A question about an unusual Port
Posted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 9:43 pm
New Years eve I participated in drinking a most unusal Port. I am interested in finding out if anyone can give me more information about this wine.
The label reads:
Coronation Port
1837
Matured in Cask
Justerini & Brooks
By Appointment to the King
Established upwards of 150 years
I assume that it was a Colheita from 1837, but I would like to know if that was the case. It looked, had the nose, and tasted like a tawny of real age. It was wonderfully complex with the distinctive nuttiness of a well-aged tawny. It had a good acid backbone with some sweetness left. The one minor negative quality was a tart after taste.
This wine came from the cellar of my father-in-law who passed away this fall. No one in the family knew he had this wine, and thus the provinance of it is unknown. We drank the wine in his honor. But all of us are curious to know more about it. Clearly it was bottled before Elizabeth II ascended the throne, but that leaves open a long period of time.
The label reads:
Coronation Port
1837
Matured in Cask
Justerini & Brooks
By Appointment to the King
Established upwards of 150 years
I assume that it was a Colheita from 1837, but I would like to know if that was the case. It looked, had the nose, and tasted like a tawny of real age. It was wonderfully complex with the distinctive nuttiness of a well-aged tawny. It had a good acid backbone with some sweetness left. The one minor negative quality was a tart after taste.
This wine came from the cellar of my father-in-law who passed away this fall. No one in the family knew he had this wine, and thus the provinance of it is unknown. We drank the wine in his honor. But all of us are curious to know more about it. Clearly it was bottled before Elizabeth II ascended the throne, but that leaves open a long period of time.