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Recommended Reviews - Burmester

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Jack G.

This was an unexpected surprise! Hadn't booked them in advance but was able to visit day of - this is a great port cellar! Really enjoyed the tour and the tasting (I recommend paying the few extra euros for the upgraded tasting).

Austin G.

At the foot of the Luís I Bridge on the Gaia side is the cellar of a 1750 port company. If you walk across the lower level of the bridge, you can't miss it. Booking a tour and tasting with chocolate for 13€ online, here's my experience: 1) Tour: Making it for right when they open at 10 a.m. on a Thursday, I had the entire tour to myself. "It's like a private tour," my guide joked. Speaking in English, the guide gave me the history of the company and the history of port while also showing the rooftop terrace with river views, old equipment, and old giant oak barrels. The tour portion lasted just under an hour. 2) Tasting: It included three healthy pours of white, ruby, and tawny and two circular pieces of chocolate (one dark and one milk). As a treat, the guide brought a fourth of vintage. Each port was superb! 3) Store: The tasting room includes a store where I bought a small bottle of white port for around 5€. Tip: Make sure you bring cash to tip your hide for their hard work!

Stacy P.

Burmester is one of the many cellars that you would find during your visit to Porto. Highlights: + There are a variety of tours that are offered if you don't happen to have a combo ticket or are visiting with one of the cruise tours. Prices do vary; however, expect to spend anywhere from 13- 20€. + You can pre-book experiences or purchase onsite + The cellars are actually quite small. There are two main rooms on the lower level, and then the tasting room/restrooms are up a flight of stairs. + Their tasting rooms doubles as the store front. The walls are lined with their offerings, which you can spend a reasonably 13.50€ for an aged Tawny to a few hundred euros for their more expensive offerings. +The Exclusive tour was relatively short on the lower level with a bit of history and discussion on the history and the production of wine. The tasting of the two wines (Vintage Port and an aged Tawny), were both quite good in flavor and quality. + They do have a break in their hours from 1- 2pm, with their last visit at 6:15 PM **Tip: Make sure to not do the tasting on an empty stomach, as the alcohol by volume is around 20%

Susan C.

Located right at the base of the Ponte Luis I bridge on the Vila Nova de Gaia side (south side) of the Duoro River, the cellar is conveniently located and a good stop for a port wine cellar tour and a simple tasting. Being located at a very convenient location with much foot traffic along the waterfront means it does get packed, especially in afternoon and evening hours. If you'd like to attend tours at a certain time of day, in a specific language, it'd be best to look up the info beforehand and make a booking to guarantee a spot. We bought tickets to a Duoro river 3:15pm boat cruise which came with tasting and tour, but realized afterwards upon arrival to the cellar that this means it's first come first served and if spots run out there's a chance you won't make it to the tour of your choice, or at all in the same day. Luckily they were able to fit us into the last English tour of the day, but it also meant waiting an hour for that to happen. The tasting room was also booked through the end of the day so no separate tastings outside of the tours could be scheduled. The tour itself was very informative and the tour guide was funny and knowledgeable. He gave background on the port-making process, the regions and types of grapes, the main products as the differences between them, and also answered many questions from the group. The tastings that come with each tour depend on which ticket you booked, for individual bookings you get 3 ports, for the boat cruise tickets there are 2 ports. The tasting room is large with very high ceilings and long communal tables, though they seemed to congregate all the tastings towards the front of the room. There are also several shelves of port with prices that you could buy. I appreciated that they timed the tours so that the tables were not completely filled in the room at the same time but it still felt a bit crowded to me. Also considering the number of groups in the tasting room at once (around 3-4 tour groups of about 15-20 people each) it got a bit hard to hear clear descriptions of the ports that we were tasting. That being said I also enjoyed the ports at a couple other places a bit more...maybe it was because those cellars had a bit more intimate customer service and we tried the more extensive tastings at those places. However overall I felt like this was a good intro tour in helping to understand the history and process, and worth attending.

Kelly S.

If you are ever in Porto and you are looking for a great experience, this place is a must visit. Burmester is one of the oldest Port wine locations and they have the show of experience and culture to match. It was an absolute pleasure walking through the streets of Porto and finding this gorgeous location. For the two of us to go, we paid $40 total, and this gave us a three glass wine tasting, and an hour tour. It was absolutely gorgeous. If you don't do any other wine tours in the area, make sure that you are doing this one. The wine is Devine, and it was solidified when we were in Lisbon a few days later and asked them to pop a bottle open for us and we were told " ahhhh Burmester, this is one of the best..."

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Review Highlights - Burmester

Make sure to get the deluxe tasting so you can pair the wine with their hand selected chocolates, and one or two vintage bottles on your way out!

Mentioned in 3 reviews

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Ramos Pinto - Port & Douro Wine

Ramos Pinto - Port & Douro Wine

4.4(24 reviews)
0.6 km

As I continue slowly catching up on finishing the *many* review drafts of places I visited in our…read morewhirlwind tour of Portugal in January, in this case one of a whole bunch of port-focused wineries within convenient walking distance of each other, that obviously being why I chose to stay at an airbnb on this side of the bridge, so I could visit as many of them as possible. Funny enough, at first glance, this tasting room felt *very* corporate - there's tons of space to spread out, but the overall vibe of the place was something like "museum gift shop". You can tell the receptionist is just a receptionist and has nothing to do with the wine's creation, which isn't inherently bad, it just sets a different tone than some of the *smallest* port tasting rooms. That said, their prices were extremely reasonable pretty much all across the board, including a base flight for 12.50 euros that had multiple standouts for the trip, enough so that this was the only tasting room where I went back a couple days later and self-constructed a second 20 euro flight that included a couple of their more somewhat more bottles. Though, funny enough, it was mostly their cheapest bottles that impressed me the most in their complexity of flavor - their tawny reserve, the Lagrima das Damas, the Lacrimosas, the base (slightly less sweet) white, and one truly interesting bottle, a Vinho Quinado, effectively a tawny port turned into an amaro with quinine and other botanicals, which as a cocktail nerd, obviously I loved learning about and trying. They *have* plenty of very expensive bottles, but the ones I mentioned were, as of when I visited a couple months ago, just *ludicrously* well-priced for how good they were. (I bought the most bottles here of anywhere I went, 3 including the Vinho Quinado - and would definitely have bought a couple more, if luggage weight hadn't been such a consideration.) I totally wasn't expecting to love their cheapest bottles, honestly, more than some of the much pricier ones I tried, here and elsewhere.

From a Kanaka, as you walk in, it seems like a typical tourist trap. Counter, Plexi glass, brand…read morenames all over. Not homey like the smaller port tasting spots. We took the $20 tour. Good history-buff tour. Warm in the museum. Bit stuffy but a great place to view memorabilia and learn the history of this influential family. Ended with a port tasting that was quiet nice. I prefer smaller tasting groups thene being part of a large scheduled group. Service was very good.

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Ramos Pinto - Port & Douro Wine
Ramos Pinto - Port & Douro Wine
Ramos Pinto - Port & Douro Wine

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Caves Offley - White port tasting

Caves Offley

5.0(2 reviews)
0.9 km

I really enjoyed Offley. With the exception of bigger Port cellars like Taylor's, most offer timed…read morelanguage tours, so do not expect to walk-in and immediately be able to tour (had I known, I would have made reservations). Offley's English tour was the earliest walk-in I could find on a Sunday (11:30, I think) and even though I waited, I was happy I went. I forget my guide's name, but she was great. It's an active cave, so you can see the aging Ports. Learning the history was interesting. Even if you've done various wineries/distilleries/breweries, Port has a different backstory, and each cellar has a different backstory, so it was still engaging. I thought I would be bored, because let's be honest, visiting these places is all about the drinking, but I wasn't bored at all. I think the tour and tasting took a little over an hour total, but I was lingering over the tasting. The tasting room is absolutely gorgeous. I enjoyed my Ports. I opted for the Reserve tasting and tried the Branco, Ruby, and Tawny, enjoying the Tawny the most. I highly recommend Offley as a stop on your Port tour.

The staff are really helpful and knowledgeable about their product range. I went for the wine…read moreflight for white port and fell in love with the late bottled vintage Porto. They have many of the standard port options as other cellars but had the best range of white ports I found anywhere and they staff like Teresa were super helpful explaining which was one that I might like.

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Caves Offley - Tasting bar

Tasting bar

Caves Offley - White port tasting

White port tasting

Caves Offley - Caves

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Caves

Quevedo Port Wine - Fado

Quevedo Port Wine

4.3(9 reviews)
0.6 km
€€

As I continue slowly catching up on finishing the *many* review drafts of places I visited in our…read morewhirlwind tour of Portugal in January, in this case one of a whole bunch of port-focused wineries within convenient walking distance of each other, that obviously being why I chose to stay at an airbnb on this side of the bridge, so I could visit as many of them as possible. Funny enough, other than the big names that export a whole bunch to the US, this was the one smaller Port producer with a tasting room here, that I'd had wines from - I'm part of a wine membership program that has had a couple of their ports (under their label but the same wine-makers listed prominently), but I was looking forward to trying several more of them that have *not* been available in the US. First off, they had a great space - admittedly I was there in the off-season, but there was plenty of space, and protected from the elements, but not stuffy (metaphorically or literally). Actually funny enough, they also had great live music the day I was there from 3-5, but I got there when they were on a break and was facing away from them, they were so polished I thought it was the radio until they finished their next set and people started clapping. (The original point being that there was also plenty of space for live music without me noticing they were there originally. But also, random potential for great live music!) It didn't feel *corporate*, it still felt properly craft and a lot more personal than the big name tasting rooms, but it did feel *polished* - they had a substantial tasting menu, all a la carte (the best way to do it). I originally spent 20 euro on a flight of 4 (the 4 that sounded the most interesting, including a 2003 Colheita they specifically recommended I try), though at the end of it, slightly tipsy, I ended up trying one more of the more affordable (the Lagrima; actually I also ended up trying another half-pour of their "Crusted" Port for free cause they wanted me to try it.) Anyway, Port-wise, I tried: the 2003 Colheita they specifically said I should try (great, obviously), the "crusted" (great), a great well-balanced dry white port, a great "special reserve" tawny, a big, fun, fruity, juicy rose (was only 11 euros for a bottle! - I bought a bottle), and the Lagrima (anyway, yeah, all their ports were great.) I also learned, which I *hadn't* previously known, that they also make gin! They sell it in bottles and by the glass - when I said I'd love to try it, but didn't need a whole *pour*, I was able to try a splash for free, and can confirm, as a gin lover, their classic dry gin is very good gin. Hits all the right notes, gin-wise. Just too bad I already had an entire full suitcase full of bottles of wine (mostly port, including a couple of theirs!). In addition, which I thought was very cool, but at that point had drunk quite enough wine for the day - they also make table (non-fortified) wines made from 3 varietals you don't really ever see, for very reasonable prices as well.

We were actually led to this place with a free tasting coupon when we purchased tickets for the…read morecable car. We thought, why not check it out. This entire area of Gaia is known for Port Wine, something we are not too familiar with. The tasting was small, but since there was 2 of us, we tried 2 different ones and shared. We thought it was different and good, so headed upstairs to enjoy a flight with cheese spread and olives. It was beautifully presented. When served, we were told the order to drink our wines (light to dark) and it was perfect. Loved our pairings and experience. Fabulous service! Great port wine selection. Cheeses were delicious. Definitely worth a visit!

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Quevedo Port Wine
Quevedo Port Wine - Free tasting with cable car tickets

Free tasting with cable car tickets

Quevedo Port Wine - Four basic port wines and lupini beans bar snack. Try them..

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Four basic port wines and lupini beans bar snack. Try them..

Burmester - winetours - Updated May 2026

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