Tonight a splendid fortified wine from Douro, not a port but in a ruby style version. Meandro do Vale Meão finest reserve. Very good stuff!
#portugal #portugueswine #fortified #Douro #wine #winelover #dinvinguide
@Reuterdahl It says "Porto" on the label, which means it is a Port. Or at least that it is claiming to be one 😉
@winenous no this is not a port wine, though made in Porto as it is not cleared by the AEVP - Association of Port Wine Companies.
@Reuterdahl May I ask where you got that information?
I'm trying to keep an open mind and am curious, but everything I have read indicates that the names Porto and Port are synonymous. Both names are protected and covered by the same PDO, which is regulated by the IVDP.
Here is the EU link to the PDO documentation. It is in Portuguese, but there are web tools to translate the PDFs (which I have just used)
https://ec.europa.eu/info/food-farming-fisheries/food-safety-and-quality/certification/quality-labels/geographical-indications-register/details/EUGI00000006172
@Reuterdahl OK, but if it is made with any grapes outside the the demarcated region it should NOT have "Porto" on the label. The PDO document is quite clear on that.
It seems the second sentence of my original comment applies, even if I wrote it as a joke.
@Reuterdahl I suggest you reread what I wrote, and take a look at the PDO document if you don't believe me - that is the ultimate authority. (Edit: Sorry, that came out a bit snarky, but if I continue with this discussion I'm just going to be repeating myself. Happy to clarify anything I wrote, but otherwise I'm finished)
@winenous well Porto is not the same as port, wines from Porto can include a bigger area. Port wine is wine exclusive from the Douro and made by specific rules, wines made in Porto is something else.