Port, Sherry, and Fortified Wines

Table of Contents
  1. Fortified Wine
  2. Port
  3. Styles of Port
  4. Madeira
  5. Sherry
  6. Marsala
  7. Review Quizzes

Fortified Wine

Fortified wines, like sparkling wines, are the result of a process beyond simple vinification.

Fortified wines are manipulated through the addition of neutral grape spirit, in order to strengthen the base wines for the purpose of added body, warmth, durability or ageworthiness. Through centuries of effort, the world’s premier fortified wine regions have developed unique regimes of production and aging; these methodologies—or manipulations of the base material—have become inextricably linked to the terroir of the wines. Port, Madeira, and Sherry represent the three great archetypes of fortified wine, yet each is utterly distinct. Sicily’s Marsala; France’s vin doux naturel; many of Greece’s PDO wines; Portugal’s Setúbal, Carcavelos, and Pico; Sherry’s close cousins Málaga, Montilla-Moriles, and Condado de Huelva; the many fading traditional styles of the Iberian peninsula—Tarragona Clásico, Rueda Dorado, etc.—and a myriad number of New World adaptations constitute the remaining stratum of fortified wine styles. Vermouth and quinquinas, fortified wines flavored by maceration with additional herbs and spices (cinchona bark is essential to the flavor of quinquinas) are properly considered aromatized wines.

There are three general methods of fortification. A wine’s fermentation may be arrested through the addition of spirit while sugars remain (as in the case of Port) or the wine may be fortified after the fermentation has concluded (as in the case of Sherry). The latter method produces a dry fortified wine, although the winemaker may restore sweetness by the addition of sweetened wine or grape syrup. The third method, in which grape must is fortified prior to fermentation, produces a mistelle rather than a fortified wine. This category was once exclusively known as vins de liq

Comments
  • Hey, Anthony! Great question, the explanation is an interesting one. Per the Pliego, there is nothing about what styles can and cannot be VOS/VORS just that they must be 20/30 years old. This is a designation that is fully regulated by the Consejo and its tasting panel rather than a codified legal document. The Consejo claims that "Sherries of Certified Age" must be Amontillado, Oloroso (sweet or dry), Palo Cortado, or Pedro Ximénez. Yet, they approved the bottlings here for Cream and Moscatel. All in all, these two bottlings seem more of an anomaly and a bending of the rules than the standard, plus only 1000 bottles of them are made, which makes it quite inconsequential to the designation. The beauty of wine law.... There are always exceptions to the rules hahaha 

  •  "A tasting panel certifies all VOS and VORS wines, and only Amontillado, Oloroso, Palo Cortado, and Pedro Ximénez wines are authorized for consideration."

    Cream and Moscatel are also made in VOS/VORS styles see: VORS archive - Bodegas Lustau

  • Hey, Partha! This is due to the tradition of field blend vineyards in the region. The Duoro is home to a high proportion of older vines, and many of the top sites have a mix of varieties versus intentional plantings of a singular variety. That said, part of wine law is purely a "just because" versus justification for each and every single regulation. 

  • Eversince I started studying Fortified wines, specially Port, this question always stuck my mind : Why is the minimum percentage of preferred red grape varieties in Porto wine production set at 60%, rather than a higher or lower percentage?

    Can you explain. Thanks in Advance

  • Hey, Michael! Yes! Per the recent legal changes, any village in the DO can produce and age wines.