40 Year Old Tawny
Douro, Portugal
Non-Vintage
RP
WnS
WE
WS
Tasting Notes
The Quinta Do Vallado 40 year-old Tawny has complex aromas of tobacco and dried fruit. This Port has excellent structure with a very concentrated palate with of English fruit cake, fig and dried fruits and a long and lingering finish.
Vineyards
The grapes come from Estate vineyards.
Winemaking
After hand-picking, destemming and crushing, sugar is added and the resulting must is fermented in very old 600 liter oak casks and other oak vats.
Technical Information
- Vintage:
- Non-Vintage
- Alcohol:
- 19.5%
- Region:
- Douro
- RS:
- 196G/L
- Varietals:
- Blend of Old Vines Tinto Roriz, Tinta Amarela, Tinta Fraca and others
- PH:
- 3.5
- TA:
- 6.97G/L
Accolades
Robert Parker's Wine Advocate
February 2015
The 40-Year-Old Tawny was aged in very old oak 600-liter casks and old oak vats. It is an old-vines field blend with residual sugar of 196 grams per liter. Even more so than its 20-year sibling reviewed this issue, its sugary with an endless finish. It adds a layer or two of depth to the 20, but it is so sexy and so rich that it seems a bit less complex, which is not always the way this works in comparing 20s and 40s. As it airs out and that first rush blows off, though, you do begin to get the complexity this has in spades. It is more piercing and gripping. You eventually taste the treacle and concentrated molasses underneath. You realize how fine it is when you notice that the powerful and sugary finish never seems to end.
Wine & Spirits
December 2019
There’s beauty in this wine’s alcohol, a fiery warmth that has captured the scents of roses and the soft luxury of caramel cream. While the fruit has matured into scents of leather and rooty notes of radish or carrot, it’s no longer central to the wine’s message, which is focused instead on brisk schist tension, an ineffable mineral freshness that’s not drawn toward earthiness but open to the sky. Drink this on a cool afternoon, after a long, leisurely lunch, especially if you happen to be in the Douro.
Wine Enthusiast
January 2015
It's old-gold color says it all. This luscious, liquorous wine has a tangy edge to go alongside the acidity, the raisin fruits and flavors of long wood aging. It's not so much fresh as still very alive and poised. Drink now.
Wine Spectator
December 2018
A flash of cherry gives way quickly to date, green tea, ginger and sandalwood notes, with an echo of persimmon through the finish. This has a rounded, viscous feel but manages to stay lithe and alluring as the flavors play out.
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