The Jancis Robinson Story (ポッドキャスト) | Mission Blind Tasting | wine writing competition | 🎁 20% off annual memberships

Where are the world's oldest wines?

• 5 分で読めます
Image

15 December 2022 We're republishing this just for fun, with a few updates, and would welcome any further suggestions via our Members' forum.

24 November 2014 This article has been syndicated.

Where in the world are the oldest wines? Not vines (although that is another interesting question – see our unique  Old Vines Register), but caches of seriously old liquids. Of course there is always the odd centenarian bottle stashed away, but where are commercial quantities of venerable wine to be found?

I was inspired to think about this by the current vogue for releasing venerable wood ports. The Fladgate Partnership (Taylor, Fonseca, et al) have now launched two ancient limited-edition bottlings, Scion dated 1855 and a Taylor's 1863 Single Harvest Port. The firm craftily acquired the old tawny specialists Wiese & Krohn recently, a family-owned firm with relatively extensive stocks of port back to an 1863 made two years before the company was founded and which Richard Mayson describes as 'almost undrinkably concentrated' in his book Port and the Douro. (See also this late 2022 update on Taylor's tawnies.)

Arch rivals Symington Family Estates had already tested the water with a special release of a 1952 Colheita (vintage-dated tawny) to celebrate Queen Elizabeth's diamond jubilee. But as a riposte to the Fladgate's 19th-century scrabblings, last June they launched Graham's Ne Oublie, a wine based on one of three casks of 1882 port that the founder of the company had bought to celebrate the year he arrived in Oporto as an18 year old. All of these luxuriously packaged 19th-century wood ports are priced at several thousand pounds a bottle, pricing presumably depending on their rarity. But they do make me wonder how many more casks of ancient port are sitting in the Douro Valley or in a port lodge in Vila Nova de Gaia blithely unaware of their commercial potential. (See also the Symingtons' very special limited offer of a Bicentenary collection of a beautiful cabinet filled with six extremely rare ports.)

For a wine to be ancient, still in bottle or cask and not vinegar, it more or less has to be fortified – although there are famous exceptions. Ch d'Yquem and top-quality Loire Chenin Blanc can last for decades, as those who come across 19th-century Vouvrays and the Moulin Touchais Anjous can attest. Kloster Eberbach in Germany's Rheingau has bottles of Rieslings going back to 1706 and the Ratskeller of Bremen contains even older German wine, albeit in a different form. Michael Broadbent MW notes in his magisterial Vintage Wine, a record of the thousands of fine wines he tasted over 50 years at the helm of Christie's wine department, that this Hanseatic trading city's official cellars house large casks of extremely ancient German whites. The oldest is dated 1653, containing wine he describes as 'very sharp and not very nice', but these are casks which have routinely been topped up with much younger wines.

This sort of regular, fractional replenishment is the solera system most famously associated with sherry and Jerez in southern Spain, and there are certainly casks of very venerable wine in the whitewashed, cathedral-like bodegas of Jerez. Although in my experience, some of the oldest sherries in Jerez are far from the most delicious. They tend to have been kept so long in cask that they have become almost unpalatable, like an over-reduced sauce. These are wines best consumed as only a minute component in a blend, adding depth and a hint of antiquity.

Barbadillo claim to have the oldest soleras, with those that supply the wines they call their Reliquias having been started in the early 19th century. Valdespino has a range based on their solera begun in 1842, and El Maestro Sierra still sell an Amontillado Viejo 1830. But these dates nowadays relate to a tiny fraction of the wine in that solera. As for vintage-dated sherries, wines that are 100% from a given year, Williams & Humbert are famous for the depth of their collection but in this context 1924 is considered old.

But for serious quantities of wine bearing venerable vintage years, you have to look to the Atlantic island of Madeira, home to the most vigorous old wine in the world. When I searched the 100,000 tasting notes (nearly 230,000 in late 2022) we have on JancisRobinson.com to see which were the oldest wines I had tasted, I saw the great majority of them were madeiras, including three from the 18th century. Chris Blandy of the important eponymous Madeira wine producer reports that they have about 1,000 bottles of 18th-century madeiras in their company cellar. The specialist website madeirawineguide.net has done an audit of all the old wine stocks on the island and has come up with no fewer than 30 from the 18th century, back to two 1715s. Many of these extremely precious wines are available in multi-bottle lots. Madeira is almost indestructible, even in an opened bottle, and I for one hope that it does not become so popular that this inimitable resource is plundered too heavily.

Nowadays there's an annual tasting of fortified wines in London every year known as the BFT (Big Fortified Tasting). Tierras de Molina showed some centenarian Málaga one year, and apparently there's a similar stash of venerable Marsala in the cellars of Curatolo in western Sicily.

There are also various caches of ancient wines, mostly not just strong but also sweet, in the old Soviet Union territory, presumably a hangover from iron state control and the desire to keep the best for an elite. The Massandra collection of stickies goes back into the 19th century and was amassed on the Crimea, holiday country for the old Tsarist regime. It has been sold by Sotheby's in its time and is still available. In 2009 I tasted widely from what was billed as the biggest collection of Soviet wines near Krasnodar but it went back only as far as the 1960s, whereas there's a collection of wine stored in 75 km of tunnels in Moldova that includes, they say, Hermann Goering's personal cellar, although it is mainly early 20th century.

To find stocks of much older wines it pays to look at those parts of the world that used to produce fortified wines in quantity but have seen them fall from fashion. Australia is an obvious place and still harbours enviable stocks of stickies. At Seppeltsfield in the Barossa Valley there are tawnies of every year back to 1878, almost all of them still in cask, including as many as 250 litres of 100-year-old wine. Small quantities are being marketed once more. In Rutherglen there are also stocks of old Muscat and the renamed Topaque – and Yalumba, Penfolds and McWilliams all have long histories of fortified-wine production.

Some of the most traditional Rioja producers, such as Marqués de Riscal and R López de Heredia (the photo above, courtesy of Viña Tondonia, shows the latter's 'Bodega Nueva', build in 1903), have impressive collections of ancient vintages but, funnily enough, stocks of really old wine are none too plentiful in France's most famous wine regions. The first growths, especially Latour and Lafite, have old vintages of their own wine, and in their smart new premises, the négociant Mahler-Besse probably has the best collection of early-20th-century wine in the city of Bordeaux, even if Bouchard Père et Fils probably beat them for the antiquity of their burgundy cellar. But otherwise, enviable collections are mainly in private hands, those of the odd British, Belgian, Swiss and Norwegian collector, plus Oxbridge colleges, particularly All Souls. You can be sure that the auctioneers are hovering, awaiting the moment any of them need to raise some cash.

購読プラン
25th

For the dad who loves wine

Start your membership this Father’s Day with 20% off a full year. Expert reviews, honest writing, no guesswork. Or, gift a membership and save 20%.

Enter code DAD20 at checkout. Offer ends 22 June.

スタンダード会員
$135
/年間
年間購読
ワイン愛好家向け
  • 295,558件のワインレビュー および 16,101本の記事 読み放題
  • The Oxford Companion to Wine および 世界のワイン図鑑 (The World Atlas of Wine)
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
プレミアム会員
$249
/年間
 
本格的な愛好家向け

Everything in “Member”, plus:

  • Early access to the latest wine reviews, 48 hours in advance
  • Early access to the latest articles, 48 hours in advance
プロフェッショナル
$299
/年間
ワイン業界関係者(個人)向け 
  • 295,558件のワインレビュー および 16,101本の記事 読み放題
  • The Oxford Companion to Wine および 世界のワイン図鑑 (The World Atlas of Wine)
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
  • 最新のワイン・レビュー と記事に先行アクセス(一般公開の48時間前より)
  • 最大25件のワインレビューおよびスコアを商業利用可能(マーケティング用)
ビジネスプラン
$399
/年間
法人購読

Everything in “Professional”, plus:

  • 最大250件のワインレビューおよびスコアを商業利用可能(マーケティング用)
  • Access to submit wines for review
  • Offer memberships to your employees and manage them from a single place
  • API access available for an additional fee
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
で購入
ニュースレター登録

編集部から、最新のワインニュースやトレンドを毎週メールでお届けします。

プライバシーポリシーおよび利用規約が適用されます。

More 無料で読める記事

Mont Ventoux seen from Les Deux Cols at dawn
無料で読める記事 南部のすべてがターボチャージされたグルナッシュというわけではない。この記事の別バージョンは『フィナンシャル・タイムズ』にも掲載されている。...
WWC26 announcement graphic
無料で読める記事 好きなアルバムを聴きながら、あるいは良い本を読みながら最も飲みたいワインはどれだろうか? バービー 、 モナリザ 、 サクセッション 、...
Institute of Masters of Wine logo
無料で読める記事 ここでは、誰もが憧れる2文字の称号を目指す受験者たちに出題された問題を紹介する。受験者の中には 当サイトのサマンサ・コール・ジョンソン...
Wild menu - yellow background
無料で読める記事 ホーム・カウンティーズで丁寧に育まれた野性味。そして見逃せないワインリスト。 農場から魚へ、フォークへ、フライパンへ...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Flowers in the Meinklang vineyard
今週のワイン オーストリアから届いた魔法のようなスパークリング・ワイン。 9ユーロ、15.50ポンド、16.95ドルから 。...
Dalla Valle vineyard
テイスティング記事 素晴らしいヴィンテージ。写真上はオークヴィルのダラ・ヴァレ・ヴィンヤーズ。このヴィンテージでサムが特に高く評価したワインを2つ生産した...
La Réméjeanne vineyard
テイスティング記事 ローヌ南部の「北西回廊」で栽培されたワインの品質ポテンシャルを示すテイスティング。写真上はドメーヌ・ラ...
Hugo, Rui, Francisco and Ricardo of Cas’amaro
テイスティング記事 ポルトガルのこのワイン産地の南半分を巡る。北半分の生産者とワインについては 【パート1】 を参照のこと。写真上(左から右へ)、カザマロ...
Ch Grand-Puy-Lacoste
Don't quote me ニック・マーティン(Nick Martin)が、またひとつのアン・プリムール・キャンペーンが終わりを迎えるにあたり考察する。シャトー・グラン...
A castle in the Espera vineyards
テイスティング記事 A tour of this underappreciated and sometimes misrepresented Portuguese wine region. Today, we cover the northern half – Encostas d’Aire...
Azenhas do Mar, Portugal
現地詳報 このポルトガルの産地のワインは、その歴史の影から抜け出しつつある。上の写真はコラレスのアゼニャス・ド・マル...
Jota Tanaka at Gotemba distillery
ワイン以外の飲み物 日本のウイスキーの透明性についての探求、そしてその感性がスコットランドでのウイスキー造りにどのような影響を与えているかについて。写真上は...
JancisRobinson.comニュースレター
最新のワインニュースやトレンドを毎週メールでお届けします。
JancisRobinson.comでは、ニュースレターを無料配信しています。ワインに関する最新情報をいち早くお届けします。
なお、ご登録いただいた個人情報は、ニュースレターの配信以外の目的で利用したり、第三者に提供したりすることはありません。プライバシーポリシーおよび利用規約が適用されます.