This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.
Graham’s Ne Oublie hits the States
Ne Oublie, Graham’s extremely rare 1882 tawny Port, is being released in the US, after its UK launch in June.
Ne Oublie Port – ‘a piece of the family silver’
“Rather than offer it all over the country, we’ll go to a couple of very high-end retailers,” explained Rupert Symington, joint MD of Symington Family Estates. The Port is from one of three remaining casks bought by his grandfather, AJ Symington, from a Douro farmer in the 1920s. Of the 650 decanters of Ne Oublie available, he hopes to sell 40 in the States with a retail price of around US$9,000.
“There’s a huge interest in the US, perhaps almost more than England. The problem is access where you’ve got perhaps half a dozen really high-end shops like Wally’s in Los Angeles and Calvert Woodley in DC,” said Symington. “When you have Cognacs at US$500 a glass and people don’t bat an eyelid, what’s clear is there’s so much money swishing around in America. It’s a question of getting to the people who have that kind of disposable income.”
Taylor’s pioneered this lucrative, niche market with Scion, an 1855 pre-phylloxera Port priced at £2,500, in 2010. Before then, Symington accepts the trade may have been slow on the uptake compared to single cask malt whiskies, but stressed: “We’re not in a position to roll one of these out every year. It really is a piece of the family silver.”