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2018 Quinta do Vallado Vintage Port

Not Currently In Auction

Latest Sale Price

December 19, 2021 - $51

Estimate

RATINGS

97Wine Spectator

Really vibrant, with bramble-laced blueberry, blackberry and raspberry compote flavors driving along, while mouthwatering anise, violet and fruitcake accents add detail and sparkle throughout. Finish sports a gorgeous late kick of fruit and spice.

95Wine Enthusiast

Dark with tannins and full of opulent black-stone fruits and prunes...

93+ The Wine Advocate

...pure flavors...texture becomes silky as it airs out. As always, its hallmark is its purity. It is all clean fruit with steel underneath. It finishes dry and stern and broods just a little.

16.5+ Jancis Robinson

...herbaceous note at first, then on aeration, dark, rocky and spicy... On the palate, dark and finely dry, lot of dark-chocolate character in both flavour and texture...packed with dark fruit...long, powerful finish. Embryonic and well balanced.

REGION

Portugal, Douro, Porto

Douro is Portugal’s most prestigious appellation, thanks to the fact that the country’s famous Port wines have always come from the Douro. Douro, the appellation, is named for the Douro River which runs through northern Portugal. The region is mountainous and rocky, with very poor soil and harsh weather conditions because of proximity to the Atlantic. Nevertheless, vineyards have always existed there on terraced parcels of land surrounded by walls to protect the vines from wind. Most of the famous Port makers have quintas, or estates, in this region. In recent decades the Douro has developed a reputation for table wines as well as Ports, and today there are two sub-appellations within the Douro, one for table wines and one for Port. Numerous grapes are allowed within the Douro, but the main red grapes grown are Touriga Nacional, Touriga Francesa and Tinta Roriz (Tempranillo.) The main white grapes are Esgana Cao, Folgosado and Verdelho. Besides the historic connection to Port wines – which were highly coveted in England and other parts of Europe as early as the 17th century – the region is also home to Portugal’s best table wines, including Barca Velha.