Luís Pato’s precious inheritance

In 1964, João Pato, father of the iconic Bairrada winemaker Luís Pato, installed a new piece of equipment at his winery in the village of Amoreira da Gândara: a rectifying chamber fitted to the traditional copper alembic. It enabled him to distill, with unusual precision, wine made from Baga, Bairrada’s emblematic red grape.

Distillation is, at its core, an act of selection. The wine is heated so that alcohol and aromatic compounds vaporize, then condensed back into liquid. But not all that emerges is equal. The first flow is harsh and volatile, the last coarse and heavy. Only the middle portion, known as the “heart,” carries purity, balance, and the true character of the wine. João entrusted the slow, exacting work to his right-hand man, Avelino Ribeiro, who distilled the wine twice, each time keeping only the heart.

João produced brandy between 1965 and 1985, the year before he died. The spirit was first aged in Portuguese chestnut casks and later transferred to used Port barrels, long favored for maturing fine brandies. João left the barrels as an inheritance for his son.  

In the 1990s, Luís moved the brandy into barrels that had previously held his most celebrated wines — Pé Franco Quinta do Ribeirinho, Vinha Pã, and Vinha Barrosa — layering the spirit with further echoes of Bairrada’s finest terroirs.

Half a century after the first distillation, Luís released only a handful of bottles. Each feels like an heirloom: an elegant black porcelain vessel resting inside a handmade wooden box, the lid closing with the soft click of a magnet, as if sealing a secret.

Winemakers whimsically call the liquid that evaporates during aging the angel’s share. In this case, the angels were clearly thirsty. Of every six liters laid down fifty years ago, barely enough is left today to fill a single 750-milliliter bottle. But what remains is the essence: flavors and aromas deepened and refined by time.

In the glass, the brandy glows deep amber. Its aroma rises with quiet confidence, warm wood, dried fruit, and a hint of smoke. On the palate, it is rich and profound, inviting slow, reverent sipping.

Sommeliers who have tasted it often describe it as incomparable, a fitting judgment for a brandy that is part of Bairrada’s history.

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