I'll extend that into a more general question: what do you all use as a guideline for maturity in halves, all other things being equal? Half the time - 11.5 years..? Or more, or less, and why?[url=http://www.theportforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=9458]Here[/url], in Phil's post about GM and WC halves, I wrote:I wonder what you'd think about Warre 00 halves that are also in storage? Not sure how long they should be left. I was told when purchasing that they were 'drinking beautifully now'.
General query on maturity in half bottles
- djewesbury
- Graham’s 1970
- Posts: 8166
- Joined: 19:01 Mon 31 Dec 2012
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
General query on maturity in half bottles
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
It's good that you've widened the scope of the question. I personaly would welcome a guideline, too. But I'm afraid that it all depends on individual ports with their individual vintages (like so many things in life, there will probably be no easy answer).
The Eleventh Commandment: Thou shalt know thy Port
-
- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
- Posts: 3707
- Joined: 16:45 Fri 19 Oct 2012
- Location: Somerset, UK
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
I have never had much luck with half bottles. I say luck because I have tended to buy half bottles on the spur of the moment and at retail. There is a gamble on any half bottle of wine in a shop, I am not sure if they are treated less kindly, hang about for longer or are more susceptible to the thousand natural shocks that flesh is heir to. But it seems to me they age disproportionately quickly, I avoid half bottles of port because of this. It is hard to pin down a time limit on them and I am sure that there will be many examples drawn from experience to refute my guess but I would say not more than 25 years. In other words they are on their way out when standard bottles are getting going.
I also admit that I avoid half bottles because they seem a bit meagre.
I also admit that I avoid half bottles because they seem a bit meagre.
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
If we take 750ml bottle maturity as a baseline I think 375ml bottle maturity almost exactly follows an exponential curve.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
In which case, what about the maturity of magnums or double magnums? Would these be twice the maturity of a regular bottle? The magnums I have had of older ports have not drank that much differently than regular bottles (next Christmas, by way of experiment, I will give a try at a 77 Graham magnum versus bottle - although there are certainly some questions as to quality of Graham 1977).
If there is a difference between the maturity of a half and full bottle, what would cause this, and would this not apply to larger formats?
If there is a difference between the maturity of a half and full bottle, what would cause this, and would this not apply to larger formats?
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
These things do not happen in straight lines and bottle variation blurs the picture, but I have no doubt whatsoever that small bottles age faster than large bottles. I suspect it has something to do with the ratio of oxygen to wine in the bottle, small bottles having a greater proportion of oxygen to wine than larger bottles. The same principle is at work in wooden casks, which is why they are topped-up to avoid the wine oxidising too quickly.TLW wrote:In which case, what about the maturity of magnums or double magnums? Would these be twice the maturity of a regular bottle?
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
That seems very plausible. But how do you know that the problem isn’t with ill-fitting corks?DRT wrote:I suspect it has something to do with the ratio of oxygen to wine in the bottle, small bottles having a greater proportion of oxygen to wine than larger bottles.
Except, of course, those destined not to be drunk until very old.DRT wrote:The same principle is at work in wooden casks, which is why they are topped-up to avoid the wine oxidising too quickly.
- djewesbury
- Graham’s 1970
- Posts: 8166
- Joined: 19:01 Mon 31 Dec 2012
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Did I hear the word 'exponential'?
I wonder if halves mature quicker but then follow a different pattern / curve? I mean, why should the plateau or secondary-tertiary transition follow the same proportion as the initial maturation? We need to do a long trial with small, standard and large formats. This should keep us busy into old age.
I wonder if halves mature quicker but then follow a different pattern / curve? I mean, why should the plateau or secondary-tertiary transition follow the same proportion as the initial maturation? We need to do a long trial with small, standard and large formats. This should keep us busy into old age.
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
-
- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
- Posts: 3708
- Joined: 13:22 Wed 15 Dec 2010
- Location: Near Cambridge, UK
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Yes, but you missed that it was preceded by "almost exactly". I almost replied "+1.".djewesbury wrote:Did I hear the word 'exponential'?
- djewesbury
- Graham’s 1970
- Posts: 8166
- Joined: 19:01 Mon 31 Dec 2012
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
+2PhilW wrote:Yes, but you missed that it was preceded by "almost exactly". I almost replied "+1.".djewesbury wrote:Did I hear the word 'exponential'?
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
I remember from somewhere that surfaces act as sites for molecules to interact, generally increasing rates of reaction. Surfaces include glass, cork and suspended/deposited particles. Smaller bottles have a higher ratio of glass to liquid. Perhaps this is also a factor?
- djewesbury
- Graham’s 1970
- Posts: 8166
- Joined: 19:01 Mon 31 Dec 2012
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
This makes sense; in which case there's no reason why a half bottle would mature twice as fast as a standard bottle. In fact the acceleration could be much quicker; can anyone here work out the internal surface area of the normal half and standard bottles and this calculate the ratio of the liquid to the glass? Thanks.
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
If we can approximate the surface area of the liquid to that of a cylinder (which we can only do if the bottle is stored upright) then the surface area calculation is:-
Area=2πrh+2π r^2
Where r is the radius (to internal wall) of the cylinder and h is the height (of the liquid).
Area=2πrh+2π r^2
Where r is the radius (to internal wall) of the cylinder and h is the height (of the liquid).
- djewesbury
- Graham’s 1970
- Posts: 8166
- Joined: 19:01 Mon 31 Dec 2012
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Yes, go on… Do you need me to measure a bottle??JWEW wrote:If we can approximate the surface area of the liquid to that of a cylinder (which we can only do if the bottle is stored upright) then the surface area calculation is:-
Area=2πrh+2π r^2
Where r is the radius (to internal wall) of the cylinder and h is the height (of the liquid).

Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
djewesbury wrote:Yes, go on… Do you need me to measure a bottle??JWEW wrote:If we can approximate the surface area of the liquid to that of a cylinder (which we can only do if the bottle is stored upright) then the surface area calculation is:-
Area=2πrh+2π r^2
Where r is the radius (to internal wall) of the cylinder and h is the height (of the liquid).
If you wish. I have no bottles of any format handy to measure, nor a tape measure to use.
- djewesbury
- Graham’s 1970
- Posts: 8166
- Joined: 19:01 Mon 31 Dec 2012
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Measurements (appx) of the internal, cylindrical part of the bottle:
standard: 65 x 195 mm
half: 55 x 145 mm
internal area of standard bottle = 46456 mm2
internal area of half bottle = 17279 mm2
is that right?
now what?
standard: 65 x 195 mm
half: 55 x 145 mm
internal area of standard bottle = 46456 mm2
internal area of half bottle = 17279 mm2
is that right?
now what?
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Don't think that's correct.djewesbury wrote:Measurements (appx) of the internal, cylindrical part of the bottle:
standard: 65 x 195 mm
half: 55 x 145 mm
internal area of standard bottle = 46456 mm2
internal area of half bottle = 17279 mm2
is that right?
now what?
For a radius of 65mm and height 195mm I get area= 106185 mm^2
and for radius of 55mm, height 145mm I get an area of 69115mm^2
The volume of the cylinder is πr2h so the volume of the above cylinders will be
2588280 mm^3 and 1377981mm^3
So the surface are to volume ratio for the larger bottle would be 106185/2588280 = 0.041025
and for the smaller is 69115/1377981 = 0.050157
meaning that the smaller bottle has 122% [(0.050157/ 0.041025) *100] higher SA/V ratio than the larger bottle.
I hereby issue a disclaimer absolving myself of all blame in case the above calculation turns our to be rubbish.
- djewesbury
- Graham’s 1970
- Posts: 8166
- Joined: 19:01 Mon 31 Dec 2012
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
That seems a very small difference. Is that really sufficient to speed up the development so markedly? Do smaller volumes of liquid do something else differently, in comparison to larger ones?
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Am thinking surfaces only a factor. I agree that oxygen concentrations could be the major influence. Suspect it is complicated. If surfaces play a part, then quantity and type of crust and suspended material is also a factor as these would also be sites for reactions.DRT wrote:I suspect it has something to do with the ratio of oxygen to wine in the bottle, small bottles having a greater proportion of oxygen to wine than larger bottles. The same principle is at work in wooden casks, which is why they are topped-up to avoid the wine oxidising too quickly.
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
The "cork ratio" should be double, though, and that's where the oxygen comes from. (Halves and 750s use the same corks, but surprise! a 750 contains twice as much liquid as a half.)DaveRL wrote:Am thinking surfaces only a factor. I agree that oxygen concentrations could be the major influence. Suspect it is complicated. If surfaces play a part, then quantity and type of crust and suspended material is also a factor as these would also be sites for reactions.DRT wrote:I suspect it has something to do with the ratio of oxygen to wine in the bottle, small bottles having a greater proportion of oxygen to wine than larger bottles. The same principle is at work in wooden casks, which is why they are topped-up to avoid the wine oxidising too quickly.
Double the oxygen, 120% of the surface area, who knows what other factors... there are plenty of potential factors that could explain it. I, personally, would not have said that a 375 ages twice as fast as a 750. That just hasn't been my experience. But they definitely age faster.
Glenn Elliott
- differentdave
- Fonseca LBV
- Posts: 143
- Joined: 17:38 Mon 25 Feb 2008
- Location: Long Island, New York
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
http://www.winespectator.com/blogs/show/id/49398
James laube from winespectator approaches this topic by tasting 18 year old wines from same producer from 5 different bottle sizes (Chateau St. Jean Cinq Cépages 1995 in five iterations: methuselah, jeroboam, magnum, standard and half-bottle.).
James laube from winespectator approaches this topic by tasting 18 year old wines from same producer from 5 different bottle sizes (Chateau St. Jean Cinq Cépages 1995 in five iterations: methuselah, jeroboam, magnum, standard and half-bottle.).
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
DaveRL wrote:I remember from somewhere that surfaces act as sites for molecules to interact, generally increasing rates of reaction. Surfaces include glass, cork and suspended/deposited particles. Smaller bottles have a higher ratio of glass to liquid. Perhaps this is also a factor?
Not sure any of that is relevant, or the subsequent calculations. While it is true to say that surfaces can act as sites for molecules to interact, that is only true if the molecules are of the type that do interact, I think. I'm fairly certain that port and glass do not cause any type of reaction.djewesbury wrote:This makes sense; in which case there's no reason why a half bottle would mature twice as fast as a standard bottle. In fact the acceleration could be much quicker; can anyone here work out the internal surface area of the normal half and standard bottles and this calculate the ratio of the liquid to the glass? Thanks.
I would think that amount of sediment plays a part in maturation, but that is likely to have significant variation between individual bottles and across shippers, which on average would not explain a generally observed trend that 375s mature more quickly than 750s.
Is there really any dispute that the mix of port to oxygen is the most likely and most significant driver of maturation level differences between 375s and 750s?
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
I say all the above, having not actually ever owned or opened a 375 of port. So I have never really examined the fill level on an 375 and what that means for the ratio of oxygen to port in that size of bottle. Is the volume not occupied by liquid in a 375 usually a good bit more than 50% of that in a 750 bottle? If not, then the oxygen/port ratio theory for maturation might be nonsense.
edit:
hence I now also understand Julian's query:
edit:
hence I now also understand Julian's query:
If the cork in a 375 neck is shorter, then could this result in greater leakage of some air into the bottle at a faster rate than with a 750? Or does this not happen? Lots of questions!jdaw1 wrote:That seems very plausible. But how do you know that the problem isn’t with ill-fitting corks?DRT wrote:I suspect it has something to do with the ratio of oxygen to wine in the bottle, small bottles having a greater proportion of oxygen to wine than larger bottles.
-
- Warre’s Traditional LBV
- Posts: 332
- Joined: 16:45 Mon 23 May 2011
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Why can't certain things be allowed to remain mysteries like how does the graphite get crammed into pencils or how are bucatini made?
It seems to me that even a perfect formula for half bottle maturation is still a less satisfactory method than that of pulling a cork on periodic sample bottles.
It seems to me that even a perfect formula for half bottle maturation is still a less satisfactory method than that of pulling a cork on periodic sample bottles.
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
I'm fairly certain glass (SiO2 etc) will have some weak ionic forces attracting some molecules in port encouraging mechanical catalysis of at least some reactions. Do decanters not stain red? It doesn't need to be a strong bond, or even for long, to decrease a degree of freedom and speed up a complicated reaction.flash_uk wrote:Not sure any of that is relevant, or the subsequent calculations. While it is true to say that surfaces can act as sites for molecules to interact, that is only true if the molecules are of the type that do interact, I think. I'm fairly certain that port and glass do not cause any type of reaction.
That was my question - is it an increase in oxygen concentrations, or an increase in the rates of reaction? Worth a thought.flash_uk wrote:Is there really any dispute that the mix of port to oxygen is the most likely and most significant driver of maturation level differences between 375s and 750s?
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
A fabulous boast.flash_uk wrote:I say all the above, having not actually ever owned or opened a 375 of port.
Calculation above is easy. Volume = v. Linear size of bottle ∝ v^⅓, and internal surface area ∝ v^⅔. So volume to surface area varies as v ÷ v^⅔, which is v^⅓. So a factor of 2 in volume changes the internal area/volume ratio by a factor of about 1.26. In other words, a 25.2YO full bottle would taste as a half bottle had 5.2 years before.
The observed effect is larger than that.
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Thank you for the calculations. Yes, significantly larger. Either not the complete answer (wasn't expected to be) or idea was a load of tosh.jdaw1 wrote:In other words, a 25.2YO full bottle would taste as a half bottle had 5.2 years before.
The observed effect is larger than that.

Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
+1Glenn E. wrote:I, personally, would not have said that a 375 ages twice as fast as a 750.
I think the gap will widen inconsistently more rapidly with age, which is why I correctly described it as almost exactly exponentially.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
From a man who commented within the past 48 hours that he started drinking Port 12 months ago?jdaw1 wrote:A fabulous boast.flash_uk wrote:I say all the above, having not actually ever owned or opened a 375 of port.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
- djewesbury
- Graham’s 1970
- Posts: 8166
- Joined: 19:01 Mon 31 Dec 2012
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Wonderful. Answers can be summarised as "we've no idea, and we can prove it".
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
-
- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
- Posts: 3707
- Joined: 16:45 Fri 19 Oct 2012
- Location: Somerset, UK
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
As you say:jdaw1 wrote:In other words, a 25.2YO full bottle would taste as a half bottle had 5.2 years before.
jdaw1 wrote:A fabulous boast.
-
- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
- Posts: 3708
- Joined: 13:22 Wed 15 Dec 2010
- Location: Near Cambridge, UK
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
For en upright bottle or half-bottle, unless it has leaked, surely the surface area will be the cross-section of the neck? Which makes use of a standard cylinder as an approximation for top surface area inaccurate by a significant factor.JWEW wrote:If we can approximate the surface area of the liquid to that of a cylinder (which we can only do if the bottle is stored upright) then ...
(a) If the exposed surface area were the only relevant factor, and the neck on a 375ml bottle is approximately the same size as that on a 750ml bottle, the the SA:VOL ratio for standing half bottles would be double that for standard bottles.
(b) Of course, most bottles would be lying down; I would need to take some measurements to estimate the air volume in order to determine the surface area on the lying bottle and hence ratio in different for half vs standard bottles for this.
(c) If the surface area itself is less relevant, and the primary issue were the volume of air in the bottle, then whether the bottle were lying or standing, it would be the volume of air present in neck, thus a similar amount for both bottle sizes; this would imply an AIR_VOL:LIQ_VOL for half bottles would again be double that for full size bottles.
(a) or (c) would imply maturation at twice the rate for half-bottles, if the scaling is linear (for which there is no evidence to date of which I am aware?).
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Phil - the surface area of the cylinder part of the debate was aiming at a view of the overall surface area available to react with something, for example with the glass bottle, rather than aiming at some view on the impact of oxygen quantity.PhilW wrote:For en upright bottle or half-bottle, unless it has leaked, surely the surface area will be the cross-section of the neck? Which makes use of a standard cylinder as an approximation for top surface area inaccurate by a significant factor.JWEW wrote:If we can approximate the surface area of the liquid to that of a cylinder (which we can only do if the bottle is stored upright) then ...
- Alex Bridgeman
- Fonseca 1966
- Posts: 15922
- Joined: 12:41 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Berkshire, UK
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
The oldest half bottle I've had was a Croft 1904 that Tom brought to one of the Xmas offlines - that was brilliant. I've had some 1927s from half bottles, they were great. Justin K shared an amazingly good bottle of Cockburn 1947 with Derek and me some years back.
Stop dissing half bottles. They can be great as an aperitif while decanting for the evening.
From my experience, half bottles do mature slightly faster than full bottles. The UK cellared SW83 and D85s that I had in halves were mature and have been drunk up while the same wines in my cellar in 75cl format are only about half drunk.
I would love to try an offline where we have halves, bottles, magnums, tappit hens and double magnums of a mature port. Anyone have halves of any of the 1977 vintages? Let's see what we can line up together.
Stop dissing half bottles. They can be great as an aperitif while decanting for the evening.
From my experience, half bottles do mature slightly faster than full bottles. The UK cellared SW83 and D85s that I had in halves were mature and have been drunk up while the same wines in my cellar in 75cl format are only about half drunk.
I would love to try an offline where we have halves, bottles, magnums, tappit hens and double magnums of a mature port. Anyone have halves of any of the 1977 vintages? Let's see what we can line up together.
Top Ports in 2024: Niepoort 1900 Colheita, b.1971. A near perfect Port.
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Great idea; you know where to start a thread.AHB wrote:I would love to try an offline where we have halves, bottles, magnums, tappit hens and double magnums of a mature port. Anyone have halves of any of the 1977 vintages? Let's see what we can line up together.
- djewesbury
- Graham’s 1970
- Posts: 8166
- Joined: 19:01 Mon 31 Dec 2012
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
I also tried one of Justin's halves of Ck47 and it was indeed excellent. He will be amused at your gender reassignment of him/her.
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
- Alex Bridgeman
- Fonseca 1966
- Posts: 15922
- Joined: 12:41 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Berkshire, UK
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Whoops. Sorry Justin.djewesbury wrote:I also tried one of Justin's halves of Ck47 and it was indeed excellent. He will be amused at your gender reassignment of him/her.
Top Ports in 2024: Niepoort 1900 Colheita, b.1971. A near perfect Port.
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
- Alex Bridgeman
- Fonseca 1966
- Posts: 15922
- Joined: 12:41 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Berkshire, UK
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
If someone provides a positive answer in this thread, I will look to organise an offline.jdaw1 wrote:Great idea; you know where to start a thread.AHB wrote:I would love to try an offline where we have halves, bottles, magnums, tappit hens and double magnums of a mature port. Anyone have halves of any of the 1977 vintages? Let's see what we can line up together.
Top Ports in 2024: Niepoort 1900 Colheita, b.1971. A near perfect Port.
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
- djewesbury
- Graham’s 1970
- Posts: 8166
- Joined: 19:01 Mon 31 Dec 2012
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Turns out I was wrong as well, the one we drank was a 1950; but from the same batch.AHB wrote:Whoops. Sorry Justin.djewesbury wrote:I also tried one of Justin's halves of Ck47 and it was indeed excellent. He will be amused at your gender reassignment of him/her.
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Would love to do this too, but sadly my cellar does not yet extend to formats beyond 750! Will keep an eye out though from now on. Finding halves and tappit hens from middle aged vintages and older is a rarity now I think.AHB wrote:If someone provides a positive answer in this thread, I will look to organise an offline.jdaw1 wrote:Great idea; you know where to start a thread.AHB wrote:I would love to try an offline where we have halves, bottles, magnums, tappit hens and double magnums of a mature port. Anyone have halves of any of the 1977 vintages? Let's see what we can line up together.
- djewesbury
- Graham’s 1970
- Posts: 8166
- Joined: 19:01 Mon 31 Dec 2012
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
I believe Alex still has tappit hens of some of the 77s. The question would then be whether there are double mags of a 77 sitting in Oporto that the Syms would sell us. I suspect this is not an impossibility but the approach would need to be made.
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
- Alex Bridgeman
- Fonseca 1966
- Posts: 15922
- Joined: 12:41 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Berkshire, UK
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
I do have a few tappit hens, but don't recall ever seeing any double magnums. But if we could get some halves of, say, Warre 1977 then we might be able to line up halves, bottles, magnums and tappit hens. But I don't know that I've ever seen half bottles of Symington 1977 ports.djewesbury wrote:I believe Alex still has tappit hens of some of the 77s. The question would then be whether there are double mags of a 77 sitting in Oporto that the Syms would sell us. I suspect this is not an impossibility but the approach would need to be made.
Top Ports in 2024: Niepoort 1900 Colheita, b.1971. A near perfect Port.
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
- djewesbury
- Graham’s 1970
- Posts: 8166
- Joined: 19:01 Mon 31 Dec 2012
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Who volunteers to ask whether they might be found? And could introducing Oporto-stored halves into this mix risk fouling the water somewhat, since they'd possibly be even more advanced than English-cellared?
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Personally I don't think that the results will count for much unless they are all oporto-cellared and from one of the recent ex-cellars releases. Too many variables beyond bottle size otherwise.djewesbury wrote:And could introducing Oporto-stored halves into this mix risk fouling the water somewhat, since they'd possibly be even more advanced than English-cellared?
We did something similar with Vau a couple of years ago I think - if not, that one should be relatively easy to do (half, bottle, magnum, double magnum) if people were interested.
Rob C.
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
• 18 Sep 2012, Vau of various vintages in singles and halves.RAYC wrote:We did something similar with Vau a couple of years ago I think - if not, that one should be relatively easy to do (half, bottle, magnum, double magnum) if people were interested.
• End-Dec 2012, SV00 in half and double magnum.
• 28 May 2013, SV00 in half and double magnum.
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
If the offer is still open (and maybe Alex could confirm?), I see that we could access and purchase GC80 in 37.5, 75 and 150cl formats. These would presumably have the same provenance as each other other and would therefore provide a consistent basis for such an experiment (incidentally, looking at the list, this seems to be the only shipper and realistic year where all three formats are available).
By my reckonong, a group purchase for cases of 12, 6 and 3 respectively, would cost about £80 per person all in (assuming 10 participants in the experiment) and there might even be some left over for a future '80 horizontal or else individual purchase. Any thoughts?
By my reckonong, a group purchase for cases of 12, 6 and 3 respectively, would cost about £80 per person all in (assuming 10 participants in the experiment) and there might even be some left over for a future '80 horizontal or else individual purchase. Any thoughts?
-
- Quinta do Vesuvio 1994
- Posts: 3084
- Joined: 21:16 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Los Angeles, Ca USA
- Contact:
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
I have 1977 Gould Campbell VP in .375ml bottles. I can be persuaded to keep one for a tasting but that would need to be the next time I fly over to London (most likely later this year), or if you all come to L.A.AHB wrote: .... But I don't know that I've ever seen half bottles of Symington 1977 ports.
-
- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
- Posts: 3708
- Joined: 13:22 Wed 15 Dec 2010
- Location: Near Cambridge, UK
Re: General query on maturity in half bottles
Warre 1977 sold in half-bottle recently here, and mentioned by New York Magazine (28 Mar 1988) as available at "Chez Louis, where a half-bottle of 1977 Warre costs $21"AHB wrote:I do have a few tappit hens, but don't recall ever seeing any double magnums. But if we could get some halves of, say, Warre 1977 then we might be able to line up halves, bottles, magnums and tappit hens. But I don't know that I've ever seen half bottles of Symington 1977 ports.djewesbury wrote:I believe Alex still has tappit hens of some of the 77s. The question would then be whether there are double mags of a 77 sitting in Oporto that the Syms would sell us. I suspect this is not an impossibility but the approach would need to be made.
- Chris Doty
- Graham’s Malvedos 1996
- Posts: 843
- Joined: 11:30 Fri 29 Jan 2010
what a silly thread!
Ahh the virtues of half bottles!
among others...
1. less impact from TCA/Spoilage/etc (one $100 750ml bottle of corked wine < two $50 375ml bottles of wine, of which one is corked)
2. more chances to diversify your cellar (explore regions, producers, take gambles, etc)
3. more accessible young (pls see Quevedo 2011 if you don't believe me)
4. more romantic (e.g., if you finish a meal for 2 with a 750 of port, either you're the one taking your trousers off, or they're staying on entirely, whereas...)
In terms of the 'science' of the aging curve, that's beyond my pay grade. I am still very much enjoying 80Ds, 86Gms, 91GCs, 94Ws, and several other 375s that have been available in quantity from the US. My oldest 375 is a 45 (47?) Warre (Dow?) which I would be happy to share at a suitable occasion. My youngest 375s would be the 300 2011s I purchased from Jeff/Oscar
incidentally, those have retained a freshness and accessibly that has been sucked out of their 750ml cousins (to my palate, at least). Again, I would be happy to organize a 375/750/6L tasting of Quevedo in NYC, LON, both, or Other. I could also do 375/750/1.5 of Dow 80, and/or of Taylor 77, if memory serves.
Port pros seem to scoff a 375s. Happily, that just means more for Christopher!
Good Hunting
woo woo
among others...
1. less impact from TCA/Spoilage/etc (one $100 750ml bottle of corked wine < two $50 375ml bottles of wine, of which one is corked)
2. more chances to diversify your cellar (explore regions, producers, take gambles, etc)
3. more accessible young (pls see Quevedo 2011 if you don't believe me)
4. more romantic (e.g., if you finish a meal for 2 with a 750 of port, either you're the one taking your trousers off, or they're staying on entirely, whereas...)
In terms of the 'science' of the aging curve, that's beyond my pay grade. I am still very much enjoying 80Ds, 86Gms, 91GCs, 94Ws, and several other 375s that have been available in quantity from the US. My oldest 375 is a 45 (47?) Warre (Dow?) which I would be happy to share at a suitable occasion. My youngest 375s would be the 300 2011s I purchased from Jeff/Oscar

Port pros seem to scoff a 375s. Happily, that just means more for Christopher!
Good Hunting
woo woo