Vintage Ports Reaching Maturity; Keep or Drink?
Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2020 1:18 pm
Having had a fully mature 1987 Souza VP recently and a comment related to it in a different thread has brought up the question; Is it worth it to keep a VP for the long haul when it's clearly reached the back side of maturity?
This question doesn't have to just apply to a 100+ year old bottle of VP and it shouldn't. The vast majority of VP's don't make super old bones and instead tend to be more toward the 20-30 year mark before they peak and/or start a downhill slide.
What are your thoughts? Should you drink them while they are still somewhat alive or do you wait until they've gotten really old, oxidized and lost their overall balance?
This question doesn't have to just apply to a 100+ year old bottle of VP and it shouldn't. The vast majority of VP's don't make super old bones and instead tend to be more toward the 20-30 year mark before they peak and/or start a downhill slide.
What are your thoughts? Should you drink them while they are still somewhat alive or do you wait until they've gotten really old, oxidized and lost their overall balance?