I was wondering how this could still be around considering that JM de Fonseca had not produced the 20 year old Roxo, Moscatel de Setubal for the past couple of years. I figured at that price, what was to lose? I did verify it was the 20 year old by JM de Fonseca before my purchase. However, it is NOT the Roxo, but a new release of 20 year old juice by JM de Fonseca that is called, "Alambre" Aged 20 years, yada yada, bottled 2003.
Whereas the Moscatel Roxo grape name stands for "the color purple" which has a very low yield per vine, approximately 1 kilo. My "Last of the Mohegans" bottling of Roxo does not have a date of bottling on it or the box it came in and is listed as 18%. BTW, the great old Roxo was a 500 ml bottle.
The new Alambre, mistakenly

is now in 375 ml bottles and has remained at 18% abv. Interestingly, whereas the Roxo was 100% pure with that one Moscatel variety, the Alambre is a blend of the Setubal Muscat grape plus (Setubal is the place where JM de Fonseca is located, on a lovely peninsula next to the town of Palmela if I remember correctly to my visit in 1994) Boal and Malvasia (which Malvasia we are not informed about). The youngest wine in the blend is actually 20 years old. So this is not an "average" of 20 years old, which is pretty interesting too.
I have invited the winemaker, Domingos Soares Franco to stop in and join this thread. I'd love to hear more about the difference between this new "20 year old" and the Roxo from a sytlistic standpoint and also why the Roxo production was stopped. I'd also think it fascinating to know where the Boal vines came from (I am guessing the isle of Madeira) and to also know specifically which Malvasia (Fina?) grape is being used in this cuvee. I hope he will get my email, as it is vacation month in Portugal.
I must commend the retailer for including a separate plastic bag which included a "T-stopper" cork for each of the six bottles I bought.
If the legendary winemaker Mr. Soares does join us, I will go into another entire topic for him to discuss too, but we'll first explore this one of course!