What is Walker Blue?g-man wrote:walker blue
Another clue - it is made from grapes
What is Walker Blue?g-man wrote:walker blue
Not cognac - it is not a distilled productjdaw1 wrote:Cognac? (I was going to guess G&T, until your most recent clue.)
Not a table wine, it is a fortified wine.KillerB wrote:Wine?
Spot on. You're up.jdaw1 wrote:Bual 1869?
Now on the March 1937 catalogue, still without an answer. In which The Wine Society started selling the 1934s: Warre, Da Silva Noval, Fonseca, Gould Campbell, Dow, and Tuke Holdsworth, each sold for 52/- per dozen. I wonder whether today’s big port companies would like the historical precedent that, during a major economic downturn, new port cost 13⅓% less than it did in the previous general declaration?jdaw1 wrote:I am now at the March 1933 catalogue, still without knowing the answer. This catalogue has the first offers of 1927. Costs? 58/- for a dozen of any of Croft, Rebello Valente, Graham, Fonseca, Dow, Da Silva Noval; fully 60/- (=£3!) for a dozen Taylor 1927; but a massive 68/- (=£3.40!!) for a dozen of Cockburn 1927.
Yes.jdaw1 wrote:Are these factual non-clues welcome?
Despite being almost completely worthless; yes, they most certainly are welcome.jdaw1 wrote:Are these factual non-clues welcome?
Prices are per bottle! And only these two ports available in the depths of wartime winter.The Wine Society, Winter 1943, under the sub-title ‟Port” wrote:Finest Douro 14/6
Calem’s specially selected Ruby 25/0
AHB wrote:Cockburn 1912
DRT wrote:Cockburn 1904
g-man wrote:1908 taylors
Too old.AHB wrote:1908 Cockburn
Glenn E. wrote:1931 Noval
Glenn E. wrote:1931 Noval Nacional
Glenn E. wrote:1948 Taylor
AHB wrote:Taylor 1963
Glenn E. wrote:Well if we're going to go to 1963, then I'll take the '63 Noval Nacional.
g-man wrote:Take teh 45 taylor
Glenn E. wrote:I'll add the 1955 Taylor to my list.
AHB wrote:Croft 1945
Too young (or too cheap).AHB wrote:Sandeman 1934
There is a port from that year that would be an acceptable answer (and from two different years that are older, and from two different years that are younger), but not that one.AHB wrote:Taylor 1920
There is a port from that year that would be an acceptable answer (and from two different years that are older, and from two different years that are younger), but neither Fonseca nor Taylor.Glenn E. wrote:1920 Fonseca?
Too young.AHB wrote:Croft 1927
Too old.DRT wrote:Croft 1912?
Year good; wrong house. Indeed, the 1917 and 1920 vintages for sale are from the same shipper.AHB wrote:Taylor 1917
I’m not quite sure which dash was conventional probably an en dash but, more importantly, it should be a solidus (â„) rather than a slash (/), so: 200â„”“.jdaw1 wrote:(Aside question for JacobH: ‟200/-”? ‟200/”“”? ‟200/ ”?)
[Aside continues: excellent, thank you my not distinguishing the ‟/” from the ‟â„” was very sloppy. However, the solidus renders on Mac Firefox as a zero-width character. Bug report 518430 filed.]JacobH wrote:I’m not quite sure which dash was conventional probably an en dash but, more importantly, it should be a solidus (â„) rather than a slash (/), so: 200â„”“.jdaw1 wrote:(Aside question for JacobH: ‟200/-”? ‟200/”“”? ‟200/ ”?)
No Croft. Year good though.Glenn E. wrote:1924 Croft?
AHB wrote:Taylor 1924
No. Though one of the houses works with a different year, the other doesn’t.Glenn E. wrote:1924 Cockburn?
Not Sandeman.AHB wrote:Sandeman 1917