Multi: Tasting 1994 vs 1997 Vintage Ports: Fonseca, Taylor, Warre's
Posted: Mon Jun 01, 2009 9:24 am
This was a Blind Tasting on 29 May 2009 of 6 wines. The tasting compared Taylor, Fonseca and Warre’s 1994 and 1997 vintages. All came from the same cellar and were decanted about 2 hours before the tasting. The tasting notes are mine, but there was also a group ranking (9 tasters).
No specific notes on colour, as all were similar – deep ruby (although the 94’s were slightly deeper in colour than the 97’s).
1994 Fonseca (poured as wine D)
On nose, very structured fruit – deep and intense with almost a metallic backbone (? Iron). On the palate everything there and in perfect balance with great fruit right through to the long finish. Great now but a long life ahead.
My ranking 1st (by a wide margin). Group ranking tied for 1st (3-way tie).
1994 Taylor (poured as wine B)
Corked! Wet leaf on nose. No structure, alcohol separate.
Everybody’s ranking 6th.
1994 Warre’s (poured as Wine A)
Very open plumy fruit on nose. Leaps out of glass.
On the taste, fruit was sweet, rather than structured with soft tannins and well-balanced. Long finish. Excellent for drinking now.
My ranking 3rd. Group ranking 4th.
1997 Fonseca (poured as wine F)
Touch of orange on the rim – showing some age.
Nose almost overripe fruit.
Palate unbalanced. Dry start, then falls away in the centre, leading to a soft fleshy finish. Not sure where this is going.
My ranking 5th. Group ranking 5th.
1997 Taylor (poured as wine E)
Most aromatic/flowery aromas of group – Lavender?
Good acisity, but a little hollow in the centre. Fruit comes back at finish, but flavours not (yet?) integrated.
My ranking 4th. Group ranking tied for 1st (3-way tie).
1997 Warre’s (poured as wine C)
Very open and fleshy fruit, on the nose – plums.
In the mouth, huge fleshy fruit which grows in the mouth and evolves to good acid, which hold through a very long finish. Drinking extremely well.
My ranking 2nd. Group ranking tied for 1st (3-way tie).
Summary
Other than the corked Taylor, these were all good to excellent solid wines. The scores were too confusing to declare a ‘winner’.
But for drinking now, Warre’s is probably the best choice – both vintages were drinking well.
In the group standings there was a tie for first – one each for Warre’s, Taylor & Fonseca. And 1997 had the overall edge with the group (but not for me). For me, the 94 Fonseca was the standout wine!
NOTE: I've aggregated all the notes here for anyone that wants to see the whole tasting. I've also extracted the relevant notes to the corresponding individual wine notes.
No specific notes on colour, as all were similar – deep ruby (although the 94’s were slightly deeper in colour than the 97’s).
1994 Fonseca (poured as wine D)
On nose, very structured fruit – deep and intense with almost a metallic backbone (? Iron). On the palate everything there and in perfect balance with great fruit right through to the long finish. Great now but a long life ahead.
My ranking 1st (by a wide margin). Group ranking tied for 1st (3-way tie).
1994 Taylor (poured as wine B)
Corked! Wet leaf on nose. No structure, alcohol separate.
Everybody’s ranking 6th.
1994 Warre’s (poured as Wine A)
Very open plumy fruit on nose. Leaps out of glass.
On the taste, fruit was sweet, rather than structured with soft tannins and well-balanced. Long finish. Excellent for drinking now.
My ranking 3rd. Group ranking 4th.
1997 Fonseca (poured as wine F)
Touch of orange on the rim – showing some age.
Nose almost overripe fruit.
Palate unbalanced. Dry start, then falls away in the centre, leading to a soft fleshy finish. Not sure where this is going.
My ranking 5th. Group ranking 5th.
1997 Taylor (poured as wine E)
Most aromatic/flowery aromas of group – Lavender?
Good acisity, but a little hollow in the centre. Fruit comes back at finish, but flavours not (yet?) integrated.
My ranking 4th. Group ranking tied for 1st (3-way tie).
1997 Warre’s (poured as wine C)
Very open and fleshy fruit, on the nose – plums.
In the mouth, huge fleshy fruit which grows in the mouth and evolves to good acid, which hold through a very long finish. Drinking extremely well.
My ranking 2nd. Group ranking tied for 1st (3-way tie).
Summary
Other than the corked Taylor, these were all good to excellent solid wines. The scores were too confusing to declare a ‘winner’.
But for drinking now, Warre’s is probably the best choice – both vintages were drinking well.
In the group standings there was a tie for first – one each for Warre’s, Taylor & Fonseca. And 1997 had the overall edge with the group (but not for me). For me, the 94 Fonseca was the standout wine!
NOTE: I've aggregated all the notes here for anyone that wants to see the whole tasting. I've also extracted the relevant notes to the corresponding individual wine notes.