Page 1 of 1

Porthead - use it or lose it?

Posted: Thu May 14, 2015 11:48 am
by David Co
I have being used the term porthead for a little while and have been debating removing it from my vernacular. Was wondering if anyone has any terms they use to describe their love of wine generally and/or love of port specifically?

Re: Porthead - use it or lose it?

Posted: Thu May 14, 2015 1:02 pm
by Glenn E.
I call us Port Geeks, or occasionally Port Nerds. Nerd has more of an academic connotation, though, so I prefer Port Geek.

Re: Porthead - use it or lose it?

Posted: Thu May 14, 2015 2:24 pm
by Eric Menchen
I'm in a local non-Port-specific tasting group. We occasionally refer to ourselves as the Winos.

Re: Porthead - use it or lose it?

Posted: Sat May 16, 2015 9:44 am
by Mads Barnkob
Port collector seems to be the description that works best in Denmark, I am however better known as do-not-drink-red-wine-at-all.

Re: Porthead - use it or lose it?

Posted: Sat May 16, 2015 11:01 am
by Roger L.
Eric Menchen wrote:We occasionally refer to ourselves as the Winos.
This appears, then, to be one of those "separated by a common language" words

To the English - "Wino" is a monstrously derogative term - to quote one of the online dictionaries - and this is pretty much what I have in my head when I hear this word - "a person who drinks excessive amounts of cheap wine or other alcohol, especially one who is homeless."

Re: Porthead - use it or lose it?

Posted: Sat May 16, 2015 11:37 am
by Glenn E.
Mads Barnkob wrote:Port collector seems to be the description that works best in Denmark, I am however better known as do-not-drink-red-wine-at-all.
Me too! Port and an occasional sweet white (Sauternes, Riesling BA or TBA, Tokaji, etc).

Re: Porthead - use it or lose it?

Posted: Sat May 16, 2015 11:38 am
by Glenn E.
Roger L. wrote:
Eric Menchen wrote:We occasionally refer to ourselves as the Winos.
This appears, then, to be one of those "separated by a common language" words

To the English - "Wino" is a monstrously derogative term - to quote one of the online dictionaries - and this is pretty much what I have in my head when I hear this word - "a person who drinks excessive amounts of cheap wine or other alcohol, especially one who is homeless."
No, that's what it means here, too.

Re: Porthead - use it or lose it?

Posted: Sat May 16, 2015 11:47 am
by Eric Menchen
Glenn E. wrote:
Roger L. wrote:To the English - "Wino" is a monstrously derogative term - to quote one of the online dictionaries - and this is pretty much what I have in my head when I hear this word - "a person who drinks excessive amounts of cheap wine or other alcohol, especially one who is homeless."
No, that's what it means here, too.
We use the term in jest. Also, we often taste things blind, with the bottles wrapped up in a brown paper bags, further fitting the stereotype--although I doubt the homeless guy on the street is drinking Unico out of his bag.

Re: Porthead - use it or lose it?

Posted: Sat May 16, 2015 2:49 pm
by Al B.
Eric Menchen wrote:We use the term in jest. Also, we often taste things blind, with the bottles wrapped up in a brown paper bags, further fitting the stereotype--although I doubt the homeless guy on the street is drinking Unico out of his bag.
You could be stereotyping again Eric. You never know what's in the bag. That's the purpose of a blind tasting. The poor guy on the street is just making sure he has no label bias.

Re: Porthead - use it or lose it?

Posted: Mon May 18, 2015 10:50 am
by Andy Velebil
Glenn E. wrote:I call us Port Geeks, or occasionally Port Nerds. Nerd has more of an academic connotation, though, so I prefer Port Geek.
I'm academic. I count my bottles and check the label grammar every time I pickup a new Port shipment. :mrgreen: