It is still early, but when I asked this question of a producer, they looked at me funny ... hinting that no, they would not be declaring.
So what are they thinking ... 2016 is going to be better?
![Pointless [dash1.gif]](./images/smilies/dash1.gif)
Moderators: Glenn E., Roy Hersh, Andy Velebil
I am not afraid of being wrong, nor do I care about being proven right. Getting at the truth of the matter through multiple blind tastings, will provide an unbiased report either way. My methodology will not change now. While I agree with Niepoort about 2015 over 2016, I've disagreed with him in the past and remember some interesting discussions about 2005, after my tastings. A nice year, but we agreed to disagree back then. All of this is just a good story and speculation to some degree, albeit, empirical experience has some merit.The main wine houses in Porto have a difficult decision to make in the coming weeks: whether they declare themselves to be 2015 as a classic vintage or wait another year and declare 2016. It is a difficult decision because they involve many millions of euros. All signs point to the choice of majority to fall in 2016, but there is a company that has already decided to go the other way: Niepoort. Niepoort continues: "I do not know why they're all cutting, but for me it's clear that 2015 is a great, great year, the best I've ever seen. The year 2016 does not remind the devil. It was born crooked in the flowering and continued crooked in the vintage, although it improved in the end. The wines are more mature, more concentrated, more to the taste of the English, but do not have the balance and perfection of the wines of 2015, "says Dirk Niepoort.
No other category of Port wine is as profitable as the Vintage Port (a one-crop wine produced in years of exceptional quality and aging bottle). It can begin to be commercialized after two years and, being classic (designation that gives to the elaboration of vintage Port with the main marks of the companies of the sector) reaches fabulous profit margins. It costs as much to produce as an LBV, for example, but is sold earlier and for a price four to five times higher or even more.
In the last two decades, in particular, the Vintage Port has been an important source of revenue for the major companies in the sector, helping to mitigate the steady drops in sales of the lower categories. What makes this wine famous is the fact that there are only two to three "vintage years" per decade. It's called "vintage year" to the years when there is a generalized statement of classic vintage, involving all the great houses of the sector. In the less good years, the normal thing is to have the declaration of a Single Quinta Port, (vintages produced with grapes of the same property and with the name of this), cheaper.
In the past decade there was widespread classic vintages in 2000, 2003 and 2007. In this, only 2011 was vintage year - by the way, one of the most acclaimed ever. Before the last vintage, it was more or less consensual that the larger houses would declare classic vintage in 2015. But the vintage of 2016 came shuffling everything. The year was one of the most atypical of which there is memory. It rained a lot in the winter and spring, which caused a great outbreak of mildew, and the summer was excessively hot, the hottest since record-keeping. As of September 12 the temperatures dropped sharply and began to rain with great intensity. The sun only came back in full more than a week later, but still in time to save the vintage, which crawled through the month of October. The rain ended up having a miraculous effect, helping to unlock maturation, and the warm, dry weather that followed allowed to increase the concentration of the grapes and make surprisingly good wines.
Winemakers and managers of Porto's main wine houses are now in trouble, torn between the desire to declare classic vintage in 2015, more for economic reasons, and the conviction that the 2016 wines are better. In the case of Sogrape, the option for 2016 is already taken. "The wines of 2015 are good, but I never thought they were extraordinary. The 2016 are not super-structured, but have a fabulous harmony and consistency, "says Luís Sottomayor, oenologist at Casa Ferreirinha.
In the Symington family, which holds the Graham's, Dow's and Warre's brands, among others, there is still no verdict, but the conservative profile of its members may be in favor of 2016. "The 2016 wines are very good, but let's see how they come out this winter, "says Joe Álvares Ribeiro, group administrator, ensuring that the final decision will be made" by the five family members in the evidence room, not in the administration room."
Those in charge of the Fladgate Partnership group remain loyal to the group's tradition of announcing the decision only on April 23, St. George's Day. Because of its recent history, it would not have been surprising if the choice fell back in 2015. The Fladgate Partnership also broke the consensus when, in a landmark decision, it declared vintage in 2009 for Taylor's, Fonseca and Croft houses, having already done so in 2000, 2003 and 2007. But even if this is the option, it is certain and certain that the sector will not live the same euphoria that lived with 2011, the most consensual and applauded vintage of the last decades. Will it be the best? This is an answer that will still take time. What the history of Port wine has taught us is that there are unpromising harvests that turn out to be extraordinary-and vice versa. Who knows if Dirk Niepoort is not being a visionary? It would not be the first time.