2014 Passadouro Vinho Tinto, Quinta do Passadouro, Pinhâo

2014 Passadouro Vinho Tinto, Quinta do Passadouro, Pinhâo

Product: 20141545593
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2014 Passadouro Vinho Tinto, Quinta do Passadouro, Pinhâo

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Description

The 2014 Tinto is a blend of 40% Touriga Nacional, 30% Touriga Franca and 30% Tinta Roriz, aged for 16 months in used French oak. It comes in at 13.5% alcohol. Adding some smoothness and cream to the texture of the Passa (the other red at the lower price level this issue), this maintains the Passa's dry and serious feel. It is a bit sterner and duller than it normally is, frankly. While it shows some power and reasonably good concentration, there is little in the way of vivid, lifted flavor. Overall, it's still a respectable performance for the regular Tinto in this difficult vintage. It will drink well young, although it could probably use six months to settle down.
Mark Squires - 28/04/2017

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Wine Advocate86/100
The 2014 Tinto is a blend of 40% Touriga Nacional, 30% Touriga Franca and 30% Tinta Roriz, aged for 16 months in used French oak. It comes in at 13.5% alcohol. Adding some smoothness and cream to the texture of the Passa (the other red at the lower price level this issue), this maintains the Passa's dry and serious feel. It is a bit sterner and duller than it normally is, frankly. While it shows some power and reasonably good concentration, there is little in the way of vivid, lifted flavor. Overall, it's still a respectable performance for the regular Tinto in this difficult vintage. It will drink well young, although it could probably use six months to settle down.
Mark Squires - 28/04/2017 Read more

About this WINE

Quinta do Passadouro

Quinta do Passadouro

Situated in the Cima-Corgo sub region of the Douro valley (a region that enjoys a longer growing season than many other areas of the Douro), this historic Quinta dates back to the 17th century. In 1991 Dieter Borhmann, a Belgian industrialist, bought the estate with 18 hectares of vines and 5 hectares of olive trees. Since acquiring the property he has encouraged the use of traditional methods alongside modern techniques, investment and innovation.

Jorge Serôdio Borges has worked with him, as winemaker and estate manager, since 1999. Dieter underlined his faith in Jorge by making him a partner in the business and with a substantial investment in a nearby Quinta (as of November 2008), to make available a further 20 hectares of vineyards for the production of Passadouro. Jorge plans to use some parcels to improve the red wine blends, but the port production will remain entirely from Passadouro’s own vineyards to preserve its single Quinta status.

The main winery building was completely refurbished, with new stainless steel tanks and new equipment installed alongside the lagars. A new bottle and barrel store was also built and a bottling line installed, with plans for more improvements in the near future.

Along with the Passadouro reds (Touriga Nacional, Tinta Roriz, Touriga Franca plus a field blend of traditional, old vine Douro varieties) and the Single Quinta Port Wines, Jorge is now making a white wine, made from grapes bought in from the Murça region (Viosinho, Rabigato, Códega do Larinho - the must is fermented between tank and French oak barrels (between 75-90% in tank and 10-25% in barrel depending on vintage)), further east up the Douro from Pinhão. The schist soils and altitude of 500-600 metres, are, in Jorge’s opinion the best combination of terroir and microclimate in the Douro for the production of white wines.

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Single Quinta Vintage

Single Quinta Vintage

Single Quinta Vintage Port is currently one of the most exciting Port categories, which could potentially challenge the dominance of true Vintage Port in years to come. Single Quinta Port is made in much the same way as Vintage: aged for two to three years in cask before bottling without filtration – and is generally produced from a Port house’s finest single vineyard, in years that are not declared. In a vintage year, the grapes from these vineyards – like Quinta dos Malvedos for Graham and Quinta de Vargellas for Taylor – will be used as the backbone of the blend and not bottled in their own right.

The more approachable, earlier-maturing Single Quinta Ports enable producers to satisfy demand for Vintage Port while retaining the rarity and caché of its top Port. Single Quinta Ports are not normally as good as true Vintage Port, but there are notable exceptions. Quinta do Vesuvio, Quinta do Noval and Quinta de la Rosa are all produced in vintage years and can be every bit good as their more famous, multi-vineyard rivals. Indeed the greatest and rarest Vintage Port in existence is from a single vineyard: Quinta do Noval Nacional.

Single Quinta Vintage Ports were traditionally sold when the Port house believed they were ready to drink, around eight to 10 years after the harvest, but as they become more serious and more popular, some are released as soon as they are bottled. Single Quinta Ports should be decanted before serving and, with some notable long-lived exceptions, generally age for around 15 to 20 years.

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Other Varieties

Other Varieties

There are over 200 different grape varieties used in modern wine making (from a total of over 1000). Most lesser known blends and varieties are traditional to specific parts of the world.

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