.
Again, thanks Thomas for taking time to post 'to our Friends overseas'.
Allan
Moderators: Glenn E., Roy Hersh, Andy Velebil
Those would be my choices as well.Glenn E. wrote:'83 Ramos Pinto is one of the best of that vintage. Very much a high water mark for Ramos Pinto, and consistently surprises people with its quality.
'85 Dow is also very good. Not on par with Fonseca or Graham in that vintage, but solidly in that next tier down.
So those are the two that I'd get.
Awesome stuff Glenn. I will pick the R.P as one of the 2, as I want to taste vintages from other vendors besides Dow's and Graham's. The Fonseca will have to wait a little as it is almost twice the price. I am in a phase were I want to taste some different things and that means buying more stuff in the 2nd or 3rd tier (which is still really really good port) at a cheaper price.Glenn E. wrote:'83 Ramos Pinto is one of the best of that vintage. Very much a high water mark for Ramos Pinto, and consistently surprises people with its quality.
'85 Dow is also very good. Not on par with Fonseca or Graham in that vintage, but solidly in that next tier down.
Thanks for the input Bradley.Bradley Bogdan wrote:
'85 Ferreira was a revelation for me at the '85 horizontal last year, and fortunately I had recently scooped 5 up at a very attractive price. It's scored 92-94 for me each time, and while it doesn't have the same style structure and power of the two Glenn picked, it is very attractive in the "feminine" sense of wine.
'83 Cockburn has probably the highest ceiling of any of those bottles, but alas has a VERY high rate of TCA. I've been fortunate enough to be 2-1 on good showings, but it's usually priced at a premium rather than a discount compared to other wines from the decade, and therefore can be an expensive gamble.
That's a good line up. I was going to take a picture of all three as a primer for you, but my '85 Graham's are in my parents' cellar; not near by.Thomas V wrote:I have placed my order just a few moments ago.
1 x 1985 Ferreira
1 x 1983 Ramos Pinto
1 x 1985 Graham's
Really look forward to tasting these bottles in great company.
The good 85's I would be in no hurry to drink. Fonseca has got 50+ years life on it. Graham, Dow, GC, RP all have 20+. They are all drink or hold for me, except the Fonseca which I would hold if I can show enough restraint... The question is how do you like your VP to show?Thomas V wrote: What has your impressions been of the maturity of 85'? Some houses should be drunk now and others kept..
Much will depend on your definition of "at peak." Personally, I don't think that the 1983 Graham is at its peak, and based on my last experiences with it and the 1985 Graham I think there's some non-zero chance that the 1983 might ultimately out-perform the 1985. It isn't as good right now, but I feel like there's still improvement going on in the 1983 that might ultimately trump the 1985.Thomas V wrote:I recently talked to Peter Skov, whom some of you might know from the PHT last year or else where. He sold me 2 1983' Graham's and kindly mentioned while handing them over that I should drink them within 5 years as they were at their peak. I was wondering how the state of things are with the 1985' which is just 2 years older. Stronger vintage year should allow the 85' age for at least 10-15 more years. What has your impressions been of the maturity of 85'? Some houses should be drunk now and others kept..
I'd be interested in seeing my inventory of '80, '83, and '85 too! I'm desperately out of date and need to do a full inventory to catch up.Thomas V wrote:@Glenn Very interesting thoughts about the 83' vs 85' vintages. I am so lucky that I have the 2 x 83' and now 1 x 85' Graham's where the 85' will be consumed within the year as it was bought for that purpose. The 83's I will probably stay off for a while and instead try either the 85' Ferreira or the 83' R.P. As you didn't mention the 80' vintage I guess it does not hold up against the 2 older vintages we are discussing here? It would be interesting to see your inventory lists of 80', 83' and 85' vintages for reference.
Taylor, Sandeman, and Graham are also good ones to look for in this vintage.Glenn E. wrote:If you can find a 1980 Dow it's a beast, but otherwise 1980 is pretty mundane for me. Some very good Ports, but nothing that I can recall (besides the Dow) that's really going to impress over the long term.
The same will be the case here. I am not even going to try and contact the shipper. They have such a bad rep. I already talked to GN and they asked me to send a mail with details and photos. So I have done that and am awaiting their response. Just a shame it wasn't packed better in the first place (unless the shipper manhandled the packed, in which case this could not be avoided).Moses Botbol wrote:I had a 3L of '77 Taylor break in shipping and the vendor, not the shipper reimbursed me. I also had UPS steal wine out of my packages and the vendor also reimbursed me.