A few things to add about the 1815s.
1. Both of these bottles that we had at my 50th birthday weekend in 2007 were brought by Alex. I have the Ferreira bottling in my hands at this moment. The front label reads:
Companhia Agricola e Commercial dos Vinos do Porto. Successora de D. Antonia A Ferreira (her name was in large letters centered on the label) and then: Garrafeira, 1815 Vinho Tinto.
There is an IVP label on it, which is surprising. It came from Garafeira Nacional, but I don't know if that is where it was purchased by Alex. A fun fact, Dona Antonia Adelaide Ferreira was only 4 years old at the time of the harvest.
2. 1815 Ferreira - we were at Ferreira's Lodge in Gaia when they took 24 remaining bottles of 1815 Port and were recorking them that day. I will have to try to find the photos of the corks and bottles. They are TOTALLY different than the one I have before me, which Alex brought to Washington State.
3. In London, earlier this year, Sotheby's auctioned one bottle put up by the Guedes family (owners of Sogrape) of 1815 Ferreira that sold for €6,800. A huge some and it went to a charity for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis.
Michael Broadbent mentioned the following note about the 1815 Ferreira in his great book, Vintage Wine: Fifty Years of Tasting Three Centuries of Wines:
"Aged in cask for about 50 years, bottled and then recorked every 50 years. (An old port takes two years to recover its bouquet after recorking). A pale but healthy amber with lemon tinge; woody and acidic at first but settled down after decanting, rich, waxy, still with fruit, slightly estery, like old lace; medium-sweet, medium light, a wonderful spicy yet soft long flavour, and madeira-like acidity, dry finish. Four consistent notes, tasted between 1981 and July 1991. **** "
My own tasting notes from 2007 of both 1815 bottlings are included below, but I do not know why I wrote "1815 Ferreira
Colheita Port" although I know that was what most tasters believed it to be, except for Bartholomew Broadbent. At that time there were only 6 bottles of this Port on the rack at Ferreira's lodge, (but in reality other vintages only showed 6 as well, so likely the rest were kept elsewhere. That was why some of us were surprised to see 24 of them being recorked at the source circa 2010. Sorry for the ambiguity but until I get to my old computer, recharge it and find the photo with the lodge re-corking session, I'll have to leave it up to the notes below:
1815 Royal Oporto Colheita Port – Bottle date is unknown. Alex brought this and the 1815 Ferreira over for this tasting, an extraordinarily generous gesture. Bartholomew felt that this could possibly be a Vintage Port (a better picture of the bottle, “The pair of 1815’s” is at the end of this article). Medium amber with a tawny edge. Some had cloudy sediment in their glass, but mine was clear in appearance. Tea, Asian spice and a marmalade bouquet arise after initial whiffs akin to a musty, damp and cobweb infested dungeon. Vested with a surprising dollop of acidity, medium-bodied and later on, more syrupy. Laden with quince, maple and marmalade together showing ancient intricate nuances. Although interesting, I am not so sure I like it, but what a rare experience. 90 points 7/1/07
1815 Ferreira Colheita Port – On the label it says, “Dona Antonia A. Ferreira. Garrafeira 1815, Vinho Tinto.” A very cool old molded bottle. Bartholomew again believed this to be Vintage Port and mentioned that he had checked with Ferreira and although they do still have a handful of 1815 Vintage Ports, they have no record of producing a Colheita from this vintage. Dark amber in color with a greenish hue on the outer edge and a slight golden inner ring. Everyone kept mentioning rosemary on the nose, but I never did discern that herb. Instead I nosed spearmint and pine needles and an herbal, more earthy essence which was intriguing. Rich and very dry flavors akin to Sherry with a mix of raisins and dried apricot. The acidity was much lighter than the first wine. The smooth texture led to a long finish early on but this fell apart fairly quickly. Thank you again Alex for this historical treasure! I liked it more than most others, but I find a fascination with how these types of ancient Ports hold up for the first half hour. I typically gain all of my pleasure during this earlier stage. 91 points 7/1/07