Cálem 60 (40+20) Years Old 0.75l (wood box)
Exclusive presents for fresh fifty year olds, who know how to enjoy the fruits of life.
Prices including VAT
| Availability: | Sold out - call us on availability |
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| Our Price: | 5.346 Kč |
| Product code: | CAL040 |
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| Category listing | |
| Volume (liters): | 2x0.75 |
| Alcohol by volume (%): | 20 |
| Region: | Douro |
| Country of origin: | Portugal |
| Web: | www.calem.pt |
| Quantity in tray/case: | 3 | Purchasable by single unit [Why?] |
Cálem 40 Years Old has been aged in small oak casks for an average 40 Years. It has a lovely pale tawny colour with tinges of green. The wonderful bouquet has hints of nuts and spices. On the palate, it is full, rounded, soft and complex- with a long finish. To fully appreciate its very special characteristics, best served on its own- as an after-dinner liqueur.
Cálem 20 Years Old Tawny has been aged in small oak casks for an average 20 Years. It has an orange-tawny colour with tinges of green- characteristic of ageing in wood. It has a complex bouquet of almonds and citrus and on tasting it is smooth, silky and light with lots of finesse. Ideal on its own or with patés, cream cheeses and fruit tarts.
About port wine
Port wine (also known as Vinho do Porto, Oporto, Porto, and often simply Port) is a Portuguese, fortified wine from the Douro Valley in the northern provinces of Portugal. It's typically a sweet wine, but comes as dry or semi-dry too. It is often served as a dessert wine. Wines in the style of the Portuguese product called port are produced around the world in several countries—most notably Australia, South Africa, India, Canada and the United States. However, under European Union guidelines, only the product from Portugal may be labelled as Port. In the United States, Federal law mandates that the Portuguese-made product be labeled Porto or Vinho do Porto.
Port is produced from grapes grown and processed in the Douro region. The wine produced is then fortified with the addition of a Brandy (distilled grape spirits), in order to stop the fermentation leaving residual sugar in the wine and to boost the alcohol content. The wine is then stored and aged, often in barrels stored in caves (Portuguese meaning "cellars") as is the case in Vila Nova de Gaia, before being bottled. The wine received its name, "Port," in the latter half of the 17th century from the seaport city of Porto at the mouth of the Douro River, where much of the product was brought to market or for export to other countries in Europe from the Leixões docks. The Douro valley where Port wine is produced was defined and established as a protected region, or appellation in 1756 — making it the second oldest defined and protected wine region in the world.

