How A Port Vintage Is Declared With Adrian Bridge - #039

April 24
43 mins

Episode Description

Port comes in many styles, but Vintage Port sits at the pinnacle -- but it isn't made every year. In this episode, Adrian Bridge of Taylor Fladgate explains what it means to "declare" a Vintage Port, how houses decide whether a year is worthy, and what all this has to do with St. George. You'll also hear how fortification works, the importance of the otherwise "neutral" grape spirit, what separates a classic declaration from Single Quinta and other vintage-dated bottlings, and you'll get a few unexpected food-pairing ideas. If you ever wanted to know how Port wine is made and why it can last for decades, then this is the episode for you. SPOILER ALERT: 2024 is a declared vintage for Port!

Key Topics

  • When to drink classic Vintage Port 
  • Why you'd want to buy a Vintage Port on release, rather than later.
  • How the declaration process works.
  • What you can expect from 2024 vintage Port.
  • Why the declaration is made on St. George's Day.
  • What foods you can pair with Vintage Port. 

Key Takeaways

  • "Declared" means a house has chosen to release a classic Vintage Port from a specific year
  • Vintage Port is rare. (~1.5% of total Port production—small volume, highest prestige)
  • Vintage Port is built to age. (50–60+ years in good storage)
  • Fortification is key to Port's style.
  • The declaration decision takes time, and it happens on St. George's Day.

Connect with Adrian Bridge

Learn more about wine in general at https://Wine365.com 

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