Historical Perspective - Cockburn Vintage Ports from 1863 to
Posted: 03:42 Thu 24 Mar 2011
I recently found an article in the August 1982 issue of The Journal of the International Wine & Food Society titled Cockburn Vintage Ports 1863-1975. I found this article pretty interesting for a couple of reasons. First, it gives some thoughts about the various vintages that we might not hear today, thirty years on. Things like what people thought of the vintages when they were new, etc.
The second thing I found amazing was that Cockburn on four separate occasions failed to declare vintages in years that were fabulous years that almost everyone else declared. Specifically, they didn't declare 1945, 1948, 1966 and 1977. How can they be that wrong, that often? On top of it, they declared 1947, which was a pretty decent year by all accounts but not widely declared, and 1967 which was a barely average year that only a couple of houses declared. This isn't meant to be argumentative, only an observation about strangely consistent behavior by a major port house.
Anyway, here's the article. I would love to know your thoughts.
The second thing I found amazing was that Cockburn on four separate occasions failed to declare vintages in years that were fabulous years that almost everyone else declared. Specifically, they didn't declare 1945, 1948, 1966 and 1977. How can they be that wrong, that often? On top of it, they declared 1947, which was a pretty decent year by all accounts but not widely declared, and 1967 which was a barely average year that only a couple of houses declared. This isn't meant to be argumentative, only an observation about strangely consistent behavior by a major port house.
Anyway, here's the article. I would love to know your thoughts.