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N.V. Blandy's Malmsey Solera 1863 Madeira

Capsule condition issue; very top shoulder fill; light label condition issue

Minimum Bid is $800
Ends Sunday, 7pm Pacific

ITEM 9855480 - Removed from a subterranean wine cellar; Purchased at retail

Bidder Amount Total
$800
N.V. Blandy's Malmsey Solera 1863 Madeira

PRODUCER

Blandy's

Blandy’s dates its venerable history back to 1807, when an Englishman named John Blandy arrived on the island of Madeira in the hopes of improving his fragile health. He brought his family and over the course of several generations Blandy's became one of the leading winemaking and exporting companies on the island. Today the company is aligned with the Symingtons of Oporto in a partnership that enables world wide distribution. Blandy’s makes a wide range of fortified wines from vintage to non-vintage Colheitas.

REGION

Portugal, Madeira

Madeira is an island in the Atlantic Ocean 530 miles southwest of Lisbon and 360 miles west of Morocco. Since the 16th century Madeira has also been the name of the island’s most famous product, a fortified wine known for its aging potential. The island is a part of Portugal and has earned Portugal’s highest wine quality ranking, the DOC. Unlike Port and Sherry, two other popular fortified wines, Madeira actually improves with heat and oxidation, one reason why it became popular in the 17th and 18th centuries with Dutch and English shippers on route to India and other Asian ports. By the 18th century Madeira was the most fashionable wine in North America, and the American colonies were buying about a quarter of Madeira’s total annual production. The island of Madeira has a warm maritime climate, but it is challenging to grow grapes on the island’s steep terrain. The red-skinned Tinta Negra Mole grape, is commonly planted as are Malvasia (Malmsey), Sercial, Verdelho, Bual and Terrantez. Madeira is produced in various levels of sweetness and European Union rules since 1986 require that labels specify the age of the wines. To be labelled as a vintage Madeira, the wine must come from a single vintage, a single grape and be aged at least 20 years. The finest Madeiras can be aged for 100 years or more before bottling. In 2002, English wine writer and Madeira connoisseur Michael Broadbent wrote that if stranded on a dessert island, his beverages of choice would be a couple of Madeiras, one from 1862 and one from 1846. “Apart from the glorious, indescribable perfume and taste,” Broadbent wrote, “madeira is one wine which is able to survive the heat and which ben be dipped into at leisure.”