The Whisky List - Blair`s Ardoe House
Transcription
The Whisky List - Blair`s Ardoe House
The Whisky List The Whisky List The Regions Like the fine wines of the world, the single malt whiskies of Scotland are grouped by region. Traditionally there were four whisky distilling regions, these regions have more to do with old regulations and taxation systems than anything else. The four main Whisky Regions of Scotland are Campbeltown, Islay, Lowlands and the Highlands. Speyside and the Islands are generally accepted as subdivisions of the Highlands region. Each of these individual regional groups do to some extent produce many whiskies which are similar in their broad basic flavours, although there are certainly a few exceptions. Regional whisky characteristics are not quite as clear cut as with wines. You will find that many whiskies from the same region have similar characteristics in taste and style, but this is more of a guideline rather than a set rule. The final flavour of a whisky is determined more by the equipment used and the methods used to produce each whisky rather than by the geographical location of where the whisky is produced. Alongside each whisky you will find a QR code which you can scan with your phone/tablet to find out more about each whisky, including reviews, extensive tasting notes and information on how to buy your own bottle. Search ‘QR Code Reader’ in your app store. 2 Speyside For many whisky enthusiasts Malt Whisky is most closely associated with Speyside, but in truth this is only half the story. The strength of the association, however, can be seen from the many distilleries which, although not situated beside the River Spey, make allegiance with it when stating their provenance. It all goes to show how over the last two centuries 'Speyside' has meant high quality and today the truth of that statement has not diminished at all. There is a 'Golden Triangle' that stretches from Elgin over towards Banff and down to the cradle of distilling on Speyside - Dufftown. In this triangle lies the greatest concentration of malt whisky making apparatus in the world, and to savour the atmosphere here is to realise how important and how dearly distilling is held in the Highlands of Scotland. Speyside Whiskies are generally noted for their elegance and complexity often with a hint of stylish smokiness. Aberlour 10 Five Pounds Matured in a combination of ex-bourbon and sherry casks, this 10 year old from Aberlour remains a perennial favourite, typical of the modern Speyside style and thoroughly approachable. Such is its popularity that this bottling has been exported to over fifty countries. Tasting Notes Nose: Sweet and full. Sherried raisins, hints of toffee and a pleasant nuttiness. Palate: Quite full-bodied, spicy rich fruitcake, toffee notes and a creamy malty-feel and the vaguest whisper of something akin to synthetic banana. Finish: Caramel and honey, the malt still evident and the sweet spices still linger. Aberlour A'Bunadh Six Pounds Aberlour's sherry monster has become so popular it's now released every few months. There's a good reason for this: it's delicious. If you like heavily sherried Speysides, this represents very good value for money, especially considering it's bottled at a hefty 59.8%. Tasting Notes Nose: Very rich and sweet, with mince pie spices, particularly cinnamon. You can taste the Oloroso too, and all round you can tell it's another big a'Bunadh. Palate: It's sweet, and thick with dried fruit; prunes, figs raisins and sultanas. There's sticky toffee pudding, plus malty cereal notes. Finish: Long and strong - should come with a cuddly puppy soft toy. Heavily sherried and oozing spice. 3 anCnoc 12 Five Pounds Knockdhu renamed their whiskies anCnoc to avoid confusion with the nearby Knockando distillery. This 12 year old exhibits a gentle, nonsherried style of whisky. Tasting Note Nose: Aromatic, quite robust. Honeysuckle, fresh flowers, cereals, barley. Palate: Medium, Madeira, winter spices, mocha, Crème de Cacao, toasted granary bread. Finish: Medium length, great interplay between oak and barley. Balvenie 15 Single Barrel Seven Pounds An individual numbered 15 year old from selected single ex-bourbon casks from the Balvenie distillery, this is a single malt both fruity and honeyed with an excellent finish. Tasting Note Nose: Delicate sweetness one expects from Balvenie. Honey and dried mixed peel. Palate: Husky sweetness. Barley lies on a bed of juicy ripe fruit. Finish: Climaxes with barley and bourbon spiciness peaking most spectacularly. Balvenie Doublewood 12 Six Pounds Aged in ex-bourbon casks before being finished in sherry casks, Double Wood is an excellent example of what the Balvenie distillery can craft, even at 12 years. Nose: Gristy, supple nuttiness, grapey Palate: Sweet with good body. The bourbon characters develop; gentle spice with a little vanilla, a balancing peat lurking quietly in the substrata. Finish: Dry, spicy, beautifully warming. Benromach 10 Five Pounds The newly released 10 year old from Gordon and MacPhail's Benromach distillery. This was matured for the first nine years in 4/5 bourbon and 1/5 sherry casks before a year in sherry casks. Tasting Note Nose: Dry, barley, big on malt and oak. Dry pine, fruity. A tad spirity. Sweet spices after a time and a hint of puckering prune from the sherry cask and maple fudge. Palate: Barley, slightly herbal, a little fruit, grassy. Big on malt, ground ginger. Finish: Bittersweet. Ginger, dry sherry, almost hoppy after a while. 4 Benromach Organic Five Pounds Benromach Organic is the first Soil Association certified Organic single malt whisky and has enjoyed maturation in new oak, though this is a well-oaked dram, there is plenty of toffee and spice. Tasting Note Nose: Woody, spicy and malty. Some caramel and resin. Palate: Oaked, oily. Toffee sweetness with freshly cut overripe fruit. Toasty spice. Finish: Wood shavings, quite fresh. Craigellachie 1997 CC Six Pounds Bottled at 46% ABV - slightly higher than previous Connoisseurs Choice releases - this is beautiful 1993 vintage Craigellachie. It was aged in remade refill American Hogsheads and it has a medium body. Tasting Note Nose: Fresh, zesty with pear drops and custard. Beeswax, furniture polish and caramel. Palate: Lavender blossom, allspice and hints of tangy citrus. Walnut, cocoa butter and star anise. Finish: Freshly cut hay, tropical fruit salad and allspice on the finish. Cragganmore 12 Six Pounds A sherried 12 year old single malt from Diageo's Classic Malts range, this bottling from the Cragganmore distillery represents Speyside and proffers a rich, slightly floral whisky with barley notes. Tasting Note Nose: Aromatic, floral. Heather, fruit salad, creamy texture. Smoked almonds, stemmy hay. Palate: Rich, honey, stone fruits, chestnuts, walnuts, almonds. Berries. Finish: Smoky, good length, delicate peppery spice. Glen Grant 10 Five Pounds A gentle, delicate 10 year old single malt, a great beginner's whisky from the Glen Grant distillery. Tasting Note Nose: Medium. Vanilla, toffee apple. Herbal, hint of smoke. Palate: Firm. Sweetness, fruity, vanilla. Gentle peat, malty. Finish: Dry, supple peat, toffee. 5 GlenDronach 12 Five Pounds A 12 year old from the Speyside distillery, Glendronach, a very heavily sherried single malt. Tasting Note Nose: Rich, cereals. Barley, creamy, hazelnut. Oak. Palate: Fruits, peels, buttery. Pain au chocolat, marmalade on toast, nutty. Finish: Good length, buttery cereal, toffee. GlenDronach Allardice Eight Pounds The famous GlenDronach 18 year old, now renamed Allardice, is the third expression in the GlenDronach core range. This exceptional single sherried malt is non chill filtered and of natural colour. Matured in the finest Spanish Oloroso sherry casks and bottled at 46%, this sublime richly sherried malt is truly unforgettable. Tasting Note Nose: Sweet aromatics of fudge and muscovado sugar. Fruit compote and glacier morello cherries provide added complexity. Palate: Rich dark and seductive. Remarkable flavours of stewed fruits and all-spice marry together with classical aged Oloroso and toasted walnut bread and chocolate orange. Finish: Tremendously complex and long. Glenfarclas 105 Seven Pounds Glenfarclas 105 is a superb cask strength whisky, really bold and punchy. In 2004, the Malt Maniacs rated this the best “Bang for your buck” whisky. Tasting Note Nose: Great depth, sherry. Creamy and nutty. Honey on toast, touch of smoky coffee. Palate: Silken, spicy and peppery oak. Almond, praline, hazelnut, dried peels, fruity. Touch of Armagnac, hint of rancio perhaps? Finish: Long, peppery and nutty. Glenfiddich 12 Five Pounds This classic Speyside from Glenfiddich was the Winner of a Gold Medal at the 2007 International Wine and Spirit Competition, aged for 12 years in American and European Oak casks. Tasting Note Nose: Grain. Slightly floral, mineralic. Spirity, orchard fruit, malty, honey. Citrus develops. Palate: Light, floral, spices. Very smooth. Finish: Sweet, touch of oak and general fruit, oily. 6 Glenfiddich 15 Solera Six Pounds A 15 year old matured in American bourbon, Portuguese sherry and virgin oak. The whisky was then married in a Solera vat. This is a great staple 15 year old from the Glenfiddich distillery. Tasting Note Nose: Sherry, citrus - orange in particular, dry wood. Slight suggestion of smoke? Palate: Medium, sherry, raisins. Fruitcake, spices, sweetness. Finish: Candied fruits, raisins, spices, Christmas pudding, oak takes over. Glenfiddich 18 Eight Pounds This 18 year old from Glenfiddich's core range was matured in a mix of Oloroso sherry and bourbon casks. Tasting Note Nose: Loads of fruit. Zesty grapefruit, apples. Dry wood. Palate: Candied fruits, spicy, toffee, ginger, sherry, syrupy. Finish: Peels, spices, sherry, sweet ginger, touch of salted toffee. The Glenlivet 12 Five Pounds The entry level bottling from the illustrious Glenlivet distillery at Speyside's heart, aged for 12 years. The archetypal Speyside dram, honey and orchard fruit driven. Tasting Note Nose: Sweet creamy vanilla, honey, pineapple, vanilla, pressed apples and a little cinnamon. Palate: Apple cores, fresh and fruity trifle and creamy citrus. Finish: Long and delicious, almonds and apple. Overall: One of the best selling malts in the world, well-worth re-visiting. The Glenlivet 18 Eight Pounds This excellent 18 year old single malt from Glenlivet is a classic Speyside dram, it also won two golds at the International Wine and Spirits Competition. Tasting Note Nose:Well-rounded, sultanas, sherried peels, barley sugar, toasty cereal and apple blossom. Fudge and wisps of smoke. Palate: Full and rich, notes of chewy, tannic oak. Manuka honey, walnut, Cox’s apples and orange peel, cut herbs; fennel and spearmint. Finish: Long and dry with spicy oak notes. 7 Glenrothes 1998 Six Pounds The latest core expression from the Glenrothes catalogue, this 1998 vintage follows on from the previous 1994. The first bottling made with Gordon Motion as the Glenrothes Malt Master. Tasting Note Nose: Very spicy and creamy with oodles of sweet vanilla, ginger nut biscuits, golden syrup, hints of citrus and malt. Palate: A creamy, malt-driven palate with sweet winter spices, particularly cinnamon. Rhubarb crumble with hot custard and hints of black pepper. Finish: Good length with more vanilla and a suggestion of nutmeg on the tail. Knockando 12 Five Pounds A delicate, sweet 12 year old single malt, unchallenging, yet rather charming. It was because of the Knockando distillery that Knockdhu began bottling their whiskies under the name anCnoc - for they deemed their names too similar and wanted to avoid confusion. Tasting Note Nose: Gentle and fragrant, Mauka honey, malty barley and steamy hay. Chewy peat lying in the background. Palate: Full with notes of heather and damp earth. Honeyed sweetness, Jamaica ginger cake, rum and malty peat. Finish: Long with winter spice, crystallised ginger and cereal notes. Linkwood 12 Six Pounds The Flora and Fauna series released 12 year old from the Speyside distillery, Linkwood. Whisky Magazine awarded this an "Editor's Choice". Tasting Note Nose: Quite green, thick. Herbal, nutty, oily. Almond. Palate: Medium, oily. Honey, pine oil. Malt, almond. Finish: Quite long, dry, touch of anise. Longmorn 12 G&M Five Pounds A first fill and refill sherry matured 12 year old from the Longmorn distillery. Tasting Note Nose: Full of fruit notes, Apple peels, Calvados, barley sugar, acacia honey, notes of smokey dry oak. Palate: Medium body, notes of citrus, dried mixed peel. Toasty cereal and orange blossom honey. Finish: Good length with notes if barley and orange honey blossom. 8 The Macallan Gold Five Pounds Macallan’s new range has done away with age-statements and instead focuses on the colour of the whisky. The concept being that the older the whisky is the darker it will be... Regardless of how true this really is, it's certainly a great whisky packed with assertive vanilla and citrus flavours. Tasting Note Nose: This burnished gold spirit presents a lemon citrus nose, the orange peel and an interlacing sweetness that softens but doesn't eliminate the zest. A quiet note of vanilla is followed by dark chocolate - more assertive, yet not overly so - with a lingering floral and light oak notes. Palate: Citrus and boiled sweets rule the palate, along with hints of ginger and cinnamon, while soft oak tones reveal toasted apples. Finish: The finish is medium sweet, malty and slightly dry. The Macallan Sienna Ten Pounds The third darkest and third most expensive bottling in the no age statement, sherry matured 1824 Series from The Macallan. Sienna is a naturally occurring pigment, referring not only to the hue of this expression but to the fact that The Macallan's whiskies are all released with no added colouring. Tasting Note Nose: Noticeably bigger than Gold and Amber, orange peel, vanilla sugar and hot cross buns. Palate: Raisins and dried apricots, ripe greengages, frozen currants. Finish: Fruity and slightly spiced with a touch of anise. Overall: This is where the 1824 Series becomes more intense. The Macallan Ruby Eighteen Pounds The jewel in the crown of The Macallan's 1824 Series is erm, a Ruby! With the darkest hue in a no age statement range where colour is king, Ruby has spent the longest time in only the very finest sherry casks. The colour has been taken on naturally with no artificial colouring. Tasting Note Nose: Rich wedding cake and espresso, cocoa, a little clove and walnut. Palate: Raspberry coulis, maraschino, prunes, marmalade. Finish: Long and rich, dark berries and ginger. Overall: Big, bold, fruity sherried Speyside. 9 Mortlach 15 G&M Six Pounds A 15 year old from the Mortlach distillery, aged in first fill and refill sherry casks before bottling for Gordon and MacPhail. Tasting Note Nose: Cereal sweetness, warm barley, apple blossom. Stewed fruits and Christmas punch. Palate: Quite full and sweet, cereal notes, syrupy texture. Sherried sultanas, fresh fruit salad, toasty oak, vanilla spice. Finish: Long with fruit and spicy oak Strathisla 12 Year Old Five Pounds This is a new edition of the Chivas malt Strathisla 12 year old, a fruity and sherry-rich single malt from Speyside. Tasting Note Nose: Soft oak and hints of candied peel. A little floral character too, with notes of spice and Danish pastries. Palate: Malty core with notes of sultanas and cinnamon pastries. Allspice, cooked apple and mince pies. Finish: Long finish. Very fruity. Overall: A good all-rounder - excellent value for money... Tomintoul 16 Five Pounds Crafted by fourth generation distiller, Robert Fleming, this is a great 16 year old from Tomintoul. Tasting Note Nose: Medium-bodied and punchy, Steamy cut hay, dried grasses, leafy green note, rooty earth and fudge. Palate: Medium body and quite rich. Notes of boiled sweets and espresso, moccchaccino, ground almonds, granary toast with melted butter, vanilla fudge and thick cream. Finish: Good length, notes of almonds and barley sugar. 10 Highlands Outside the Speyside area distilling activity is spread more sparsely throughout a wide area which is best split into four main areas in the North, South, East and West. This large area covers on the mainland from Pulteney in the northeast to Oban in the west, to Tullibardine in the south. None of these Highland areas, however, is officially regarded as a region. If they have any similarities, it is a firm and round dry character with some peatiness. Ardmore Traditional Five Pounds The 2007 release of this 'Traditional Cask' was the first official single malt from the Ardmore distillery, this is a young whisky, but it was aged in quarter casks, which proffers a speedy maturation thus discounting its youth. Tasting Note Nose: Full of caramel. Toasted oak is evident and rich and just the faintest peat has muscled its way through. Palate: Lots of barley and cereal notes, oodles of rich bourbon, smoke and peat still present. Charming interplay through the caramel sweetness and the vanilla spiced oak. Finish: Has a sharp edge, more caramel and sugary barley notes and a lanolin smoothness and more tapering smoke. Dalmore 15 Seven Pounds The Dalmore 15 year old was first launched in 2007. Matured in matusalem, apostoles and amoroso sherry casks, it proffers all those winter spice, orange zest and chocolate notes characteristic of Dalmore. Tasting Note Nose: A chocolate orange. Potpourri, perfumed. Fruitcake, sherry. Palate: Medium, lovely delivery. Zesty orange, Blue Curaçao, chocolate. Winter spice, stem ginger in syrup. Hints of anise and a little hickory. Finish: Malty barley and smoky espresso. Dalmore King Alexander III Sixteen Pounds A sextuple-wood bottling from Dalmore. This auspiciously-named dram was matured in wine, Madeira, Sherry, Marsala, Kentucky bourbon and Port casks. King Alexander III is a rich, fruity Highland single malt. Tasting Note Nose: Malty and utterly Dalmore. Seville orange zest, Parfait Amour, malty cereal, barley and chocolate. Creamy vanilla fudge, tropical fruit with a vaguely vinous quality. Palate: Medium, rounded. Winter berries, spice, zesty orange. Liqueurs emerge; Gran Marnier, kirsch and Frangelico. Finish: Peppery with well-integrated oak and the claret makes a last minute appearance. 11 Dalwhinnie 15 Six Pounds A great malt which Jim Murray awarded 95 points in his Whisky Bible, this is excellent value for money. The flavours are simple, but flawless, a clean, crisp 15 year old from the Dalwhinnie distillery. Tasting Note Nose: Aromatic, toffee, fruit salad, lush nectarine, custard. Floral, apple blossom, honeysuckle. Apple peels, pear, touch of smoke. Palate: Malty. Walnuts steeped in manuka honey with vanilla sponge. Gentle smoke weaves its way through the cereal with a touch of spice. Finish: Long, malty, walnut, almond. Edradour 10 Five Pounds Edradour is one of Scotland's smallest distilleries and at the heart of the range, this 10 year old Eastern Highlander is a rather unique single malt, a decidedly rum-like dram with a thick mouthfeel. Tasting Note Nose: Medium, great complexity. Thoroughly fruity, sherry, sweetness, alluring vanilla. Palate: Cloying, seductive murkiness. Rum, barley, toasted almonds. Some may find themselves lost in the mêlée, not quite enough method to the madness. Finish: Any confusion is arrested: spiced fruitcake with crème anglaise. Fettercairn 1997 Five Pounds Fettercairn is a Highland whisky which first opened in 1824. This bottle was distilled in 1997 and bottled in 2010 by Gordon & MacPhail. Tasting Note Nose: The nose combines roasted malt, tropical fruits and fresh-cut grass in a vibrant and stimulating aroma. Palate: Toasted malt and a light lemony quality form initially on the palate followed by notes of chilli and spice. Finish: The finish has a warming quality with spicy notes on the tail. Fettercairn Fior Six Pounds A handsome, smartly packaged Fettercairn. Fior is Gaelic for "true", and the whisky has an astonishingly rich flavour of cocoa, espresso, spices, fruit and almond. It was released in Summer 2010 as part of the distillery's rebranding process, which is positioning them into the premium market. Tasting Note Nose: It’s quite punchy, has a big hit of sherry, stewed fruits and fig, creamy expresso and dark chocolate, cocoa powder and a touch of earthy peat. Palate: very smooth, creamy coffee, melted dark chocolate, burnt orange peels, the sherry oak is here as well bringing a nice deep fruitiness, soft dark peat-smoke runs though the palate as well as some desert spices, cinnamon, nutmeg, clove. Finish: Dry on the finish, strong notes of oak, salted caramel and toffee, the desert spices carry over from the palate and fade into the finish. 12 Fettercairn 40 One Hundred and Ten Pounds The stunning-looking (and stunning-tasting!) Fettercairn 40 Year Old. This was distilled in 1969 and it was aged in Apostoles Palo Cortado sherry wood. It was bottled recently with the newly redesigned packaging, and there are just 463 bottles. Tasting Note Nose: Chocolate, dried apricot and musty orange. Very stylish and tasty! Hints of cocoa, espresso, nutmeg and stewed fruits. Palate: Good body, with a lot of depth. Hints of dark fruits, honey, caraway, chocolate oranges (a la Dalmore!), a little tobacco sweetness, pepper and malt. Finish: Long, oaky and bittersweet with dark chocolate and cedar. Glen Garioch 12 Six Pounds Released in 2010, Glen Garioch's new 12 year old is matured in both bourbon and sherry casks, and it has loads of character, as well as being bottled at the sensible strength of 48%... Tasting Note Nose: The colour of sharp honey, on the nose heathery floral notes are balanced with the richness of poached pears and the sweetness of malted barley. Palate: Crème brûlée and sweet ripe banana at first, then comes a light oakiness with pear fruitiness, leading to a long smooth, creamy and fragrant finish. Glen Garioch Founder's Five Pounds Founders reserve is the new offering from Glen Garioch (pronounced Glen Geerie). Tasting Note Nose: Warm amber in appearance, sweet vanilla and subtle spice combine with fruitier green apple and grapefruits on the nose. Palate: Butter cream and vanilla pave the way to fruity green apple skin and citrus cleanliness, leading to an elegant and subtle finish. Glengoyne 21 Fourteen Pounds Winner of a Gold Medal at the San Francisco World Spirits Competition 2005, a single malt from Glengoyne matured in first fill European oak sherry casks for 21 years. Tasting Note Nose: Oak, barley, red fruits. Palate: Barley and oak, possibly erring on the side of too much oak. Winter spice, cider. Finish: Oak, barley. 13 Glencadam 10 Five Pounds This was first released in 2008 under the new ownership of Angus Dundee. Glencadam 10 stands as a delicate, balanced dram, neither coloured nor chill-filtered so it retains its true flavour. Tasting Note Nose: Aromatic and fresh. Hay, fruit, gentle wood influence with light vanilla and spice. Palate: Beautifully balanced with tart fruits, freshly cut hay and vanilla sweetness. Finish: Long and gentle as it fades out on barley malt and fruit. Glenmorangie Original Five Pounds Original is the core bottling in the Glenmorangie range, released to replace the old 10 year old. This really is a classic malt, so creamy and fruity. Tasting Note Nose: Very fruity and thick. Rich notes of lemon, nectarine and apple. Spices. Palate: Fresh and balanced, vanilla. Boiled sweets, very creamy, tiramisu, toffee. Finish: Quite long, gentle, malty and very fruity. Oban 1997 DE Eight Pounds The Distillers Edition range is a series of Diageo's Classic Malts, finished in sherry casks. The Oban is finished in Montilla Fino sherry casks, which results in a clean, nutty flavour. This is the 1997 edition. Tasting Note Nose: Hints of cocoa and grape. Dried peels, almond and soft malt. Seasalt. Palate: Buttery palate with notes of dark chocolate and cooked fruit. Salt caramel and dried herbs. Finish: Herbal, coastal finish. Nutty. Old Pulteney 12 Five Pounds Matured in ex-bourbon casks for 12 years, this Old Pulteney malt was a Double Gold winner at the 2006 San Francisco World Spirits Competition. Tasting Note Nose: Crisp and clean. Great balance reveals notes of herbs and grist. Parsley, almond. Palate: Balanced with medium body. Musty, nutty, sultana, toffee, spices. Oak. Finish: Medium, oak, spices. 14 Old Pulteney 21 Fifteen Pounds Malt from the most northerly mainland distillery in Scotland. This 21yo is an exceptionally well-matured version well worth a try. This was just rated the best whisky in the in Jim Murray's 2012 Whisky Bible. Tasting Note Nose: Medium to high intensity, dry with a briny hint of sea air. Palate: Sweet, floral, citrus: lemon and lime plus dry banana skin. Smooth and faintly salty. Finish: Creamy, toffee, vanilla, baked red apple with a hint of smokiness and a dry finish. Royal Lochnagar 12 Five Pounds This 12 year old was distillery at the Lochnagar distillery, once visited by Queen Victoria when she was staying at nearby Balmoral. Tasting Note Nose: Full bodied with traces of fruits (apples and pears); slightly fragrant with spicy overtones. Palate: Creamy, toffee, vanilla, baked red apple with a hint of smokiness and a dry finish. 15 The Islands Orkney Orkney is the most northerly outpost of whisky distilling in Scotland with two very good malts emanating from Highland Park and Scapa. Their much sought after character has light smoky heather touches. Skye Skye's giant of a malt Talisker is a 'big' whisky in every way with an explosive effect on the palate and a wonderful peaty, sweetness on the nose. The palate is slightly oily spicy seaweed, warm, tangy and peaty. Mull Tobermory has one the most beautiful distillery locations at the southern end of the famous harbour on the Hebridean island of Mull. It produces a light medium-flavoured malt with touches of soft smoky honey and herbs. Jura Jura from the island just north of Islay produces a light, slightly oily dram with a malty flowery feel. Arran The most recent addition to the island portfolio is the Arran distillery at Lochranza producing complex flavours of malt and spice. Arran 10 Five Pounds Officially launched in 2006, this 10 year old lies at the heart of the Isle of Arran range and exudes all the honeyed richness we have come to associate with the island distillery. Tasting Note Nose: Herbal, biscuity, hedgerow greenness and dried grass, like a long English summer's afternoon. Palate: Sweet. Quite malty, digestive biscuits, followed by green fruits and Cox's apple peel. Finish: Slightly bitter, maltiness. Highland Park 12 Five Pounds The entry level bottling from Scotland's most northerly distillery, Highland Park, aged for 12 years with plenty of citrus and green notes. Tasting Note Nose: Heather-honey sweetness, peaty smokiness Palate: Rounded smoky sweetness, full malt delivery Finish: Sweet and lingering with heathery notes and subtle smoke 16 Highland Park 18 Ten Pounds A superb 18 year old from the Highland Park distillery and a winner of a Gold Medal at the 2005 San Francisco World Spirits Competition. Tasting Note Nose: Rich, mature oak, top note of aromatic smoke Palate: Rich, full flavour, honey and peat Finish: Soft, round and long Highland Park 25 Twenty Five Pounds Ever tried a perfect whisky? Well this could be your chance! This bottling of 25 year old Highland Park single malt is made with whisky taken from ex-sherry and bourbon casks and bottled at 45.7% abv, slightly lower than previous 25 year old expressions from the Orkney distillery. It was awarded 100 points out of 100 at the 2013 Ultimate Spirits Challenge in New York; a perfect score! Tasting Note Nose: Soft, plump cherries, toasted walnut, crumbly pastry and brown sugar. Palate: Stewed fruits, sweet vanilla and some classic Orkney peat. A hint of spiciness, not too much though. Finish: Sweet, long and delicious. Overall: This really is a fantastic single malt from Highland Park, tonnes of flavour but balanced admirably. Isle of Jura 10 Five Pounds A core bottling from the Isle of Jura's only distillery. This 10 year old has exhibits the distillery's classic oily, briny characteristics. Tasting Note Nose: Freshness, notes of damp hay, soft malty cereal. Touch of peat, gentle oak, blossom tones. Palate: Thick and full. Barley fudge sweetness, creamy smoothness, aniseed. Finish: Long with Peppy winter spice. 17 Jura Prophecy Seven Pounds A very peated edition from Isle of Jura, Prophecy is made from a selection of old and rare Jura whiskies. Very interesting indeed. Tasting Note Nose: Some peat, aniseed, oily, dry, pungent. Palate: Smoky and dry, a muscular, powerful Jura with notes of nutmeg, cardamom, sea spray. Coal tar. Finish: Good length, with punchy, dry peat smoke and dry herbal notes. Ledaig 10 Seven Pounds A 10 year old from the Tobermory distillery on Mull, a Gold Medal winner at the 2008 International Wine and Spirits Competition. Tasting Note Nose: Quite light and well-balanced. Soft peat, gentle smoke. Notes of barley, malt extract, walnut, pine oil. Dried fruit and nuts. Palate: Medium-bodied and quite rich. Notes of spice, smoked gathering above charred oak. Quiet and dry peat, black pepper and earth. Finish: Medium-length, slightly smoky with spice. Scapa 16 This 16 year old from Orkney's Scapa was relaunched in 2008. Seven Pounds Tasting Note Nose: Quite thick, rich notes of honeycomb and toffee, dried peel, marmalade, malty texture. Palate: Full-bodied, cut grass, honey oak, winter spices, cinnamon, cloves. Finish: Long, Dry oak, gentle weaving smoke. 18 Talisker 10 Five Pounds A classic Island dram from the Isle of Skye. Always highly rated, this was an Editor's Choice at Whisky Magazine. Lots of spice and fresh, tangy peat. Tasting Note Nose: Thick, pungent smoke. Notes of kippers, seaweed, apple peels. Fresh and fragrant. Palate: Full bodied with huge plumes of smoke and volcanic, peppery peat. Intense. Finish: Long finish, barley, malt. Talisker 18 Ten Pounds A must have for any Talisker fan. The 18 year old was hugely well received by just about everyone, it took the title Best Whisky in the World at the 2007 World Whiskies Awards too. Tasting Note Nose: Clean and fresh, mixed fruity sweetness, peat and smoky notes of oak, calvados, ground ginger. Palate: Thick, rich and full-bodied, spicy peppery oak, espresso beans, wood smoke. Allspice and zesty character. Finish: Long finish, peppery oak. Tobermory 15 Ten Pounds A 15 year old from the Tobermory distillery on the Isle of Mull, this was matured in Gonzalez Byass Oloroso sherry casks. Tasting Note Nose: Medium-bodied and rich. Sultanas, Oloroso sherry, lemon and orange peel. Honeyed cigar smoke. Palate: Full-bodied, sherried peels, winter spice, crème de cacao, peppery oak. Finish: Long, spicy. Walnut, salted melted butter. 19 Islay Of all Scotland's malts, the Islay single malts are perhaps the most characteristic. But even so, there are some surprises within this group which are traditionally held to be amongst the heaviest and most pungent available. The most recognisable characteristics are due to the production methods which were developed in concert with the available distilling ingredients in this remote locality. While the mainland markets were supplied by mainland distillers in the 18th and 19th centuries, the islanders supplied a local market from stills both legal and illegal - which were operated from farmyards, bothies on the bleak moors above Port Ellen and remote caves along the precipitous coast of the Oa. The island of Islay, renowned as the most fertile island in the Hebrides, had three major assets in this development, a ready source of local barley - or bere as it was then known inexhaustible amounts of peat and burns running brim-full of soft water. It is impossible to visit Islay and not notice the peat. Along the roadside crossing the enormous Laggan Moss between Port Ellen and Bowmore the peat banks spread as far as the eye can see. The fuel was the only means by which the islanders could dry their grain which was an essential process not on for distilling, but also for storage during the wet seasons. By kilning barley it could be kept longer and the dryer the grain was, the less likely it was to go mouldy. As the grain dried in the fumes, the peat imparted to the barley a highly distinctive character which manifested itself when the spirit was finally distilled from it. These characteristics are still apparent in today's Islay malts which are renowned for their seaweedy, iodine like, phenolic character and are best experienced by trying Ardbeg, Lagavulin and Laphroaig which form the three most traditional Islay malts. The other Islay single malts display this peaty-smoky characteristic to a lesser degree but it is always detectable nonetheless. Ardbeg 10 Six Pounds Jim Murray's 2008 World Whisky of the Year! When Ardbeg 10 was released it was the first expression from the distillery not to be chillfiltered. It's a true classic from Islay, and a must have for any fan of single malt whisky. Tasting Note Nose: A ridge of vanilla leads to mountain of peat capped with citrus fruits and circled by clouds of sea spray. Palate: Sweet vanilla counterbalanced with lemon and lime followed by that surging Ardbeg smoke that we all know and love. Finish: Long and glorious; sea salted caramel and beach bonfire smoke. 20 Ardbeg Uigeadail Seven Pounds Uigeadail derives from the Scotch Gaelic for 'Dark and Mysterious Place' and is named for the Loch from whence Ardbeg draws its waters. Jim Murray's 2009 World Whisky of the Year, this caskstrength bottle exudes breathtaking balance. Tasting Note Nose: Multifaceted, notes of peat and little flourishes of dark sugar, freshly ground espresso beans. Palate: Ripe fruit and black forest honey. A good helping of malt, Peat and smoked barley. Finish: Very long, caramel and malt weave their way through peat smoke and dark sugar and just a hint of fresh espresso coffee before it finally peters out. Bowmore 12 Six Pounds The heart of the Bowmore range, the 12 year old exhibits some beautiful coastal notes with a gentle peat, it is the balance that the floral element presents that makes this a great entry bottling for Bowmore. Tasting Note Nose: Very floral, lots of peat and smoky heather. Ash, hay, coastal, zesty orange. Palate: Lovely and rounded, perfumed smoke, coastal element develops. Dark Peat. Blossom, oily sweetness. Finish: Very smoky, long. Sea spray, dry grass, ash and citrus. Bowmore 18 Eleven Pounds A comparatively recent release from Bowmore, the 18 year old was launched in January of 2007 to replace the 17 year old. A perfumed, fruity offering from the Islay distillery. Tasting Note Nose: Pungent, citrus. Stewing fruit, hints of damp wood and a very soft smoke. Palate: Spirity at first, then give ways to perfume, fruit, plum jam. A good sweetness, peat smoke, grapey. Finish: Seville marmalade, blossom, dark peat. 21 Bruichladdich ‘The Classic Laddie’ Five Pounds Created by Jim McEwan from whisky matured in American oak casks alongside Lochindaal, and chosen to represent the classic, unpeated distillery style. Bruichladdich's new signature bottling is made with 100% Scottish barley. Tasting Note Nose: Barley sugar, mint, freshly cut wild flowers; buttercup, daisy, meadowsweet, myrtle, primrose and cherry blossom. Caramelisd fruits, lemon drops, honey, tangerine and tablet. Palate: Refined and refreshing, sweet oak and barley. Ripe green fruit, brown sugar. Finish: Unforgettable! Its best enjoyed in good company. Bunnahabhain 12 Six Pounds This entry level Bunnahabhain bottling comes in a redesigned bottle. This 12 year old is lightly peated for an Islay single malt and consequently is a light, fresh dram. Now at the higher strength of 46.3% - for more complexity and flavour. Tasting Note Nose: Fresh, sweet. Seaweed, malt. Palate: Soft, supple. Sherry, nutty. A little sweetness, malty, juicy sultana. Slightly coastal. Finish: Sherried, mochaccino, herbal, balanced salty tang. Caol Ila 12 Six Pounds This 12 year old is the entry level bottling from the Caol Ila distillery, launched in June of 2002 this expression is light and fresh with that distinctive Caol Ila smoke. Pronounced Cowl-Eela. Tasting Note Nose: Fresh, herbal. Rubbed peppermint leaves, stemmy, damp grass, smoky. Oily, cigar leaves, smoked ham, hickory. Palate: Good body, oily, tar, elegant smoke. Hints of boiled sweets. Finish: Long, peppery, spicy warmth, smoke. 22 Kilchoman Machir Bay 2014 Six Pounds The Machir Bay 2014 is a vatting of 5 and 6 year old ex-bourbon barrels and Oloroso sherry butts. According to John MacLellan, Distillery Manager at Kilchoman, the sherry butts give the whisky a desired taste that has proven to be this drams unique selling point. The best new Islay whisky. Tasting Note Nose: Picture yourself sitting around a lovely peat fire in a harbour: Plenty of peat, iodine, salt and oiliness. A lovely little bit of mintiness follows with floral and citrus notes hiding at the back. Palate: Big hit of cut grass and syrup right from the word go! The smoke is much calmer on the palate and balances really, really nicely with that soft syrup and chocolate feel. The oily character has fallen but the coastal feel is still pretty dominant with the peat and sweetness on the palate. Finish: Salty, savoury, and meaty like good dim sum dumplings. Lagavulin 16 Seven Pounds A much sought-after single malt with the massive peat-smoke that's typical of southern Islay - but also offering richness and a dryness that turns it into a truly interesting dram. The 16 year old has become a benchmark Islay dram from the Lagavulin distillery. Tasting Note Nose: More like Lapsang Souchong tea than Lapsang Souchong! One of the smokiest noses from Islay. It's big, very, very concentrated, and redolent of iodine, sweet spices, good, mature sherry and creamy vanilla. Stunning. Palate: Very thick and rich. A massive mouthful of malt and sherry with good fruity sweetness, but also a wonderful sweetness. Big, powerful peat and oak. Finish: Long, spicy finish, figs, dates, peat smoke, vanilla. Laphroaig 10 Six Pounds Really smoky and iodine rich. This has to be one of Scotland's most characterful drams. Laphroaig are known for their medicinal malts, and the classic 10 year old is no exception. Tasting Note Nose: This opens on big, smoky muscular peat notes. There are spices, and liquorice, as well as a big dose of salt. This whisky has become slightly sweeter in recent years, and it beautifully on the nose, amidst the classic iodine/sticking plasters and cool wood smoke we love. Palate: Seaweed-led, with a hint of vanilla ice cream and more than a whiff of notes from the First Aid box (TCP, plasters etc). The oak is big, and muscles its way into the fore as you hold this whisky over your tongue. An upsurge of spices develop – cardamom/black pepper/chilli. Finish: Big and drying, as the savoury, tarry notes build up with an iodine complexity. 23 The Lowlands The modern difference between the Lowland Malt and that originating from the other regions is simply one of style. Historically, the distinguishing factors were more numerous. In the late 18th century the product of the discreet Highland still (be it legal or illegal) was considered a wholesome, hand-crafted product which was in great demand in the urban markets, but the larger Lowland distillers produced a relatively coarse whisky (rarely made purely from malted barley alone) in huge industrial stills in an effort to supply both the city drinkers and the lucrative London market. The distinction was created by the industrial Lowland distillers who aggressively exploited whatever Government legislation was in force. The distinctions were magnified by the drawing of the 'Highland Line' which effectively stretched from Greenock on the river Clyde to Dundee on the river Tay and split the country into two regions 'gauged' by two separate sets of Excise regulations due to the disparity between their respective products. The lowlands tend to produce whiskies with a gentle lemony sweet fruitiness of the malt without the peatiness or costal brine and seaweed. Auchentoshan 12 Five Pounds A more recent release from the Auchentoshan distillery, replacing the previous staple 10 year old, this 12 year old bottling exhibits the new, slightly Imperial aesthetics Auchentoshan have rebranded themselves with. Tasting Note Nose: Cereals, exotic fruits. Palate: Tannins, a little sweet barley, vanilla. Finish: Dry and very long, a little sweetness from the barley. Auchentoshan Three Wood Six Pounds A Lowland single malt matured in 3 different casks, namely: Pedro Ximenez Sherry casks, bourbon casks and Oloroso sherry. A distinctive triple distilled whisky from Auchentoshan. Tasting Note Nose: Cooked fruit, sherry, toffee, a rum-like quality and notes of Bas Armagnac. Palate: Rich. Liqueur cherries in dark chocolate, more sherried fruit, ripe dark forest fruits, like a Black Forest Gateaux. Finish: Superb, led by thick dark treacle and toffee notes and chewy wooded notes, balanced with a green fruit edge. 24 Glenkinchie 12 Five Pounds This 12 year old is the new entry level bottling from Glenkinchie, released in 2007 to replace the 10 year old. Tasting Note Nose: Quite light, yet fragrant. Fresh cereal and grist, barley sweetness and a nutty note. Acacia honey. Palate: Very fruity with notes of Madeira and sweet stewed fruits. Calvados and tannic oak. Finish: Medium length with notes of cereal and a fresh greenness. 25 Campbeltown Dufftown could lay claim to being Scotland's whisky capital but in the middle of the last century there was only one place which had the right to that name - Campbeltown. Situated on the lee shore of the Mull of Kintyre, this town was literally awash with distillate just over a hundred years ago. When Alfred Barnard compiled his wonderful book - The Whisky Distilleries of the United Kingdom in 1886, he found no less than 21 producing distilleries in and around the town! Today, the sad reminder of the industry's presence in the town is now manifested in just two distilleries, Glen Scotia and Springbank. These Campbeltown single malts are very individual, with a briny or fresh salty-sweet character. Springbank 10 Five Pounds The 10 year old from the Springbank distillery in Campbeltown, a mixture of both bourbon and sherry matured whisky. Tasting Note Nose: Big-bodied with oaked aridity. Peat, earthen rootiness. Exotic fruits and a hint of salinity. Palate: Full-bodied with a good helping of cereal sweetness. Peat, with a dark nuttiness and whirling smoke. Finish: Long and crisp with a coastal tang and a trailing peat with oaked dryness. 26 Blends A blended whisky is the product of blending different types of whiskies and sometimes also neutral grain spirits, colouring, and flavourings. It is generally the product of mixing one or more higher-quality straight or single malt whiskies with lighter spirits and water. Ballantine's Finest Four Pounds Ballantines Finest was Jim Murray's No Age Statement Blend of the Year with a whopping 96 points! A classic blend. Tasting Note Nose: Expressive, crisp barley sugars. Touch of wood smoke, toffee. Palate: Rich and sweet. Barley and caramel, very gentle peat. Finish: Soft and sweet, fudge. Ballantine's 12 Gold Seal Five Pounds The key ingredients in the Ballantines blends are Miltonduff and Glenburgie as well as whisky from around fifty other distilleries. This is a new 12 year old. Tasting Note Nose: Fruit salad and sherry, mixed nuts. Palate: Rather creamy. Mochaccino and buttery pastry, spice. Finish: Gentle, spice and fruitcake. Ballantine's 17 40% Seven Pounds Ballantine's 17 Year Old is a blend favoured by many, including Jim Murray, who awarded it Scotch Blend of the Year 2010, and who can blame him? Ballantine’s 17 year old displays all the flavours of Scotland, with a careful combination of malt and grain whiskies from all over Scotland. Tasting Note Nose: Deep, balanced, elegant and smooth with hints of sweet vanilla, oak and a sensation of smoke. Palate: Full and complex, vibrant honey sweetness and creamy vanilla flavours with hints of oak and spicy liquorice. Finish: Long, sweet and smooth with a hint of spice. 27 Ballantine's 21 Twelve Pounds A sparkling gold colour, floral nose and aromatic palate give it a delightful complexity. This sophisticated blend is a whisky to savour on special occasions. Ballantines base their whiskies around malt whisky from distilleries like Glenburgie and Miltonduff. Tasting Note Nose: Rich, honey-sweet with hints of apple and floral aromas. Palate: Smooth, rich liquorice and aromatic spice flavours with traces of heather and smoke. Finish: Long and mellow with hints of dried fruits. Ballantine's 30 Thirty Pounds With a deep gold colour, subtle sweet flavour on the nose and a complex palate of honey and vanilla, Ballantine’s 30 Year Old is an exceptional, rare and exclusive whisky. It won a Gold at the International Spirits Challenge and Jim Murray gave it 92 points. Tasting Note Nose: Deep, soft fruity aromas and an elegant subtle sweetness with a luscious vanilla oakiness. Palate: A full, rich complex balance of honey, floral and fruity flavours, with mellow notes of vanilla. Finish: Long-lasting and elegant. Mackinlay’s Shackleton Fourteen Pounds Yes, this is it – an exact replica of the whisky left in Antarctica by Sir Ernest Shackleton during his Antarctic expedition between 1907 and 1909. The whisky was recreated down to the very last detail by Whyte and Mackay’s blender extraordinaire, Richard Paterson. The final replica bottle of Mackinlay’s blend contains whiskies from Speyside, the Island, and the Highlands, and the recipe even includes some very rare 1983 Glen Mhor! Tasting Note Nose: Soft, elegant & refined. Crushed apple, pear & pineapple, buttery vanilla, creamy caramel and nutmeg. Marmalade, cinnamon, smoke, ginger and muscovado sugar Palate: With a generous strength of 47.3% this gives the spirit plenty of impact on the palate but in a mild warming manner. Gentle bonfire smoke give’s way to spicy rich toffee, treacle and pecan nuts. Creme brulee, orange rind and freshly baked bread. 28 Whyte and Mackay 30 Thirty Pounds An incredible 30 year old blended whisky from Whyte and Mackay, very rich and well sherried. Tasting Note Nose: Deep and mellow. The sherry wood exposes itself immediately. Hearty and grand, the weight of the Speyside malts lingers in graceful harmony. Palate: A classic refined flavour brought about by its many years in wood. A blend of this age must be drunk with respect - slow, not hurried. Each flavour must be given time to reveal its many fine qualities - rich and mellow, elegant and distinguished. All these excellent attributes are captured on the tongue leaving the palate rewarded and satisfied. Grain whisky Ordinarily refers to any whisky made (at least in part) from grains other than malted barley, such as whisky made using maize (corn), wheat or rye. Grain whiskies can also contain some malted barley. Whisky made from only malted barley (or primarily from malted barley) is typically called malt whisky rather than grain whisky (although barley is a grain). Most American whiskeys and Canadian whiskeys are grain-based. Compass Box Hedonism Seven Pounds A delightful blended grain whisky, Hedonism really is as enjoyable as the name suggests, a smooth and creamy offering from Compass Box. Tasting Note Nose: Ripe fruit, fraises des bois and sponge cake. Red pepper’s. Palate: Sensual, disarmingly sleek & creamy. Black cherry, sweet spices, cereal notes. Finish: Very warm and spiced, toasty, some oak and milk chocolate. 29