No problem. If you hear anything do post it here, I would be most grateful.JB vintage wrote:Great advice! Thank you.
Cockburn 1977
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Re: Cockburn 1977
Re: Cockburn 1977
The UK allocations of Cockburn 77 will finally be released to the trade 9th November along with the Malvedos 65.
I have asked fells for a press release.
I have asked fells for a press release.
Re: Cockburn 1977
A little more info - Quantities are tiny - The RSP for Ck77 is £75 (I assume that this is VAT inclusive).forest26 wrote:The UK allocations of Cockburn 77 will finally be released to the trade 9th November along with the Malvedos 65.
I have asked fells for a press release.
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Re: Cockburn 1977
I have these two images from Cockburn 77.
The "official" one is from the factory house:
and the one, where Miguel gave us a case after the tasting in 08:
I liked these labels better.
Axel
The "official" one is from the factory house:
and the one, where Miguel gave us a case after the tasting in 08:
I liked these labels better.
Axel
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Re: Cockburn 1977
As far as I understand the Cockburn 77 has been released but I cannot find it for sale anywhere. Does anyone know where it is sold?
Re: Cockburn 1977
Very small allocations are likely to go through the wine merchants that normally sell SFE's new release VPs and are highly likely to be snapped up by the most regular customers of those wine merchants.JB vintage wrote:As far as I understand the Cockburn 77 has been released but I cannot find it for sale anywhere. Does anyone know where it is sold?
I wouldn't expect many of these to make it to a shelf or a generally available list.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
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Re: Cockburn 1977
I heard it would be so plentiful that they were going to run the fountains on it in Trafalgar Square.
The original labels are much nicer.
The original labels are much nicer.
Re: Cockburn 1977
Press release - for the CK77
1977 Vintage Port Bicentenary Limited Edition
Following the acquisition of Cockburn’s in 2006, the Symington family were surprised to find 116 cases of 1977 Vintage Port in a corner of the company’s cellars. Cockburn’s famously did not ‘declare’ a 1977 Vintage, although virtually every other Port house did so.
Cockburn’s had been under multinational ownership since 1962 and the head office strangely turned down the request of the company’s winemakers in Portugal to ‘declare’ the 1977 Vintage, apparently a vintage offer did not fit into the multinational’s global corporate plan, despite excellent weather conditions and the obvious quality of the wine. Fighting to keep the independent spirit of Cockburn’s alive, the winemakers in Portugal quietly ignored the head-office’s command and discretely bottled two barrels of this exceptional Vintage Port. The bottles were then hidden in a quiet corner of the vast Cockburn’s cellars in Vila Nova de Gaia, where they have remained undisturbed for 36 years.
When the Symingtons were preparing for the Cockburn’s bicentenary in 2015 it became clear that there could be no better way of celebrating this historic anniversary than by releasing this rare Vintage Port. Finally the covert plans of the Cockburn’s winemakers can see the light of day; each bottle of Cockburn’s 1977 Vintage Port reflects the independent and sometimes idiosyncratic spirit of this great Port house that never died under the long years of multinational ownership
The remaining 1,400 bottles of Cockburn’s 1977 Vintage Port will be available through fine wine merchants.
Vila Nova de Gaia, XX 2015
About Symington Family Estates
The Symingtons have been Port producers for five generations since 1882 but their involvement in Port dates back fourteen generations to 1652 through their great-grandmother Beatrice Leitão de Carvalhosa Atkinson. The family company is the leading quality Port producer with companies such as Graham’s, Cockburn’s, Dow’s and Warre’s as well as being the leading vineyard owner in the Douro Valley with 1 006 hectares (2 486 acres) of vines at 27 Quintas. Many of the region’s finest Quintas belong to the family. For more information on Symington Family Estates, visit http://www.symington.com and discover more on blog.grahams-port.com and http://www.facebook.com/grahams.port.wine
1977 Vintage Port Bicentenary Limited Edition
Following the acquisition of Cockburn’s in 2006, the Symington family were surprised to find 116 cases of 1977 Vintage Port in a corner of the company’s cellars. Cockburn’s famously did not ‘declare’ a 1977 Vintage, although virtually every other Port house did so.
Cockburn’s had been under multinational ownership since 1962 and the head office strangely turned down the request of the company’s winemakers in Portugal to ‘declare’ the 1977 Vintage, apparently a vintage offer did not fit into the multinational’s global corporate plan, despite excellent weather conditions and the obvious quality of the wine. Fighting to keep the independent spirit of Cockburn’s alive, the winemakers in Portugal quietly ignored the head-office’s command and discretely bottled two barrels of this exceptional Vintage Port. The bottles were then hidden in a quiet corner of the vast Cockburn’s cellars in Vila Nova de Gaia, where they have remained undisturbed for 36 years.
When the Symingtons were preparing for the Cockburn’s bicentenary in 2015 it became clear that there could be no better way of celebrating this historic anniversary than by releasing this rare Vintage Port. Finally the covert plans of the Cockburn’s winemakers can see the light of day; each bottle of Cockburn’s 1977 Vintage Port reflects the independent and sometimes idiosyncratic spirit of this great Port house that never died under the long years of multinational ownership
The remaining 1,400 bottles of Cockburn’s 1977 Vintage Port will be available through fine wine merchants.
Vila Nova de Gaia, XX 2015
About Symington Family Estates
The Symingtons have been Port producers for five generations since 1882 but their involvement in Port dates back fourteen generations to 1652 through their great-grandmother Beatrice Leitão de Carvalhosa Atkinson. The family company is the leading quality Port producer with companies such as Graham’s, Cockburn’s, Dow’s and Warre’s as well as being the leading vineyard owner in the Douro Valley with 1 006 hectares (2 486 acres) of vines at 27 Quintas. Many of the region’s finest Quintas belong to the family. For more information on Symington Family Estates, visit http://www.symington.com and discover more on blog.grahams-port.com and http://www.facebook.com/grahams.port.wine
Re: Cockburn 1977
Nice! I would be keen on acquiring being a birth year and all that but looks like it may not be available to the likes of me.
Re: Cockburn 1977
Farr Vintners have 1 case on sale on their website - not for me, but I'm sure a fellow TPF member will jump in!
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- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
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Re: Cockburn 1977
Gone before my credit card was warmed up, did anyone see what price was quoted?SCP wrote:Farr Vintners have 1 case on sale on their website - not for me, but I'm sure a fellow TPF member will jump in!
Re: Cockburn 1977
670 Gbp for a case
Re: Cockburn 1977
I got qouted 1500$ for a 12pack
Disclosure: Distributor of Quevedo wines and Quinta do Gomariz
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- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
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Re: Cockburn 1977
I have managed to get eight of these from here and there. I am not doing this from a sense of smugness (alright, not just smugness), but those who have expressed an interest should be pestering their merchants, trawling the web, or weeping at their lack of foresight.
Re: Cockburn 1977
i understand the rarity
but is there really a point to stock up on this port, from the notes i've read on here, that is at best possibly mediocre?
It'd be like buying a 84' Domaine d Romanee Conti just to say you have it but not really enjoy drinking it.
but is there really a point to stock up on this port, from the notes i've read on here, that is at best possibly mediocre?
It'd be like buying a 84' Domaine d Romanee Conti just to say you have it but not really enjoy drinking it.
Disclosure: Distributor of Quevedo wines and Quinta do Gomariz
Re: Cockburn 1977
Mediocre?g-man wrote:but is there really a point to stock up on this port, from the notes i've read on here, that is at best possibly mediocre?
Your point system must be very different than mine. I have it at excellent, which is a good 10-15 points higher than mediocre.
Glenn Elliott
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Re: Cockburn 1977
Well, yes, and no.g-man wrote:i understand the rarity
but is there really a point to stock up on this port, from the notes i've read on here, that is at best possibly mediocre?
It'd be like buying a 84' Domaine d Romanee Conti just to say you have it but not really enjoy drinking it.
I agree that it is a bit overpriced, you could buy the 1970 Cockburn for the same price, but to compare it with the 84 Romanee Conti is a little excitable. I looked it up and FRW have it for £7500 a bottle, a sum which would enable you to buy about a quarter of the allocation of the Cockburn sent to the UK (I think).
But I happen to like Cockburn wines, I think they are underrated for no readily apparent reason. Now I come to think of it the reason is clear; paler, browner wines always lose out to darker fruitier ones. But I am happy to pay a bit of a premium for something from a reliable source. You mention the rarity, which is certainly a factor. But the killer punch for me is not rarity, it is the story. It is the port that never was.
Re: Cockburn 1977
i'm only reading the notes, not the points.Glenn E. wrote:Mediocre?g-man wrote:but is there really a point to stock up on this port, from the notes i've read on here, that is at best possibly mediocre?
Your point system must be very different than mine. I have it at excellent, which is a good 10-15 points higher than mediocre.
descriptions as LGTrotter mentions, doesnt sound that appealing for the value.
I used the drc reference as a drastic point to say that the wine shoudln't be even remotely worth that much, and certainly wouldn't drink like it was worth that much, but that it fetches the prices due to the rarity.
In terms of rare ports, I dont recall many ports that would fit into the category of a cockburn 77, where it wasn't officially declared, and the house decided to reissue a non declaration so it's a bit of special category on its own.
But I buy my port to drink, I paid 62$ for my cockburn 70. I have trouble pulling the trigger on a 130$ cockburn 77'. Is the juice better or am i just looking at the c77 as a collectors item.
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- Alex Bridgeman
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Re: Cockburn 1977
For me it's a bit of both. It's certainly not the greatest port ever, but it is a decent drop of juice - probably on a par with the Cockburn 1970.g-man wrote:But I buy my port to drink, I paid 62$ for my cockburn 70. I have trouble pulling the trigger on a 130$ cockburn 77'. Is the juice better or am i just looking at the c77 as a collectors item.
I'm happy to buy one, maybe two, bottles at roughly twice the cost of the Cockburn 1970 mostly because I love the back story and when I sit down to sip my way through a bottle I will be thinking of Jim Read (I think he was the one in charge at the time) who just thought "To hell with those guys in head office, what do they know about making port? I'm going to make a 1977 anyway." Call my willingness to spend the extra money belated support for the rebel cause.
But I do agree with Jeff. If you look at this purely from a QPR point of view you wouldn't buy this port. The backstory and romance associated with the wine comes at quite a price.
Top Ports in 2023: Taylor 1896 Colheita, b. 2021. A perfect Port.
2024: Niepoort 1900 Colheita, b.1971. A near perfect Port.
2024: Niepoort 1900 Colheita, b.1971. A near perfect Port.
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Re: Cockburn 1977
G-man; all you say is true, I submit. And that is a very good price on the Cockburn 70.
Perhaps you should look at the 77 as an overpriced punt, just to try. You could wait a bit, I doubt that the price will fall given how little there is, but you never know. I also doubt it will go up much either.
Perhaps you should look at the 77 as an overpriced punt, just to try. You could wait a bit, I doubt that the price will fall given how little there is, but you never know. I also doubt it will go up much either.
Re: Cockburn 1977
That is true of the majority of mature vintage port on the secondary market, as evidenced by the huge amount of average or over-the-hill juice we find when we do very large horizontal tastings. As people who buy lots of different ports for a variety of reasons I don't think QPR is the most appropriate measure for purchases like this otherwise we would all have cellars full of Fonseca 1985 and almost nothing else.AHB wrote:If you look at this purely from a QPR point of view you wouldn't buy this port.
I think this Port is very good. I have tasted it four times and never been disappointed. The price is equivalent to Ck70 in the UK and is about one third or less than the price of most of the other special releases of ex-cellers VP from the Symingtons in the past few years.
It feels like good value to me and I am glad I managed to secure some and help others do the same.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
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Re: Cockburn 1977
A telling point.DRT wrote: I don't think QPR is the most appropriate measure for purchases like this otherwise we would all have cellars full of Fonseca 1985 and almost nothing else.
This also is true, I have been moved to laughter rather than reaching for my wallet by most of the mature treasures which have been marketed recently. Despite my acknowledgement of g-man's arguments I am glad I have some and would have certainly bought a dozen if they had been offered at the price in the UK.DRT wrote:The price is equivalent to Ck70 in the UK and is about one third or less than the price of most of the other special releases of ex-cellers VP from the Symingtons in the past few years.
Re: Cockburn 1977
4 cases in the cellar and countingLGTrotter wrote:A telling point.DRT wrote: I don't think QPR is the most appropriate measure for purchases like this otherwise we would all have cellars full of Fonseca 1985 and almost nothing else.
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- Alex Bridgeman
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Re: Cockburn 1977
There was some speculation in the UK that the Cockburn 1977 vintage port had been rebottled prior to despatch. Having drunk the 1977 before the recently release and having seen one of the new release bottles last week, I can confirm that the juice is in the original bottle. The bottles have clearly been cleaned, recapsuled, selloed and relabelled, and I suspect recorked, but the bottles are the original late 1970s bottles.
Top Ports in 2023: Taylor 1896 Colheita, b. 2021. A perfect Port.
2024: Niepoort 1900 Colheita, b.1971. A near perfect Port.
2024: Niepoort 1900 Colheita, b.1971. A near perfect Port.