First great port in 24 years

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PaulW
Cruz Ruby
Posts: 8
Joined: 00:14 Sat 05 Jul 2025

First great port in 24 years

Post by PaulW »

My first post here. What a pleasure!

Last night, I opened one of my six of hard-got 1977 Gould Campbells. (There should have been nine but the auction house clearly didn't package for transport well enough. :crying: ) I haven't had a vintage port of this calibre since I was at a feast in Trinity in 2001, when I had something from 1963, though I can't remember which one! It was absolutely sublime and the idiotic rule about always passing to the, erm... right..? got in the way of my enjoyment on our table of eight obviously philistinic imbibers. It was clear to me at that instant that I would have a lifelong attachment to great port.

Back the GC1977. I have to admit, I didn't like it at first. But it grew on me, especially as it opened up and changed in spectacular fashion - see notes below. It was probably either at its peak or slightly beyond it, but I don't think it's going to get worse with another ten years, just different. It's going to be interesting to find out. I know fancy and old Bordeaux much better than port, so I'm really just guessing. Any input, given my notes?

It was fun to open. It had a week to stand still in the dark, and I could have poured it almost completely without filtration, so little sediment was there, but I put my double muslin over my funnel and filled two small decanters anyway, just to get the last drops. The perfume that filled the room was astonishing! Quite an incredible blackcurrant scent, like fresh Ribena. I was being so careful with the pouring, I didn't think about it much at the time, which I regret now. Still, five bottles to go.

I tasted repeatedly over the next day. I opened it at 2pm just before going out, and did a quick sniff and swish-spit tasting so I wasn't drunk on the train. I should have just been tipsy on the train - it would have been better. But once I returned, I did a full-spectrum analysis. Here are the results - Oh! - you'll need a heads-up on my scoring method: It's out of ten, with a resolution of 0.5, but the numbers are merely for an instantaneous notion of how it was to me at the time. I'm perfectly well-aware that the day on which I taste something will affect the score. Mainly I keep numbers for repeat (non-)purchasing decisions. Colour out of 1, Nose out of 3, Body out of 3, Finish out of 3, but first a total:

=====
7.5 - but will probably be adjusted after a week of further tasting
C: hints of brown on the edge of dark garnet
0.5
N: on decanting fully perfumed the kitchen with blackcurrant like Ribena, some subtle wood notes, dark molasses, cherry, but it's all rather quiet very soon after.
3 hours: nose still very quiet, now something slightly vegetal, and a touch of class, a little bit of fruit cake, pure alcohol, oak wood obvious now, something green and herby - maybe a touch of menthol with cucumber, but overall still not holding together very well
6 hours: rose and violet and lemon sherbet!
8 hours: what is that? Cardamom and sage?! Not dissimilar to Benedictine
2.5
B: very little sediment, tannins super low for port, silky smooth, cucumber more clear, but lacking overall cohesion and balance
9 hours: if you like Benedictine liqueur you'll love this - lots of similar notes,
2
F: 3 hours: long, deep, mushrooms, alcohol-hot, caramel toffee
9 hours: longer fruit - blackberry and cherry
2.5
=====

And now I'll settle in for another evening of tasting, once the roast beef is done. Beyond that, I've got a small decanter left over in the fridge which I'll give a go next weekend. Actually, with the beef, I was thinking of tasting the other item I won in the auction - a 2009 Puech-Haut Prestige - but I wonder if the port might go quite well with beef? No doubt someone here's tried that before?

Oh, and if I can figure out how to attach pictures, I'll show you the interesting double capsule (I'm sure most here know about all this already, come to think of it...), and the amazing things that had grown underneath it, and its colour through a decanter.
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jdaw1
Dow 1896
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Re: First great port in 24 years

Post by jdaw1 »

Lots of things here.

Obviously, you are going to fit in very well. You seem like a hopeless geek — not the only one — and we even have another from Trinity (who has been notified).

PaulW wrote: 20:01 Sun 06 Jul 2025I should have just been tipsy on the train - it would have been better.
This isn’t even a question.

PaulW wrote: 20:01 Sun 06 Jul 2025Still, five bottles to go.
Indeed, so few.

PaulW wrote: 20:01 Sun 06 Jul 2025I tasted repeatedly over the next day.
We are all too gentle to say “geek”. So nobody will.

PaulW wrote: 20:01 Sun 06 Jul 2025Oh! - you'll need a heads-up on my scoring method: It's out of ten, with a resolution of 0.5, but the numbers are merely for an instantaneous notion of how it was to me at the time. I'm perfectly well-aware that the day on which I taste something will affect the score. Mainly I keep numbers for repeat (non-)purchasing decisions. Colour out of 1, Nose out of 3, Body out of 3, Finish out of 3, but first a total
I’ll risk a guess. A physicist, or a cosmologist, would not risk such a muddling of units. Are you, ahem, a pure mathematician? If you are, you are not even the only one from Trinity.

PaulW wrote: 20:01 Sun 06 Jul 2025I wonder if the port might go quite well with beef? No doubt someone here's tried that before?
Port goes very well with beef.
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mcoulson
Warre’s Otima 10 year old Tawny
Posts: 643
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Re: First great port in 24 years

Post by mcoulson »

Hello Paul - welcome to the port forum .....

I have a case of this stuff and I agree it's glorious however beware not all bottles of GC77 have survived, a good friend of mine had an entire case that was basically corked .... my case so far appears good like yours .... what is a fact is that magnums of GC77 are definatly good ....

I have the double wrapping and the sunkan cork as well so I think we are just lucky and my friend not so ... still I've shared some of my GC77 with him so thats fine.
Glenn E.
Graham’s 1977
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Re: First great port in 24 years

Post by Glenn E. »

PaulW wrote: 20:01 Sun 06 Jul 2025 I wonder if the port might go quite well with beef? No doubt someone here's tried that before?
It should go very well with the beef. I am one who drinks Port with food, and I think it pairs very well as long as you follow principles similar to what you would use with table wine. The trick is dessert - try to ensure that the dessert is less sweet than the Port, and then you should be fine.

I have ... a few ... magnums of GC77 which are pretty uniformly outstanding. Bottles tend to have a little more variation from one to the next, but usually range from very good to outstanding.

Welcome to The Port Forum!
Glenn Elliott
PaulW
Cruz Ruby
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Joined: 00:14 Sat 05 Jul 2025

Re: First great port in 24 years

Post by PaulW »

jdaw1 wrote: 23:01 Sun 06 Jul 2025 I’ll risk a guess. A physicist, or a cosmologist, would not risk such a muddling of units. Are you, ahem, a pure mathematician? If you are, you are not even the only one from Trinity.
Actually, I did study the physics. I switched into it in the third year, having grown bored with the computer science. But I think you'd describe me as a pure physicist - I was always MUCH more interested in the meaning behind these things than the numbers. The philosophy of physics is seriously interesting. My final understanding is: there is no physical reality. It's all mind!

But... what's so muddled about my units?!
PaulW
Cruz Ruby
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Joined: 00:14 Sat 05 Jul 2025

Re: First great port in 24 years

Post by PaulW »

mcoulson wrote: 15:48 Mon 07 Jul 2025 Hello Paul - welcome to the port forum .....
Thank you - how good of you to share! There are lots of ports I don't have, btw - actually, all the other ones... Hint, hint...
PaulW
Cruz Ruby
Posts: 8
Joined: 00:14 Sat 05 Jul 2025

Re: First great port in 24 years

Post by PaulW »

Glenn E. wrote: 17:01 Mon 07 Jul 2025 I have ... a few ... magnums of GC77 which are pretty uniformly outstanding. Bottles tend to have a little more variation from one to the next, but usually range from very good to outstanding.

Welcome to The Port Forum!
Super! And thanks. I like it here.
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mosesbotbol
Warre’s Otima 10 year old Tawny
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Re: First great port in 24 years

Post by mosesbotbol »

I know I have magnum, not sure if I have any 750's of G77. I am generally a fan of their ports. Their style is big and powerful.
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