THE MADEIRA BUY OF THE YEAR
Posted: Fri Sep 29, 2006 1:30 am
Unfortunately, I am not the most savvy computer geek, so trying to copy a .pdf is not my forte. Please forgive how this looks, but DO make sure to read this if you are a Madeira lover. You can call RWC as of Friday and place your order, as the owner provided the members of FTLOP a couple of days of advanced notice, which is very much appreciated. He was sympathetic that not everyone from this Forum was able to buy in on the 1950 Terrantez. So, this offer will appear in next week's RWC newsletter. Please do NOT post this on any other BB. Quantities will still be very limited, but your odds of not getting shut out are very good, IF you act quickly.
Good luck Madeira lovers!
By the way, the RWC shipment of the 1927 Bastardo is leaving in mid-October and will arrive in CA by Thanksgiving.
_______________________________________________________
THE RARE WINE CO.
21481 EIGHTH STREET EAST
SONOMA, CA 95476
email: sales@rarewineco.com
1-800-999-4342
1-707-996-4484
Fax: 1-707-996-4491
Fax: 1-800-893-1501
OCTOBER 3, 2006
The vanishing of Terrantez after Phylloxera has long been one of the
great heartbreaks for Madeira lovers. Today, pre-Phylloxera examples
are painfully rare, and although a few growers have replanted it in
recent decades, Terrantez of any age remains scarce.
Yet, another famous Madeira grape has proven even more elusive: Bastardo. Many longtime Madeira drinkers have never seen—much less
drunk—a bottle, and its history is shrouded in mystery. Owing to its miniscule yields and vulnerability to insects, little was ever planted, and even less was ever bottled on its own. While no one knows exactly when Bastardo arrived in Madeira, some viticultural scholars believe that it came from Greece with Malvasia as early as the 1400s. For further
evidence of ancient residence, others point to Shakespeare’s “score a pint of bastard in the Half-moon” in King Henry IV. Like Terrantez, Bastardo essentially vanished after Phylloxera.
We know of only four vintage Bastardos having been made before World War II: 1870, 1875, 1876 and 1927. And rarely does even a bottle of one of these appear on the market. So, it is with a great deal of excitement that we announce the new release of one of the legends: the famous 1927 Bastardo from Adegas do Torreão, bottled this year from an original
cask by one of the last remaining giants of the Madeira trade, Pereira D’Oliveira.
Always Rare -
In the decades leading up to Phylloxera, each year saw a Bastardo crop, but yields were usually too small to bottle it on its own. Shippers, instead, would use it to beef up their most prestigious blends, or—as Cossart-Gordon did with its 1844 harvest—to create a small solera. After Phylloxera, few growers replanted the grape, making it even rarer. During the entire first half of the 20th century, only one vintage
Bastardo was made—in 1927—and it has become every bit as famous, and mysterious, as its 19th-century predecessors. Until now, there have been two 1927 Bastardos bottled, under the Adegas do Torreão and
Leacock labels. It is very possible that both wines originated at Torreão. This little-known house, which closed a few years ago, was a partidista,
maintaining large stocks of Madeira they’d buy from growers and then supply the big houses.
D’Oliveira’s New Bottling of the Famous 1927 Bastardo At left, Pereira D’Oliveira’s cellars, dated 1619, and at right, Adegas do Torreão’s cellars from 1949. The bastardo grape in Viala et Vermorel’s 1903 amepelography MADEIRA
How they happened to be the owner of such an important wine as the 1927 Bastardo is unknown. The only other '27 Bastardo on the island rests in a couple of barrels belonging to Henriques & Henriques, whose Bastardo plantings in Câmara do Lobos are legendary. In fact, a
Henriques wine was the source of the famous 1870 Bastardos of Blandy’s and Avery’s.
Today only the 1927 remains in Henriques’ cellars—a wine it has never sold in bottle. Is this where the Torreão wine began its life, or did it come
from other vineyards on the island? We will probably never know.
Torreão & D’Oliveira
The man behind Adegas Torreão was Vasco Loja, who —during the difficult years of the 1960s and 1970s— built Torreão into one of the island’s most powerful wine companies. But after his death, his children chose not to continue his work. All of the company’s assets were put on the market, including the company cellars near the historic Hinton Torreão sugar works which inspired the company’s name. A number of barrels of wine, including small amounts of 1927 Bastardo and 1969 Sercial, were also put on the block. Several of the island’s shippers were interested, but it was the D’Oliveira family who, in 2002, succeeded in buying the cellars and its wine.
Today, they are hard at work restoring the 57-year-old building. As for
the Torreão wine, while most of it continues to slumber in barrel, the
D’Oliveiras have done a small bottling of the 1927 Bastardo and 1969 Sercial.
Tastes of History
This could be the first time the 1969 Sercial has been offered for sale; in fact, we had never tasted the wine before our most recent visit to the island in June. It is a gem: a fantastic, old-style Sercial, pungently scented, deeply concentrated, with powerful acidity. As for the 1927 Bastardo, it is of course, marvelous: somewhat drier than the Leacock '27 and with the pleasingly bitter finish that typifies classic Bastardo.
And because it spent a few extra decades in barrel, we think that the D’Oliveira bottling is even better than the earlier bottlings under the Adegas do Torreão label.
Any time we can offer two Madeiras of such rarity and quality, it’s a privilege. But the even greater honor is to afford American wine lovers their only opportunity to experience one of Madeira’s mythic wines: the great 1927 Bastardo.
The Fabled 1927 Bastardo MADEIRA
1927 D’Oliveira Bastardo*
(ex-Adegas do Torreão)
$275.00
Beautiful deep walnut color with a greenish-yellow
rim. Very perfumed, powerful and high-toned nose of
dried Adriatic green fig, vanilla, malt and dried apricot.
There is a persistent core of sweetness on the
nose. The palate opens with perfumed dried apricot
and toffee flavors of moderate sweetness. Very well-
balanced with excellent acidity across the rich mid-
palate; the acidity pulls the richness through to the
long, powerful dry almond-infused finish. A wonderfully
exotic combination of elegance and power.
1969 D’Oliveira Sercial*
(ex-Adegas do Torreão)
$89.95
A walnut color of medium darkness and a yellow rim
with green glints. The nose is impressively deep and
very aromatic, revealing notes of dried Mirabelle
plum, dried cherry and cherry blossom, and almond.
There’s a silky entry on the palate, with a great acid
structure in the fleshy mid-palate; dried Mirabelle
plum and green almond flavors with a slightly bitter
note of quinine really fan out on the very long, very
dry finish. Great balance and freshness thanks to the
impressive natural acidity.
A barrel of 1927 Bastardo.
Wines may be sold and delivered only to persons who are at least 21 years old. All wines are sold in California and title passes to the buyer in California. We make no representation
to the legal rights of anyone to ship or import wines into any state outside of California. We are not responsible for typographical errors. All items and prices subject to
availability. Request a copy of our terms of sale or read them at http://www.rarewineco.com. An * indicates pre-arrival. Issued 16 times yearly. © 2006 The Rare Wine Co.
Good luck Madeira lovers!
By the way, the RWC shipment of the 1927 Bastardo is leaving in mid-October and will arrive in CA by Thanksgiving.
_______________________________________________________
THE RARE WINE CO.
21481 EIGHTH STREET EAST
SONOMA, CA 95476
email: sales@rarewineco.com
1-800-999-4342
1-707-996-4484
Fax: 1-707-996-4491
Fax: 1-800-893-1501
OCTOBER 3, 2006
The vanishing of Terrantez after Phylloxera has long been one of the
great heartbreaks for Madeira lovers. Today, pre-Phylloxera examples
are painfully rare, and although a few growers have replanted it in
recent decades, Terrantez of any age remains scarce.
Yet, another famous Madeira grape has proven even more elusive: Bastardo. Many longtime Madeira drinkers have never seen—much less
drunk—a bottle, and its history is shrouded in mystery. Owing to its miniscule yields and vulnerability to insects, little was ever planted, and even less was ever bottled on its own. While no one knows exactly when Bastardo arrived in Madeira, some viticultural scholars believe that it came from Greece with Malvasia as early as the 1400s. For further
evidence of ancient residence, others point to Shakespeare’s “score a pint of bastard in the Half-moon” in King Henry IV. Like Terrantez, Bastardo essentially vanished after Phylloxera.
We know of only four vintage Bastardos having been made before World War II: 1870, 1875, 1876 and 1927. And rarely does even a bottle of one of these appear on the market. So, it is with a great deal of excitement that we announce the new release of one of the legends: the famous 1927 Bastardo from Adegas do Torreão, bottled this year from an original
cask by one of the last remaining giants of the Madeira trade, Pereira D’Oliveira.
Always Rare -
In the decades leading up to Phylloxera, each year saw a Bastardo crop, but yields were usually too small to bottle it on its own. Shippers, instead, would use it to beef up their most prestigious blends, or—as Cossart-Gordon did with its 1844 harvest—to create a small solera. After Phylloxera, few growers replanted the grape, making it even rarer. During the entire first half of the 20th century, only one vintage
Bastardo was made—in 1927—and it has become every bit as famous, and mysterious, as its 19th-century predecessors. Until now, there have been two 1927 Bastardos bottled, under the Adegas do Torreão and
Leacock labels. It is very possible that both wines originated at Torreão. This little-known house, which closed a few years ago, was a partidista,
maintaining large stocks of Madeira they’d buy from growers and then supply the big houses.
D’Oliveira’s New Bottling of the Famous 1927 Bastardo At left, Pereira D’Oliveira’s cellars, dated 1619, and at right, Adegas do Torreão’s cellars from 1949. The bastardo grape in Viala et Vermorel’s 1903 amepelography MADEIRA
How they happened to be the owner of such an important wine as the 1927 Bastardo is unknown. The only other '27 Bastardo on the island rests in a couple of barrels belonging to Henriques & Henriques, whose Bastardo plantings in Câmara do Lobos are legendary. In fact, a
Henriques wine was the source of the famous 1870 Bastardos of Blandy’s and Avery’s.
Today only the 1927 remains in Henriques’ cellars—a wine it has never sold in bottle. Is this where the Torreão wine began its life, or did it come
from other vineyards on the island? We will probably never know.
Torreão & D’Oliveira
The man behind Adegas Torreão was Vasco Loja, who —during the difficult years of the 1960s and 1970s— built Torreão into one of the island’s most powerful wine companies. But after his death, his children chose not to continue his work. All of the company’s assets were put on the market, including the company cellars near the historic Hinton Torreão sugar works which inspired the company’s name. A number of barrels of wine, including small amounts of 1927 Bastardo and 1969 Sercial, were also put on the block. Several of the island’s shippers were interested, but it was the D’Oliveira family who, in 2002, succeeded in buying the cellars and its wine.
Today, they are hard at work restoring the 57-year-old building. As for
the Torreão wine, while most of it continues to slumber in barrel, the
D’Oliveiras have done a small bottling of the 1927 Bastardo and 1969 Sercial.
Tastes of History
This could be the first time the 1969 Sercial has been offered for sale; in fact, we had never tasted the wine before our most recent visit to the island in June. It is a gem: a fantastic, old-style Sercial, pungently scented, deeply concentrated, with powerful acidity. As for the 1927 Bastardo, it is of course, marvelous: somewhat drier than the Leacock '27 and with the pleasingly bitter finish that typifies classic Bastardo.
And because it spent a few extra decades in barrel, we think that the D’Oliveira bottling is even better than the earlier bottlings under the Adegas do Torreão label.
Any time we can offer two Madeiras of such rarity and quality, it’s a privilege. But the even greater honor is to afford American wine lovers their only opportunity to experience one of Madeira’s mythic wines: the great 1927 Bastardo.
The Fabled 1927 Bastardo MADEIRA
1927 D’Oliveira Bastardo*
(ex-Adegas do Torreão)
$275.00
Beautiful deep walnut color with a greenish-yellow
rim. Very perfumed, powerful and high-toned nose of
dried Adriatic green fig, vanilla, malt and dried apricot.
There is a persistent core of sweetness on the
nose. The palate opens with perfumed dried apricot
and toffee flavors of moderate sweetness. Very well-
balanced with excellent acidity across the rich mid-
palate; the acidity pulls the richness through to the
long, powerful dry almond-infused finish. A wonderfully
exotic combination of elegance and power.
1969 D’Oliveira Sercial*
(ex-Adegas do Torreão)
$89.95
A walnut color of medium darkness and a yellow rim
with green glints. The nose is impressively deep and
very aromatic, revealing notes of dried Mirabelle
plum, dried cherry and cherry blossom, and almond.
There’s a silky entry on the palate, with a great acid
structure in the fleshy mid-palate; dried Mirabelle
plum and green almond flavors with a slightly bitter
note of quinine really fan out on the very long, very
dry finish. Great balance and freshness thanks to the
impressive natural acidity.
A barrel of 1927 Bastardo.
Wines may be sold and delivered only to persons who are at least 21 years old. All wines are sold in California and title passes to the buyer in California. We make no representation
to the legal rights of anyone to ship or import wines into any state outside of California. We are not responsible for typographical errors. All items and prices subject to
availability. Request a copy of our terms of sale or read them at http://www.rarewineco.com. An * indicates pre-arrival. Issued 16 times yearly. © 2006 The Rare Wine Co.