Roy Hersh wrote:We know of many great years of Colheita production, but if you could only pick one each ... which would you choose?
a. From 2010 back to 1980, which ONE year is your favorite for Colheitas?
b. From 1979 back to 1950, which ONE year is your favorite for Colheitas?
c. From 1949 back as far as you want to go ... which ONE year is your favorite for Colheitas?
It seems I missed this thread!
a. This is a genre that I don't touch very often, because for me a Colheita needs to be ~30 years old to be "ready" to drink. Younger Colheitas can be very nice, but they're still evolving rapidly and so I don't feel I can rate the vintage based on a rapidly moving target. I'd rather wait and see how they all turn out. That said, I have had nice Colheitas from 1982, 1992, and 1994. I'll make my pick
1992 in honor of the 2010 Harvest Tour where we experienced both Quevedo's and Vesuvio's Colheitas from that year.
b. This is prime time and so difficult. There are a lot of good years involved in this choice. Krohn '76. Andresen '70. Kopke '66. Kopke '57. Kopke '52. (Hmm... there's a theme here...) I would love to agree with Andy and go with my birth year (1964), but I've had them all many times and while there is a nice variety from that year they just don't hold up quality-wise. (By which I mean only that they're for the most part all excellent, but rarely if ever push any higher than that.) So ultimately I think I'm going to go with
1952 for two legends - the Kopke Colheita and the Dalva Golden White Colheita.
c. Easy.
1937. Sure, it's a cliche. But cliches exist because they're so true as to be obvious. While there may be better single Ports in various other years, 1937's broad selection of outstanding and magnificent Colheitas has to make it the best Colheita vintage of all time. I've had... 6 or 7?... different Colheitas from 1937 and the lowest rated was still 92 points. (That'd be the Moreira with a 5-7 day decant.) When the "worst" Port is excellent and all the rest are at least outstanding, that's saying something. Honorable mention goes to 1900 for the Niepoort, Constantino, and what I've heard about the Krohn that I've never been lucky enough to taste.