This bottle of possum juice came as part of a job lot.
Having indulged a Croft '45 a couple of days ago, it seemed timely to come back down to earth and get this one drunk up.
Cheap gold plastic capsule topped a green glass bottle that was of similar shape to a Hennessy brandy. Rather pretentious label, declaring the contents to be 'Vintage Port'. On removing the capsule I found the cork was well raised - I could actually turn it with thumb and forefinger!
Difficult to decant, as the red/brown liquor was distinctly murky.
First sip - very unattractive colour, bit of bottle stink. On the palate a touch sharp, but otherwise better than I expected - full bodied and actually quite drinkable.
Will give it a few hours in the decanter and revisit this evening!
Tom
1975 Rovalley Vintage Port
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- Tom Archer
- Posts: 2790
- Joined: Tue Aug 09, 2005 8:09 pm
- Location: Near Saffron Walden, England
OK, a glass proper
It looks pretty awful - a cloudy red brown soup - near opaque.
In fact it bears a closer resemblance to prune juice than it does wine.
- Come to that, the bouquet is pretty similar to prune juice too :?
It actually doesn't taste that bad - very smooth, though rather syrupy. It has an overtone of coffee that is not displeasing, but totally different to anything I've experienced from Portugal.
However, this is not a bottle I would recommend...
Tom
It looks pretty awful - a cloudy red brown soup - near opaque.
In fact it bears a closer resemblance to prune juice than it does wine.
- Come to that, the bouquet is pretty similar to prune juice too :?
It actually doesn't taste that bad - very smooth, though rather syrupy. It has an overtone of coffee that is not displeasing, but totally different to anything I've experienced from Portugal.
However, this is not a bottle I would recommend...
Tom
- Tom Archer
- Posts: 2790
- Joined: Tue Aug 09, 2005 8:09 pm
- Location: Near Saffron Walden, England