Google Whisky Fun by Serge and Angus, blog, reviews and tasting notes since 2002
Whiskyfun Malt Madness Malt Maniacs
 

Serge whiskyfun

 

Whiskies 16,196
Other spirits 2,209
Angus 1,342

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Index of whiskyfun


Whisky Tasting

 
Balblair (96)
Balmenach (42)
Balvenie (1
27)
Banff (5
2)
Ben Nevis (204)
Ben Wyvis
(3)
Benriach (1
92)
Benrinnes (
102)
Benromach (
71)
Bladnoch (
84)
Blair Athol (
95)
Bowmore (5
55)
Braes of Glenlivet (4
8)
Brora (1
34)
Bruichladdich (309)
Bunnahabhain (3
65)

Caol Ila (668)
Caperdonich (
100)
Cardhu (3
8)
Clynelish (4
37)
Coleburn (2
5)
Convalmore (2
8)
Cragganmore (84)
Craigduff (4)
Craigellachie (
100)
Dailuaine (87)
Dallas Dhu (41)
Dalmore (1
26)
Dalwhinnie (38)
Deanston (
54)
Dufftown (5
5)

Edradour (88)
Ladyburn (12)
Lagavulin
(1
78)
Laphroaig (4
70)
Ledaig (1
35)
Linkwood (1
73)
Littlemill (1
24)
Loch Lomond (
78)
Lochside (70)
Longmorn (2
31)
Longrow (7
6)

Macallan (311)
Macduff (
89)
Malt Mill
(1)
Mannochmore (
47)
Millburn (2
4)
Miltonduff (
105)
Mortlach (206)
Mosstowie (2
4)
Scapa (51)
Speyburn (
44)
Speyside (22)
Springbank (3
94)
St-Magdalene (5
4)
Strathisla (
106)
Strathmill (
45)

 
 
Pete and Jack



2021
February 1
January 1 - 2

2020
December
1 - 2
November 1 - 2
October 1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
May 1 - 2
April 1
- 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2019
December
1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2018
December
1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2017
December
1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2016
December
1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2015
December
1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2014
Music Awards
December
1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1- 2
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2013
Music Awards
December
1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2012
December
1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2011
Music Awards
December
1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2010
Music Awards
December
1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2009
December
1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2008
Music Awards
December
1 - 2 - 3
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2007
Music Awards
December
1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September 1 - 2
August 1 - 2 - 3
July 1 - 2
June 1 - 2
Feis Ile
Special
May 1 - 2
April 1 - 2
March 1 - 2
February 1 - 2
January 1 - 2

2006
Music Awards
December 1 - 2
November
1 - 2
October
1 - 2 - 3
September
1 - 2
August
1 - 2
July
1 - 2
June 1 - 2
Feis Ile
Special
May
1 - 2
April
1 - 2
March
1 - 2
February
1 - 2
January 1
- 2

2005
Music Awards
December 1 - 2
November 1 - 2
October
1- 2
September
1 - 2
August
1 - 2
July
1 - 2
June
1 - 2
Feis Ile
Special
May
1 - 2
April
1 - 2
March
1 - 2
February
1 - 2
January
1 - 2

2004
December 1 - 2
November 1 - 2
October
1 - 2
September
1
August
1
July
1
June
1
May
1
April 1
March 1
February
1
January
1

No archives for 2002-2003

 
Malt maniacs goodies
 

Othe whisky stuff
 

Brora

The Magical History
of the Great
Brora Distillery
1969 - 1983

   


 

Ye Auld Pages
that used to be here

   

 

 



Disclaimer
 

All the linked files (mp3, video, html) are located on free commercial or non-commercial third party websites. Some pictures are taken from these websites, and are believed to be free of rights, as long as no commercial use is intended.

I always try to write about artists who, I believe, deserve wider recognition, and all links to mp3 files are here to show you evidence of that. Please encourage the artists you like, by buying either their CDs or their downloadable 'legal' tracks.

I always add links to the artists' websites - if any - which should help you know more about their works. I also try to add a new link to any hosting website or weblog which helped me discover new music - check the column on the right.

I almost never upload any mp3 file on my own server, except when dealing with artists I personally know, and who gave me due authorizations, or sometimes when I feel a 'national' artist deserves wider recognition. In that case, the files will remain on-line only for a few days.

I do not encourage heavy consumption of alcoholic beverages, nor dangerous motorbike riding. But life is short anyway...

As they say here: 'L'abus d'alcool est dangeureux pour la santé - à consommer avec modération'

   
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Copyright Serge Valentin
Angus MacRaild
2002-20
21

 
Whiskyfun

Scotch Legal Announcement

 
 

March 8, 2021


Whiskyfun

Some Macallan

Having a few Macallans is a compulsory theme when you're some kind of whisky blogger, like it or not. Let's see what we have… Oh why not have a trio of entry-level 12s?

Macallan 12 yo 'Fine Oak' (40%, OB, +/-2020)

Macallan 12 yo 'Fine Oak' (40%, OB, +/-2020) Three stars and a half
This is the expression that made us all cry and cringe when it first came out, around fifteen years ago. This was, I quote, 'matured in a selection of American and European oak casks seasoned with Sherry, as well as American oak casks seasoned with bourbon'. So a matter of seasoning… I last tried this expression in 2017 and had though it was extremely 'meh'. But time is progress. Colour: straw. Nose: no quibblings, this is fresh, cake-y, sightly fat, with touches of suet and paraffin, otherwise fresh croissants and sunflower oil. Overripe apples, a little menthol. I'm surprised, positively. Mouth: not bad at all, and not even weak at 40% vol. Good notes of beers, cakes, sweet breads, with a little rye and liquorice, which was not expected, gingerbread, and those lovely cookies our deer neighbours the Swiss are making in Basel, Läckerli! Finish: medium, clean, with even more rye and something that reminds me of Eddu's Breton buckwheat 'whisky'. Comments: excellent surprise. I could quaff this, and even find a wee 'craft' side to it. Did they change the recipe? Up from 76 points to no less than…
SGP:451 - 83 points.

Macallan 12 yo 'Sherry Oak' (40%, OB, +/-2020)

Macallan 12 yo 'Sherry Oak' (40%, OB, +/-2020) Three stars
Last time I tried those 12s this 'sherry' version was way better than the Fine Oak. So in theory, this should have gotten stellar (hold your horses, S.) The price, just south of 100€, does not make any sense having said that, even if Mac is an obvious Veblen brand. Colour: deep gold. Nose: things change and we change. I like the FO's freshness rather better, while this has something burnt and rubbery. Having said that the sherry was of good quality, I'm even finding notes of botrytis (noble rot). I-am-no-joking. Earl grey, malt, roasted raisins. Mouth: no, it's a good drop, no question about that. It's a little rough around the edges, but walnuts abound and indeed the earthier and more orangey sherry did a fine job. Cakes and biscuits, slightly overburnt in the oven. Finish: rather long but loses points here because of a rubbery bitterness in the background. But it's good. Some thick sweet wok sauce in the aftertaste. Comments: it's good for sure but this time, oh shock oh horror, I think I liked the FO a little better.
SGP:451 - 82 points.

Let's double the oak…

Macallan 12 yo 'Double Cask' (40%, OB, +/-2020)

Macallan 12 yo 'Double Cask' (40%, OB, +/-2020) Two stars and a half
I last tried this one in 2016 and had though it was very lousy (WF 76). They have this at Amazon's these days, always a terrible sign. Has it got that bad? Colour: gold. Nose: dishonest notes of toasted oak, chicory, Starbucks' macchiato, and just that Saturday morning at Ikea's. Whisky made in the lab, as they say, very dispensable. Mouth: better on the palate, because we do enjoy our breads, toasted woods, roasted raisins and nuts, and ginger-led spice mixes. But it is soulless malt whisky; I mean, there is no signs of any forms of any distillate character here. Finish: medium, toasted, a little green. Comments: some Macallan that's a little 'world'. Could be large-batch Kavalan (I know I'm being harsh now) but it's got no conversation.
SGP:451 - 77 points.

Macallan 'Classic Cut 2020' (55%, OB)

Macallan 'Classic Cut 2020' (55%, OB) Two stars and a half
No age but this is limited, you understand. Now the 2018 was good (WF 82). I have to say the wording 'Classic Cut' works very well with me, it reminds of when I was smoking those fine British cigarettes, Craven A, Gold Leaf, Senior Service, John Player Special, Benson's red box, Lambert & Butler… In short, the good old times… Colour: gold. Nose: the double oak (was it double cask?) only with more depth, nuts, spices, stuff from the woods, mosses, teas, mushrooms, mint… With water: okay. Walnut stain, plywood, MDM, more Ikea, a little shoe polish. That's nicer. Mouth (neat): rather hot, but really spicy, with a lot of oak influence. Nothing wrong with that of course, but the distillate is of no importance whatsoever here and I'd swear you could make this anywhere in this world, from Tasmania to Nova Scotia. Where's the Scotchness? With water: same feelings. Bitter oranges, oak spices, kirsch. Finish: rather long, eau-de-vie-ish beyond the fresh oak. Comments: nothing classic in this Classic Cut. Too much oak. This is 'world whisky'. Oak will kill and burry Scotch whisky (hold your horses, S.!).
SGP:471 – 78 points.

Perhaps an indie…

Blended Scotch Whisky 38 yo 1980 (48.6%, C. Dully Selection, sherry hogshead, cask #23, 230 bottles)

Blended Scotch Whisky 38 yo 1980 (48.6%, C. Dully Selection, sherry hogshead, cask #23, 230 bottles) Four stars
Right, Edrington, owners of Macallan, seem to have parted with many older casks a while back, many having found their ways to Asia. They now come out as either 'Blended Malt' or 'Blended Scotch', if not simply 'Macallan' in China, while rumour has it that they're all second-tier Macallans indeed.  And we agree, rumours kill. Colour: amber. Nose: to be honest I would say this is a blend indeed, as I do find some varnishy notes of old grain whiskies, with some coconut wine and even whiffs of nail polish remover. Some patchouli and potpourri too, but I believe it's not malty enough to be qualified as, err, obvious malt whisky – let alone Macallan. Mouth: better, much better, more intriguing, leafy, mushroomy, with old oils and waxes, phenols, Thai sauces, coriander, Thai basil, chicken soup, coconut wine, eggplant, artichokes, green pepper… I would wager that's it is all from the oak. Finish: long, rather on sour oaks. Comments: intriguing's the keyword here. Was it a blend or a single malt? Have they been Tamdhu-ised? Blended away indeed? Will the ones who know ever talk?
SGP:661 - 87 points.

More tasting notesCheck the index of all Macallan we've tasted so far

 

March 7, 2021


Whiskyfun

Caution

A word of caution
Let me please remind you that my humble assessments of any spirits are done from the point of view of a malt whisky enthusiast who, what's more, is aboslutely not an expert in rum, brandy, tequila, vodka, gin or any other spirits. Thank you – and peace!

 

Rhum for your sum

I agree that headline is lousy. But so are many rums these days, I'm even wondering if rum's not a 'lost category' with many missed opportunities. Having said that, only sales figures count…  

Don Papa 'MassKara' (40%, OB, Philippines, +/-2020)

Don Papa 'MassKara' (40%, OB, Philippines, +/-2020)
The newish brand 'Don Papa' has become synonymous with 'junk' or 'fake' rum, which has been a blessing for other very wacky and dodgy brands such as Diplomatico, Dictador and all the rotgut they pull out of the DomRep such as Oliver & Oliver's and others. Esclavo, Marti, Bolivar… We're still awaiting a 'Guevara' brand, are we not? Bottom line, sugar kills. Colour: gold. Nose: LOL. Pear cake, mandarin liqueur, Mandarine Impériale, Cointreau… But certainly not rum. This is to rum what MacDo's Double Quarter Pounder With Cheese is to western gastronomy. Forgot to mention Toplexil and kids' toothpaste. Mouth: holy featherless crow, what a liqueur! Even Starbucks wouldn't sell it, but to be honest, it's got some charming sides, it's just that it's a liqueur and in no way a rum. Finish: long, very sweet, but also finely citrusy. Comments: let us be honest, this is not a bad drink and I'd even quaff this with pleasure, on a ton of crush ice, around the pool and with young friends. It is just not rum; I'd put it in the same category as Campari's. But bad it is not, honestly. Now as for playing with words and the name 'Mascara', where they used to produce the best wines on northern Africa, I'm not sure that's a very smart idea… Try to find a rare old bottle of 'Coteaux de Mascara' and you'll see what I mean.
SGP:840 - 65 points.

Off to La Réunion…

Savanna 5 yo 'Unshared Cask' (50%, OB, Salon du Rhum Belgique 2021, cognac cask, 840 bottles, 2020)

Savanna 5 yo 'Unshared Cask' (50%, OB, Salon du Rhum Belgique 2021, cognac cask, 840 bottles, 2020) Four stars
Some say savanna is the best rum in the Indian Ocean, and that's most probably true. I mean, it is true for sure. Dead sure. Colour: gold. Nose: too easy after the Don Papa! Seriously, this is very traditional rum, rather on overripe bananas and just cane juice, with a wee petroly side – just what's needed -  and really a deep feeling of 'rum français'. With water: carbon, tar, brine, capers, new Formica, olives. Classic. Mouth (neat): great classic French rum, grassy, fatter, a tad medicinal, also with wee notes of smoked fish and certainly some green olives. A little varnish too, which belongs here, and some tar that's certainly not unwanted. Good highish esters. With water: saltier yet, with tars and olives. Finish: long, very 'Antilles', while we all know the Antilles are located around twenty thousand kilometres away from La Réunion. Kind of and anyway, it's all a matter of spirit. Comments: cool, dry, and good. Fond of the olives in  there.
SGP:362 - 86 points.

Caroni 1997/2020 (49.2%, The Whisky Agency, Keep Going, 262 bottles)

Caroni 1997/2020 (49.2%, The Whisky Agency, Keep Going, 262 bottles) Five stars
Let's not forget that when Caroni is good, it is actually magnificent when you just cut any ambient BS. Colour: amber. Nose: it is a softer, leafier Caroni, rather on tobaccos (ever visited a tobacco factory?) and smoked herbs and fish. Smoked oysters, smoked tea, smoked butter (Monsieur Bordier's), shoe polish and brand new leatherette. Junk plastic stuff you would have ordered from Wish's. Don't. Mouth: oh! Stunning high-extraction pine resins, sauna oils, retsina wine, hashish, Bakelite, a drop of acetone, new plastics, heavily salted Dutch liquorice… With water:  just more of all that. Totally extreme, tarry, 'chemical', possibly stuff bottled for the board at British Petroleum. Finish: long and very tarry. Comments: extreme rum, ridden with chemicals and wrong intentions. I'm no rum guy but I've heard some gals or  guys mention the word 'pirate'. Not my thing but I would say this, is a pirate's rum.
SGP:273 - 90 points.

Off to pastures new...

El Destilado de Panela (43.15%, OB, Mexico, +/-2020)

Aguardiente de Panela (43.15%, OB, Mexico, +/-2020) Two stars
What is this? Panela is solid concentrated cane juice obtained by cooking, so some kind of unrefined sugar 'bread'. It's also called 'galabé' in some French islands. Let's try to find out… What's sure is that it is white. Colour: white. Nose: eggplants, capers, olives, carbon paper, cucumber, cabbage. This might be existential, unnecessary, anecdotal, and forgettable. Mouth: yes and not. Yes because it is funny. No because it's is too dissonant, bitter and sour, green, acrid, unpleasant… I would not actually drink this, but I would let some salmon marinate in this. Finish: yes. Comments: possibly a bacterial feast – a wild guess – but frankly, it's rather just a talking point. Ham and chocolate. Yeah, sure it's better than all gins… Right, I'm rather a fan of the most experimental spirits, but this time I'll pass.
SGP:272 - 70 points.

River Antoine (69%, OB, Grenada, 2020)

River Antoine (69%, OB, Grenada, 2020) Four stars
White rum from Grenada, made without electricity, apparently. I suppose this will just kill us, so I say bye-bye, see you in another, friendlier, more philosophical world, without Boris and Macron… Colour: white. Nose: it is so extremely strong, but I would identify the usual olives and a large bag of whelks, liquorice, and crushed slate. With water: no, great distillate, hyper-bacterial, salty, sour secondary, fermentary, on Greek yoghurt and tapenade. Mouth (neat): someone's distilled sardines, apparently. Seawater, brine, rollmops, smoked herring, urchins and curry sauce. I would say white Hermitage, such as the good Sterimbergs, as matching wines, but I think we're digressing. With water: salty rum indeed. Sardines, anchovies, oysters, urchins. Not for everyone but what a distillate! Finish: same, even spicier, saltier, and even more on urchins. A feeling of drinking diesel oil. Comments: one of the saltiest and most petroly spirits I've ever tried in my whole life.
SGP:263 - 85 points.

More tasting notesCheck the index of all rums we've tasted so far

 

March 6, 2021


Whiskyfun

 

 

 

Angus's Corner
From our Scottish correspondent
and skilled taster Angus MacRaild in Edinburgh
Angus  
Macduff, Longmorn and Edradour
A bit of a mish-mash of names today, but don't we always enjoy 'mish-mashing' on Whiskyfun? Most of these, barring the obvious old Longmorn, are pretty recent or recent-is releases I believe. First up is humble wee Macduff.

 

Macduff 11 yo 'Batch 6' (48%, That Boutique-y Whisky Co, 1237 bottles)

Macduff 11 yo 'Batch 6' (48%, That Boutique-y Whisky Co, 1237 bottles)
Colour: straw. Nose: lemon, cereal, straw, bailed hay, meadow flowers, barley sugars. Fresh, simple, easy and yet with a reasonably firm and malty 'weight' about it. In time it gets a little more bready and beery. Mouth: this beery quality dominates here, rather bitter and peppery at first. Cooking oils, breads, mashed veg and potatoes. Not the biggest fan of this one to be honest. A sense of acrylic and plasticine too. Finish: medium, slightly salty, brown bread, toasted seeds and plain cooking oils. Comments: It's fine, but I find it a bit of an 'ungenerous' style if I'm honest.
SGP: 561 - 78 points.

 

 

Macduff 10 yo 'Batch 10' (52%, That Boutique-y Whisky Co, 1160 bottles)
Colour: pale white wine. Nose: similar but more pure, petrolic, direct and mineral in style. Still these notes of cooking oils, yeast and breads, but also some grasses, mineral oil and fabrics. Quite nice if you're in the mood for this style. With water: goes more towards cooking oils, seeds, linens and plasticine. Mouth: grassy, mashy, vegetal and yeasty. Rather sharp as well, almost saline. A peculiar style that manages to straddle mashy notes and chiselled, flinty sharpness. With water: retains this rather textural quality and once again emphasises cooking oils, mashed potatoes, yeasty bread dough and a little mustard powder. Finish: quite long, but a little plasticky, sharp and bitter. Comments: I find this kind of profile rather tough and hard word to be honest. It's a very gruff style of distillate.
SGP: 461 - 77 points.

 

 

Longmorn 22 yo 1997/2020 (58.7%, Elixir Distillers 'Single Malts Of Scotland', cask #163301, hogshead, 240 bottles)

Longmorn 22 yo 1997/2020 (58.7%, Elixir Distillers 'Single Malts Of Scotland', cask #163301, hogshead, 240 bottles)
Colour: bright straw. Nose: sometimes you 'smell' colours in whisky, this one smells yellow. Lots of buttercups, turmeric and bailed hay. This big vibe of summery fields and meadows, many flowers, pollens, dusty cereals, oatcakes and baking soda. It's not a super fruity example but it's a profile I find very attractive. With water: rice crackers, oatcakes, sandalwood, gorse and dried apricot in a flapjack. An elegant and easy balance. Mouth: a nice natural tension between sweetness and more bitter and pithy aspects. Barley sugars and malt extract, orange juice, peaches in syrup, bergamot and orange travel sweets. Alongside that you have a little hessian and white pepper. With water:  richer, firmer, slightly more waxy and textural. Wintergreen, pinecones, myrtle and some sense of lemon peel. Finish: good length, peppery, warming, some general wood spices and vanilla. Comments: All very good, it's an easy yet deceptively complex and rather summery feeling sort of malt. Fresh, light and playful with a feeling of perfect maturity. It's just perhaps a little too subtle, lacks some more obvious Longmorn juiciness.
SGP: 651 - 86 points.

 

 

Longmorn-Glenlivet 15 yo (46%, Cadenhead Dumpy, -/+ 1980)

Longmorn-Glenlivet 15 yo (46%, Cadenhead, Dumpy, -/+ 1980)
A very rare one that I never saw before. There is a reasonable possibility that this would be from a parcel of 1964 casks that were also bottled elsewhere in this series, however as with so many old bottles it's not really possible to be sure. Colour: deep gold. Nose: it has this really textural, almost gelatinous fruitiness that only old Longmorn and Bowmore seems to possess. However, it is not immediately tropical, rather this is more on peaches in syrup, nectarines, apricot and flower honey. Vividly fruity though and with this superbly elegant thread of waxiness beneath. Even some hints of expensive olive oil and pomegranate. You also get this rather signature 'Cadenhead dumpy calling card' note of metal polish in there as well. Mouth: thick, plush and almost jammy, this sense of your mouth glued shut by old school, glycerol-textured distillate. Honeys, pollens, waxed hessian, herbal medicines and even some glimmers of cereals and cooking oils. It's rather peppery too, with this sense of herbal, dry waxiness growing over time. Big, mouth-coating, dry and rather powerful old style whisky. Oily rags, cooking oils, bouillon broth, mineral oils, something of a dry, well-aged Chenin blanc. A wine drinker's whisky as Serge might have said around 2004. I find the complexity grows over time. Finish: good length, warming, a sense of slightly salty, dried out honey, mineral oils, plush cereals, camphor, hessian, crystallised citrus fruit peels and a persistent and beautiful waxiness. Comments: a Longmorn that speaks with a Glenlochy or a Glenugie accent? It's certainly quite a ride that begins rather more classical but really evolves towards something very complex, grown up and old school in the most beautiful sense. Proof that old Longmorn was really a distillate that could sing almost anywhere from 5 to 50 years old.
SGP: 662 - 92 points.

 

 

Edradour 11 yo 2008/2020 (58.3%, OB for The Whisky Exchange, cask #372, 1st fill oloroso sherry butt, 709 bottles)

Edradour 11 yo 2008/2020 (58.3%, OB for The Whisky Exchange, cask #372, 1st fill oloroso sherry butt, 709 bottles)
Colour: ruby amber. Nose: it's funny how these days you can almost spot different companies by the style of sherry cask they've been using this past decade or so. This one has a very 'Edradour' style about it. All on red and game meats, sods of turf, freshly brewed coffee, cranberry gravy and wee touches of wood spice and maraschino cherry juices. Spicy, meaty, earthy, punchy and rather powerful in style. Certain aspects are reminiscent of early batch Aberlour A'bunadhs in some respects. With water: a brief waft of Cuban cigar smoke, then shoe polish, boot leather and some slightly more fruity and playful notes, like a fruiter style of red chilli and strawberry jam. Works very well with water. Mouth: richly meaty and almost quite salty, like strips of Iberico ham and bone dry oloroso. Really excellent in my book. More notes of cranberries, hot paprika, toasted nuts and bacon jam. With water: now we're getting into very direct flavours of dark chocolate coated coffee beans, walnut liqueur, meat soup, biltong, black pepper and tobacco leaf. Finish: good length, drying, warming and very spicy. A rather vaporous impression of cough sweets, medical herbs and cherry liqueur. Comments: quite brilliant I think, and takes to water like a barefooted Timothy Dalton in License To Kill. It's a rather beefy and boisterous style of sherry, which may be an acquired taste for some, but for those of you who are self-confessed coveters of the 'sherry bomb', this way pleasure lies…
SGP: 462 - 88 points.

 

 

Ballechin 14 yo 2005/2020 (58.8%, OB for The Whisky Exchange, cask #158, 2nd fill sherry hogshead, 296 bottles)

Ballechin 14 yo 2005/2020 (58.8%, OB for The Whisky Exchange, cask #158, 2nd fill sherry hogshead, 296 bottles)
Colour: light amber. Nose: streaky bacon on an iron skillet, this is usually my immediate impression with Ballechin and sherry. Cured meats, ink, tar, farmyard muddiness, graphite, crushed aspirin, iodine and a rather precisely metallic kind of peat smoke. Brittle, sharp and powerfully assertive. With water: getting funkier now, all on pickled walnuts, brine, damp earthen wine cellars, gherkins and camphor. Still some notes of ink, carbon paper and a rather sharp peat smoke. Mouth: it's a very leathery kind of sherry mingling with chilli infused dark chocolate, beef jerky, tar, embrocations, dry madeira and peat embers. Overall this impression of drying, metallic and very sharp peat smoke - that almost has acidity about it - remains dominant. With water: saltier, meatier, leaner, more walnuts, hessian, tar, brine and pickled notes. Grown up whisky. Finish: long, salty, leathery, tarry, meaty, peppery and earthy. Comments: these Ballechins are extreme whiskies that take no prisoners. What I like is that they are very much their own style, you know you aren't just tasing 'another peated mainlander'. What's also neat is that it shares some clear DNA with the Edradour, although that may be the sherry talking.
SGP: 476 - 87 points.

 

 

 

 

March 5, 2021


Whiskyfun

World sessions
Number Seventeen
Various drops from the bright wild world of whisky. Let's kick this off with a light one from Japan…

Miyagikyo Distillery 'Limited Blended Whisky' (40%, OB, Japan, +/-2019)

Miyagikyo Distillery 'Limited Blended Whisky' (40%, OB, Japan, +/-2019) Two stars and a half
All right, some blended whisky from a single Japanese distillery owned by Nikka. What is this? It's probably not fully Japanese mind you, the kind of bottling that should disappear for good upon the new Japan Whisky Act. Colour: light gold. Nose: almost niente, nada, nichts, rien, nothing. Some vanilla, a little corn bread, some whiffs of hay that are not unpleasant, and basta cosi. It's not ugly at all, it's just extremely light. Poor Miyagikyo. Mouth: it's not bad at all, mind you. It reminds me of some recent bottlings of White Horse. Yeah it's like if someone would have bottled some 2010s White Horse under the brand name 'Lagavulin'. Seriously? Finish: short, leafy, not bad, with good citrus and even a touch of salt and smoke. Comments: don't get me wrong, it's good whisky and the blenders knew what they were doing. It's just that the whole idea is/was rather infuriating, was it not.
SGP:341 - 79 points.
j

Kornog 13 yo (57%, OB, for Triskel Spirits Singapore, France, Sauternes, cask #937, 2020)

Kornog 13 yo (57%, OB, for Triskel Spirits Singapore, France, Sauternes, cask #937, 2020) Four stars and a half
A Kornog from Glann ar Mor Distillery fully matured in an ex-Rayne Vigneau barrique. Colour: red amber. Nose: very unusual. A lot of model glue, Barbour grease and rotting bananas at first, kombucha, garden peat, raw cocoa, then growing notes of green Chartreuse, getting really huge, as well as pine liqueur and something very lactone-y. The jury's still out, this is extremely unusual… With water: it's really not sweet and rounded, and in truth it rather feels like ex-amontillado. Walnuts, curry, cocoa, tobacco, capers and olives, wee whiffs of burning plywood… Mouth (neat): what-a-monster. Huge varnish, rotting fruits, caraway everywhere, wormwood, capers, very bitter leaves, siracha, miso… It's really huge, probably the hugest whisky I've tried so far this year. You'd almost call it 'atomic whisky'. With water: weren't we missing Tabasco ad Worcester sauce? This is really something unusual, almost monstrous in a way. Finish: long, very leafy, with tons of green walnuts and this kind of curry-and-peanut paste that some folks in the East are making – and which I adore. Comments: crazy, very dissonant whisky with fantastic bitters, but it is wanted dissonance. Think Thelonious Monk!
SGP:274 - 88 points.
fr

No, no fear at all…

Kornog 12 yo (58.8%, OB, for Triskel Spirits Singapore, France, Sauternes, cask #938, 2020)

Kornog 12 yo (58.8%, OB, for Triskel Spirits Singapore, France, Sauternes, cask #938, 2020) Four stars
This time it is ex-Château Suduiraut. Lovely, classy Sauternes. Colour: red amber. Nose: much rounder, sweeter, Sauternes-y, with apricots, crystallised oranges, raisins, and preserved peaches. This is really alright, much easier than its twin despite the higher strength. With water: a walk in the woods and a load of walnuts, paprika and turmeric. The sweetness is gone but not sure we shall complain. Mouth (neat): gosh this is heavy indeed on the palate. Full cloves, curry, aniseed, pepper and cinnamon. Highly extractive, but more classic indeed after the Rayne Vigneau. Now I cannot not think of some Millstones from Holland or Larks from Australia. With water: I think I like the other one better because it was much more brutal, extreme, and 'unseen'. This is more on sweeter leaves, peach, cherry… And on some black tobacco. Finish: very long, very chocolaty this time. Black tea and the blackest chocolate. Comments: the very active casks have almost swallowed the peat in these two spectacular examples. I still like Kornog al natural better, but this sure will make for a conversation piece after dinner. Crazy stuff.
SGP:364 - 87 points.
fr

If there's one distillery that seems to share Glann ar Mor's spirit, it is Smögen in Sweden (and conversely).

Smögen 8 yo 2012/2020 (59.3%, The WhiskySponge, Sweden, 1st fill bourbon barrel, 261 bottles)

Smögen 8 yo 2012/2020 (59.3%, The WhiskySponge, Sweden, 1st fill bourbon barrel, 261 bottles) Five stars
Ah, a regular barrel… Colour: straw. Nose: but f****g yes! Pure manzanilla, distilled. Green walnuts and bags of olives. With water: fresh baguette and leaven bread. You cannot beat this. Mouth (neat): perfect crystalline peat and lemons and olives and tiny herbs. With water: I'm sorry but back to classic Islay. Grist, peat smoke, touch of vanilla, slice of bread, drop of seawater, music, poetry, painting, and literature. In short, civilisation. Finish: yes, saltier. And green walnuts are never too far away.  Comments: I hope this note was like the whisky, to the point. Also, I find it quite noteworthy that some Scottish entity such as The Sponge would select and bottle a whisky from Sweden. No, really, do you believe that's just normal? What does it say?
SGP:466 - 90 points.
sw

To Andalusia for more sun…

Liber 12 yo 2008/2020 (60%, OB, Spain, Spanish Whisky Club, 1st fill PX, cask #047, 300 bottles)

Liber 12 yo 2008/2020 (60%, OB, Spain, Spanish Whisky Club, 1st fill PX, cask #047, 300 bottles) Two stars and a half
I don't think we'll have to add the flag, the label being self-explanatory in that respect. I'm missing Spain and I'm missing Andalucia. We've tried several Libers already and found out that the younger, the better. Colour: mahogany. Nose: bold, sulphury, a little acidic, on truffles and hard-boiled eggs. Soy sauce, hoisin. Let' say the jury's definitely still out. With water: works. Asparagus, tarmac, new leather (jacket) and cigars. This is sherried to the core, not just 'flavoured'. A lot of chocolate. Mouth (neat): no no no. Extreme sulphur on the palate too. With water: works, as long as you've got your proportions right. Black pepper, cocoa powder, cardboard, artichokes. Finish: long and dry. More artichokes, perhaps a little burnt sugar, more cocoa. Comments: chocolate-dry and less meaty than the 10. Some sulphur at play here and there.
SGP:262 - 79 points.
 
 

March 4, 2021


Whiskyfun

World sessions
Number Sixteen
Around the world, around the world (in the wise words of the former duo known as Daft Punk). Starting from France, I believe that makes sense. No Covid-pass needed yet…

Distillerie de Paris 'Rice' (43%, OB, France, 2021)

Distillerie de Paris 'Rice' (43%, OB, France, 2021) Four stars
In Paris, 'rice' means 'riz', which means 'rice', capisce? So this is grain whisky since it isn't malt. We've tried rice whiskies in the past, such as some from Japan or that 'Moto' from Brooklyn, USA. In this case Distillerie de Paris have chosen rice from Camargue, where they also have horses, bulls, and The Gipsy Kings. Let's see what their shiny Cadillac, I mean Holstein still has done… Colour: gold. Nose: bread, pumpernickel, gingerbread, caraway, drops of aquavit, pot-still barley vodka, cucumber shoots and lemon caviar, hints of thyme honey, perhaps a little meringue… In truth I believe we're sitting between malt whisky and artisanal gin here, but it is some very precise and yet complex spirit. The bready flavours are fantastic and if you push it a wee bit, you reach sake. Rice! I mean, nice! Mouth: they're onto something, clearly. Starts on wine vinegar and capers but its soon to get to liquorice and to some thick, pumpernickel-style heavy breads. I believe it was smart to reduce this to 43%, it's such thick – and yet harmonious - distillate that 45 or 50% would have made it a little cloying. Perhaps. Finish: long, salty, liquoricy, with drops of old balsamico and some stout. Rather bitter oranges in the aftertaste. Did they polish the rice? Comments: unusual albeit adorable whisky, very neat and tidy and yet thick and complex. I hope they'll make a lot of this and keep a few casks for the years 2040. Yes, rice is a cereal.
SGP:462 - 87 points.
fr

Let's fly to… eenie meenie… India!

Paul John 2015/2020 (59.5%, TCWA, India, 1st fill bourbon, cask #8560, 234 bottles)

Paul John 2015/2020 (59.5%, TCWA, India, 1st fill bourbon, cask #8560, 234 bottles) Four stars
TCWA stands for The Cyprus Whisky Association. Cool people in a great place. This is unpeated Paul John (I cannot not think of the Beatles when writing that name). Colour: gold. Nose: the Rice whisky was really rich but this one goes the distance too, with more classic and rounder notes of cakes, nougat, roasted nuts and, hold on, rather soft sherry than bourbon. Some maraschino, I would say, and that wonderful millionaire shortbread they used to make at the bakery opposite Bowmore Distillery. I suppose/hope they are still in operation! With water: breads and cakes, what else does the People want? Awesome fermentary touches, leaven, baker's yeast, thick beers… Mouth (neat): classic, very good, slightly buttery, spicy and sour arrival. Some butterscotch, chardonnay, nougat, a drop of siracha chilli sauce, then some muscat wine. Bourbon, really? Where's that stuffy vanilla? With water: hold on, do not add too much water or the oak will come out in force. Finish: long and cake-y. Raisins. Comments: yeah, do not add too much water, as with many young oak-driven modern whiskies, or it may become a little plankish. When you don't, it's a very lovely young dram.
SGP:551 - 85 points.
in

Off to the Netherlands…

Millstone 5 yo (43%, OB, Holland, American oak, +/-2020)

Millstone 5 yo (43%, OB, Holland, American oak, +/-2020) Four stars and a half
We've got quite a few stunning Millstones in the boxes and they sure will come out eventually, but I wanted to try some of their more pedestrian output today. Whisky for the pleb, in other words. I'd add that they had several fives and that I'm not dead sure about the exact pedigree here. Should we care?  Colour: gold. Nose: popcorn, sour cream, muesli, all kinds of fresh breads, sourdough, and huge quantities of fresh leaven. Like, there's no leaven left on the whole planet. Mouth: there's bready whisky and there's breadier whisky. This sure belongs to the latter category, and perhaps is it not for everyone, but I have to confess I'm an integral sucker for these profiles. Salty doughs, fresh breads, artisanal meads and beers... Quite funnily, there are some similarities with the Parisian rice whisky. Finish: rather long, absolutely excellent, bready, fresh, salty, fermentary, yeasty, with a totally perfect lemony signature that leaves your palate as fresh as a baby's bottom. Comments: an exceptional bready and rather fat drop. Best stuff out of the Netherlands since Venus by Shocking Blue. Quite.
SGP:461 - 88 points.
nl

To Ireland? You say what?

Teeling 'Blackpitts' (46%, OB, Ireland, +/-2020)

Teeling 'Blackpitts' (46%, OB, Ireland, +/-2020) Three stars
I'm sure there's a story here – NAS need them - but the world is getting sick of gooey stories, is it not? Products and features please, keep your stories for Zooms (or stinky SEO). Colour: pale white wine. Nose: a light peatiness, distant whiffs of green peppercorns, perhaps a little iodine, a little new wool, a little earth… All that is very 'little' indeed, almost shy I would say. Whispering whisky (yes I know alliterations always kill). Mouth: olives, peat, salt, lemons. Repeat. Extremely narrow and young, a little rudimentary. Not bad at all, just rudimentary. Great surface, little depth. Finish: rather long, greener, more peppery. Comments: it's very good no doubt, but this is something I often find in peaters from the Scottish mainland too, they would lack depth. Which generates frustration and a wee feeling of, well, how would I put this… Coitus interruptus?
SGP:356 - 80 points.
ei

To Taiwan for our last stop…

Kavalan 'Solist' (57.8%, OB, for Palo Alto Whisky Shop, bourbon, cask #B101214010A, 157 bottles)

Kavalan 'Solist' (57.8%, OB, for Palo Alto Whisky Shop, bourbon, cask #B101214010A, 157 bottles) Four stars
Not too sure that's the right label, it's getting a little complicated with Kavalan and their zillion single casks, is it not. But our hearts are willing and our souls pure… And hey, Palo Alto, that's whiskypsychosociology at its best! Colour: deeper gold. Nose: of course. Bread, malt, coconut, custard, panettone, brioche. With water: doughs and breads and pastries and stuff. Good. Mouth (neat): very good, I would add 'of course'. Lemon cake, vanilla, coconut yoghurt, chamomile and lime teas, green tea. With water: very good. Finish: very good. Comments: perhaps a little emotionless. Probably not exactly Santana's Soul Sacrifice at Woodstock but let's be honest, there are no complains to be delivered whatsoever, this is perfect whisky. One day I'll tell you about me playing football with Carlos Santana around 1976, but this is neither the time nor the place. And hey, Palo Alto! Adios.
SGP:451 - 87 points.
tw
 

March 3, 2021


Whiskyfun

Greatish Clynelish

Still love, love, love Clynelish, but the very fact that IBs do not seem to be allowed to use the name anymore will probably damage the reputation in the future. As old marketeers used to say, you cannot have a good (or a bad) image when brand awareness is weak, while brand awareness only comes with product exposure and/or publicity. I agree, we deserve a few drams now…

A Highland Distillery 10 yo 2010/2020 (54.8%, The Maltman, sherry butt, cask #2090, 632 bottles)

A Highland Distillery 10 yo 2010/2020 (54.8%, The Maltman, sherry butt, cask #2090, 632 bottles) Three stars
It's good that the back label would tell us this was distilled in Sutherland, we could have thought it was Old Rhosdhu. See what I mean? Colour: deep amber. Nose: loads of chocolate, chicory drink, Ovaltine and a little rubber and gunpowder. I wouldn't have sworn this was Clynelish at this stage, this is more Motörhead than Mozart. With water: some coastal notes, kelp… Some chutneys too, cloves, a little tar… Really not a ballerina. Mouth (neat): salty teriyaki sauce, pepper, leather, bitter leaves, rubber, bitters, cocoa, Seville oranges. All that is really heavy indeed. With water: soy sauce and armagnac blended together, with some drops od artichoke bitters for good measure. Finish: very long, leafy, dry, salty. More bitterness and chocolate in the aftertaste. Comments: good dram but as they say, distillery character disappears quicker than Harry Houdini after such a treatment, even Clynelish. Or was it Old Rhosdhu indeed? Nah, remember, Sutherland… Wait, Glenmorangie?
SGP:371 - 80 points.

Clynelish 10 yo 2010/2021 (57.5%, The Single Malts of Scotland, cask #700050)

Clynelish 10 yo 2010/2021 (57.5%, The Single Malts of Scotland, cask #700050) Four stars
This one's brand new, picture is that of a previous expression. Indeed I could have put a wild kitten instead. Colour: white wine (hurray). Nose: crushed chalk, squeezed lemons, oysters and a touch of fresh coriander (hurray). With water: whiffs of maize bread and a new pack of marshmallows. Coriander again, and something slightly grappa-y. Mouth (neat): lemon jellies and drops, green peppercorns, touch of bubblegum and marshmallows, perhaps a hint of grated coconut. Green pepper and balm-mint extracts. Bamboo shoots too (hurray) and a slight idea of the existence of some waxiness, no more. With water: a fruit feast indeed rather than an austere waxy and mineral beast. Jelly babies, beans, crocodiles and Trump heads. Are those out yet? Finish: medium, very fruity, probably not intensely Clynelish, but just excellent. Lemon drops in the aftertaste (bravo). Comments: the lemons are this drop's main asset. Excellent but once again and just like its sister casks, not quite an ueber-waxy 'lish.
SGP:541 - 86 points.

Did someone just mention sister casks?

Clynelish 10 yo 2010 (57.4%, The Single Malts of Scotland, for USA, cask #700051, 228 bottles)

Clynelish 10 yo 2010 (57.4%, The Single Malts of Scotland, for USA, cask #700051, 228 bottles) Four stars
Colour: white wine. Nose: amazing, this one's much more austere at first, on hessian and brake pad dust, then we find lime and kiwis indeed, granny smith, and various other green fruits. More green tea too. Lovely, er, greenness. With water: indeed it is greener and tarter. Starfruits, lemons, wet plaster, then a little beeswax and curaçao. Mouth (neat): we're much closer to #700050 on the palate. Perhaps a few more waxy oils? More Clynelishness? With water: perhaps. Now both whiskies are extremely close, naturally, if not proper twins. Finish: medium, fruity and chalky, with nods to Chenin blanc moelleux – which means semi-sweet in case you don't know. Comments: I think I liked this one a wee tad better but we're splitting hairs now, something I'm pretty good at says my better half.
SGP:551 - 87 points.

Since we're having tenners…

Distilled in Sutherland 10 yo 2010/2020 (57.3%, Thompson Bros., 90 bottles)

Distilled in Sutherland 10 yo 2010/2020 (57.3%, Thompson Bros., 90 bottles) Five stars
A micro-bottling and a large cat on the label, which leaves no uncertainties. Although the latter would rather look like a stray cat, no? Colour: white wine. Nose: further into 'lish, earthier and waxier, leafier, perhaps more complex and certainly less fruity. Paraffin and new vinyl record, a little engine oil, some burnt grasses and garden woods and leaves, notes of citron at the fruit section. With water: lovely. Dirty waxes, olive oil, miso… Mouth (neat): ah yes, another world, a feeling that could come from the cask's former content. Islay? Indeed this baby's more medicinal, camphory, waxy, with dirty leathers ala Ben Nevis and oiled marrow ala Springbank (wha-a-at?) With water: superb. We had a Zoom gathering around a few waxy oldies last night (at time of writing) and we mentioned kokumi, that famous 'fatty' sixth taste. So we're clearly finding kokumi here, a.k.a. oleogustus on our shores. Great. Finish: long, just perfect, full, complex, earthy, medicinal, waxy, almost a little Brora-y. More about Brora hereunder. Comments: I'm curious about the cask here, but I would understand that's a secret, Phil and Simon. There are only secrets in this industry anyway, sob sob sob…
SGP:453 - 90 points.

Clynelish 21 yo 1997 (49.9%, The Malt Affair & The Auld Alliance, bourbon cask, 254 bottles, +/-2019)

Clynelish 21 yo 1997 (49.9%, The Malt Affair & The Auld Alliance, bourbon cask, 254 bottles, +/-2019) Four stars
I believe this is a very Singaporean affair, but we all know these good folks do know their whisky. Colour: white wine. Nose: refill wood, so fresh and tight, high-precision, with luminous bready and waxy tones, plus mint, quinine, pine resin, and probably a little aniseed. It is a tad unusual to tell you the truth, but we're all for just any differences in this world. Kumbaya, mee lord. Mouth: one of those 'bridge-y' Clynelishes that would link us to the great vintages of the 1980s, such as 1983. Heaving said that the chalk and the hessian are heavy here, you'd almost believe you're sucking raw wool at times. Grapefruits and oysters are singing loud though, and so is paraffin. A curious touch of fish oil. Cod? Finish: long and much more bitter, green, almost acidic. There is some peat too here, seriously. Unexpected notes of plastic and perhaps even soap in the aftertaste. Comments: not a textbook Clynelish at all on the palate, but all these uncertainties do make it appealing, provided you've already tried a few dozen.
SGP:462 - 87 points.

Now watch this…

Clynelish 12 yo (57%, OB, green and red label, +/-1985)

Clynelish 12 yo (57%, OB, green and red label, +/-1985) Five stars
A super-rare 100-proof version of the well-known official 'orange and bordeaux' or 'brick and red' or 'brown and orange' label, poured at the online Whisky Show Old & Rare this year. This is the first time I'm trying this, believe or not, this thanks to Mr. Sukhinder Singh, who would deserve the Légion d'Honneur just because of that. Not just a simple Knighthood, ladies and gentlemen, Officer at least! If not Commander… Or High-Commander… In truth, I've always believed this was a misprinted label. It was not. Colour: straw. Nose: of course, you cannot not wonder if this is 'old' Clynelish or 'new' Clynelish. To be honest it does hint at 'old' Clynelish, being more mineral and more phenolic, and less on fruiter aromas or just beeswax than the new Clynelishes. Not sure you're following me, are you? Hessian, chalk, metal polish, coalpit, fisherman's nests, whelks and crabs, fern, rubbed lovage leaves, camphor, myrtle liqueur, aspirin, just damp earth… No, after reflection and unless the palate tells me otherwise, this is clearly 'old' Clynelish if you ask me. No water needed (save the planet!) Mouth: long story short, this is old Clynelish in my humble opinion, perhaps with a little more sherriness and roundness (a drop of coconut oil) than, for example, the last 12 100proof for Giaccone (which, incidentally, was rather sporting the brick and red label). Oh please just call the Anti-Maltoporn Brigade, thank you mucho. Finish: yes and that's the fate of many a great whisky, which makes them even more precious (what a waste of bandwidth, S.!) Stunning salted lemons in the aftertaste. Comments: I had thought I had tried them all. Vanitas vanitatum, omnia vanitas et sic transit gloria mundi.
SGP:364 - 94 points.

(Thank you Sukhinder!)

More tasting notesCheck the index of all Clynelish we've tasted so far

 

March 2, 2021


Whiskyfun

Two young Old Fettercairns

There's an interesting new official Fettercairn but first, a recent batch of the regular 12.

Fettercairn 12 yo (40%, OB, +/-2020)

Fettercairn 12 yo (40%, OB, +/-2020) Three stars
I thought this baby was a little challenging two years ago, so let's see if the make has changed a wee bit. Just for the sake of research. Colour: gold. Nose: vanilla and raisins up, gunpowder and 'new leatherette' still there, coal dust as well, fumes, artichoke, plasticine, sourdough… that's all pretty fine, if a little unlikely indeed. What it isn't is boring, which deserves commendations for sure. Unless… Mouth: well, the artichokes are still there, eggplant, a little stewed cabbage, green walnuts and tomato leaves, bitter oranges… I have the impression that this one keeps improving without denying its well-known idiosyncrasies. Like, artichokes. Finish: long, still rather bitter (even more artichokes) and pretty leathery, with Seville oranges and more green walnuts in the aftertaste. Comments: still a little challenging but either it has improved indeed, or I just like it better. Or both. From 70 to 78 last time, while this time it's going to be…
SGP:361 - 80 points.

Fettercairn 2010/2021 'Warehouse 2 Batch No.001' (49.7%, OB)

Fettercairn 2010/2021 'Warehouse 2 Batch No.001' (49.7%, OB) Four stars
A small batch that's seen it all as far as woods are concerned, as is now fashionable in every corners of this whisky world. I quote, this 'was matured in a combination of unseasoned casks, Sherry seasoned butts, Sherry barrels, ex-Bourbon barrels and Port Pipes'. No less! Colour: gold. Nose: indeed the oaks seem to have smoothed out the fearless distillate, as we're rather finding a lot of vanilla at first nosing, then Jaffa cakes, brioche, muesli, crushed bananas and earl grey. Indeed a smoother combination, which, I suppose, was the whole point. Old Fettercairn getting back in line. Mouth: success! Success because the artichokes and eggplants haven't totally left the stage, while raisins, vanilla and indeed earl grey have made this baby rather more approachable. More muesli, gingerbread, biscuits, then rather pepper, cinnamon mints, leather and ginger, with drops of green chartreuse. That's the distillate fighting back. Finish: very long, bittersweet, liqueury and herbal, to my liking. Bitter teas. I really enjoy this little 'fight in a glass'. Or, rather on your palate. Comments: a firm, very well composed Fettercairn that hasn't given up on its singular DNA but that's also, well, simply easier. Moderner whisky has many charms.
SGP:561 - 85 points.

More tasting notesCheck the index of all Fettercairn we've tasted so far

 

March 1, 2021


Whiskyfun

Old young and young old Lochside

Hunter Laing are having a new Lochside! It sure wasn't easy to find a proper aperitif and we settled for an old G&M CC at 40% vol. It's another name that never quite caught our attention as long as there was only a pretty lousy official 10 by Spanish owners DYC. And then came the IBs… Let's see if these will be some much expected fruit bombs…

Lochside 20 yo 1965 (40%, Gordon & MacPhail, Connoisseurs Choice, old brown label, +/-1985)

Lochside 20 yo 1965 (40%, Gordon & MacPhail, Connoisseurs Choice, old brown label, +/-1985) Five stars
We tried this one quite a few times already and always thought it was brilliant. But careful, some labels have been photocopied in the past and this Lochside's one of them. I mean, not this particular bottle mind you… The two (or three?) 1965s by G&M were stellar anyway. Colour: gold. Nose: pure mangos and peaches, plus pink bananas and a subtle chalkiness. Touches of white currants, which is always wonderful. Amazing nose, close to that of some old cognacs that have been aged with care using only well-behaved oak. Mouth: oh! Pure clean old Petite Champagne with no signs of any oakiness as such. Nutshell: more pink bananas and mangos, more juicy vine peaches, touches of beeswax, chalk, then citrus (limes and tangerines I would say). Luminous old whisky, just a wee tad drier than I remembered it. Finish: pretty long, with this salty tang and always this wax that reminds me that these 1965-1966 Lochsides were pretty close to Clynelish. But there hasn't been many… Other than that, the same fruits keep dancing in the back of your throat… Comments: extraordinary aperitif. Watch the fakes though (especially the ones with unusually shiny photocopied labels).
SGP:651 - 92 points.

And so the new one…

Lochside 39 yo 1981/2021 (52.9%, Hunter Laing, The First Editions, sherry butt, cask #HL17831, 309 bottles)

Lochside 39 yo 1981/2021 (52.9%, Hunter Laing, The First Editions, sherry butt, cask #HL17831, 309 bottles) Five stars
A very small number of 1981s have been flying around in the very recent years but I doubt there will be many more. Also, I like it that they would not have waited until it's 40! Colour: full gold. Nose: phew, the sherry was well-behaved too, and the trademark mangos may express themselves with confidence in this context. Very lovely fruity freshness, absolutely no signs of over-aging, just more complexity and refinement. The wee pink bananas are back too, maracuja, certainly some beeswax, lime blossom and honeysuckle, whiffs of well-cured cigars, grapefruits, hops… Well I find it more complex than other 1981s, including sherried ones. Awesome nose. With water: a little rounder, more on cake, Danishes, crème caramel, cheesecake… With a little mango coulis over all that! Mouth (neat): this one's perfect and certainly stands up to the brilliant G&M. Very citrusy, chalky, with a little menthol, salt, a little more paraffin than expected, perhaps something medicinal too (Colgate's mouthwash – that's cheaper indeed), quite some pomegranate too. With water: the 1965 takes the lead now, but by a very, very small margin. A little shoe polish. Finish: long and spicier. Pepper over more mango coulis and grapefruits. Notes of raw fino in the aftertaste. Comments: I think water was not needed. Anyway, superb Lochside, even after the legendary 1965. I would say new enthusiasts may have to act swiftly before there's no more Lochside at all.
SGP:651 - 90 points.

More tasting notesCheck the index of all Lochside we've tasted so far

 

WF Favourites
Whiskyfun fav of the month

February 2021

Serge's favourite recent bottling this month:
Springbank 1994/2020 (48.5%, North Star, refill hogshead, 270 bottles) - WF93

Serge's favourite older bottling this month:
Springbank 12 yo (100 proof / 57.1%, OB for Samaroli, early 1980s, 2400 bottles) - WF98

Serge's favourite bang for your buck this month:
Scarabus 10 yo (46%, Hunter Laing, +/-2020)  - WF88

Serge's favourite malternative this month:
Uitvlugt 20 yo 1997/2017 (56.5%, The Rum Cask, Guyana) - WF91

Serge's Lemon Prize this month:
Brenne 'Cuvée Spéciale' (40%, OB, France, +/-2020) - WF50
 

February 26, 2021


Whiskyfun

A few more bastards and blends

Just a short aimless selection of what we have. So either single malt whiskies with no demonstrable origins, or improbable branded vattings. You know, Victorian typesets and QR codes, and all that jazz. Let's do that randomly…

Chivas Regal 18 yo (40%, OB, blended Scotch, +/-2020)

Chivas Regal 18 yo (40%, OB, blended Scotch, +/-2020) Two stars and a half
Tsk tsk, I can hear you. We whisky bloggers need to calibrate our sensors every once in a while and taste the large-volume blends, I believe that's crucial, even if it's true that we prefer malts. The industry, including embedded bloggers and influencers, keep shouting that blends are the deal - and that age is just a number while they're at it – but that's just an unnecessary mantra. Remember in the (not so) old days, the better blends were advertised as containing a higher proportion of malt. Malt is the deal. Anyway, rant over, let's taste this sadly-under-proofed deluxe baby, I'm sure it's good. Colour: gold. Nose: it is an high-malt-proportion blend indeed, even if it's really very soft to any malt aficionado – or, yeah, maniac. Overripe apples, drops of mead, a wee Cognacqy side, so raisins, a little oak, earl grey, a tiny meaty side (bouillon), perhaps some nuts, probably some tobacco… But it is really very light, if not weak. I understand why fine folks in Asia are quaffing this with their meals, it is not much bigger than wine. Mouth: good, just a little indefinite and kind of blurred. I know master blenders are second only to Mick Jagger, but when you try to do a little painting, you soon learn that if you blend too many colours, what you get is… grey. So this is a nice grey, but it is a grey. I'd add that the raisins and the vanillin in the back are very pedestrian. Finish: very short and too spirity. Comments: you could have two bottles of Glenlivet 12 for the price of one bottle of Chivas 18. A no brainer. I had found an earlier Chivas 18, back in 2013, much better (WF 83).
SGP:341 - 77 points.

That's sorted, let's go on…

MacNair's 12 'Lum Reek'(46%, OB, Glenallachie Distillers, blended malt, 2020)

MacNair's 12 'Lum Reek' (46%, OB, , blended malt, 2020) Two stars and a half
Victorian is dead, Dickensian is up, apparently. This is a young peated blended malt, as they all do now. Hope they'll never shut down Caol Ila! Colour: light gold. Nose: soft vanilla and gentle smoke, some apple peelings, fresh hazelnuts, a little cardboard, white chocolate, nougat… So a simple, easy, pleasant nose. One to sip at parties instead of Mai Tais, except that we don't do parties these days. And Mai Tais are out, aren't they? Mouth: not too sure. Some peppery smoke, rather a lot of bitterness, then sugar cane syrup, which makes it do the slits, so to speak. Not bad but not very well integrated, perhaps. There's some lemon but it feels a bit 'added'. Am I not being too harsh? Finish: medium, spirity, a little rough. Comments: I'm wondering if it's not made out of peaters from the mainland. They're good but they often lack depth, balance and integration. In my humble opinion.
SGP:455 - 78 points.

Peat & Bourbon (60.5%, Elixir Distillers, Elements of Islay, Canada exclusive, 2020)

Peat & Bourbon Barrel (60.5%, Elixir Distillers, Elements of Islay, Canada exclusive, 2020) Five stars
With these guys you don't ask questions, you just try to taste the many juices they put out, as long as you can keep up. So this is for Canada, so I suppose they've dumped maple syrup into the bourbon barrels, have they not? Colour: white wine. Nose: sharp peat smoke at a strength that reminds me of the first Port Ellen I have bought, that Rare Malt. But why am I telling you this? Walnut skin, kelp, gasoline, hessian, kippers, concrete, raw chocolate, soy sauce (unusual in unsherried drams), lovage… Hold on there must be a secret weapon in this, and that cannot be maple syrup. With water: carbon paper, perhaps? But who's still got carbon paper? Mouth (neat): yeah roots, brine, gentian, capers. With water: mezcal? Did they add mezcal? Big salt too, olives… Better and better. Finish: long, earthy, rooty, smoky, salty. Incredible touches of tequila/mezcal. Comments: grows on you, just like… let's try to find something Canadian… Say dear Joni Mitchell? Score will be high and justified. Fantastic work.
SGP:367 - 90 points.

Right, I should try other 'Elements' now but we've said this would be varied, have we not?

Scarabus 10 yo (46%, Hunter Laing, +/-2020)

Scarabus 10 yo (46%, Hunter Laing, +/-2020) Four stars and a half
Building brands. This is an Islay single malt, let's see if it's just Caol Ila under another name. What? Why would the label be overdone? Of course it isn't! But it's the juice that counts anyway… Oh and I seem to remember Scarabus is also the lovely place where our very dear friend Martine Nouet, queen of all stills, has got her house on Islay. But shh… (hugs, Martine) Colour: white wine. Nose: precise, millimetric, on olive brine, oysters, lime juice, and sea breeze. No more, no less. Mouth: high-definition smoke, seawater, green olives, and lemon. An unexpected touch of thyme honey, which will cure your throat as sure as 1+1=2. Finish: long, wonderfully briny, salty, you'd almost believe you could quaff this with razorfish stewed in garlic and butter sauce, Barcelona-style. Crikey, I'm hungry again. Comments: let's be serious, the name Scarabus obviously suggests the Rhinns of Islay, it just cannot stem from the other side, can it? So either Port Charlotte, or Kilchoman. Not too sure… Let's move on… Great tight juice in any case.
SGP:367 - 88 points.

Isn't this getting all about young peat? That wasn't our goal in the first place but anyway, since we're here, let's do a last one…

Vital Spark 12 yo 'Batch 002' (50.2%, Meadowside Blending, 1280 bottles, +/-2020)

Vital Spark 12 yo 'Batch 002' (50.2%, Meadowside Blending, 1280 bottles, +/-2020) Three stars
Are all designers in Scotland on acid these days? Or did they hire the very last veterans of the Light Brigade to do these ueber-retro labels? This one was only finished in oloroso sherry, so in theory, it should be taken down a notch, but not too sure. Colour: gold. Nose: of course it's nice, the sherry's perfectly nutty, the tobaccos are well in place, the smoke's very noticeable yet smooth, the strength is perfect, and these complex notes of late-summer rainwater and cigarillo tobacco work very well. No quibbles. With water: chocolate and pipe tobacco, with some glutamate. Mouth (neat): more fun and wackiness here. Ham and mustard, loads of caraway, even more juniper and clove, nutmeg on steroids, concentrated walnut wine, dry Madeira at its most extreme… May we have a chat with the chef? With water: but this is goulash! Finish: long, on walnut wine. Extreme cardamom in the aftertaste, nutmeg in the after-aftertaste. Comments: whether this spark is vital or not, I don't know, what's sure is that it's rather of-the-wall. The palate is really spicy and the cardamom loud in the aftertaste. Yet I rather like it.
SGP:373 - 81 points.
 

February 25, 2021


Whiskyfun

A trio of Glencadam

Let's see what we have…

Glencadam 13 yo 2007/2020 (40%, OB, Whisky Journey Singapore, 1st fill bourbon, cask #27, 368 bottles)

Glencadam 13 yo 2007/2020 (40%, OB, Whisky Journey Singapore, 1st fill bourbon, cask #27, 368 bottles) Four stars
Glencadam's new livery here, and a strength that's curiously low. Now low-strength whiskies do make for appropriate apéritifs, don't they… Colour: straw. Nose: ho-ho, the strength might be low, but the profile is perfect, you'd really believe you're nosing some young Montrachet ex-new oak. Wonderful vanilla, crushed bananas, honeysuckle, acacia flowers, sunflower oil, and a few sweets, jellybeans perhaps, a tiny drop of cherry coke (remember?) All that is rather brilliant and the 40% got by without a hitch. This far… Mouth: understood! I believe they've been looking for high drinkability and that worked. Same feeling of high-class chardonnay, sweets, ripe bananas, herbal teas, earl grey, a drop of triple-sec, oats and sesame, lime tea… It's really very good and for once you feel any extra-degrees would have been rather superfluous. Well done. Finish: sure it's a little short but the barley is back. Comments: really very good but you'd rather buy jeroboams. Goes down as if it was… a Montrachet.
SGP:451 - 86 points.

Good, after that ueber-gentle dram, let's have rocket fuel…

Glencadam 9 yo 2011/2020 (63.9%, Single Malts of Scotland, Elixir Distillers, barrel, cask #800015, 249 bottles)

Glencadam 9 yo 2011/2020 (63.9%, The Single Malts of Scotland, Elixir Distillers, barrel, cask #800015, 249 bottles) Four stars
Colour: white wine. Nose: earth after a first rain, cellulosic varnish, white asparagus, granny smith, nail polish remover, marshmallow brochettes (a hit when we were boy scouts), Spanish green apple liqueur… And a feeling of wood smoke that sometimes comes with high-strength whiskies. With water: the smoke's still there! All the rest consists in various herbal teas and small citrus. Yuzu, lemon caviar, also lemon sherbet. Mouth (neat): tremble, mere mortal… Juicy fruits, marshmallows, bubblegum, all kinds of raspberry sweets and candies and gums… Orange eau-de-vie (maceration). With water: a whole basket of fresh orchard fruits plus big juicy oranges and all the fruits drops we could hope for. Finish: same. Good length. Sherbety, as they say in St. Tropez. Comments: liquid sweets. Super good, with a distillate that's got a little more texture than others, which works well with this style.
SGP:651 - 86 points.

Look, those 63.9% were nothing…

Glencadam 9 yo 2011/2020 (64.6%, Signatory Vintage, for Kirsch Import, bourbon barrel, cask #800144, 178 bottles)

Glencadam 9 yo 2011/2020 (64.6%, Signatory Vintage, for Kirsch Import, bourbon barrel, cask #800144, 178 bottles) Four stars
Colour: light gold. Nose: almost the same whisky, pretty obviously, as it is a sister cask. Perhaps a tad fatter, with a little more vanilla from a barrel that was probably a little more active. A little more chlorophyll and herbs, perhaps. With water: a few lactic tones, other than that it is, indeed, the same whisky as the TSMOS. Mouth (neat): even closer. Excellent – perhaps just a little lethal. With water: same. Ish. Finish: long and similar. A little grassier this time. Grapefruits, lemon sherbet, acid drops. Comments: very good drops, these young fruity Glencadams!
SGP:651 - 86 points

(Merci Benjamin)

More tasting notesCheck the index of all Glencadam we've tasted so far

 

February 24, 2021


Whiskyfun

Some more Glenrothes

There's really a lot of Glenrothes. Huge distillery, one of the first we visited together with the Malt Maniacs, around twenty years ago. Good times.

Glenrothes 31 yo 1989/2020 (44.4%, The Whisky Agency, hogshead, 268 bottles)

Glenrothes 31 yo 1989/2020 (44.4%, The Whisky Agency, hogshead, 268 bottles) Four stars and a half
Colour: light gold. Nose: an all-natural nose, relatively light, with whiffs of tree resins, some light mead and pear cider, apple pie covered with cinnamon powder, and a growing floral side. Rather honeysuckle I would say, elderflowers… Marzipan… So it is a pretty delicate and subtle old Glenrothes, rather lovely. Mouth: lovely indeed, rather on ripe fruits, more cider, almond milk, touches of agave syrup and even cane juice, mead and lighter honeys (acacia), chamomile tea, touches of pistachio nougat (or halva)… And lastly, earl grey tea. Finish: not too long but fresh and well balanced. A little more resinous, perhaps. An unexpected salty aftertaste, with a wee feeling of smoked salmon. Comments: super good. I'm wondering if we couldn't quaff this with smoked salmon indeed. Remember, it's not always a great idea to have very coastal whiskies with seafood, gentler Speysiders often work better. My tuppence.
SGP:451 - 88 points.

Glenrothes 21 yo 1997/2019 (43%, Signatory Vintage, cask #6369)

Glenrothes 21 yo 1997/2019 (43%, Signatory Vintage, cask #6369) Three stars and a half
One of those Ibisco decanters that do let the colours of our favourite whiskies fully express themselves. Wonderful - when no caramel was involved, which should be the case here. Colour: light gold. Nose: rather a lot of burnt wood at first, burning pinecones, coconut shells… Then rather chocolate, Mars bars, then a little chicken bouillon, brown sauce, sesame oil… I would say we're pretty close to some officials here, not only because of the lighter strength. Mouth: really good, really on malt (Ovaltine) and chocolate, with some gingerbread and some drops of gentian liqueur (Suze or Avèze). Perhaps elderberry eau-de-vie, holly, sorb… Why perhaps? No, certainly! Finish: medium, rather more on some earthier chocolate. Almonds. Comments: its sometimes really a blessing not to have to deal with any waters. Just me and my whisky, as some old ads would have said.
SGP:461 - 84 points.

Glenrothes-Glenlivet 23 yo (46%, Cadenhead, Original Collection, bourbon and sherry, 2020)

Glenrothes-Glenlivet 23 yo (46%, Cadenhead, Original Collection, bourbon and sherry, 2020) Three stars and a half
This is 60% sherry and 40% bourbon. No, wait, the other way 'round. Colour: light gold. Nose: same ballpark. Nuts and leaves and teas, rather milk chocolate, quite a lot of marzipan this time, dried coconuts and bananas, dried papayas, you know these mixes we have with our apéritifs (like Bowmore Bouquet or Laphroaig 1967 – I'm joking). A gristiness too. Mouth: all-natural gentle malt whisky from Speyside, rather in the style of Glenlivet indeed, even of this one's a tad more lactic. Butter cream, overripe apples, tealeaves, perhaps a touch of fresh mushroom. Nothing bad to say, quite the contrary. Drops of orange squash. Finish: medium, fresh, pleasant, not much to add. Apple pie and butterscotch. Comments: works very well and goes down even better.
SGP:551 - 84 points.

Glenrothes 29 yo 1990/2020 (48.8%, Or Sileis, 'The Emperor', hogshead, cask #17999, 242 bottles)

Glenrothes 29 yo 1990/2020 (48.8%, Or Sileis, 'The Emperor', hogshead, cask #17999, 242 bottles) Four stars
The lady on the label reminds of a tour guide they were having at the distillery, a long time ago. Of course I am joking, no offence meant! Colour: straw. Nose: we're not too far from the TWA here, with subtle hive-y aromas, waxes and honeys, mead, pollen, yellow flowers, dandelions, orange cake, champagne biscuits… Oh and indeed, some rather buttery, toasted, fatter champagne. A style that's a tad out of fashion, but I'm sure it'll be back. Yes we're talking champagne. Mouth: very very very good, with a lovely maltiness, some flawless teas, then herbs and roots. A touch of turmeric (cures anything), ginseng (ditto), and absinth (nope). A pinhead of horseradish. Finish: rather long, clean, fresh, rather herbal. Earthier aftertaste, this just always works. White pepper. Comments: excellent. So, who's this lady? An emperor? Were they having emperors in Rothes? Empresses?
SGP:561 - 87 points.

Glenrothes 9 yo 2009/2019 (54.6%, Duncan Taylor, Dimensions, cask #4923204, 293 bottles)

Glenrothes 9 yo 2009/2019 (54.6%, Duncan Taylor, Dimensions, cask #4923204, 293 bottles) Three stars
I think we're expecting some average malty whisky here, not that there's anything wrong with that, on the contrary. Colour: straw. Nose: sponge cake, brioche, shortbread, praline, nougat, sunflower oil. Nothing to throw away, this is cool young barley-forward malt whisky. With water: I seem to find white asparagus (green ones are rather for our old friends in Brittania). Mouth (neat): yes, love this! Pure raw barley, white pepper, vanilla, branches, kougelhopf, scones, café latte, pear spirit. With water: same plus more sour peary notes. Gets a tad too sour for me, but no quibbling. Finish: medium, with some sour woods beyond the fresh malt. Comments: very good young Glenrothes that does the job. We sometimes call them ueber-blends.
SGP:351 - 82 points.

Glenrothes 13 yo 2006/2020 (61.8%, Signatory Vintage for Whic, 1st fill butt, cask #9683, 329 bottles)

Glenrothes 13 yo 2006/2020 (61.8%, Signatory Vintage for Whic, 1st fill butt, cask #9683, 329 bottles) Four stars
What a lovely medieval label! Colour: light gold. Nose: modern. Popcorn, nougat, vanilla, butterscotch, butter cream. Go beat this. With water: same. Lactones and fats galore. Mouth (neat): too good. Apple pie, touch of varnish from the strength, gueuze, woodruff, elderflower syrup, orgeat, bark, walnut peelings, softer bitters. With water: very good. Barley, butterscotch, marmalade, praline, sesame oil, peanut butter. You do not beat this, even if that's regrettable. Finish: long, nutty and caky. Toasted oak, roasted peanuts, stuff. Comments: you cannot fight these modern concoctions. Let it go, life's too short.
SGP:461 - 87 points.

A last one please…

Glenrothes 12 yo 2006/2019 (57%, The Whisky Baron, 1st fill sherry butt, cask #6147)

Glenrothes 12 yo 2006/2019 (57%, The Whisky Baron, 1st fill sherry butt, cask #6147) Three stars and a half
Colour: gold. Nose: starts a little leafy, leathery and metallic, as some ex-sherry seasoned malts can sometimes be, but gears towards black cherries and chocolate, with notes of fresh battelman and really a lot of chestnut honey. Tends to become more and more chocolaty. Mousse! With water: wee whiffs of natural rubber, then a few meaty touches (pâté, foie gras - really) and an old copper kettle. Other than that, chocolate. Mouth (neat): really bold, starting with a lot of bitterer marmalade and chocolate as well as quite some pepper and ginger (tonic), while the chocolate would take over after five seconds. Quite some green pepper too. With water: wouldn't change that much. Dry and spicy. Finish: rather long, a little rough and leafy, but we're very fine. Comments: a dry one that didn't spend much on fruits. Pretty pretty good!
SGP:361 - 84 points.

(Thank you Tim)

More tasting notesCheck the index of all Glenrothes we've tasted so far

 

February 23, 2021


Whiskyfun

Rosebank, new old and old young

I haven't tried the new 'old' 30 by current owners Ian Macleod, and maybe I will, but we shall now try another 30 that's most appealing. And naturally, a proper sparring partner…

Rosebank  30 yo 1989/2019 (55.2%, Hunter Laing, The First Editions, Author's Series, refill hogshead, cask #HL17438, 192 bottles)

Rosebank  30 yo 1989/2019 (55.2%, Hunter Laing, The First Editions, Author's Series, refill hogshead, cask #HL17438, 192 bottles) Five stars
The author here is the Franco-British writer and cartoonist George du Maurier who seems to be much more famous in the UK than he is in France. The French! Colour: gold. Nose: a bag of 25 kilograms of lemon drops. The question is, do we enjoy lemon drops? We sure do. Also lemon tarte, limoncello, and these wonderful citrons with their very thick skins. So, the profile is narrow, but it is totally perfect, in my opinion. Indeed, you could think of a great chenin blanc too. With water: myriads of tiny mineral aromas, chalk, flints, cement, some hessian too, all that over this bright, almost luminous lemonness. Mouth (neat): good, imagine ¾ chenin blanc (say Savennières) and ¼ manzanilla. Add a little chalk and a little grass (or leaves) and there, you have it. Isn't life wonderful when it's simple? With water: more of all that. Yellow jelly beans (or crocodiles, or babies, or bears…) Finish: medium, a tad fatter but extraordinarily pure and still vertical. Say rather chenin 'moelleux' in the aftertaste. Some waxy fatness in the aftertaste. Comments: fully the work of time, totally irresistible and integrally 'pure' Rosebank. We'll see, around 2050, if the 'new' Rosebank will be similar when it's 30. The right age!
SGP:651 - 91 points.

This rare oldie just came in…

Rosebank 12 yo 1980/1992 (60.1%, Kingsbury, sherry butt, cask #2467) Rosebank 12 yo 1980/1992 (60.1%, Kingsbury, sherry butt, cask #2467)

Rosebank 12 yo 1980/1992 (60.1%, Kingsbury, sherry butt, cask #2467) Four stars and a half
Rosebank could be stunning when young too. I remember an 8 by Aldelphi that was just implacable. Or was it a 9? Rosebank was still working when Cadenhead's subsidiary Eaglesome did bottle this baby, I also remember a sister cask in CAD's 150th Anniversary collection. Colour: amber. Nose: oh wow, amazing wax polish, cellulosic varnish, crushed pine needles, camphor, embrocations, sage and dill, grapefruits, touches of acetone, butterscotch, pistachio halva, sesame oil… Oh wow indeed, this is totally glorious. The cask was quite a beast for sure. With water: oh, mangos and papayas popping out! Late harvest riesling and just a touch of Bakelite. Mouth (neat): oh! Huge pine-iness and varnishes, but it's really strong and hard to swallow, literally. Well in the style of those rocket fuels that Cadenhead were bottling in the 1990s. With water: varnishes would never go away. Gets a little rough, I would say, even a weed tad rubbery and too fat(tish) here and there. Now the core remains splendid, with all the citrus you would need. Finish: long, waxy, lemony and salty, with this faint rubbery side remaining in the background. The aftertaste is unexpectedly salty. Comments: the nose here was just amazing, the palate just a little rough and rubbery in my opinion. Very faint touches of glue, I would say. High-class nonetheless.
SGP:662 - 88 points.

(Merci KC!)

More tasting notesCheck the index of all Rosebank we've tasted so far

 

February 22, 2021


Whiskyfun

A bag of old grains

As they come. No orders, no laws, no logics, total freedom! Except that will all be +/-30 or more…

Fine Single Grain 43 yo 1976/2020 (45.7%, Whisky-Fässle, hogshead)

Fine Single Grain 43 yo 1976/2020 (45.7%, Whisky-Fässle, hogshead) Four stars
Good, as it appears, even grains can't tell you their names these days. Now, does that really matter? There's a clear difference between, say Auchentoshan and Clynelish, but is there really any between, say Girvan and Invergordon? Same age same wood? Colour: gold. Nose: it's one of these old grains from gentle oak that, over the many years, have started to resemble rum. A wee metallic side, surely some nougat and popcorn, clear whiffs of cane juice, and frankly, well, I'd swear I'm nosing an old bottle of Havana Club. You not shoot please. Mouth: ah rather lovely. Coconut wine and vanilla, plus zucchini flowers and elderberries. All this is rather complex, clearly some kind of 'magic of the cask' after more than forty years, and surely something that you just couldn't replicate, even if 'when there's a will there's a way' (BS motto as we all know). No, despite the light body that makes most grains taste like J&B anyway, this is a better one. Finish: short but clean and sweet. Frappuccino (apologies) and vanilla fudge. Comments: an excellent grain. You can't do much better without any sherry anyway, can you.
SGP:640 - 85 points.

I suppose you wouldn't be against a little maize…

North British 30 yo 1989 (Dramfool, bourbon hogshead, 182 bottles)

North British 30 yo 1989 (Dramfool, bourbon hogshead, 182 bottles) Three stars
Indeed it was all maize for sure in 1989, I know because a friend used to supply them. Remember North British is today a joint venture company between Diageo and Edrington. Colour: straw. Nose: totally on nail polish remover and jelly babies at first sniffs, while the acetone would then dissolve (bravo), leaving room for the much expected vanilla and coconut, as well as, guess what, popcorn. I told you, maize… Mouth: very sweet, on loads of white chocolate and marshmallows at first, then lemon sherbets and perhaps praline brittle. Typical rather thin body, not unpleasant having said that. Finish: a little short, with some candyfloss, more marshmallows, and just a minimal oaky touch towards the end, with some tea and some pepper. Comments: the thinness of these grains is always very surprising when you're used to malt whisky, but I won't deny that this one was particularly worth our attention.
SGP:630 - 82 points.

Cambus 27 yo 1991/2019 (58%, Hotmalt Taiwan, Richard's Choice, sherry, cask #61970, 205 bottles)

Cambus 27 yo 1991/2019 (58%, Hotmalt Taiwan, Richard's Choice, sherry, cask #61970, 205 bottles) Three stars
With grain whisky, sherry usually helps, in my experience. Colour: straw. Nose: that's the thing with sherry on grain, we're not just having a line-up with marshmallows, varnish, coconut and vanillin. Not that there isn't any, and indeed there is some acetone, for example, but these tiny earthy touches may well rather come from the sherry. A light sherry. Some marzipan too. With water: butter cream, nougat, brioche, biscuits. This should work well for enhancing a bad Champagne. Mouth (neat): mirabelle eau de vie, chocolate, praline, nougat, triple sec. Pleasant combo, but the very high strength doesn't help too much and imparts, as almost always with high-voltage grains, a feeling of quaffing antifreeze. This marzipan is better. Quite. With water: a little pine resin and mint, I would say. Finish: medium. Comments: thicker but also a little harsher than the North British. A good grain. These bottles are good for making your own high-end blend at home, just add twenty measures of Clynelish to one measure of old grain, et voilà, you too are a master blender.
SGP:641 - 82 points.

Off to Port Dundas…

Port Dundas 31 yo 1988/2020 (51.3%, Cadenhead, bourbon hogshead)

Port Dundas 31 yo 1988/2020 (51.3%, Cadenhead, bourbon hogshead) Three stars and a half
Colour: pale gold. Nose: we've tried these batches several time already, at various ages and under several liveries. It's really all about amaretti, vanilla, marzipan and pistachio halva. No complains! With water: Clint Eastwood's own shaving lotion! A curious mix of pineapple juice with menthol and a little gunpowder. Mouth (neat): always this lightness but this time there's a curious earthiness, with even something distantly reminiscent of ammonia. A lot of roasted peanuts too, and Vishnu knows that I love roasted peanuts, especially when they're coated with caramel – we call them 'chouchous' then over here in F. With water: total nougat and popcorn. Finish: rather short, ultra-sweet this time. Various fruit wines and more pineapple juice. Comments: another one that's very pleasant. This one wouldn't hurt a fly when reduced.
SGP:730 - 83 points.

Invergordon 45 yo 1974/2019 (46.9%, Single Cask Nation, bourbon barrel, cask # 7844000025, 194 bottles)

Invergordon 45 yo 1974/2019 (46.9%, Single Cask Nation, bourbon barrel, cask # 7844000025, 194 bottles) Four stars
Have they really produced 7844000025 casks or more at Invergordon, back in 1974? Now it's true that it's a rather huge plant. Grain distilleries aren't very romantic, in general. Colour: gold. Nose: some consider that really old Invergordons are the best grains we could put our paws on (if we wanted to do so), and I would agree. Nice cakes, Jaffa cakes, old orange cordials, almond paste, barley wine, a touch of rose (petals), baklavas and Turkish delights, orange blossom… This one's clearly in another category, with its middle-oriental side. Mouth: indeed, it's rather subtler than the others, at time reminiscent of some bourbons, with rather pastries and sweet breads, touches of lavender and violet sweets (but no Bowmore '85), and oranges in all their forms, including as syrups. Finish: its only at this point that it would lose steam, getting thinner, and reminding you that this is only grain whisky. The aftertaste is a little sugary. Comments: great old grain.
SGP:640 - 86 points.

Girvan 30 yo 1989/2020 (51.8% The Whisky Exchange Whisky Show, Artificial Intelligence)

Girvan 30 yo 1989/2020 (51.8% The Whisky Exchange Whisky Show, Artificial Intelligence) Three stars and a half
Can artificial intelligence be intelligent? I've read that the most advanced AI will recognise a cat without any doubts after having seen/recorded 1,000 of them, while a baby human will need only two or three. Anyway… Colour: gold. Nose: this one reminds me of the Port Dundas. Coconut wine, vanilla, varnish, turon, touches of mushrooms and metal… With water: oh, anti-rust and metal polish. That's certainly not ex-Girvan, Girvan being a very empty spirit. Mouth (neat): rather good, with a background that would suggest this has encountered some peater-seasoned wood in its life. Like if it had been finished in an ex-Ardmore cask or something  - how artificially intelligent would that have been? With water: smoked almonds, some light lapsang souchong, some coconut wine… Finish: short. Marzipan, coconut and a little chlorophyl. Comments: it seems that someone tried to do something on this little Girvan. Dr Girvanstein? Seriously, I find this rather very good, some kind of in-cask blend.
SGP:550 - 84 points.

A last old grain…

Invergordon 32 yo 1987/2020 (52.7%, Elixir Distillers, Whisky Trail, cask #88799)

Invergordon 32 yo 1987/2020 (52.7%, Elixir Distillers, Whisky Trail, cask #88799) Four stars
Colour: white wine. Nose: the usual acetone, some grass juice, fruit peeling, a few fresh mushrooms, and a lot of Chinese green tea made gung-fu style. Whiffs of glucose too. With water: metal polish, where have we already seen that? Mouth (neat): rather a bolder grain, and this time again the attentive taster will notice some bolder flavours that do not quite belong to grain whisky. Such as a lemony peatiness. With water: lol, this is totally some in-cask blend. Nice notes of green peppercorns, I'd almost dare mention  stir-fried Thai garlic pepper prawns, served with citronade. Finish: medium, rather smoky, lemony, and not quite Invergordony. Comments: mutant whisky, good fun here, this is even very blameless. In-cask blending made by an AI?
SGP:652 - 85 points.

I believe that's enough grain already.

More tasting notesCheck the index of all grain whiskies we've tasted so far

 

February 21, 2021


Whiskyfun

Cognac's turn again

It's getting a little tough with the US tariffs, so let's support all French brandies. Granted, the larger brands are still pretty autistic, more so than the large Scottish brands (with all due respect to all people suffering from autism), but things are changing and some start to understand that they're just boozemakers and certainly not worthy of a Nobel Prize. A little more humility will do them much good.

Drouet et Fils 'Réserve de Jean' (40%, OB, Cognac, +/-2020)

Drouet et Fils 'Réserve de Jean' (40%, OB, Cognac, +/-2020) Four stars
Rather an entry-level cognac, but better entry-level cognac from good makers – single estate here – than inflated 'prestige' blends from larger brands. Well that's a personal opinion. Colour: deep gold. Nose: a fresh style that will please malt drinkers, with these very lovely ripe peaches at first, gorse (vanilla), then some very soft liquorice and marzipan, then a few raisins and 'distant evocations of mangos'. Lovely fresh nose I pretty much agree with. Well done Drouet. Mouth: no real problems with the low strength and wonderful notes of soft liquorice (allsorts) upfront, peaches and raisins stewed in honey sauce, kougelhopf glacé, cassata, some earthy tones (superb here) and some black nougat, with just a tiny touch of mint. Perfect. Finish: a little short but very refreshing, with a perfect honey + raisins + peaches + liquorice combination. Comments: danger zone! Very drinkable and moreish. And the price is right. See what I mean?
SGP:651 - 87 points.

Michel Forgeron 2008 'Folle Blanche' (47%, OB, Grande Champagne, +/-2019)

Michel Forgeron 2008 'Folle Blanche' (47%, OB, Grande Champagne, +/-2019) Four stars
A very well reputed house from Segonzac, capital city of Grande Champagne, and a pure folle blanche that's more or less ten years old. Remember folle blanche is the original varietal in Cognac, which had been eradicated by phylloxera vastatrix in the second part of the XIXth century. We now have 'the Chinese virus', phylloxera was 'the American bug'. Some estates have been replanting folle blanche for a few decades, which is just very cool. Colour: gold. Nose: splendid! Much less 'sexy' than the Drouet, so more austere, grassier, more on peelings, melon skin, even vegetables, eucalyptus, then more floral notes, rose petals, getting a little musky too, whiffs of plants of the woods, lilies of the valley, woodruff… It is all pretty subtle, with an awesome herbalness that may remind us of chartreuse, in a way… Mouth: same feelings, this is some pretty rustic cognac, and yet it's showing great fruity balance, with peaches and oranges, raisins, dried pineapples, also tobacco and mushrooms, with lovely touches that would be reminiscent of a deep Vosgian forest. A little fir resin. Finish: rather long, still warming, fruitier and jammier. Fir honey and stewed apricots and peaches. Something camphory and slightly medicinal in the aftertaste, as in some Sauternes. Can't quite beat this. Comments: same very high level as that of the Drouet, we may have started this session too fastly. Right.
SGP:561 - 87 points.

Since we were in 2008…

Hermitage Chez Richon 2008 (45%, Cognac, Grande Champagne, +/-2020)

Hermitage Chez Richon 2008 (45%, Cognac, Grande Champagne, +/-2020) Four stars
In truth this brand is a little mysterious, but Forgeron's address in Segonzac is 'Chez Richon', so ties may exist… or not. This is a blend of ugni blanc (the vast majority I suppose) and folle blanche. Colour: gold. Nose: another rather fresh, and rather grassier cognac, with more earth and grasses. Mushrooms for sure, stewed peaches, liquorice and honey, apricots, touches of musk again, and a growing meatiness that was not to be encountered in the others. Around cured ham, and a tiny drop of Kikkoman soy sauce. Mouth: excellent, rather punchy, with more citrus this time, some lovely sourer fruits, some clear notes of wine (pinot noir, perfect in this context), cherries, moss, fir, honey, liquorice, pipe tobacco, touches of demerara sugar – or rather rum, more earth, crunching pine needles… It's actually even more rustic than the Forgeron, with some sort of armagnacness that may stem from the folle blanche. Just wild guesses. Finish: long, firm. Gingerbread and liquorice. Comments: oh well, we sure weren't too far from Forgeron's folle blanche. Cognac from the land.
SGP:561 - 87 points.

A older one by Hermitage please…

Hermitage 50 yo (44%, OB, cognac, Petite Champagne, +/2015)

Hermitage 50 yo (44%, OB, cognac, Petite Champagne, +/2015) Five stars
Pure ugni blanc this time. Not too sure when this was bottled, what's more I've seen it at various strengths. Age-statement cognacs are pretty uncommon anyway. Colour: amber. Nose: ueber-classic perfect old cognac, with more rancio, stewed fruits, honeys and whatnot. I'm finding this nose extraordinary, to think that you'd have to shell out twenty times more money to find a similarly aged whisky that, besides, won't be as fresh. A feeling of old Yquem, apricots, broom, vetiver, ylang-ylang, damp earth, dried figs, Jaffa cakes, heather honey, and prunes! Love prunes in my brandies, when in moderation. Mouth: yes. Pink grapefruits, raisins, tobacco, cinnamon rolls, touches of pecans, yellow peaches, fir liqueur, verbena (Verveine du Velay), aniseed, dill… There are some green tannins in the background (over-infused green tea), but they would behave, thank you. Finish: rather long, a tad drying and slightly too grassy, perhaps, but remember this is 50 yo. Mint, lemon marmalade and just a touch of cardboard in the aftertaste. Comments: the empty glass would let you believe you've just had an old Sauternes.
SGP:551 - 90 points.

Jean-Luc Pasquet 'Lot 62 La Corbeille de Fruits' (40.1%, Malternatives Belgium, 200 bottles, 2020)

Jean-Luc Pasquet 'Lot 62 La Corbeille de Fruits' (40.1%, Malternatives Belgium, 200 bottles, 2020) Four stars and a half
This baby that reeks of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones is a sister cask of the 1962 Through The Grapevine by LMDW. It may be a little fragile given the strength… Colour: reddish amber. Nose: what a nose! Peonies, stewed red peaches, tamarind, red apricots, muscat, redder papayas, mangos… Well if this was whisky it would be Benriach 1968. Does that ring a bell? Amazing, amazing fruity nose, with an incredible freshness. Fantastico. Mouth: perfect arrival that just continues the nose, with all those wonderful fruits, plus pink bananas and litchis, but the tea-ish oakiness would then slowly take over. Oh we just won't care, since the overture was perfect. Finish: medium, tea-ish. Comments: a stunning cognac to nose. The palate is almost superfluous, just pour it back into your bottle, the nose alone is worth twice the price. To think that the French used to quaff only 2.2% of all cognac that was produced BT (before Trump).
SGP:771 - 88 points.

(Merci Aurélien)

More tasting notesCheck the index of all cognacs we've tasted so far

 

February 20, 2021


Whiskyfun

 

 

 

Angus's Corner
From our Scottish correspondent
and skilled taster Angus MacRaild in Edinburgh
Angus  
Strathmill and Jura
I think I already did a Strathmill tasting this decade. What does it say about today's whisky world that we're doubling our Strathmill tasting note output? As always, apologies to Strathmill fans around the world. We'll also have a couple of Jura as well, for no other reason than because they happened to be within easy reach. No effort spared here at Whiskyfun!

 

Strathmill 21 yo 'Batch 6' (47.7%, That Boutique-y Whisky Company, 401 bottles)

Strathmill 21 yo 'Batch 6' (47.7%, That Boutique-y Whisky Company, 401 bottles)
Colour: white wine. Nose: it's actually rather nice, all on barley, fresh breads, simple beers, putty, sunflower oil, hand lotion. Easy, simple, honest malt whisky that is extremely close to the raw ingredients. Some greener notes of vase water and chlorophyl as well. Mouth: good richness, cereals, cooking oils, a touch of dried mint, yellow fruits, turmeric. Some rather new worldy, bready and even slightly rye-spicy aspects as well. Finish: medium, oily, bready, cereal and with various mashed vegetables and cooked grains. Comments: Quite unusual and in many ways characterful spirit. It's not exactly 1945 Glen Grant, but if you like rather firmer, grainier and chewy malt whisky then this humble and harmless we Strathmill has plenty charm.
SGP: 461 - 83 points.

 

 

Strathmill 27 yo 1991/2019 (46.1%, Cadenhead Single Cask, bourbon hogshead, 204 bottles)

Strathmill 27 yo 1991/2019 (46.1%, Cadenhead Single Cask, bourbon hogshead, 204 bottles)
Colour:  pale straw. Nose: it's very much the same style of distillate, except here there's even less wood influence. This feels bare, sparse and brittle. Bare bones whisky with naked aromas of crushed malt, barley water, malt extract, toasted brown bread and then this growing and rather unusual aroma of glue, putty, vase water and once again this impression of chlorophyl. I find it very good but extremely idiosyncratic and unusual. A few notes of vegetable and sunflower oils as well. Mouth: good, rather chewy texture on arrival. Once again it's really dominated by malt extract, breads, dough, scone mix, Bakelite, sunflower oil, putty and rye spice. It's really a rather challenging style of whisky in fact I would say. Some firmer notes of canvass and an impression of rather brittle, drying waxiness emerge over time. Finish: good length, getting really quite spicy and peppery now. Rapeseed oil, grass, hay, raw cereals, mashed vegetables and ink. Comments: I'm sorry, but these Strathmills are somewhat strange little whiskies if you ask me. Very close to the raw ingredients but also with a rather strange, almost mechanical aspect as well. One of the more peculiar wee corners of Scotch Whisky if you ask me. A point lower as I find it a bit more difficult overall than the Boutique-y.
SGP: 361 - 82 points.

 

 

Isle Of Jura 28 yo 1992/2020 (41.2%, Lady Of The Glen, cask #1857, bourbon barrel, 187 bottles)

Isle Of Jura 28 yo 1992/2020 (41.2%, Lady Of The Glen, cask #1857, bourbon barrel, 187 bottles)
Colour: straw. Nose: superbly fruity! Really on things like tropical bubblegum and fruit salad juices at first nosing. Runny honey, melon, guava and tinned pineapple in syrup. There's also a little coastal freshness lingering at the back which provides balance, and I think overall it feels a little fuller than the ABV suggests, which is always a good sign. Mouth: a little lacking in oomph, but lots of coastal-tinged waxy qualities, grassy olive oil, camphor, lanolin, bitter citrus peels, grapefruit, tangerine and more exotic fruit syrups too. The length in the mouth is actually quite surprising and once again confounds this expectation around the ABV. Finish: medium, nicely bitter, peppery, coastal, something like salted honey, heather ale and rye bread. Comments: these batches of early 1990s Juras that have appeared in the past year are generally superb in my opinion. I think this one suffers ever so slightly from the low ABV in the mouth, but the nose is 91 point material for sure. Extremely lovely whisky that's well worth trying if it crosses your path.
SGP: 651 - 88 points.

 

 

Isle Of Jura 30 yo 1990/2020 (46.4%, Thompson Brothers for The Whisky Find, refill hogshead, 163 bottles)

Isle Of Jura 30 yo 1990/2020 (46.4%, Thompson Brothers for The Whisky Find, refill hogshead, 163 bottles)
Colour: straw. Nose: not as fruity as the 92, this is more on seashore, wet rocks, mineral salts, freshly baked breads, heather flowers, waxes, lemon rind and flower honey. Also these rather firm notes of expensive olive oil, soda bread and lanolin. I find it extremely attractive and elegant malt whisky, and really quite old style. In time some slightly green fruity tones emerge like underripe banana and some crushed nettle leaf. Mouth: firm, rich and bready. Resinous in texture, quite saline, peppery, grassy and with a lot of flints, pebbles and mineral oils. Sheep wool, dried tarragon and this impression of salted mead. A lot more mechanical-tinged, Jura unusualness on display here, but it really works and feels very 'island', which is always great. I find more fruitiness over time with some pineapple, more banana and a tiny sweet glimmer of dessert wine. Finish: long, grassy, mineral, oily, perfectly bitter, peppery and with a gingery, salty warmth. Comments: Jura is a distillate that just needs time I think, and to not be juggled around into every cask type under the sun. Anyway, old school, deeply charismatic and complex malt whisky that needs attention.
SGP: 562 - 90 points.

 

 

Thanks to Dirk.

 

 

 

 

February 19, 2021


Whiskyfun

A little duet of Miltonduff 2008

It's to be remembered that old OBs bottled in the 1970s and 1980s had been splendid and of obvious 'grand cru' quality. I don't quite know why the name got so much more discreet since back then, probably a matter of priorities within the booze konzerns.

Miltonduff-Glenlivet 10 yo 2008/2018 (55.7%, Cadenhead, bourbon hogshead, 168 bottles)

Miltonduff-Glenlivet 10 yo 2008/2018 (55.7%, Cadenhead, bourbon hogshead, 168 bottles) Four stars
As they often did, there's also a 'Small Batch' version of the same age and vintage. A good one (WF 85). Colour: gold. Nose: punchy, very grassy, austere, full of stones and chalk, with no fruits in sight at this point. Pure grass juice when undiluted, but I'd bet that some citrus, for example, will come out after H2Oisation. With water: not that much fruitiness, or only green rhubarb and gooseberries, as well as cider apples. Not that I dislike this style, on the contrary! Some lovely sour notes too, citrons… Mouth: various apples, from the softer goldens to the tartiest granny smiths, plus grass and chalk. Just touches of custard and biscuits on top of all that greenness. With water: similar, just a notch earthier, which happens very often. It takes water well. Finish: medium, with tiny notes of mint and aniseed. Or there, absinth. Comments: surely of the same high quality as the Small Batch, the latter having been fruitier having said that.
SGP:561 - 85 points.

Miltonduff 11 yo 2008/2020 (62.7%, Double V, PX hogshead, cask #180612, 323 bottles)

Miltonduff 11 yo 2008/2020 (62.7%, Double V, PX hogshead, cask #180612, 323 bottles) Three stars and a half
A new Belgian indie bottler, it's true that our Belgian friends usually bring great care to anything they would eventually quaff. Not just Chausse-trappe and Couilles-de-singe (a real thing)! Colour: gold. Nose: first a feeling of vin doux naturel and sweet mustard sauce, then rather pink peppers (Timut) and orange bitter, then curious mixtures such as Marmite, in minimal proportions. The whole works well, without the heady notes that are sometimes to be found in PXed whiskies. Let's see how it swims… With water: sour wines (vin jaune, fino) and affiliated walnuts rather than pure PXness, which is good news. Mouth (neat): fun! Gingerbread liqueur (liqueur de pain d'épices) and even more orange bitter, many spices from some pretty active oak (perhaps European), cloves, big nutmeg, cinnamon, cardamom aplenty… I would not call this 'distillate-driven'. With water: nice, a little lovage, soy sauce, green walnuts, teas… Finish: rather long and pretty dry. Comments: the exact opposite of the Cadenhead, which was almost fully spirit-driven, which is a style that I usually prefer. Now for a PX extravaganza, it's not too extravagant and was well coopered. High score for a PX.
SGP:461 - 84 points.

More tasting notesCheck the index of all Miltonduff we've tasted so far

 

February 17, 2021


Whiskyfun

World sessions, doing sequels for no particular reasons
Number Fifteen (and more real Japan)

Quite logically, we'll start from France once again, as I am French (proof, I wear berets and stripy tops, swear all the time, and eat five baguettes a day).

Armorik 7 yo 'Batch 1' (50%, That Boutique-y Whisky Company, France, 2020)

Armorik 7 yo 'Batch 1' (50%, That Boutique-y Whisky Company, France, 2020) Three stars
Looks like this Breton whisky was matured in a Breton oak cask. I had thought they had used all the oak trees to build warships. Seriously, Warenghem/Armorik are at the top of their game and are now playing with the big boys, only their latest peated effort didn't quite convince me. Colour: amber. Nose: ah, a highly extractive one. We'll see what happens once water's been added, but for now, I'm finding some burning linoleum, roasted chestnuts, Guinness sauce (or carbonnade flamande), really a lot of metal polish, old kettle, and leather and cigars. Is that the Breton oak? With water: pinecone fire! And an old gun. Mouth (neat): there's some smoke, some kind of mint sauce, oloroso-y notes (walnuts), loads and loads of tobacco, and a spice mix with cumin, cloves and juniper berries. Pepper heating up. With water: spicy herbs, curry, and lorryloads of nutmeg. That's the Breton oak, I presume. Finish: similar. Comments: I've tried a few Armoriks and I don't think I ever came across this heavily extractive style. Very intriguing and pretty good, just a tad Breton-oak-heavy. Kenavo!
SGP:373 - 82 points.
fr

Off to post-Donald America…

Golden Moon 15 yo 'Gun Fighter' (50%, OB, USA, bourbon, for Hotmalt, Whisky Fair Takao, 2019)

Golden Moon 15 yo 'Gun Fighter' (50%, OB, USA, bourbon, for Hotmalt, Whisky Fair Takao, 2019) Four stars
The 13 has been rather brilliant the other week. Golden Moon is yet another worthy distillery on my map. Tennessee, right? The funny drawing reminds me of Giacomo Agostini – not the bike, though. Colour: deep gold. Nose: soft spices all around, paprika, goulash, cinnamon rolls, nutmeg, then tapioca, touch of camphor, pinewood, cones, nuts, rye, lavender… With water: a little varnish - as always and rather more vanilla – as always.  Mouth (neat): like this a lot, it is so clearly American, so full of pancake sauce and rye bread, praline, minty honey, roasted peanuts, popcorn, vanilla… This one really wears its origins on its forehead. With water: yeah, perfect, a cologne-y touch that always works well within this style, rye, spicy sawdust, lavender, muscovado sugar, geranium syrup (ever tried that?) Finish: long, spicier, perfect within this style. Spicy fudge in the aftertaste. Comments: I'll really have to dig deeper into Golden Moon Distillery. Even the name is lovely, isn't it.
SGP:351 - 87 points.
us

And now, off to… Eenie meenie… Sweden!

Smögen 8 yo (59.8%, OB, Sweden, 2020)

Smögen 8 yo (59.8%, OB, Sweden, 2020) Four stars
Oh wow, I can read from the back label that them too are having 'wave-lashed smooth granite (smooth granite?), high winds and fresh air in abundance'? That bodes well for the rest… This batch from 7 first fill barrels and 1 sherry hoggie. Let's see if we find the sherry… Colour: white wine. Nose: citrusy and coastal smoke, touches of baked French beans and peas, smoked ham, leather, cigarettes, whelks… I think water's needed, as we're very close to L. this far. Starts with Laph, ends with roaig, any clues? With water: classic iodine, creosote, hessian, oysters, seaweed, and olives. Olives represent the main part. Mouth (neat): a high-precision peater, which is all we like. Loads of lemon and yellow melon, some grassy smoke, and some burnt olives on a pizza. Drop the pizza. With water: a little sweeter, with a little more green spices too, even lemon drops. We're rather going towards Port Askaig now. Finish: long, with a chiselled citrus and some peppery greenness. Prawns stewed in green pepper sauce. Comments: yet another lovely Swede and I haven't even mentioned surströmming. Everything's going to hell.
SGP:476 - 87 points.
sw

Shall we say real Japan? Indeed we keep celebrating the new 'Japan Whisky Act'... (see yesterday)

Saburomaru 2017/2020 'The Fool D' (48%, OB, Wakatsuru Distillery, Japan, 2000 bottles) 2

Saburomaru 2017/2020 'The Fool 0' (48%, OB, Wakatsuru Distillery, Japan, 2000 bottles) Four stars
Some new real crazy sexy authentic heavily peated Japanese whisky by some real Japanese people, how it feels good! It's said that the distillery's active since 1952, but that they're making this peated malt only since 2017. They only do peat by the way, just like… hold on, Lagavulin? Colour: straw. Nose: tin boxes and old coins, sake (really), buckwheat, Weissbier, fresh sourdough, mash… Well this baby sure has an obvious quality (to me), it is very fermentary. Love that. The smoke's there as well, but it's pretty self-restrained. Perhaps wee whiffs of rose petals? I'm a fan already. Mouth: okay, good, this works. I may notice a little too much pepper and other sharpish oak spices, but all the rest is perfect. Celeriac, sourdough, polenta, beets, and indeed perhaps a little sake (how do you control your mind?) Finish: long, rooty, smoky, fermentary, with a bitterish aftertaste, and yet some custard. No quibbling. Comments: the future of Japan whisky is real Japan whisky indeed. This is a great example.
SGP:566 - 87 points.
j

Fifth and last… Back to Europe? Italy?

Puni 'Gold' (43%, OB, Italy, +/-2020)

Puni 'Gold' (43%, OB, Italy, +/-2020) Two stars and a half
Not the first Puni I've tried and to be honest, I've always found them very 'Italian', which means 'design first'. Ever driven a Lamborghini? All this with profound hugs to all our Italian friends… Colour: white wine. Nose: there, I'm lost already. Starts with artisanal mead (sour honey) and a lot of custard, then we have vanilla and some kind of aniseed-flavoured biscuits. In Alsace we call them anis bredala, I believe they have them in Trentino a.k.a. South Tyrol too. Feels a bit light but let's go on… Mouth: good, if a little too much oak-forward. Woods, fresh herbs, vanilla, wormwood… All good, it's just that the spirit might be a little light to stand such oakiness. Would work with Springbank, maybe not with a light fruity make. Finish: a little short and rather too oaky for me. A matter of balance. Comments: very honest malt whisky, no problems, with a chassis that's very good but an engine that's perhaps too fragile. Haven't we seen that before?
SGP:351 - 78 points.
it

(Thank you Boris)

 

February 16, 2021


Whiskyfun

World sessions, doing sequels for no particular reasons
Number Fourteen - and breaking news wrt Japan Whisky

There's now so much interesting whisky in the world. And duds too, naturally, but I believe those tend to slowly become a minority… we shall take off from France, naturally…

Brenne 'Cuvée Spéciale' (40%, OB, France, +/-2020)

Brenne 'Cuvée Spéciale' (40%, OB, France, +/-2020)
Cuvée spéciale means Special cuvée, would you have guessed that? So, not much, it's to be put into the same box as 'réserve', 'deluxe' or 'premium'. Last time I tried Cognac's Brenne whisky, in 2015, I thought it was okayish (WF 70) but pretty thin and sweet. Still no age statement after all those years… Sure age is just a number, but NAS is no number at all. Colour: straw. Nose: perhaps has it improved, as I'm rather finding a lot of white currant at first nosing, some nice notes of kiwis and guavas, then touches of fennel and caraway (clear notes of caraway liqueur). What it hasn't quite got is barley, or malt, or bread, or anything like that. Mouth: extremely sweet, with syrups and a lot of vanilla liqueur. Feels like very light 'arranged' rum, or Bacardi Vanila. Very thin body. Finish: short, sweet, with a feeling of having quaffed sugarcane syrup. Sugary aftertaste. Comments: I don't think it has improved, and it surely feels sweetened-up. A little thing, I'm afraid, some kind of Don Papa of malt whisky? I would have loved to like it, really. I would hope no one in the world would believe this is how French whisky tastes in general.
SGP:730 - 50 points.
fr

Good, let's forget about that one and move straight to Taiwan…

Nantou 4 yo 'Batch 1' (49%, That Boutique-y Whisky Company, Taiwan, bourbon, 342 bottles)

Nantou 4 yo 'Batch 1' (49%, That Boutique-y Whisky Company, Taiwan, bourbon, 342 bottles) Four stars
I believe this was bottled last year. Nantou/Omar are doing it right, we do know that. Colour: straw. Nose: much more body, much more fatness, and yet it's not a very aromatic whisky, but that was probably not the game. A little fresh oak, some crushed bananas, overripe apples, muesli, bread, poppy seeds, butter pears, plantain… Sunflower oil too. I'm a fan of this pretty self-restrained style. Mouth: very good, on oranges, croissants, more bananas, sweet barley, touches of lime, muesli again… It is really all natural and since we're travelling now, it could have been a blend of young ex-bourbon Arran and Yamazaki. And why not? We're free to travel as long as we don't (eh?) Finish: medium, rather on the same notes, perhaps with a little more peaches and lemons, and a liquoricy, almost balsamic at times signature. Some warming spices too (cinnamon, perhaps a pinprick of curry). Comments: unquestionably very good. Great quality/age ratio.
SGP:551 - 87 points.
tw

Perhaps an easy 'Japanese'…

Now this to celebrate the fact that the  Japan Spirits & Liqueurs Producers Makers Association have just announced a kind of Japanese Whisky Act that does regulate the labelling of Japanese Whisky. For example, saccharification and distillation will have to take place integrally in the country. This should be the end of 'false' Japanese malts. Kudos to the members of the Japan Spirits & Liqueurs Producers Makers Association (here's the act translated into English)...

 

Nikka 'Session' (43%, OB, Japan, world blend, 2020)

Nikka 'Session' (43%, OB, Japan, world blend, 2020) Four stars
All right, this is not quite Japanese, it's Nikka's recent answer to Suntory in the 'world blend' category. In short, our Japanese friend keep blending whiskies sourced from other countries, but this time they tell us about that and wont label it as 'Japanese Whisky'. Thank you Nikka. A lot of Ben Nevis in this, I'd bet, and certainly some Miyagikyo and Yoichi… Colour: straw. Nose: to be honest, I like this, it's pretty light yet not thin on the nose, with touches of pineapples and pears, the same bananas as in the Nantou, and only a moderate vanilla. What's a little troubling I that I do not get much Ben-Nevisness this far, perhaps on the palate?... A little apricot too. Tends to lose steam, don't nose too deeply. Mouth: there, ben Nevis, most probably! Rotting vegetables, engine oil, good sulphur, artichokes, rapeseed oil, bitter herbs… Nothing to throw! All that over a gentler, banana-y and brioche-y foundation, and even touches of mangos and papayas. Finish: medium, fruitier again. Green melons. Comments: liked it, they should even do a cask strength version. Very solid body and oomph at only 43% vol., while I wasn't expecting much. Isn't whisky always better when it's they're being transparent?
SGP:552 – 85 points.
j

Let's do a U-turn, to Israel… I really need to publish notes for Milk & Honey's Classic, by far my favourite, and I shall do that soon. In the meantime…

Milk & Honey 3 yo 2017/2020 (61.6%, OB, for Holydram, Israel, ex-Islay, 223 bottles)

Milk & Honey 3 yo 2017/2020 (61.6%, OB, for Holydram, Israel, ex-Islay, 223 bottles) Four stars and a half
I usually call these set-ups 'in-cask vattings', as the cask's former content, here Ardbeg it seems (many do Laphroaig instead),will most certainly change the nature of any new filling and consequently, of the mature malt. But that's only gratuitous literature, let's try the beast… Colour: straw. Nose: not too many burnt tyres, we're fine. What I don't know is if the newmake was peated in the first place; if it wasn't, the impact of the Islay cask is totally massive. Many smoked herbs and vegetables, a feeling of wood-smoked asparagus (perhaps), burning pinewood, garden bonfire… Now once your olfactory bulb has filtered out all this smoke, some rounder, cakier notes of malt bread and puréed chickpeas start to have the upper hand. But all that may change once water's been added… With water: coal, cigar ashes, menthol, broken branches… All that works really well.  Mouth (neat): Ardmore! Seems that it was a peaty whisky in the first place. Lovely notes of fried parsley on top of the rather massive peat. Lemons. With water: there, yes, aha, it worked, compliments. No feeling of 'unjustified flavouring' whatsoever here, this is just a fresh young peater from some solid active wood, with mentholated oranges in the background. Smart. Finish: long, tight, fresh. Perfect aftertaste. Comments: hey hey! I really wasn't sure about the concept, and I still not sure they should tell us about it, but the end result is unquestionably superb. And only 3 – I would be proud to be 3 (we're looking at you, NAS).
SGP:456 - 88 points.
is

Let's fly afar for our fifth and last dram toady…

Hellyers Road 16 yo 2004/2020 'Slightly Peated' (59.4%, OB, for Taiwan, Australia, cask #4113.11)

Hellyers Road 16 yo 2004/2020 'Slightly Peated' (59.4%, OB, for Taiwan, Australia, cask #4113.11) Five stars
These Tasmanians are great, that's all. They've flabbergasted yours truly in December and January already. Colour: light gold. Nose: boy is this nice. Leatherette, old Volkswagen, banana pie, antifreeze, lanoline, leather polish, butter pears, marzipan… All that is extremely coherent. No, seriously. With water: superb. Old magazines, Bakelite, new electronics, not-too-ripe bananas, hand cream, cleansing milk… Very coherent again. Mouth (neat): but yes! Could you smoke masala? In truth I'm instantly reminded of those Indonesian cigarettes, Gudang Garam, that have tips that taste like sweet clove. Actually, they do add clove to the tobacco, so when you smoke them it can happen that they suddenly 'burst' when the burn reaches a clove. Oh well, why am I telling you this, we're in Tasmania, not in Jakarta… With water: lemons are up, cloves disappear. The peat here kind of reminds me of old Caol Ila (G&M, pre-1970) even if it hasn't quite got its complexity. Finish: very long, with more liquorice, chlorophyl, and smoked almonds. Lemons and eucalyptus in the aftertaste. Comments: more proof that age does much. By golly, Hellyers Road!
SGP:466 - 90 points.
as

Sure the Brenne didn't belong here, but I'm happy about his session. You always need a steppingstone anyway.

(Thank you Chris and Gal)

 

February 15, 2021


Whiskyfun

Long time no Springbank

Well, quite, but still, I'd say it's time to remedy the situation. Let's see what we have in the box that sits on the shelves at Château WF…

Springbank 18 yo (46%, OB, 2020)

Springbank 18 yo (46%, OB, 2020) Four stars
This is the latest edition, ex-sherry and ex-bourbon. Always with this wonderful purple colour that Janis Joplin herself would have just adored. And Jimi Hendrix too, naturally… Colour: straw. Nose: I believe it was no first fill sherry and it's just better like this. Having said that I find it pretty gentle, especially after the 10 that I like so much and that I sipped a few cls of just yesterday. These wee metallic touches, this damps chalk, these touches of used engine oil, these sour herbs (tarragon), these rusty old tools, these clear notes of fino sherry, with seawater, curry, mustard and green walnuts, perhaps suet, surely soot (nice, S.!) … Just everything is to be cherished here and I find this nose vastly superior to those of earlier batches (circa 2015 and such). Now… Mouth: not quite the same class I would say, with more dry bitterness, this feeling of eating charcoal ashes or clay, and fewer coastal, waxy and smoky notes than in younger expressions. But don't get me wrong, it still beautiful whisky, it's just curiously thin – although I wouldn't say it is thin whisky as such, of course. Are you following me? Finish: rather long, a tad bitter, acrid, but the saltier aftertaste is most pleasant. Comments: excellent whisky, it's just that there are Springbanks, including contemporary ones, that I like much better. Starting with the 10…
SGP:462 - 86 points.

Springbank 21 yo (46%, OB, Open Day 2018, 534 bottles)

Springbank 21 yo (46%, OB, Open Day 2018, 534 bottles) Three stars and a half
From the Campbeltown Festival, naturally. It's a blend of ex-Madeira and ex-sherry hogsheads, married together in a first fill Madeira butt. So, careful now… Colour: gold with orange hues. Nose: rather typical of the early 1990s juices, with these obvious sulphury smells at first, then loads of roasted walnuts, bags of 'curious raisins', five kilograms of Jaffa cakes, bags of dried goji berries, and just litres of sweet malmsey/Malvasia. A little burnt mint. This is very fine at this point, but these noses may lead to very unbalanced palates, in my short experience. Only one way to find out… Mouth: wah! Smoked walnut wine, salted brandy, blueberry mustard, ashes, cloves, chocolate sauce (mole), roasted sesame oil (love that), then a growing tarry bitterness. Over-infused lapsang souchong. Loads of cardamom seeds too. Well I wouldn't call this baby 'Mr Balance'. Finish: long, bitter, peppery and all on very bitter chocolate then. Like 99% cocoa. Comments: I'd say it's a devilishly chocolaty Springbank for crazy Springbank fans who've already got all the others, including the various versions of the 1919. Quite. But there, it's still Springbank and whats more, the sulphur pulled back very politely.
SGP:462 - 84 points.

Springbank 23 yo 1997/2020 (54.6%, The Whisky Baron, fresh sherry butt, cask #289, 553 bottles)

Springbank 23 yo 1997/2020 (54.6%, The Whisky Baron, fresh sherry butt, cask #289, 553 bottles) Five stars
We've already tried some beautiful malts by The Whisky Baron, so expectations are high here. Colour: reddish amber. Nose: amazing, and what contrast! It's difficult to explain but this is probably as thick and even heady at times as the 'Open Day', but this time there is no faulty notes, no sulphur, rather this majestic engine-y fruit combo, with all oils and waxes any human beings could think of, plus anything you could find in an old English garage. With a lot of engine oil on the floor ;-). Cements, paraffin, touch of grilled garlic perhaps, glutamate, miso, walnuts… So, this is beautiful. With water: rusty tools and old copper coins. Touch of camphor and eucalyptus. As expected. Mouth (neat): absolutely fantastic, if a little on cheese and sour old wines. Balsamico, gruyere, manzanilla, green walnuts and bitter almonds, crazy extreme manzanilla, miso soup, many fermented things… Well this is some rather bacterial, I mean funky whisky! With water: swims like a champ while getting greener, mossy, with some artichokes and eggplants. Old digestive herbal liqueur. Finish: very long and mostly on green walnuts, with a leathery touch in the aftertaste and a lot of dryness. Comments: bone-dry, like a very old oloroso from a good house.
SGP:372 - 90 points.

Springbank 1994/2020 (48.5%, North Star, refill hogshead, 270 bottles)

Springbank 1994/2020 (48.5%, North Star, refill hogshead, 270 bottles) Five stars
Angus already tried it so we're a little late. Let's focus on the highlights… Colour: white wine (great news!) Nose: oh, pure carrot juice! I am not joking, carrot juice! Rooty, herbal, earthy, slightly spicy, fresh, lively… No, really, this is carrot juice! Made out of the best carrots on this planet, naturally. Adorable nose. Mouth: oh. Marrow, paraffin, almond oil, sunflower oil, salt, winkles (I swear to Vishnu), sesame, salt, caviar, lemon… Finish: rather the same for a rather a long time. Grapefruits rather than lemons. Very coastal aftertaste. Salt and peppered winkles. Comments: yeah, sure, obviously. This is like watching an uninjured Roger Federer play, there's something 'obvious'. Have I mentioned caviar?
SGP:463 - 93 points.

Bonus: just a few drops remaining from an high-end online tasting session we did with Whisky Live Paris and the Golden Promise whisky bar last year…

Springbank 12 yo (100 proof / 57.1%, OB for Samaroli, early 1980s, 2400 bottles)

Springbank 12 yo (100 proof / 57.1%, OB for Samaroli, early 1980s, 2400 bottles) Five stars
The last time I wrote some proper tasting note for this one that was in… 2004. My God, sixteen years. But I've tried it several times since back then, naturally. Top Five whisky. We'll try to keep this short and sweet… Colour: amber. Nose: starts with anything from a beehive. This always floors you. We're talking around ten various honeys (chestnut, lavender, lime tree, orange blossom, fir, thyme…) plus some sublime beeswax, pollens, this very waxy substance called propolis that bees harvest from resinous trees, plus a very wide assortment of dried fruits (figs and dates first), plus myriads of mentholy and lemony herbs. We could go on for hours and hours but I suppose you've got better things to do. No water needed, for once – how could it become any more complex? Mouth (neat): incredible. Tars, waxes, honeys, herbs, medicinal substances, dried fruits (longans are very obvious), and things only known to gods, including minerals, herbs, and various organic substances, some not even identified and recorded by Man yet. Yeah yeah. Finish: sadly. Comments: after all, we don't change, do we? Huge whisky that needs time and patience. Sixteen years. Top five indeed.
SGP:562 - 98 points.

(Merci François, Ryan)

More tasting notesCheck the index of all Springbank we've tasted so far



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