Multi: Taylor's 10 year Tawny Port vs Quinta do Noval 10 yr
Posted: Thu Apr 19, 2007 10:46 pm
Another thread has been following the Q do Noval 10 yr Tawny, and a couple requests were made for a Taylor 10 yr TN. So, happy to oblige, I bring you this...
I have always thought of Taylor 10 yr Tawny as my mainstay Aged Tawny port... one that never disappoints and is always of consistent quality. It still is, but I have recently discovered other 10 yr Tawnys that do a bit of a disservice to the old faithful Taylor. :)
I am trying to get together a tasting of a "10 year Tawny Horizontal." I know, I know... 10 yr Tawnys cannot really be compared properly in a true horizontal. We'll use the terminology for ease of use, if not for proper grammar. I think a 'horizontal' of multiple 10 yr olds would be a fantastic little venture. Unfortunately I cannot afford to run one myself with 10+ wines, so I'm trying to convince a couple of friends to each buy two bottles of 10 year and bring them all over one night for a killer horizontal.
Anyway, onto the TN:
-colour that reminds me of a garnet stone, with some orange colour and hints of light brown when tilted to the light
-nose of orange peel, toffee, brown sugar, raisins. No alcohol to speak of on the nose.
-a bit hot, the alcohol does stand out a bit, serving as a distractor from the sweet, mellow flavours of caramel. A touch of mint and pepper on the palate as well, but the alcohol is quite apparent on this night.
I know that I definitely prefer the Taylor 20 yr old, which seems to be more mellow, smooth, with less acidity and alcohol standing out, calling out for attention. I do have a bottle of the 20 yr in the basement so perhaps it is time to pay a quick visit to that old friend one night soon.
Compared side-by-side with the Noval 10 yr Tawny (my first time tasting that) I definitely would choose the Noval 6 days out of 7.
Todd
I have always thought of Taylor 10 yr Tawny as my mainstay Aged Tawny port... one that never disappoints and is always of consistent quality. It still is, but I have recently discovered other 10 yr Tawnys that do a bit of a disservice to the old faithful Taylor. :)
I am trying to get together a tasting of a "10 year Tawny Horizontal." I know, I know... 10 yr Tawnys cannot really be compared properly in a true horizontal. We'll use the terminology for ease of use, if not for proper grammar. I think a 'horizontal' of multiple 10 yr olds would be a fantastic little venture. Unfortunately I cannot afford to run one myself with 10+ wines, so I'm trying to convince a couple of friends to each buy two bottles of 10 year and bring them all over one night for a killer horizontal.
Anyway, onto the TN:
-colour that reminds me of a garnet stone, with some orange colour and hints of light brown when tilted to the light
-nose of orange peel, toffee, brown sugar, raisins. No alcohol to speak of on the nose.
-a bit hot, the alcohol does stand out a bit, serving as a distractor from the sweet, mellow flavours of caramel. A touch of mint and pepper on the palate as well, but the alcohol is quite apparent on this night.
I know that I definitely prefer the Taylor 20 yr old, which seems to be more mellow, smooth, with less acidity and alcohol standing out, calling out for attention. I do have a bottle of the 20 yr in the basement so perhaps it is time to pay a quick visit to that old friend one night soon.
Compared side-by-side with the Noval 10 yr Tawny (my first time tasting that) I definitely would choose the Noval 6 days out of 7.
Todd