Archive for February, 2010

Classic Malts Website Redesigned – Scotch Whisky News

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The website of the Classic Malts ( www.malts.com ) has been redesigned…visit the shiny new website at;

http://www.malts.com/

The Classic Malts are;

Caol Ila

Cardhu

Clynelish

Cragganmore

Dalwhinnie

Glen Elgin

Glenkinchie

Knockando

Lagavulin

Oban

Royal Lochnagar

Talisker

The Singleton of Glendullan

The Singleton of Dufftown

classicmalts

Jolly Toper Tastings – Scotch Whisky News

February 18th Thursday: Springbank £18 ALL PROCEEDS TO WATERAID (No member’s discount)-

Springbank 18yo 46%

Springbank 12yo Claret wood expression cask strength

Springbank CV 46%

Springbank 12yo cask strength

Longrow

March 4th Thursday: old/sherried/peaty/rare/unusual/mystery £20/17*-

Springbank private bottling 1996-2009 13yo frsh sherry hogshead 56%

Birnie Moss ‘intensely peated’ from Benriach distillery 48%

Dewars 12yo 43%

Caol Ila unpeated 10yo bottled 2009 65.8%

Ardmore 25yo 51.4%

+ a mystery dram

March 18th Thursday: 5 anonymous Islay/peaty malts at 40% No.2 £16/13*-

Glenkeir Treasures (2 malts vatted The Whisky Shop)

Pride of Islay 12yo 40% Gordon & MacPhail

Islay Storm single malt

The Ileach single malt

special guest Brora 1982-2008 43% refill sherry butts Gordon & MacPhail

April 1st Thursday: old/sherried/peaty/rare/unusual/mystery £20/17%

April 15th Thursday: World Whiskies £tbc-

India- Amrut Fusion single malt 50%

Japan- Super Nikka blend 43%

Australia- Lark single malt 43%

Canada- Lot No. 40 40%

USA- tbc

Europe- tbc

Future dates:-

29th April, 13th May Highland Park, 27th May, 10th June Anonymous Islay malts 43% The Ileach 12yo single malt, The Pibroch 12yo single malt, Smokehead single malt, Six Isles plus a special guest (Brora or Port Ellen), 24th June and 8th & 22nd August

Future tastings:-

Peaty Blends 40% : date,drams & price tbc
Islay Mist
Islay Hallmark 8yo
Black Bottle 10yo
Black Grouse
Black Bottle
plus a special guest (Brora or Port Ellen)

Tickets : £17*/20 or when a tasting’s theme requires buying more expensive bottles the increase will be reflected proportionally in the ticket price.

At least 5 drams, cask strength being the preferred option when a choice is available and affordable.

Refunds only possible if tasting not sold out or if ticket can be resold.

The tastings aim to inform and entertain. The relaxed approach is still structured and props are used so the tastes and smells of the various influences on production can be experienced first hand, for example there will be the opportunity to smell and/or taste both malted and un-malted barley, yeast and new make spirit.

The tasting usually ends with a raffle where every entrant wins a miniature’s worth of whisky left over from previous tastings, entry to the raffle is an additional £2 and any further donations being collected for World Vision’s ‘Sponsor a Child’ scheme (we’ve collected more than £1500 to date).

All tastings include oatcakes, shortbread and chocolates.
The Tollbooth offers meals up to the time of tasting.
ENTRY BY PREPAID TICKET ONLY – prices from £17*
*first timers & members discount, 13 month membership = £10
2nd year’s membership £5 then all subsequent years free.
Want to taste the whiskies but can’t attend? We can bottle them for you to take away. Empty minis always appreciated.

http://www.jollytopertastings.co.uk/

Preiss Imports Jan/Feb 2010 Single Malt Newsletter – Scotch Whisky News

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In this issue, I am highlighting a product from the Lonach label (Duncan Taylor) that is simply outstanding, and I think you all should know it’s available. I put the Longrow CV in the spotlight section. If you like peaty whisky and haven’t tried this one, you’re in for a treat.
 
Cheers,
 
Ken Young
Preiss Imports
ken@preissimports.com

What A Deal, You Say

Strathisla? 1967? For $199 or less ?!? Can’t be!  

From our good friends at Duncan Taylor & Co. we are able to offer a great value whisky – Lonach Strathisla 1967 42 Year Old. The Lonach label was created to showcase those rare and old whiskies that were too low in alcohol volume to be bottled as a single cask, so instead many barrels were married together to provide a deliciously old dram at a great price!  
lonstrath1967

Tasting Notes:

Color: Pale Straw Hue
Nose: Dried bark and cinnamon, with developing fruitiness and buttered crumpets, and evolves into treacle sponge. Also present are vanilla pods, dried spices and mahogany tables.
Palate: Quite creamy notes of authentic vanilla ice cream and jelly sweets.
Finish: Hard toffee, a touch of shortbread and a little dried fruit.
41.1%ABV

Single Malt Spotlight  – Longrow CV 
  
The brilliant minds at Springbank Distillers longed to make an uber-balanced Longrow Single Malt…they wanted all of that peat and smoke, while maintaining a superior balance of complexity and maturity. After months of experimenting, Longrow CV was released as a combination of 6, 10, and 14 year old Longrow Single Malt. 
 
CV stands for Curriculum Vitae (meaning Resume) which describes the variety of ages contained in the expression. 
 

longrowcv 
Bragging Rights
F. Paul Pacult’s Spirit Journal :: 5 STARS, HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION
F. Paul Pacult’s Spirit Journal :: 2009 115 Best Five-Star Spirits
2009 Whisky Bible :: 95.5 Points!
Whisky Magazine :: Highest Recommendation
~Available Nationwide~

 
GlenDronach, Anyone?

We reintroduced GlenDronach in 2009 and currently have 12, 15, and 18 year old in stock. We would like to make sure you can get your fix of this WONDERFUL sherried single malt.  Please contact me directly at ken@preissimports.com if you have any issues obtaining GlenDronach in your market. 

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Gauntleys Whisky Newsletter No. 11 August 2005 – Scotch Whisky News

Whisky Intelligence has reproduced (with permission) The Gauntleys Whisky Newsletter for August 2005; a small sample of scotch whisky archeology. The author, Chris Goodrum, has some excellent insights of whisky, which makes for excellent reading on a Sunday.  Enjoy!

Dear Whisky Customers
 
Far be it from me to blow my own trumpet, but I think that we are maybe beginning to be taken seriously in the whisky market. I say this because I was contacted by the independent bottling company Dewar Rattay (more about them later) who were most enthusiastic about their single cask whiskies and wondered whether I would like to taste some of their stuff. Well I think you can guess what me reply was!
 
The other event was that Murray McDavid have released the latest Misson range, nothing unusual in that I hear you say, but, apparently I am the only UK merchant that has been given advance samples. Certainly this is an honour and I would like to thank them for that and now I need to convince you lot to buy them!
 
Other gems include, as promised tasting notes on the updated John McDougall range, and the Blackadder range, both of which are of their usual high standards. Also along with the Misson V samples I was given a sneak preview of the Bruichladdich 3rd Edition 20 year old. As you will remember the 2nd Edition bottling which was rather good, and which incidentally we still have stock of, flirted with a mourvedre cask and generated a lot of column inches because of it. So in their spirit of adventure the 3rd Edition had an ‘ encounter’  with a Madeira cask! Also for fans of the Bruichladdich Links series, there is a new bottling.
 
JOHN McDOUGALL – GOLDEN CASK SERIES
 
HIGHLAND
 
Balblair 1990 (15 year old) 62.1% £39.95 

Clean, very pronounced aromas of sherry fruit, rich marmalade, slightly creamy with notes of earth, vanilla and fresh pine. Superb depth. Dry, med bodied with oodles of fresh, drying sherry fruit, spices. Sensational, intense alcohol, lovely creamy, sweet and luscious mid palate with a fruitcake finish. A drop of water really brings the nose to life, evocative and aromatic, the rich fruit exudes from the glass. On the palate it brings out the oiliness making it super smooth and glorious.

Glen Moray 1990 (14 year old) 62.1% £39.95

Quite a lively, soft, earthy, summery apricot fruit scented bouquet. Lots of earthiness, a touch waxy and subtle Bourbon oak (much less than on the previous bottling). Luxuriously smooth and complex on the palate, full of rich apricot fruit, earth, cereal, fudge and restrained Bourbon oak. Adding a touch of water reveals hidden dimensions to this glorious malt, emphasising its apricot and yellow fruit and brining out the most glorious perfume hints on the nose. I loved the earlier bottling of this malt, but this is even better.

Macallan 1992 (13 year old) 57.1% £38.95

Bourbon Hogshead.

Clean and very, very fruity, buckets of ripe, juicy oranges with earthy notes, very deep and uncluttered. Water makes the nose delightful, perfumed and slightly creamy. Dry, light-med bodied, rich, slightly sweet with juicy spiced orange fruit, tangy alcohol and a very long length with spice and earth notes in the finish, water makes it silky smooth and creamy.

ISLAY

Bowmore 1999 (6 year old) £34.95

Clean, pronounced, very youthful with an abundance of cereal, ripe fruit with a delicate smokiness and a hint of salt, peat, perfumed violets. Quite leafy and foresty. Dry, very smoky yet softly so, a touch of obvious immaturity, but it is wonderfully complex, the coal smoke builds and builds until it fills the mouth, then fades leaving a suggestion of floral herbs, forest floors and sweet fruits. A drop of water tends to emphasis its immaturity but also brings out its perfume ? Certainly not one-dimensional.

MULL

Tobermorey 1996 (6 year old) 60% £34.95

Clean, very youthful and fresh aromas akin to a gin with a floral/ botanical edge, then the clean vanilla oak with its creamy richness forces its way through with hints of citrus fruit, earth, salt and a winey note – Amazing a bottling that doesn’t smell like it just came off the still or of wet cardboard! Dry, quite oily, light bodied, floral, again gin like, then comes crisp malt, citrus and vanilla oak, tangy alcohol and a very wild, incredibly salty finish. This must be the saltiest whisky ever! Water removes the floralness from the nose and adds a beguiling orange note along with earthy custard creams. On the palate it smoothes out the edges, but doesn’t diminish it salinity.

RARE MOTHBALLED/ CLOSED DISTILLERIES

Glengarioch 1984 (21 year old) 53% £?54.95    (*)

A clean surprisingly youthful nose, I?d swear it was only in its teens! A superb depth of earthy vanilla, orange, white chocolate with a delicate floral edge. Dry, light-med bodied, slow to build with an initial floralness giving way to delicate spice and tangerine, tangy alcohol and a very long length. A drop of water emphasises the white chocolate and vanilla aromas, while on the palate it softens and brings out the lush creaminess and orange citrus fruit, as well as increasing the spicy length.
 
BLACKADDER
 
SPEYSIDE

Linkwood Raw Cask 1989 (16 year old) 59.3% £46.95

Cask No 1832

Clean, bracing, youthful aromas of custard creams, salt. Smoke, citrus fruit, toffee, bourbon oak and earthy notes. Bracingly dry on the palate with a wonderful oily texture, med bodied with tangy toffee fruits and vanilla custard. Water brings out a floral orange fruit note and emphasises the toffee and spices, helping the flavour to gloriously mingle ? A lovely crisp, tangy speysider.

Strathisla Raw Sherry Cask Distilled 1989 61.3% £47.95

Cask 9413

An absolutely stunning bouquet, rich, layered and bursting with extremely rich, sherried fruitcake, a profusion of almond, milk chocolate and oranges when a drop of water is added. A big wow as this whisky passes the lips. Rich and decadently sherried, yet well balanced Dry, soft and silky, full bodied with gentle peat, rum like dried fruits, molasses and moist fruit cake. Water brings out the rich, dark, spicy flavours. Very long and very classy.

HIGHLAND

Aberlour Raw Cask 1990 (12 year old) 60% £45.95

Cask No 3319

Quite floral and youthful on the nose with a perfumed malty character and an apple blossom note. Light-Medium bodied, quite soft and a bit winey. Very different from the distillery bottling, full of malty/ cereal flavours, lovely soft and sweet middle with a long rounded finish. It takes a drop of water to tease out its complex aromas and flavours ? a floral, winey vanilla note on the nose and sumptuous oily fruit, rich dark chocolate, peat and salt on the palate.

Craggenmore Raw Cask 1989 (15 year old) 57.9% £48.95

Cask No 1970

A clean, extremely saline nose, it hits the senses as straight as an arrow with fresh citrus, vanilla oak along with a touch of earth, herbs and slight toffee. Very dry and intense on the palate, lovely soft, oily exotic fruit, malt and coal smoke, water makes the fruit even juicier and really brings out its saline character. Very long finish with coffee notes.

ISLAY

Caol Ila Raw Cask 1990 (15 year old) 57.3% £50.95

Finished in ex-Glen Grant Sherry Cask. Cask No 4162

Superb nose. Clean and very soot, bracingly coastal fresh, oozing sherry richness with peat and a superb depth of earthy fruit. Water brings out the spicy orange fruit along with a chocolaty richness and heather aromas. Dry, soft and silky (even without water), full bodied, the sooty-peat flavours hit the palate first followed by floods of fruit and coastal bonfires, bacon and roasted meats, water softens it even more, really bringing out its fruitiness and coastal notes, pushing the smoke and peat into the background. Superb length and complex, a thoroughly engaging dram.

Smoking Islay 55% £37.95    (*)

This is a mystery single cask bottling. Technically it is a vatted malt from an Islay distillery and quite interesting it is too. Quite intense

earthy-peat bouquet with smoke, candied orange, clean oak, barley sugar & a slight floral violet note. On the palate there is a depth of smoky bourbon oak, cerealy fruit, reminiscent of ‘off the still’ Bruichladdich and a return of the smoke and peat on the middle. A drop of water smoothes out the spirit and brings forth sweet citrus fruit, apricot, barley, malt and spices. Lovely length and tangy finish.

Blackadder Peat Reak 46% £26.95

Heavily Peated Coal Ila.

Very clean and floral with youthful violets, peas and juniper aromas, with lots of peat, smoke, coal and ground coffee. Dry and youthful on the palate with peat, peat and more peat, plus a bit of smoke for good measure. Intense and tangy, it does exactly what it says on the tin!

MULL

Ledaig Raw Cask 1992 (13 year old) 46.1% £42.95

Cask 123

How did it get down to this abv in 13 years? A beguiling, quite oily nose with lots of wood aromas ? coconut, banana followed by oily spiced fruit, a mere whiff of sweet peat and vanilla oaked citrus fruits. Med-dry on the palate again quite oily, med bodied with the wood flavours initially dominating ? toffee, spices, coconut, then comes the citrus fruit and it begins to remind me of the linseed oil flavours of Guyana Rum. Lovely length with a delicate peatiness, tangy alcohol and a long length with dried fruit and coffee notes

ARRAN

Lochranza Arran Raw Cask 1996 (8 year old) 55.8% £39.95

Cask No 34

Light, clean and youthfully playful on the nose. Floral with violets, malt, orange, coastal and earthy aromas. Dry, light bodied initially a fleeting sweetness gives way to crisp malt, citrus lime, butter-cream and nutty flavours. Very smooth alcohol with a slight twang of sea air. Water really brings out its perfumed, nutty, floralness and emphasises its butter/ cream/ toffee/ salty character

JURA

Jura Raw Cask 1990 (15 year old) £50.95

Finished in ex-Longmorn Sherry Cask. Cask No 1640

Quite a shy, backward nose, there is an impression of a weight of big, juicy, sherried citrus fruits and smoke waiting to scream “You’ve been Jura’d??” A drop of water unleashes the aromas, bringing about a dramatic transformation, and boy are they expressive and voluptuous. Soft, med-sweet on the palate, juicy, spiced sherry, earth, smoke and a gentle peat build to a tangy crescendo, leaving mouth watering spicy fruit and smoke lingering. Water softens and pacifies this wild beastie, mellowing its spicy fruit and bringing out its smoky side.

DEWAR RATTAY

Dewar Rattray was founded in 1868 by Andrew Dewar and William Rattray in Glasgow. The company originally imported French wines, Italian spirits and olive oils as well as holding stocks of both malt and grain whiskies which were the basis of its two Scotch Liqueur whiskies, Hero and Glenburn. It also acted as West of Scotland Sales Agent for a number of Highland Malt Distilleries one of which was Stronachie.

In the early 1950s the company moved away from bottling wines and spirits and its primary purpose today is to blend and store bulk Scotch Whisky, primarily malts which range from the 1989 distillation. Today Dewar Rattray is in the capable hand of Tim Morrison, who after the sale of Bowmore to the Japanese a couple of years ago decided to resurrect the Stronachie blend.

Morrison enquired about the Stronachie trademark and found that it had fallen into abeyance, so he bought the rights to the name. By coincidence an original bottle of Stronachie 12-year-old 1904 appeared in the salesroom of McTear?s in Glasgow in 2001. The story became more complicated than a normal bidding ceremony, as the bottle had been dropped and damaged by the auctioneers, who had to purchase it from the owners. So Morrison was able to offer McTears “a sizeable four-figure sum” (at the upper end of this price scale) to take it off their hands. As far as he is aware, this bottle is one of only three in existence (the other two are in Japan and Germany).

Small samples were drawn from the 1904 bottle, tasted and given a detailed flavour profile. He then had to find a good replica that bore some resemblance to the spirit he had tasted. He analysed hundreds of casks and conveniently found a 12-year-old single malt from another Highland distillery in his filling stocks which was similar to the original Stronachie.

Aside from this he has selected a number of single casks which he believed were of a significant quality to bottle under the Dewar Rattay label. As you will see from the tasting notes below some are exceptionally good and I have decided to shoe horn them into the range. The only couple I have not chosen to list is their 15 year old Mortlach, which was pleasant, but possibly a touch on the simple side, and their 16 year old Macallan. This wasn’t omitted due to quality, it was quite interesting but having several Macallan’s in the list I couldn’t see any room for it. So on to the ones that made it.

Benrinnes 14 year old  59.3% £39.95

Clean, quite a floral lowlandesque nose with citrus fruits, and grass, slightly spirity with nuts, creamy vanilla and a winey note. Dry on the palate opening with crisp, clean malt, grass and citrus fruits. The oak arrives on the middle and finishes with a lovely nutty finale. A touch of water brings out an aromatic creamy lemon note along with hints of spice and salt. On the palate it sweetens it, giving depth to its delicate flavours. A lovely aperitif malt.

Benraich 15 year old 59.9% £38.95

Clean, fresh and youthful aromas of perfumed, spicy orange fruit and dusky spices arise from the glass. This whisky is quite light but has a superb depth with earthy nuances. It has a deft balance of dry-sweet aromas and liquefied orange fruit. Med-dry on the palate with a rich entry of cereal and malt. Deep and viscous, loaded with naturally sweet citrus fruits, honey and spices, which build nicely. Soft yet tangy alcohol and an intensely spicy middle. Superb length with a drying finish. Water bring out a touch of oak on the nose but doesn’t really add much to the already complex palate, thus ideally it should be drunk neat.

Strathmill 15 year old 63.5% £39.95

Wow, a lovely nose, slightly youthful but showing signs of mellowing. Awesome amounts of juicy, sweet liqueur like orange fruits, quite oily with a slight floral/ grassy note. Considerably more delicate than the Duncan Taylor bottling, but just as good. Med-dry on the palate with lots of spices – cloves, cinnamon, then comes waves of intense, drying orange fruit, cereals and more mouth watering spices, finishing with a touch of vanilla and a dry wineyness. Water emphasises its winey character and brings out an earthy note. On the palate it softens it, but retains its refreshing oily freshness.

Invergordon Single Grain 40 year old 52.1% £84.95

Wow, wow and again wow! It has been awhile since I was truly blown away by a whisky, but this one does. Oily, lusciously fruity almost Bourbon whisky like. Is this really 40? The aromas are so extraordinary and complex they are quite difficult to pin down, but here goes (deep breath!) – sweet corn, very creamy apricot, new oak-ish aromas, it reminds me of a heavily oaked desert wine, hugely spicy with natural caramel and coconut. This was an incredibly cask. On the palate it is med-dry, crisp, mature, again quite Bourbon like with cereal, corn, lovely soft, mature dried fruit, a touch rum like on the middle, tangy yet soft alcohol, lashings of oily orange, apricot, late harvested oaked fruit. A simply superb length, luscious, sweet and lasting. I think I can still taste those spices.

BRUICHLADDICH LINKS SERIES

The latest release in the Links Series is the ‘St Andrews Swilcan Bridge’, and once again has a lable bearing the art of Greame W Baxter, the world’s leading golf artist. Not being a golfing person the lable dipicts the Swilcan Bridge looking up towards the 18th Hole. The whisky is bottled in 500ml bottles and is a mix of lightly and medium peated malt of varying ages which has been matured exclusively in bourbon casks. This bottling is limited to 6000 bottles, but unlike the earlier ones, it will not be numbered. It will retail for ?20.95, and at the time of writing I have not tasted it but I would imagine that it will be of their usual high standard.

MURRAY McDAVID MISSON V

Now, as I said earlier I am going to have to convince you to buy these. I know what you are thinking, that these luxury bottlings arrive with an alarming regularity, but if you are a fan of harmonious whiskies that are challenging and all have distinct fazes in the evolution on the tongue. Without exception they all have a discernable start, middle and finish, all set against the cleanest, most enticing oak that I have ever tasted, then you must taste them. Another good reason is the price. When the Misson Series was first released they were coming in at around ?100 per bottle, but know you can pick up the splendid 31 year old Glenlivet for the relative bargain price of ?73.95.

Jim has once again been playing with the wood finishes and I always approach these types of whiskies with caution, because, for me personally sometimes the wood finish tends to completely mask the distillery character. A case in point is the Springbank Port finish, which some people, Jim Murray included seem to love, but it just left me cold, the finish had completely swamped the whisky. When it is subtly done, as in the second edition Bruichladdich 20 year old it can add another dimension to the an already complex malt. So where am I going with all of this, well I have never tasted a port wood finished Macallan or a Grenache finished Auchtentoshan, and I have to say that the Macallan really does it for me, yet I struggled with the Auchtentoshan, I am not sure whether I really like it or not and I’m ashamed to say that I also struggled with the 3rd edition Bruichladdich 20 year old too.

Rosebank 1989 (16 year old) 46% £60.95

Clean and very aromatic. It opens with wild aromas of heathery moorlands, slightly grassy with lots of complex flower aromas, like walking through a cottage garden, followed by apricot, barley and sweet earthy vanilla oak. Dry, light-medium bodied, quite robust for a Lowland. Sweet vanilla apricot and garden scented sweet fruit begin the proceedings, along with waves of delightful oak soaked, almost tropical fruit, pineapple, melon and peach. Very long with a fresh tanginess and a touch of salt. Seamless and complex. I would rate it as the best expression from the distillery that I have tasted.
 
Macallan 1986 (18 year old) Port Wood Finish £64.95

A clean, subtle, yet immense nose. It opens with lots of ripe, clean cherry fruit floating above a crisp cereal and vanilla base with spices, liqueur seeped stoned cherries, peach, dried fruit, crystallized orange. Complex, you aren’t kidding, all the while the port notes dangle on the edge of this superb malt. Dry on the palate with a sensuous, luscious sweetness, full of soft cherry fruit conserve, a touch of wood tannins, spice and vanilla. The mid palate is truly sensational, all mouth-watering and spicy with a creamy/ glycerol mouth coating intensity and finally the American oak put in an appearance in the after taste. This malt just clings to the mouth and refuses to leave. Absolutely stunning.
 
Linkwood 1983 (22 year old) 46% £65.95

Wow. This has to be my favourite, especially on the nose. It is inviting, dripping in honeyed cereals, butterscotch and pineapple, along with apricot and ripe pear. Big and sturdy with a slight heathery floralness and loads of sumptuous fresh, homemade vanilla custard. Dry, medium bodied, soft, succulent and very sexy, overflowing with ripe apricot fruit, heather, spices and the mellowest, softest oak imaginable. Absolutely stunning, seamless with a lovely mid palate resplendent with sweet cereal and pure custard. Very long and richly satisfying.
 
Auchentoshan 1981 (24 year old) Grenache Cask Finish 46% £65.95

Ripe and clean with rich apricot fruits mingling with dusky spices, golden syrup, honey, cereal and sweet vanilla fudge. After awhile plum and wine soaked raisins drift in, but on the edge is this slight vegetal note which detracts a bit. Dry, soft, smooth and extremely succulent. The palate abounds with rich, spicy red fruits and apricot followed by a floral, flower petal intensity (almost like licking rose petals!). Very long and incredibly spicy with luxurious light syrup coated fruits, and a long classy finish. Great quality spirit, just taste it and judge for yourself and make your own mind up.
 
Glenturret 1978 (27 year old) 46% £72.95

A lovely shimmering gold colour. Clean and quite weighty on the nose with the rich fruit quick to assert itself, followed by crisp cereal, fudge, natural caramel and vanilla. I could sniff this all day. Underneath the oak lurks a depth of spicy citrus fruit, melon, pear, apricot and cooked apple all lusciously dripping in the softest honeyed vanilla imaginable. Dry and clean on the palate with the ultra clean, soft and smooth vanilla oak engulfing the slightly smoky succulent fruit. Mouth-filling and complex with apricot and natural toffee, along with cooked apple, spice and salt notes in the finish. Very long and very rewarding.
 
Glenlivet 1974 (31 year old) 46% £73.95

Clean, crisp and slightly estery with light cream and vanilla giving way to the ripest summer berries and barley sugar followed by hints of lemon and lime and an enticing spicy perfumed note, then it is back to the heavier almond, coconut and vanilla notes. Dry, medium bodied, very elegant with a complex intensity of vanilla, soft fruit, spices, coconut and almonds. The spice builds on the middle and fades leaving a soft barley sugar finish with a crisp salty freshness. All the time you are aware of the background of quality American oak. Stunning balance, gentle and very, very complex.
 
AND FINALLY A  SNEAK PREVIEW
 
So the sneak preview was of two imminent realises, one being the 3rd edition Bruichladdich 20 year old and a 1996 (9 year old) Glen Spey. So what is unusual with these, well this time they have been finished in ex-Madeira Casks, and I would imagine that they once held either Boal or Malmsey Madeira. I have agonised over how to approach this and I have decided to just be truthful. And the truth is that (and I really hate to say this) I am not sure if I really like them. There is no denying the quality of the sprits, I just think that the Glen Spey is like the Springbank Port wood finish –  the intensity of the Madeira completely swamps any distillery character. It is not so bad in the Bruichladdich because it has the maturity to push through all that wood character – eventually. Once again I would like to say that I have absolutely no issue with the quality of either of these two spirits, the guys at Bruichladdich would say that it was all about the quality of the wood, but damn it I like a to taste some distillery character in my malts, otherwise it could just be labelled “Madeira/Port/Sherry Cask finished Malt of no particular origin”.
 
I believe that they will be appreciated by customers who like this sort of malt. All I can say is that I recommend that if you give them a try and draw your own conclusion. I think I’m just going to have to try them again! – just to check, of course!
 
Bruichladdich 3rd Edition 20 year old 46% £TBC

Clean, obviously mature aromas from the rich Madeira cask greet the nose, displaying a wealth of mature dried fruit, figs and sweet fruit, then the coastal freshness of the Laddie just below the surface with its crisp honeysuckle and clean oak notes. Very soft on the palate, juicy and sexy with dried fruit, figs, California raisins and spiced fruitcake. Oily and weighty with some wood tannins. Then the coastal fresh malt and fruit just about comes through and definitely lingers with hints of herbs, coffee and ginger bread. The Madeira certainly adds a weight to the malt and new flavours kept popping up after I’d finished writing the tasting note. This is very different and a worthy experiment which will interest a lot of customers.
 
Murray McDavid Glen Spey 1996 (9 year old) 46% £TBC

Clean, very sweet aromas of rich, spiced dried fruit, crystallized oranges, toffee and coffee. Somewhere beneath all this Madeira laden fruit there is some tangy spirit and a hint of vanilla oak. Medium bodied, again rather sweet with the juicy Madeira dried fruit dominating the palate, along with a touch of rich shortcake biscuits and a suggestion of plums and vanilla. It is really quite monstrous, showing great cask selection, and I couldn’t get away from the shortcake flavours. It is definitely one not for the purists, and I suppose that is exactly what the guys want. It is for those who want to experiment and want a sweet dram for after dinner.
Ok that’s it for now. If you have any comments, or would like to purchase any of these bottling, please drop me a line to the usual address.

Sincerely

Chris Goodrum
 
 Visit Gauntleys at http://www.gauntley-wine.co.uk/

Glenfiddich Tasting At The Whisky Exchange Vinopolis – A Few Spots Left – Scotch Whisky News

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Dear all,

We have a just a few tickets left for the
Glenfiddich Tasting on Tuesday 16th.

If you want tickets, please call now or
be forever disappointed.

Best of luck,

The Team

The Whisky Exchange at Vinopolis  |  Tel: +44 (0) 207 403 8688

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Binny’s Chicago Has Some Limted Scotch Whisky & Whiskey On Sale – Scotch Whisky News

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Canadian Club 1.75L $16.99
Canadian LTD. 1.75L $10.99
Dewar’s White Label 1.75L $29.99
Glenlivet 12 Year Old $24.99
House of Stuart Scotch 1.75L $14.99
Jim Beam Bourbon 1.75L $21.99
Knob Creek Bourbon $22.99

658

Marker’s Mark Bourbon $19.99 

 

657

Cutty Sark1.75L $19.99 

659

Johnnie Walker Black Label $24.99

Visit Binny’s at www.binnys.com

Macallan Single Malt Scotch Tasting at The Brandy Library in New York – Scotch Whisky News

 

the20macallan20for20charitywater_2010Dear Scotch Lover:

Another great tasting with Macallan: Wednesday, February 17th, 2010 at 7:00 p.m. with Brand Ambassador Graeme Russell.

RSVP with Graeme Russell: graeme@themacallan.bz

Space is limited.

Cheers!

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Ralfy Posts Episode #106 Handy Hints 4, 5 & 6 & Episode#107 Canadian Club – Scotch Whisky News

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Fresh at  www.ralfy.com (whiskyreviews) are;
106 – Handy Hints 4 5 & 6   

and

107 – Canadian Club (Barrel Blended)   … which commences a run of five Canadian Whiskies bought at the Victoria Whisky Festival, Vancouver Island, and in Scotland.

The Oak Barrel in Sydney is Hosting A Sullivans Cove Whisky & Cheese Tasting – Whisky News

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We wanted to let you know that this month the Oak Barrel is hosting an exclusive whisky and cheese matching night with Sullivans Cove. The uniquely cured cheeses from Sullivans Cove compliment the whiskies that are regarded  as one of  Australia’s finest exports. Sullivans Cove whisky has been rated 90+ in Jim Murray’s annual World Whisky Bible and produce over 250 barrels of whisky a year. 

Tasmanian Providore Single Malt Whisky Cheddar is a “new to the world” product innovation. Firstly the Cheddar is matured for a minimum of 9 months. It is a deep yellow colour with a firm closed texture. The cheese is handmade – quite uncommon in this day and age of mass produced cheddars. Once mature it is infused with 8 Yr old Tasmanian Sullivans Cove Single Malt Whisky. The Single Malt Whisky flavour that develops complexity with further ageing. As the cheese matures the result is a deep, full flavour that lingers.

“Among the colonizing population of Tasmania were the Irish and Scottish who, upon stepping ashore married their passion, know how and heritage of whisky distilling with the most pristine whisky making environment in the world. Soon after settlement the air was rife with the scent of illicit whisky, as distilleries were established in the Sullivans Cove area.  Governor Franklin noted that he could reach port in the foggy gloom of winter by simply pointing his ship towards the smell of whisky.” www.tasmaniadistillery.com.au

If you have anymore question regarding this event or any others held at the Oak Barrel please feel free to email or call at any time. This event is taking place on Tuesday 16th February between 6.30pm –  8.30pm.

Kind regards,
Isabella Manuell
Event Manager
Events Team

The Oak Barrel
Retail Store
152 Elizabeth St
Sydney, 2000

Tel: +61 (0)2 9264 3022
Fax: +61 (0)2 9383 2742

www.oakbarrel.com.au

Clan MacGregor 36 Months (40%, Imported, Blended Scotch Whisky, +/- 2009) – Scotch Whisky Tasting Note

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Clan MacGregor 36 Months (40%, Imported, Blended Scotch Whisky, +/- 2009)

From http://www.grantusa.com/

Clan MacGregor, one of the world’s fastest growing major Scotch whisky brands, is enjoyed in over 60 countries around the world, from the USA to Venezuela and the Middle East to Thailand. It is a reassuringly high quality yet affordable Scotch whisky, proudly carrying the Clan MacGregor badge and motto, and with his kind permission, the personal crest of the 24th Clan Chief, Sir Malcolm MacGregor of MacGregor.

The Clan traces its ancestry and takes its name from Gregor, third son of Alpin, King of Scotland in the last part of the eighth century. This royal lineage gives rise to the Clan motto of ‘Royal is my Race’. The Clan MacGregor underwent centuries of persecution and turmoil, with their lands being confiscated and the very name MacGregor being outlawed. But they were brave and resilient, and eventually all of their rights and privileges were restored.

The Clan badge, a crowned Lion’s head on a wreath, encircled with a belt and buckle, signifies the unity and loyalty of the Clan. By using their badge on both bottle and label, Clan MacGregor Scotch Whisky honours the heritage of this strong ancient Clan.

Clan MacGregor is skillfully blended from a selection of Scotland’s finest malt and grain whiskies. It has hints of fruitiness and Speyside malts. It is a high quality, light and fragrant whisky with a well-balanced, smooth, mellow taste that resonates with modern whisky drinkers across the world.

The nose sweet and spicy and actually has the familiar aromas one normally associates with scotch whisky. Naturally it noses as quite young however it is actually pleasant, lively and vibrant (this is a pleasant surprise). There is not however any real hints of malt. The taste is smooth, sweet and spicy (just like the aroma) along with some vague hints of tobacco and leather and then some really nice sweetness one often associates with grain (as opposed to malt) whisky. This is actually nice (but not great). The finish is sweet, very ‘grainy’ along with some spice and some mild fruit. The finish is also quite long and reflects the previously commented characteristics. The finish actually improves with time and doesn’t degrade over time which is a surprise…..

This is actually a pleasant dram and drinkable and by far the most pleasant of the three whiskies reviewed this week. Quite a surprise for 36 months…

$11.99

Score 76 points

And thus $11.99 36 month old scotch whisky concludes…..

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