Falstaff Magazine (International)

PORT: A PRIMER

The region, the grapes, the styles.

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The area of Port wine production has been demarcated since 1756 and extends across 250,000ha/617,800 acres of which about 44,000ha/180,730 acres are under vine. It is located in the Douro Valley in Portugal’s north and divided into three areas: Lower Corgo, Upper

Corgo and Upper Douro.

The vineyards are on the steep schist and slate slopes that seam the river Douro and are often terraced by drystone walls. The difference­s in altitude, soil and aspect account for numerous stylistic difference­s between the different

quintas. Since the area is inland, the seasons are marked, and an old local saying describes the climate as “nine months of winter and three months of hell” illustrati­ng the infernal inland

heat of summer.

Port is made from local grape varieties that can thrive in these harsh and often extreme

conditions. The most commonly used are Touriga Nacional, Touriga Franca, Tinta Roriz (aka Tempranill­o), Tinta Cão and Tinta Barroca. The grapes are harvested and foot-trodden in granite troughs called lagares (even though today mechanical extraction with robotic “feet” is widely used). This ensures the rapid extraction of colour and tannins from the grape skins.

The juice then starts fermenting but before the yeasts can complete the fermentati­on and consume all the grape sugars, the fermenting juice is fortified with 77% ABV grape spirit. This kills the yeasts, arrests fermentati­on and leaves a wine with about 20% ABV and somewhere between 90-110g/l of residual sugar. It is the quality of the wine and the style of ageing that

then determines the Port style.

RUBY PORT

Entry-level Ports, filtered and bottled after 2-3 years of maturation. Full of fruit flavours and ideal for mixing in long drinks and cocktails.

Made for immediate consumptio­n.

LBV OR LATE BOTTLED VINTAGE

Wines blended from the same vintage, filtered and bottled after 3-6 years of maturation. Ideal for getting to know Port. Made for immediate

consumptio­n.

VINTAGE PORT

Port wines from the best years only, declared as a vintage. Bottled unfiltered after 2-3 years in barrel, requiring at least 20 years of bottle age but 40 or 50 is even better. Since Vintage Ports throw a heavy deposit, they must be decanted.

TAWNY PORT

After an initial maturation in large barrels for 2-3 years, these Ports are transferre­d to 550-litre barrels called pipas where they continue ageing oxidativel­y. Having been fortified, the wines can withstand this and develop complex aromas. Simple Tawny Port gives an idea of style, but most Tawnies are sold with an age declaratio­n of 10, 20, 30 or 40 years, the older blends gaining superb complexity, spice and aroma.

COLHEITA

These are vintage-dated Tawny Ports, i.e. woodaged Ports from a single vintage. They need to spend at least seven years in barrel before being bottled. Often they are only bottled after many

years of ageing and represent great value.

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