80YO and VVO Port
In the run up to the bft this year (2026) we were asked if we could organise a press tasting of a selection of the new categories of Port – 80 Year Old Tawny and 80 Year Old White.
Always up for a challenge, I got on the phone and started to call people. The task was to put together a selection of wines that would be of enough interest to the right quality of audience.
The producers I spoke to were interested and willing to participate, provided the audience was the right calibre and the structure of the tasting gave the producers time to talk to the audience. The members of the media and key buyers for organisations likely to sell or serve these wines were interested and were willing to commit to being at the bft provided there was a range of wines from big and small producers and there would be enough time to taste the wines and speak with the producers.
Out of these two sets of parallel conversations was born the structure for a tasting. An audience of 14 people with 7 producers presenting their wines. Audience members would circulate around the producers’ tables, moving on at their own pace. Producers would generally have a couple of people at their table at any time and – if we ran the tasting for 70 minutes – would have about 10 minutes with each pair of audience members. 10 minutes felt like enough time for a tasting of one or two wines plus a short Q&A session.
2026: Very Very Old and 80 Year Old Ports at the bft
- Alex Bridgeman
- Croft 1945
- Posts: 16568
- Joined: 12:41 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Berkshire, UK
2026: Very Very Old and 80 Year Old Ports at the bft
Top 2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
- Alex Bridgeman
- Croft 1945
- Posts: 16568
- Joined: 12:41 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Berkshire, UK
Re: 2026: Very Very Old and 80 Year Old Ports at the bft
The next step to actually delivering the press tasting was to sign up the producers who had already said they were interested. This is when things started to come a little unstuck. Chatting to Filipe Marinho from Quinta da Devesa, he apologised profusely but said that he would not be able to participate despite his earlier interest. I didn’t push, diary conflicts happen to the best of us.
Then the same thing happened when I was talking with Elisabete Almeida from Agri-Roncão. Initially very interested and wanting to show a tawny and a white from her range, she was now unsure. Given this was the second person having doubts, I wanted to understand what was causing the hesitation.
Quinta da Devesa have two old wines on the market. Both are prominently labelled 80 but what I wasn’t aware of at first was that both of these wines fall outside the definition of the regulations governing the new category of 80 Year Old. Both are older, and qualify for the category of VVO or Very Very Old, now officially meaning older than wines within the 80 Year Old category. Both of these wines had been blended and bottled in 2024 to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the current owner’s family acquiring the quinta and featured 80 prominently on the labelling, but pre-dated the 80 Year Old category so were governed by the regulations for Port wines more than 50 Years Old.
One of Elisabete’s wines was also over 80 years of age. The DR White VVO had been bottled to celebrate a 90th anniversary so also fell into the VVO category.
It turned out to be a very easy problem to fix.
Then the same thing happened when I was talking with Elisabete Almeida from Agri-Roncão. Initially very interested and wanting to show a tawny and a white from her range, she was now unsure. Given this was the second person having doubts, I wanted to understand what was causing the hesitation.
Quinta da Devesa have two old wines on the market. Both are prominently labelled 80 but what I wasn’t aware of at first was that both of these wines fall outside the definition of the regulations governing the new category of 80 Year Old. Both are older, and qualify for the category of VVO or Very Very Old, now officially meaning older than wines within the 80 Year Old category. Both of these wines had been blended and bottled in 2024 to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the current owner’s family acquiring the quinta and featured 80 prominently on the labelling, but pre-dated the 80 Year Old category so were governed by the regulations for Port wines more than 50 Years Old.
One of Elisabete’s wines was also over 80 years of age. The DR White VVO had been bottled to celebrate a 90th anniversary so also fell into the VVO category.
It turned out to be a very easy problem to fix.
Top 2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
- Alex Bridgeman
- Croft 1945
- Posts: 16568
- Joined: 12:41 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Berkshire, UK
Re: 2026: Very Very Old and 80 Year Old Ports at the bft
Quinta da Devesa have two old wines on the market. Both are prominently labelled 80 but what I wasn’t aware of at first was that both of these wines fall outside the definition of the regulations governing the new category of 80 Year Old. Both are older, and qualify for the category of VVO or Very Very Old, now officially meaning older than wines within the 80 Year Old category. Both of these wines had been blended and bottled in 2024 to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the current owner’s family acquiring the quinta and featured 80 prominently on the labelling, but pre-dated the 80 Year Old category so were governed at the time of release by the regulations for Port wines more than 50 Years Old.
One of Elisabete’s wines was also over 80 years of age. The DR White VVO had been bottled to celebrate a 90th anniversary and also fell into the VVO category.
The fix was no more difficult that a quick run of calls to the people invited attend the tasting to ask the question “Are you happy for us to include older wines as part of the 80YO tasting, and make the scope of the tasting 80 Year Old and VVO Ports?” I wasn’t surprised that no-one objected, so I was able to go back to Filipe and Elisabete and let them know the change of scope for the tasting — and both were very happy to include their wines.
In the end we put together a terrific mix of large and small producers with Taylor showing their VVO plus Graham and Kopke showing their 80 Year Olds. We would have included Quinta do Noval’s (rumoured) 80 Year Old but they were not yet ready to announce and show the new blend. Alongside these names were a collection of boutique producers: DR, Maynard, Quinta da Devesa, Blackett and the newly launched JáFoste from Luís Rodrigues — one of the most prolific blenders in the Douro Valley. In total the tasting featured 8 producers, between them showing 11 wines. 3 of the wines were white Ports, 4 were VVO Ports. Retail prices of the wines ranged from £385 (Maynard, discounted at vintagewineandport.co.uk) up to £1,675 (Graham’s 80 Year Old, Hedonism).
Top 2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
- Alex Bridgeman
- Croft 1945
- Posts: 16568
- Joined: 12:41 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Berkshire, UK
Re: 2026: Very Very Old and 80 Year Old Ports at the bft
The tasting was a great success and gave the audience a real opportunity to try these remarkable wines in context. It was also a chance to understand the ways in which different winemakers interpreted and used the wines they had available to them. Maynard’s 80 was blended to a price point and was a good wine offering remarkable value for money. But what was absolutely clear was that the quality of these wines reflected their prices. Every one of these wines was stunning and was presented – quite rightly – with great pride by the winemaker or their representative. These are wines available in tiny quantities, wines which are windows into the history of the families who have nurtured them since the 1940s.
If I had pockets deep enough, I would drink any and all of these wines regularly. Sadly, I don’t but I will be very happy to celebrate the occasional special event with a sip of one. If I am lucky, Vinum, the Yeatman or the Tivoli Kopke will offer these by the glass when I next visit Porto
I'm at the UK launch of the 2024 vintage today, but tasting notes will follow tomorrow...
If I had pockets deep enough, I would drink any and all of these wines regularly. Sadly, I don’t but I will be very happy to celebrate the occasional special event with a sip of one. If I am lucky, Vinum, the Yeatman or the Tivoli Kopke will offer these by the glass when I next visit Porto
I'm at the UK launch of the 2024 vintage today, but tasting notes will follow tomorrow...
Top 2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
- Alex Bridgeman
- Croft 1945
- Posts: 16568
- Joined: 12:41 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Berkshire, UK
Re: 2026: Very Very Old and 80 Year Old Ports at the bft
Blackett 80 Year Old Tawny Port.
Founded by Pedro Carneiro in 2013, Blackett (a brand of Alchemy Wines) is one of the new wave of young Port companies taking advantage of the changes in regulation in 1986 and shipping directly from the Douro Valley. Although a young company, the name Blackett is a revival of the name of the firm established by George Blackett, a Leeds based wine merchant who became a significant shipper in the 19th century.
Production is based on wines coming from Quinta da Brunheda in the Douro Superior and from Quinta da Mata de Cima – one of the vineyards in the first mapping of the demarcated zone in 1756 – in the Cima Corgo sub-region. Blackett’s growing reputation is based on its aged white and tawny Ports, but the company also produces ruby, LBV and vintage Ports.
This final blend sample of the 80 Year Old Tawny is an astonishing dark chestnut brown colour with a dark centre. Smooth and rich on the palette with tannins still sitting in the crepe Suzette, orange and muscvado sugar. Bright acidity keeps the flavours focused, balancing the sticky, treacle and citrus acidity finish. Really long and bitter-sweet. This is a Port which is rich and delicious. 95/100.
Founded by Pedro Carneiro in 2013, Blackett (a brand of Alchemy Wines) is one of the new wave of young Port companies taking advantage of the changes in regulation in 1986 and shipping directly from the Douro Valley. Although a young company, the name Blackett is a revival of the name of the firm established by George Blackett, a Leeds based wine merchant who became a significant shipper in the 19th century.
Production is based on wines coming from Quinta da Brunheda in the Douro Superior and from Quinta da Mata de Cima – one of the vineyards in the first mapping of the demarcated zone in 1756 – in the Cima Corgo sub-region. Blackett’s growing reputation is based on its aged white and tawny Ports, but the company also produces ruby, LBV and vintage Ports.
This final blend sample of the 80 Year Old Tawny is an astonishing dark chestnut brown colour with a dark centre. Smooth and rich on the palette with tannins still sitting in the crepe Suzette, orange and muscvado sugar. Bright acidity keeps the flavours focused, balancing the sticky, treacle and citrus acidity finish. Really long and bitter-sweet. This is a Port which is rich and delicious. 95/100.
Top 2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
- Alex Bridgeman
- Croft 1945
- Posts: 16568
- Joined: 12:41 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Berkshire, UK
Re: 2026: Very Very Old and 80 Year Old Ports at the bft
Quinta da Devesa
Quinta da Devesa features on the 1844 map of the valley drawn by Barão Forrester. The Quinta is located high on the hilltops above Peso da Régua in the Cima Corgo sub-region of the Douro Valley and has been in the current owner's family since 1941. As was normal at that time, the family were grape farmers as well as wine makers, selling the wines and later the grapes to the bigger producers based in Vila Nova de Gaia. However, the family had the foresight to keep back some of the wines they made, both white and tawny, slumbering peacefully in large wooden casks in the cellars under the house at the top of the hills overlooking the Douro. The white Ports were easy to keep back as there was little interest in them from the producers, so the whites were treated as the family’s house Port — drunk at family meals and shared with visitors. The tawnies were more of a challenge to keep as the producers were keen to buy these (both as young vintage wines but also later when they had become aged tawnies), but José Fortunato was also determined to keep back some of the best Ports from the best years. It is this library of family wines that the consultant winemaker, Luís Rodrigues, has been able to use to produce the two blends presented at the bft.
Quinta da Devesa Very Very Old Tawny, 80th Anniversary
The final blend from a 75cl bottle filled in 2025. A glorious wine, rich and full of flavour yet without sacrificing any of the balance. Incredibly persistent on the palate with fabulous sweetness and a delicious slightly bitter kumquat to offset the sweet citrus peel. Simply divine. 97/100.
Quinta da Devesa Very Very Old White, 80th Anniversary
Both the VVO Tawny and the VVO white were the final blend of these wines, bottled in 75cl in 2025. When Port matures in wood for the best part of a century, the characters of the red and the white grapes start to become very similar. This VVO white has a sweet orange syrup on the palate. The wine carries itself with a lovely elegance, with a sweet white peach seasoned with some spectacular bitter citrus. This is such a lovely wine which can be sipped and savoured for hours. 96/100.
Quinta da Devesa features on the 1844 map of the valley drawn by Barão Forrester. The Quinta is located high on the hilltops above Peso da Régua in the Cima Corgo sub-region of the Douro Valley and has been in the current owner's family since 1941. As was normal at that time, the family were grape farmers as well as wine makers, selling the wines and later the grapes to the bigger producers based in Vila Nova de Gaia. However, the family had the foresight to keep back some of the wines they made, both white and tawny, slumbering peacefully in large wooden casks in the cellars under the house at the top of the hills overlooking the Douro. The white Ports were easy to keep back as there was little interest in them from the producers, so the whites were treated as the family’s house Port — drunk at family meals and shared with visitors. The tawnies were more of a challenge to keep as the producers were keen to buy these (both as young vintage wines but also later when they had become aged tawnies), but José Fortunato was also determined to keep back some of the best Ports from the best years. It is this library of family wines that the consultant winemaker, Luís Rodrigues, has been able to use to produce the two blends presented at the bft.
Quinta da Devesa Very Very Old Tawny, 80th Anniversary
The final blend from a 75cl bottle filled in 2025. A glorious wine, rich and full of flavour yet without sacrificing any of the balance. Incredibly persistent on the palate with fabulous sweetness and a delicious slightly bitter kumquat to offset the sweet citrus peel. Simply divine. 97/100.
Quinta da Devesa Very Very Old White, 80th Anniversary
Both the VVO Tawny and the VVO white were the final blend of these wines, bottled in 75cl in 2025. When Port matures in wood for the best part of a century, the characters of the red and the white grapes start to become very similar. This VVO white has a sweet orange syrup on the palate. The wine carries itself with a lovely elegance, with a sweet white peach seasoned with some spectacular bitter citrus. This is such a lovely wine which can be sipped and savoured for hours. 96/100.
Top 2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
- Alex Bridgeman
- Croft 1945
- Posts: 16568
- Joined: 12:41 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Berkshire, UK
Re: 2026: Very Very Old and 80 Year Old Ports at the bft
DR from Agri-Roncão
Named DR after Domingos Ribeiro, who started the company in 2001 after purchasing Quinta da Levandeira do Roncão which lies in the Cima Corgo, lying at altitudes of 500-600m on the north bank of the Douro River. The vineyard is known to date back to at least the middle of the 1800s from the presence of morótorios, which show the vineyard was productive in the years before phylloxera. The estate was partially abandoned before 2001, when the Ribeiro family began a 4 year project to bring the estate back to its former glory. Despite the company’s youth, the family have access to some amazing old wines and it is these that the wine-maker, Luís Rodrigues, has been able to use to create the new 80 Year Old Tawny blend and the limited edition VVO White “90th anniversary” edition.
DR 80 Year Old Tawny
A new blend released in 50cl bottles in January 2026, this was the first time the wine was shown to the UK market. DR does not currently have a UK agent but the wines are available directly from the winery by mail order. Amber in colour with a delicious freshness on the nose. Astonishing in its intensity on the nose, so complex even before the first sip is taken. Initially, this wine has a lovely delicacy on the palate with a fabulous, intense lime oil finish. That delicacy so misleading, this wine really packs a punch of such intensity, yet does so without going overboard on its acidity. What a fabulous, top-notch wine. 97/100.
DR Very Very Old White, 90th Anniversary Edition
A very limited edition of only 60 50cl bottles, released in 2025. The wine had an average age of around 90 years when it was blended and bottled. Amber coloured with just a slight tint of rose, which made the wine look like it was a bowl of rose gold. Such a powerful nose! So full of fragrant dried lemon peel. Sweet yet beautifully balanced on the palate with an intensity of flavour that just has to be experienced to be believed, like liquidised dried apricots. Stunning. The aftertaste is even bigger than the palate. Thick, rich and sweet fruit all over the finish. Port cannot get much better than this. 98/100.
Named DR after Domingos Ribeiro, who started the company in 2001 after purchasing Quinta da Levandeira do Roncão which lies in the Cima Corgo, lying at altitudes of 500-600m on the north bank of the Douro River. The vineyard is known to date back to at least the middle of the 1800s from the presence of morótorios, which show the vineyard was productive in the years before phylloxera. The estate was partially abandoned before 2001, when the Ribeiro family began a 4 year project to bring the estate back to its former glory. Despite the company’s youth, the family have access to some amazing old wines and it is these that the wine-maker, Luís Rodrigues, has been able to use to create the new 80 Year Old Tawny blend and the limited edition VVO White “90th anniversary” edition.
DR 80 Year Old Tawny
A new blend released in 50cl bottles in January 2026, this was the first time the wine was shown to the UK market. DR does not currently have a UK agent but the wines are available directly from the winery by mail order. Amber in colour with a delicious freshness on the nose. Astonishing in its intensity on the nose, so complex even before the first sip is taken. Initially, this wine has a lovely delicacy on the palate with a fabulous, intense lime oil finish. That delicacy so misleading, this wine really packs a punch of such intensity, yet does so without going overboard on its acidity. What a fabulous, top-notch wine. 97/100.
DR Very Very Old White, 90th Anniversary Edition
A very limited edition of only 60 50cl bottles, released in 2025. The wine had an average age of around 90 years when it was blended and bottled. Amber coloured with just a slight tint of rose, which made the wine look like it was a bowl of rose gold. Such a powerful nose! So full of fragrant dried lemon peel. Sweet yet beautifully balanced on the palate with an intensity of flavour that just has to be experienced to be believed, like liquidised dried apricots. Stunning. The aftertaste is even bigger than the palate. Thick, rich and sweet fruit all over the finish. Port cannot get much better than this. 98/100.
Top 2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026