Port-wine stains are birthmarks that look like someone spilled wine on the skin. About 3 out of every 1,000 children are born with this pink-to-reddish mark. You'll see port-wine stains most often on ...

You might think port can only be served with dessert, but this fortified wine from Portugal is about more than its sweet, save-for-after-dinner reputation. "Port is a drink that not everybody ...

Overly dilated capillaries can cause port-wine stains. These enlarged capillaries allow blood to collect in them anywhere in the body, giving port-wine stains their pinkish or purplish color. A ...

Millennials are discovering the world of Port wine. Port refers to a fortified wine produced in Portugal’s Douro Valley. It has been in existence since the 15th century, and has been consumed in the ...

The New England Journal of Medicine: Redarkening of Port-Wine Stains 10 Years after Pulsed-Dye–Laser Treatment

Although pulsed-dye–laser therapy is currently the gold standard for the treatment of port-wine stains, few objective data are available on its long-term efficacy. Using objective color measurements, ...

Food & Wine: Port’s Great Reinvention: How a Centuries-Old Wine Found Its Cool Again

The Vancouver Sun: Anthony Gismondi: Port is more than just a wine, it's a mood. Try one of these.

As the chill of autumn settles over B.C., and the rains return, few wines offer the warmth and richness of a well-aged Port from Portugal’s Douro Valley and, in more recent times, some of its ...