I’m a great fan of Borges 15 year old series.
Last month opened a 1850 Joao Lomelino Boal. Pretty good.
Will be visiting the island again later this year.
I own exactly one bottle of Madeira, purchased when I was in Portugal a couple years ago and tasted through some and enjoyed it, but had no reference point for what I was doing. There were several in the gift / wine shop where I was staying so picked up one for my wife’s birth year. It’s 1979 Blandy’s Madeira Verdelho. I know next to nothing about Madeira! Any advice on this bottle? Food pairings, serving temp, decant, etc etc??
I own exactly one bottle of Madeira, purchased when I was in Portugal a couple years ago and tasted through some and enjoyed it, but had no reference point for what I was doing. There were several in the gift / wine shop where I was staying so picked up one for my wife’s birth year. It’s 1979 Blandy’s Madeira Verdelho. I know next to nothing about Madeira! Any advice on this bottle? Food pairings, serving temp, decant, etc etc??
Medium dry. Blandy’s is a rich style, but it’ll still have very high acidity. Would decant a day before, a week before wouldn’t hurt. I like mine the same temperature as red wine. Fabulous with sushi and even fried chicken! But by itself with some softer cheese is fine as well. Remember the high acidity.
Verdelho is the best grape … Sercial is more acid. Boal and Malmsay sweeter (and often less complex).
This Blandy’s 1979 should be interesting … Semi sweet rancio with a hint of sugar and specific acidity (lime). Complexity due to time …
No decanting. 16°. see what happens when the wine gets hotter. And you can keep in for days after opening.
Very plastic : smoked salmon, game, cheese, desserts … whatever you like …
Tell us.
Ooh ooh… an excellent wine. I brought a bottle to a friend’s 40th, and I think we had it with ibeirico ham, marcona almonds and idiazabal cheese - perfect. It may have also paired deliciously with a buttercream frosted strawberry unicorn birthday cake as well. I would open it up a week in advance to air out the funk. You can double decant, but you don’t need to - it’s already fully oxidized.
My tasting note from a year ago:
1979 Blandy’s Madeira Verdelho- Portugal, Madeira (1/20/2019)
Very very fine. A bit of acetone on the nose, but not too bothersome alongside the intense dried flowers and dried stone fruit. A steel spine of acidity that forms the backbone of this wine. Brilliant focus and concentration, moreso than the ‘77 Terrentez, perhaps a tiny bit sweeter, but completely in balance. Dried strawberry, dried nectarine, dried herbs, golden raisins, dusty rocks. Layers on the reveal and a solid minute plus finish. Still young and lots of upside. 95+ (95 pts.)
I’m also a big fan of Madeira, and old enough to have seen an explosion in price. However, IMHO vintage Madeira is still a relative bargain given the age, the fact that provenance is unimportant, and that the bottle can be consumed for weeks/months/years after opening rather than a single night’s indulgence.
In general I prefer D’Oliveira to Barbeito.
However, a good value in high quality Madeira is Rare Wine Co’s Thomas Jefferson, which I believe is made by Barbeito. It’s harder to find than others in the Rare Wine series. but I think a big step up.
Madeira revels in air. Many producers will repeatedly decant wines that have been in glass for a long time (decades) to refresh them. The 79 hasn’t been in glass that long, but oxygen will certainly not hurt.
The rule of thumb I know and follow is a day in the decanter for every decade in glass. That last part is key, as Eric points out as well - not from the vintage date, from the date it was removed from cask.
I can’t keep Madeira in my cellar. I know it will keep once opened, but it is much safer in my stomach. I am a Terrantez fan, but like all of the styles at different times. I’ve had some great ancient wines from Madeira and wince at current pricing, but these are special wines.
Wasn’t a huge Madeira fan until this fall when I visited the island and stayed at Faja Dos Padres on a recommendation from this board, it’s a slippery slope given the broad availability of older vintages.