Definitely!
I’m leaving Wokingham 2 hours later than originally planned and have some errands to run when I’ve dropped my bottles off. But will see you there later.
Definitely!
GlennGlenn E. wrote: ↑22:50 Sun 12 Oct 2025I can't recall ever even hearing of a tasting with this many old Vintage Ports in it. This is truly spectacular.jdaw1 wrote: ↑12:46 Sun 12 Oct 2025 That might be an understatement. The book has mention of many tastings. I do not recall any with ten Vintages more than a century old. Just none. Even Taylor’s great bicentennial tasting discussed in A Celebration of Taylor’s Port (1992), p53 onwards, had none older than a century. And the Cockburn bicentennial in 2015 had only three older (’63, ’68, ’08). So this tasting is at least a candidate for Swankiest Port Tasting Ever.
The Decades tasting that I attended in Los Angeles in 2020 was, alas, only 9 Vintage Ports over 100 years of age, because the 1927 Niepoort and 1931 Noval were merely 93 and 89 years old, and so too young to qualify.
I have been lucky enough to attend a few tastings with 6-8 Ports that were 100+ years old, but those were all ancient tawnies.
I've been to 1 tasting that had 14 bottles that were all over 100 years old, but those were all Madeira.
Christopher wrote: ↑12:13 Mon 13 Oct 2025GlennGlenn E. wrote: ↑22:50 Sun 12 Oct 2025I can't recall ever even hearing of a tasting with this many old Vintage Ports in it. This is truly spectacular.jdaw1 wrote: ↑12:46 Sun 12 Oct 2025 That might be an understatement. The book has mention of many tastings. I do not recall any with ten Vintages more than a century old. Just none. Even Taylor’s great bicentennial tasting discussed in A Celebration of Taylor’s Port (1992), p53 onwards, had none older than a century. And the Cockburn bicentennial in 2015 had only three older (’63, ’68, ’08). So this tasting is at least a candidate for Swankiest Port Tasting Ever.
The Decades tasting that I attended in Los Angeles in 2020 was, alas, only 9 Vintage Ports over 100 years of age, because the 1927 Niepoort and 1931 Noval were merely 93 and 89 years old, and so too young to qualify.
I have been lucky enough to attend a few tastings with 6-8 Ports that were 100+ years old, but those were all ancient tawnies.
I've been to 1 tasting that had 14 bottles that were all over 100 years old, but those were all Madeira.
I feel this is a challenge set! Can this tasting ever be beaten. Suspect with Ferriera but not any other Port house
I’m sure we will be able to cope.
Definitely. I should note that the Decades tasting in Los Angeles was not a single producer. There were many producers represented in order to get to a mere 9 centenarians, and a couple of those were even Unknown Producer bottles.Christopher wrote: ↑12:13 Mon 13 Oct 2025 I feel this is a challenge set! Can this tasting ever be beaten. Suspect with Ferriera but not any other Port house
No, it was the Madeirathon in Seattle in 2016. But the one you have linked appears to be similar.
Yes please I would be very interested, thank you. In terms of shipper Fonseca, Graham, Croft or Cockburn?Alex Bridgeman wrote: ↑19:40 Tue 12 May 2026 Out of curiosity, would there be any interest in a similar event this year based around a different shipper?