Antonia A. Ferreira – Garrafeira Port 1815
Ferreira is one of
This very distinguished family, with Royal connections,
(Francisco de Olazabal, currently President of the
company and of the eighth generation, is a direct descendant of King John VI of
Portugal.) has long been dominant in the port wine trade. Moreover the Ferreiras have bred a succession of great characters none
more legendary than Dona Antonia Adelaide, born in the "comet" year,
1811, and who personally ran the company and its extensive properties over the
course of her long life. The family were the biggest vineyard owners in the
Ferreira have the largest share of the Portuguese market, followed closely and
coincidentally by Offley Forrester, both firms now
under the corporate "umbrella" of the distinguished Guedes family. The firm produces a full range of
"wood" ports, white, tawny and the standard 10 and excellent 20 year
old, the latter branded with the title of the Portugese
Royal Family, Duque de Braganca
(if I can be partial, it has long been my favourite old tawny) and of course
traditional vintage ports. Unusually, indeed uniquely, for stocks of old
vintages are virtually non-existent in Oporto,
Ferreira have always maintained an extensive "library" in its Lodge
in Vila Nova de Gaia housing a priceless range of vintages dating back to the
early 19th century.
Vintage 1815 – referred
to by the British as the ‘
Ferreira 1815 aged in cask for about 50 years, bottled and recorked every 40 years. (These old wines take two years to recover their bouquets after recorking.) A pale but healthy amber with lemon tinge; woody and acidic at first but settled down after decanting, rich, waxy, still with fruit, slightly estery, lik old lace; medium-sweet, medium-light, a wonderful spicy yet soft long flavour, Madeira-like acidity, dry finish. Four consistent notes, all from Ferreira’s cellars, last tasted July 1991 ****
(
Michael Broadbent, Vintage
Wine ed. 2002)
Garrafeira is an unusual and rare intermediate vintage dated style of port made from the grapes of a single harvest that combines the oxidative maturation of years in wood with further reductive maturation in large glass demijohns. It is required by the IVDP that wines spend some time in wood, usually between three and six years, followed by at least a further eight years in glass, before bottling. In practice the times spent in glass are much longer. The style is most closely associated with the company Niepoort, although others do exist. Their dark green demijohns, affectionately known as bon-bons, hold approximately 11 litres each. Some connoisseurs describe Garrafeira as having a slight taste of bacon, although many people will neither notice nor understand such a description; the reason being that, during the second phase of maturation, certain oils may precipitate, causing a film to form across the surface of the glass that can be tasted by those who are accustomed to the difference between Garrafeira and other forms of port. Confusingly, the word Garrafeira may also be found on some very old tawny labels, where the contents of the bottle are of exceptional age.