
Is a special place. The reasons are multitude but the point is that its individual members, with perspectives and preferences as varied as their personalities, have continuously helped me think in new ways about a subject on which I have already invested so much.
You could look at 1,000 bottles of vintage port and be astounded by the apparent variety (vintage, shipper, vineyard, bottler, etc.) One detail that will be nearly identical (beyond Ivdp) will be an alcohol statement of 20%. Almost always 20. I don’t think I’ve ever seen 18 or 22. Whereas table wine can vary considerably in alcohol content (from literally zero to pushing 16pct), port at least in this respect, is consistent.
So, when we observe “excessive” alcohol (and before jdaw makes a comment doubting the very existence of such a concept...), what are we talking about?
I would say this happens when the fruit has faded and whatever else the wine may have had going for it has not been enough to overcome the ‘burden’ of a bottle comprised ~25pct of relatively inexpensive (and typically foreign) spirit. I do see it as a trouble, and I liken it to burgundy, on the other side of the alcohol and intensity spectrum. Burgundy is finesse and depth without weight. If you have no substance and no weight, however, are you anything at all? That’s why I rarely (never) drink low end burgundy. There is no low end champagne by definition, but usually I’d be open minded when it comes to slumming. Not with burgundy, not with port, and couldn’t with champagne if I tried. What’s a poor boy to do?
Anyway, back to port, to misquote (though only slightly) Lou Brown, “I like spirit in a player!” Wine is a living breathing thing. It should have a pulse. It should kick. But it should not kick like Elaine Benes.
Penny for your thoughts?
If you celebrate holidays this time of year I hope that you have been able to do so safely and soundly in the arms of those you love. And if you pop a bottle, share! I’m bringing 1985 Figeac to dinner... fingers crossed.