Brandy and Port recommendations needed please

cambsno

Suspended / Banned
Messages
20,999
Name
Simon
Edit My Images
Yes
Topping up my booze cupboard for Xmas. Want to get a Port, partly to drink and partly to cook with. Ruby, tawny, LBV??? Want to keep below £15, ideally around £10/£11. Want something quite smooth.

Know nothing about Brandy? Difference between that and Cognac? Some of the ones in Tescos look cheap and nasty!!! Want to stay below £20, again, needs to be smooth and drinkable and not harsh. To give you an idea, I wont touch Bells, but love Laphroaig whisky.
 
PORT: Grahams lbv but for drinkin only and only after decantering first. (usually 20quid but can get for 12 in some places on offer for xmas) id use a cheap tawny for cooking.
 
Simon,

Cheap brandy is awlful - well it tastes awlful to me.

My favorite is Remy Martin V.S.O.P.

As for port - well you can pay a fortune for a really good one that needs decanting. They are labelled vintage port and the final maturity is in the bottle for too many years. LBV is matured for longer before bottling and tends not to need decanting. Taylors, Dows, Grahams are all good.

For cooking I would use a cheaper one. Morrisons has a cheap Dows Renown port at the moment.

Cheers,
Ken
 
not too sure anyone will agree with me here but port wise cockburns assured limited addition port s on offer at the co-op for £5.99 half price it's normal price. and i only have either Asbach brandy or remy Martin...
 
Best Brandy for drinking is Courvoisier, so smooth. Then Remy Martin VSOP. Just don't spoil the taste by adding a mixer to either.:thumbs:
 
I'm shuddering at some of the names mentioned here :suspect:

For port, alas I can't comment on the cheaper stuff. Who ever mentioned vintage (or a single di quinta) is sending you in the wrong financial direction though Tescos Finest is only around £15 a bottle and quite decent. Vintage port only lasts just over 3 days once opened (and decanted).

Whether you go for a tawny or a ruby style port (ruby style = vintage, single di quinta, LBV, and ruby) depends on your tastes. For cooking you want a ruby. The suggestion of Cockburns is a fair one, though for ruby (as opposed to a ruby style) you won't go far wrong with all the big names. Personally I think you'd be better off with an LBV (which does not need decanting from what I remember (though that's going back a fair few years)).

Brandy is more down to taste. Cognac and Armagnac are the two main ones. The latter is harder to get hold of in this country and tends to be cheaper, though in France it can attract a more 'elitist' crowd. Hine, Hennesey and Remy Martin are the better main stream labels to go for. Courvoisier and Martel are considered to be cheap and poorer quality. Don't go for generic French brandy.

For non French there's only one really worth considering - Asbach. It's a decent alternative and cheaper than the French power houses (though in many respects you do get what you pay for).
With Cognac the stars and letters indicate length of time in the barrel, the longer obviously the better. The order is *** - VS - VSOP - XO above which you can find then find types with names like Crystal and Ancestral Reserve. Armagnac tends to just give barrel age instead, though some of the more common ones (such as Janneau) use Cognac descriptors.
 
For what it's worth, boths sainsburys and tescos have Dows on half price at the moment.
 
Back
Top