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    Vinologia

    4.5 (4 reviews)
    Open 11:00 am - 12:00 AM (Next day)

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    7 years ago

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    Ramos Pinto - Port & Douro Wine

    Ramos Pinto - Port & Douro Wine

    4.4(24 reviews)
    0.5 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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    Porto Augusto's

    Porto Augusto's

    4.6(11 reviews)
    0.5 km
    €€

    Tour: Our tour guide Sonia was clear and concise! I really…read moreappreciated that the tour focused on the port aging process rather than focusing on the specific history of their distillery. It was the perfect introduction to port with the added benefit of supporting a port owned by 100% Portuguese families! Cost: If you book online, you pay only 5 euros for the ticket. Once there, if you pay the remaining 10 euros in cash, you are able to deduct the 10 euros from the price of a bottle. Also, the tastings are all of the younger aged ports where you have the option at the time of tasting to decide whether or not you want to add on the older more expensive ones. For those, you can also deduct the tasting price from the price of the bottle. Know that you can do half tastings and split it between red and white. This means you can try half red and half white for the cost of a single tasting! This was a great price for port tastings when I compared it to others in the area.

    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. So I'm slightly conflicted in this one, by coincidence, the first place we stopped - on one hand, I absolutely loved the small-batch craft feel of the place, with a tour the exact opposite of the museum-feeling tours you'd likely get at the tasting rooms of any of the big-name, big-production port producers we mostly see in the US (short, but you could tell you were seeing where the magic was actually happening, the guide was knowledgeable and clearly happy to answer any questions we had about port production or the different types of port (which was convenient, as while I was already very excited to taste a bunch of port, I wasn't by any means an *expert*, so it was a good primer for terminology and such). And while the tour was basically just of the one room where they age everything, it was cool to see up close and personal, and was plenty large enough to get pictures with the large aging barrels, which we... definitely should have done, in retrospect. That's on us. Their tasting room is sparse, but that's way better than feeling overly corporate, which this is, again, the very opposite of. On the other hand, I hate to say it, but I didn't think their ports were that great? Even at the time I didn't think they were as good as some port-style California fortified wines I'd had, but especially now after having gone and had tastings at all their immediate competitors over the course of the subsequent few days, their ports were all clearly small batch and made with care, but they all still felt just a little... flabby. None were by any means bad, but they were probably still some of the least interesting ports we tried. (At least of the base ones that were included. You could add on additional tastes of the expensive ones, but I knew I'd be spending a lot this trip trying a broad range of ports at various places, and their expensive ones were... expensive). The tour was 10 euro and included either a flight of their core ports, or chocolates that supposedly contained 20, 30 and 40 year aged port. We figured we could share a flight, so we tried both so we could have a port and chocolate pairing - the chocolates were good, but I couldn't really taste a lot of port under the ganache, let alone that one was made with 20 vs 40 year old port, so that felt like a little bit of a waste. The ports were all, as I said, decent but not amazing, at least the reasonably priced ones. That said, the 10 euro each for the tour was also refundable on a bottle purchase, so at that point we still obviously had to buy a couple bottles of the one we'd tried and liked well enough, that was affordable (the fine tawny, at an effectively 6 euro a bottle, given the refund of the tour we'd already paid for, it was a no brainer), which is why I have a small glass in front of me while finish this review, so I can confirm, yep, still just a little one-dimensional. (Though it's been quite good for cocktail-crafting.)

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    Porto Augusto's
    Porto Augusto's
    Porto Augusto's

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    Vinologia - wineries - Updated May 2026

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