Wine Glossary

Fortified Wine (Liqueur Wine)

December 9, 2025
winemakingwine stylesfundamentals

Fortified wines (liqueur wines) such as Port, Sherry, or Madeira are made by adding alcohol. Discover the different styles and their distinctive characteristics.

What Is a Fortified Wine?

Fortified wines (also called liqueur wines or spirits-enriched wines) are wines to which high-strength alcohol (usually grape spirit at 77–96% vol.) is added during or after fermentation. This "fortification" raises the alcohol content to 15–22% vol. and gives the wines special properties such as greater shelf life, more intense aromas, and often pronounced sweetness.

Production Principle

The timing of the alcohol addition determines the character of the fortified wine:

Fortification During Fermentation

When alcohol is added while the yeasts are still actively fermenting sugar, fermentation stops abruptly. The yeasts die off and the residual sugar remaining in the must is preserved. The result is a sweet, fortified wine.

Examples: Port, Banyuls, Maury, Vin Doux Naturel

Fortification After Fermentation

If alcohol is added only after complete fermentation, a dry fortified wine is produced, as the yeasts have already converted all the sugar.

Examples: Fino and Manzanilla Sherry, dry Madeira

Important Types of Fortified Wine

Port (Port Wine)

Origin: Douro Valley, Portugal

Port is the best-known fortified wine. During fermentation, high-proof grape spirit (Aguardente) is added, stopping fermentation and preserving approximately 100 g/l of residual sugar. The alcohol content is 19–22% vol.

Main styles:

  • Ruby Port: Young, fruity, intense red colour, ready to drink immediately
  • Tawny Port: Aged in small barrels, oxidative style with nutty and caramel aromas
  • Vintage Port: From a single outstanding year, capable of aging for decades
  • Late Bottled Vintage (LBV): Aged 4–6 years in barrel, more approachable than Vintage Port
  • White Port: From white grapes, dry to sweet

Typical aromas: Black cherries, plums, chocolate, spices; with Tawny styles: nuts, caramel, figs

Sherry

Origin: Jerez, Andalusia, Spain

Sherry is made from white grapes (mainly Palomino, Pedro Ximénez, Moscatel). Fortification takes place after fermentation. A distinctive feature is the Solera system, in which wines from different vintages are continuously blended.

Main styles:

  • Fino & Manzanilla: Dry, pale, aged under flor yeast (biological aging), 15–15.5% vol., saline, yeasty notes
  • Amontillado: Begins as Fino, then continues to age oxidatively; nutty, complex, 16–18% vol.
  • Oloroso: Completely oxidative aging, dark, powerful, walnut and smoky aromas, 17–22% vol.
  • Pedro Ximénez (PX): Extremely sweet, from dried PX grapes; raisins, figs, chocolate
  • Cream Sherry: Sweetened Sherry, often based on Oloroso

Typical aromas: Almonds, hazelnuts, saline sea air (Fino); walnuts, dried fruits (Oloroso); raisins, figs, dates (PX)

Madeira

Origin: Madeira Islands, Portugal

Madeira undergoes a unique heating process (Estufagem or Canteiro), which gives it extraordinary aging potential — Madeira can age for over 100 years.

Main styles (by grape variety, from dry to sweet):

  • Sercial: Dry, high acidity, served as an aperitif
  • Verdelho: Medium-dry, nutty
  • Bual (Boal): Medium-sweet, caramel-like
  • Malmsey (Malvasia): Sweet, opulent, toffee and caramel

Typical aromas: Caramel, toasted nuts, orange peel, coffee, oxidative notes

Further Fortified Wines

Marsala: Sicily, Italy — dry to sweet, 15–20% vol., nutty and caramel aromas

Vin Doux Naturel (VDN): Southern France — sweet fortified wines from Grenache or Muscat

  • Banyuls: Roussillon, red-fruited, chocolatey
  • Rivesaltes: Roussillon, red or white (Muscat)
  • Muscat de Beaumes-de-Venise: Rhône, aromatic, floral

Commandaria: Cyprus — one of the oldest known wines, from dried grapes

Málaga: Andalusia, Spain — sweet, raisin-like, from Pedro Ximénez or Moscatel

Vermouth: Technically an aromatised fortified wine with herbs and spices

Winemaking

Producing fortified wines requires great craftsmanship:

  1. Grape selection: Specific grape varieties are often used or grapes are dried (as with PX Sherry)
  2. Fermentation: Controlling the timing of alcohol addition
  3. Fortification: Addition of neutral grape spirit
  4. Aging: Barrique, large barrels (Botti), or oxidative aging
  5. Solera system (Sherry): Continuous blending of different vintages for consistency

Flavour Profile

Fortified wines show extraordinary intensity and complexity:

  • Body: Full-bodied to very full-bodied
  • Alcohol content: 15–22% vol., clearly perceptible
  • Sweetness: From bone-dry (Fino) to extremely sweet (PX, Vintage Port)
  • Acidity: Varies greatly depending on style
  • Tannins: Present in red Ports, softened in oxidised wines
  • Aromas: Highly concentrated — dried fruits, nuts, caramel, spices, chocolate

Storage & Aging

Fortified wines are among the most age-worthy wines of all:

  • Opened bottles: Oxidative styles (Oloroso, Tawny Port) keep for weeks once opened; biologically aged styles (Fino) only a few days
  • Unopened: Vintage Port can age over 50 years; Madeira over 100 years
  • Storage: Dark, at a constant temperature (12–16°C)
  • Port & Madeira: Store upright (except Vintage Port with a cork)

Food Pairing

Fortified wines are versatile companions at the table:

Fino/Manzanilla Sherry: Tapas, olives, Manchego, seafood, Jamón

Tawny Port: Nuts, blue cheese, crème brûlée, apple cake

Vintage Port: Stilton or other blue cheeses, dark chocolate

PX Sherry: Vanilla ice cream, dark chocolate, as a dessert in its own right

Oloroso Sherry: Game dishes, braised beef, aged Manchego

Madeira: Depending on style — Sercial as an aperitif, Malmsey with dessert or chocolate

Serving Temperature

  • Fino/Manzanilla: Well chilled, 6–8°C
  • Amontillado/Oloroso: Lightly chilled, 12–14°C
  • Port: Room temperature, 16–18°C (Vintage Port should be decanted)
  • PX/Cream Sherry: Lightly chilled, 10–12°C
  • Madeira: Room temperature, 16–18°C

Fortified wines are a fascinating category that unites tradition, craftsmanship, and extraordinary aging potential. They offer a tasting experience that goes far beyond ordinary wines.

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