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New Arrivals & Selected Diageo 2015 Special Releases Available From Edencroft!

October 26, 2015 by Gary Leave a Comment

Compass Box / This Is Not A Luxury Whisky £ 150.00

Compass Box / This Is Not A Luxury Whisky
£ 150.00

All whiskies are sold on a first come basis and are subject to availability.

New Arrivals

Caol Ila / Unpeated 17 Year Old / 2015 Release
Caol Ila / Unpeated 17 Year Old / 2015 Release

£ 90.00
Country: Scotland
Region: Islay
Age: 
Strength: 55.9%
70cl

Summary: Country/Region: Scotland/Islay.
ABV: 55.9%
Distilled: 1997
Bottled: 2015
Unit: 70cl
An unusually rounded older unpeated Caol Ila, the most mature yet released in this series: a little less ‘full on’ than previous expressions, it still has all their fruity sharpness, hints of smoke and the sea, grainy cereals and bittersweet tannins, and becomes soft, harmonious and welcoming with water.
Appearance: Bright gold in sunlight. Good beading.
Nose: Reserved; at first fruity, with zesty orange or mandarin, then slowly becoming sweeter and denser, with malt and hard toffee, and fresh, creamy vanilla. There’s a balancing, lightly smoky and fresh-clean aroma too, backed by drier notes of newsprint and grainy cereal. Later, hints of moss, or crusty sourdough bread. A dash of water unusually produces a prickly nose-feel and makes the aromas more accessible, as fruitcake, wood smoke and caramel, salt on a sea breeze, and sweet honey and lemon.
Body: Medium to rich.
Palate: Intense, starting with sweet mixed fruit, chocolate and ginger, then distinctly salty, growing warm and slightly bitter. Waxy and coating, later adding a strong, clean, herbal dryness. With water the taste is softer yet somehow more pronounced: still salty, but with a mineral edge, and now peppery across the tongue. Quietly clean and leathery with pleasantly smooth tannins.
Finish: Medium to long, warming and coating, with dark chocolate, an appetising bitter-sweetness, distant light smoke and a touch of salt. With water, gently comforting, with a lingering, cooling aftertaste of Szechuan pepper.

Lagavulin / 12 Year Old / 2015 Release
Lagavulin / 12 Year Old / 2015 Release

£ 80.00
Country: Scotland
Region: Islay
Age: 
Strength: 56.8%
70cl

Summary: Country/Region: Scotland/Islay.
ABV: 56.8%
Distilled: 2003
Bottled: 2015
Unit: 70cl
An expressive, energetic and self-assured Lagavulin with a straightforward aroma and a direct, full-on Islay flavour: classic, pleasantly relaxed and cleanly structured with a fine balance of cereal sweetness, appetising sharpness and dry, volcanic smoke, all adroitly set off by citrus and mint.
Appearance: Light gold. Moderate beading. Light body.
Nose: At first fresh cleaned, with soft malt, then rapidly developing maritime scents of sweet seaweed alongside a sharper, fruitier note, with grainy cereals. Quite starchy, like boiled basmati rice, then later vanilla-sweet, like a sponge cake dusted with icing sugar. With time, the aromas open up, releasing spent match and a little menthol balanced by sugary fruits, lemon zest, and gradually some distant smoke. Soft, fruity and minty with water: the sweetness now is of barley sugar and there’s fresh-baked sourdough or damp wool beneath the background smokiness.
Body: Light.
Palate: A smooth, oily mouthfeel; surprisingly sweet, with coating liquorice and a rising, smoky pungency, before the dryness of rich chocolate arrives with balancing salt and smoke. Water amplifies all these flavours, delivering more sweetness, saltiness, smoke and ash; dusty notes mingle with sulphury smoke and clean, pine-fresh menthol and eucalyptus, while the tongue finds the tannins well formed.
Finish: Easy-going, sweet and powerfully smoky. First there are those smoothly coating tannins. Then, salt and smoke; spent matches, clean slabs and charred embers; and a little orange oil. It’s sweetly appetising, warming and intensely smoky with water; clean, with cool smoke and wood ash.

Compass Box / Flaming Heart Fifteenth Anniversary Limited Edition
Compass Box / Flaming Heart Fifteenth Anniversary Limited Edition

£ 100.00
Country: Scotland
Region: 
Age: 
Strength: 48.9%
70cl

Summary: Country/Region: Scotland.
ABV: 48.9%
Unit: 70cl
This fifteenth anniversary release is a huge, layered, long-lasting mouthful of a whisky to enjoy late into the night. Brooding, indulgent and older than ever before, this is a whisky born of oak, smoke and fire – with a big heart all of its own.
First released in 2006, Flaming Heart was the first whisky to combine the rich, complex spice of Scotch aged in new French oak with the evocative peat-fired smoke of Islay malt. It created a genre-defying style that was smouldering, spicy, complex – and so popular that it has been re-released four more times in the years that followed.
Availability: Fifteenth Anniversary Limited Edition release of 12,060 bottles.
Bottled: July 2015.
Flavour Descriptors: A unique interplay between spice, sweet and smoke characteristics. Sweet fruits and wood-smoke on the nose. Fat and full-bodied on the palate with a spicy sweetness and a brooding complexity that is rich, sweet and addictively decadent.
Recommendations: This is a whisky for late nights, for after dinner, for camping under the stars. Drink it neat or pair with rich cheeses, fine cigars or your favourite rock song turnedup to 11.
Ratings: 93 Points / Whisky Israel.

Compass Box / This Is Not A Luxury Whisky
Compass Box / This Is Not A Luxury Whisky

£ 150.00
Country: Scotland
Region: 
Age: 
Strength: 53.1%
70cl

Summary: Country/Region: Scotland.
ABV: 53.1%
Unit: 70cl
This is not a luxury whisky. Or is it?
The inspiration for this limited release is René Magritte’s 1929 work “Ceci n’est pas une pipe”, a Surrealist painting which challenges peoples’ perceptions of reality.
The reality is, these days we hear more and more commentators talking about ‘luxury’ whiskies, which are presumably whiskies that are either rare or expensive, or, possibly, both.
On one level, similar to the role Magritte’s painting played in the art world, this release is about getting people to consider for themselves what a ‘luxury’ whisky is.
On another level, a level we consider much more important, this limited release is about the liquid. This is about the whisky in the bottle, which we have painstakingly sourced and blended, and the engagement and enjoyment and pleasure this whisky will bring when shared with others.
This latter point is what we believe a ‘luxury’ whisky is. And at Compass Box, this is what they believe whisky, generally speaking, is all about.
Availability: Limited Edition release of 4,992 bottles.
Bottled: August 2015.
Flavour Descriptors: Complex, rich, lightly smoky and opulent. Sultanas, sweet sherry and concentrated floral notes combine with deep demerara sweetness, cacao and lighter creamy coconut character. An inviting nose, fat and full-bodied on the palate with a long, lingering sweetsmoke finish.
Recommendations: This particular luxury has been designed to be consumed, not preserved on a shelf. Use it to celebrate life’s little victories – a new job, a chance meeting with a friend, the conclusion of an enjoyable dinner. Above all else, share and enjoy.
Ratings: 92 Points / Whisky Israel.

If you are interested in ordering any of the other bottlings in the Release you can register the whisky on your wish list or contact us by email.

Filed Under: Diageo, Edencroft Spirit Specialists, New Arrivals

Diageo Announce 2012 ‘Special Releases’ Limited Edition Malts!

August 28, 2012 by Gary Leave a Comment

THE 2012 COLLECTION OF LIMITED-EDITION SINGLE MALT SCOTCH WHISKIES

THE 2012 COLLECTION OF LIMITED-EDITION SINGLE MALT SCOTCH WHISKIES

Well it’s that time of the year again!

Diageo has announced its Single Malt Scotch Whiskies to be released in limited edition this autumn in the Special Releases series. All are at natural cask strength.

As usual, the series has some exceedingly rare (and therefore increasingly sought after) single malts from the dwindling stocks of long-silent distilleries alongside expressions from familiar and less familiar working distilleries, but at unusual ages.

The eight single malt releases this year are:-

DISTILLERY No. OF BOTTLES UK RRP COMMENTS
Auchroisk 30 year old 2,976 £230 The oldest Auchroisk ever released by the distillers. From a mix of American & European Oak refill casks filled in 1982.
Brora 35 year old 1,566 £400 Eleventh of a very limited series of annual releases. Vatted from whiskies at least 35 years old distilled in 1976 & 1977 and aged in refill American Oak casks
(This distillery closed in 1983.)
Caol Ila 14 year old limited numbers £66 From a batch made only once a year,: the 7th limited release of unpeated Caol Ila, the first at fourteen years old, also the first ‘sherried’ Caol Ila released in this series. From 1st fill ex-bodega European Oak casks filled in 1997.
Dalwhinnie 25 year old 5,358 £185 Latest of four limited releases to be offered by the distillery, and the first of these to come from rejuvenated American Oak hogsheads.
Lagavulin 12 year old limited numbers £71 Eleventh in a series of special 12 year old releases from the original distiller’s stocks. Vatted from refill American Oak casks, each at least 12 years old.
Lagavulin 21 year old 2,772 £350 Only the second 21 year old ever bottled by the original distillers. Vatted from first fill ex-sherry European Oak casks each at least 21 years old, filled in 1991.
Port Ellen 32 year old 2,964 £600 Twelfth of a very limited series of annual releases. From refill American Oak and refill European Oak casks filled in 1979.
(This distillery closed in 1983.)
Talisker 35 year old 3,090 £525 The oldest limited release ever offered by the distillery. Sixteenth in this series. From American & European Oak refill casks filled in 1977.


Commenting on the new release, Nick Morgan, Diageo’s Head of Whisky Outreach said:
“Once again I hope we have released whiskies here to interest very many single malt drinkers and connoisseurs.”

“The iconic 21 year old Lagavulin will, I’m sure, not disappoint those who have bought the previous highly-regarded bottling, and will be a delight for those who haven’t tried it before. An ‘unpeated’ Caol Ila from ex-bodega European Oak will be fascinating. We are particularly excited about the Talisker 35 year old – the oldest we have ever released from this celebrated distillery.

“And our ever-diminishing stocks of Brora and Port Ellen have once again been successfully explored for hidden treasures, which will no doubt further increase the huge over-demand for these rare products . It is amazing to think that those distilleries closed nearly 30 years ago.”

So, expect the usual rush for stocks and a word of warning.
Don’t get in the way of the stampede.

That is, unless you want a fine collection of size 9’s imprinted on your back!

Filed Under: 12 year old, 14 Year Old, 21 Year Old, 25 Year Old, 30 Year Old, 32 Year Old, 35 Year Old, Auchroisk, Brora, Caol Ila, Dalwhinnie, Diageo, Lagavulin, Limited Editions, Port Ellen, Special Release 2012, Talisker

New Cambus Cooperage Opens – Roll Out The Barrel!

December 2, 2011 by Gary Leave a Comment

Robot loading cask for firing

Robot loading cask for firing

Recognising the still-growing demand around the world for Scotch, particularly in the emerging markets of Asia and Latin America, Diageo is investing in growing Scotch whisky production capacity across Scotland.
To accommodate additional production, a good supply of top quality oaks casks is needed, so Diageo has built a new state-of-the art Cooperage at Cambus, near Alloa in Fife.

The coopers there will craft around 250,000 casks each year – all of which will be used to mature Scotch whisky for Diageo’s world leading brands, such as Johnnie Walker and J&B Rare, and Diageo’s famous collection of single malt Scotch whiskies like Talisker, Lagavulin, Caol Ila, Oban and The Singleton of Glen Ord.

The Cambus site – the first new cooperage to be built in Scotland for decades – has been designed “by the coopers for the coopers”, drawing on generations of skill, craft and experience and combining it with the state-of-the-art British engineering – never before used in a cooperage – to dramatically improve the working lives of the coopers.

Diageo has invested £10 million in the new purpose-built cooperage. It employs over 100 people: 40 coopers, 39 operators and team leaders and has eight apprentices. A further 20 people are involved in maintenance, transport and support services.

Calum Bruce, Prince Edward, Brian Law

Calum Bruce, Prince Edward, Brian Law

The new Cambus cooperage was opened on 28 November by His Royal Highness, the Earl of Wessex, who toured the new cooperage and met a range of time-served coopers, including some with decades of experience in the trade, as well Diageo’s apprentice coopers who are now able to hone their skills in a custom-built coopering school within the new cooperage.

Calum Bruce, 51, one of Diageo’s longest serving coopers with 35 years’ service, having started in the trade at age 16, explained the difference the new ways of working had made to the coopers.

He said: “A lot has changed over the last 35 years, but the basic skills have stayed the same. But Cambus is something different altogether. We still use the same skills to do the same job, but the difference is the machines now do a lot of the heavy lifting so we don’t have to spend time and effort on hard labour and we can focus on the skilled part of the job. That is what has really transformed the way we work.”

Classic coopering skills& strength are still needed

Classic coopering skills& strength are still needed

Brian Law, one of eight apprentices currently learning their trade on Diageo’s four-year apprentice scheme, also welcomed the investment the company has made in the future of the trade. He said: “It is a really exciting time to be learning my trade as a cooper. At Cambus, Diageo has an investment in the future of coopering and that’s also an investment in the futures of all the guys who work here.”

“We wanted to maximise the craft skills which are the core of the job, while using smart technology to minimise the back-breaking bending and heavy-lifting which causes physical damage to the guys doing the job.”

Tom Duncan, a manager at Cambus, was one of the team tasked with leading the new cooperage project and explained the ethos behind the cooperage: “It’s not often you get to start with a blank sheet of paper and design something like this from scratch. From the start the basic principal was that this would be a cooperage designed by coopers for coopers.”

“We wanted to maximise the craft skills which are the core of the job, while using smart technology to minimise the back-breaking bending and heavy-lifting which causes physical damage to the guys doing the job.”

To achieve this, the Diageo team turned to Leicester-based engineering firm CI Logistics, which works primarily in the car industry, and together they custom-designed a series of mechanical conveyors to move the casks – which weigh up to 85kg when empty – around the cooperage between the hand-craft elements of the process. The result is the world’s most unique and innovative cooperage.

Filed Under: Diageo, News

More On Diageo’s Classic Malts Special Releases 2011

September 12, 2011 by Gary Leave a Comment

This years Brora 32 year old is in a limited edition of only 1,404 bottles

This years Brora 32 year old is in a limited edition of only 1,404 bottles

Diageo’s prolific collection of single malt Scotch whiskies, the Classic Malts Selection, is augmented every year by the issue of a small portfolio of limited edition single malts, under the heading of Special Releases.

The series has always aimed to intrigue, delight and sometimes surprise whisky connoisseurs and collectors, by presenting unusual, rare, collectable – but always deeply enjoyable – expressions of single malt whisky, all from original distillery stocks.

Some are affordable, others enjoy a rarity that imposes frankly aspirational prices. Many enjoy striking, specially designed packaging that enhances the pleasure of ownership and sharing.

Familiar distilleries are often present, but in unusual expression or ages. Other bottles are drawn from the precious and dwindling stocks of distilleries that ceased production last century. Most are bottled at natural cask strength and all without chill filtration. There are eight Special Releases this year; five are from closed distilleries; and the whole production is less than 60,000 bottles.

Diageo’s Nick Morgan explains:

“We set out to include one or two really unexpected bottlings in the 2011 Special Releases collection. Very few whisky connoisseurs – possible none at all – will ever have encountered anything like the 20 year old glorious Port Dundas single grain whisky that we are offering this year, and since the distillery closed two years ago, it’ll be a rare experience for those who who get to try it now.

“By contrast, the 25 year old Knockando from first-fill ex-sherry casks might astonish those who thought they know this malt: this bottling is rich, deep-flavoured and very complex. The Glenury Royal at 40 years old is a very venerable (and inevitably expensive) bottling, an old-style after-dinner experience; but it shows no fatigue and is packed with flavour. Lovers of the Lowland style will be charmed by the Rosebank 21 year old.”

Older & Rarer

As in previous years, Brora and Port Ellen will be a focus for committed devotees of these irreplaceable single malts.

The Brora 32 year old is in a limited edition of only 1,404 bottles: compare the first release in this series, in 2002, which ran to 3,000 bottles.

The Port Ellen, also at 32 years old, comes in an edition of 2,988 bottles (compared with 12,000 bottles in 2002!). Rarer and older as the years go by, both are priced at £300.

Here’s a quick summary:-

2011 Release Quick Facts Price Range
Brora 32 Year Old 1978 (54.7% abv) Diageo’s oldest Brora to date. 1,404 individually-numbered bottles available.
£300
Caol Ila Unpeated 12 Year Old 1999 6,000 bottles available.
£55
Glenury Royal 40 Year Old 1970 Second oldest release of Glenury Royal from Diageo. 1,404 bottles available worldwide.
£525
Knockando 25 Year Old 1985 Knockando has never before been featured in the Special Releases range. Fewer than 4,500 numbered bottles.
£135
Lagavulin 12 Year Old Cask Strength The tenth time Lagavulin has been featured in the Special Releases series.
£63
Port Dundas 20 Year Old 1990 First ever Special Release of grain whisky! There are just 1,920 numbered bottles from the now closed distillery.
£110
Port Ellen 32 Year Old 1978 (53.9%) Oldest ever official release of Port Ellen. 2,988 bottles available from this legendary distillery which closed just a few years after this was distilled in 1978.
£300
Rosebank 21 Year Old 1990 5,604 numbered bottles worldwide. The distillery closed almost two decades ago and stocks are becoming heavily depleted.
£160

The Special Releases 2011

The Special Releases 2011

[Read more…]

Filed Under: 12 year old, 20 Year Old, 21 Year Old, 25 Year Old, 32 Year Old, 40 Year Old, Abbey Whisky, Brora, Diageo, Edencroft Spirit Specialists, Glenury Royal, Knockando, Lagavulin, Master of Malt, News, Port Dundas, Port Ellen, Rosebank, Special Release 2011, The Drink Shop, The Whisky Exchange

Master Of Malt Announce Diageo’s 2011 Special Releases

September 9, 2011 by Gary Leave a Comment

‘The Chaps at Master of Malt’ have been sitting very quietly, saying not a word and only responding with name, rank and car registration number when anyone spoke to them over the last few days.

Why?

Well they’ve been keeping a big secret, it’s been killing them but now they can reveal all – well not quite, it’s not that type of blog – but they can tell us what Diageo’s 2011 Special Releases are going to be!

They share all the details in their blog posting here but here’s a quick run down of the releases.

2011 Release Quick Facts Price Range
Brora 32 Year Old 1978 (54.7% abv) Diageo’s oldest Brora to date. 1,404 individually-numbered bottles available.
£300
Caol Ila Unpeated 12 Year Old 1999 6,000 bottles available.
£55
Glenury Royal 40 Year Old 1970 Second oldest release of Glenury Royal from Diageo. 1,404 bottles available worldwide.
£525
Knockando 25 Year Old 1985 Knockando has never before been featured in the Special Releases range. Fewer than 4,500 numbered bottles.
£135
Lagavulin 12 Year Old Cask Strength The tenth time Lagavulin has been featured in the Special Releases series.
£63
Port Dundas 20 Year Old 1990 First ever Special Release of grain whisky! There are just 1,920 numbered bottles from the now closed distillery.
£110
Port Ellen 32 Year Old 1978 (53.9%) Oldest ever official release of Port Ellen. 2,988 bottles available from this legendary distillery which closed just a few years after this was distilled in 1978.
£300
Rosebank 21 Year Old 1990 5,604 numbered bottles worldwide. The distillery closed almost two decades ago and stocks are becoming heavily depleted.
£160

Filed Under: 12 year old, 20 Year Old, 21 Year Old, 25 Year Old, 32 Year Old, 40 Year Old, Brora, Diageo, Glenury Royal, Knockando, Lagavulin, Master of Malt, News, Port Dundas, Port Ellen, Rosebank

The Spirits See Tourism Rise

April 20, 2011 by Gary Leave a Comment

Talisker Distillery

Talisker Distillery

Whisky tourism has grown rapidly in Scotland over the past two years with Diageo, the country’s leading distillery operator, reporting an increase of almost 20 per cent in visitor numbers.

Tourists have flocked to the 12 distillery visitor centres run by Diageo across Scotland, with the number rising from 176,471 in 2008 to 194,505 in 2009 and to 210,432 in 2010 – an increase of 19 per cent over the two year period.

A staggering 43 different nationalities were recorded amongst the visitors to their distilleries last year, with UK tourists leading the way and accounting for 87,417 of the visits in 2010.

The other top countries, in terms of visitor numbers, reflected the traditional leading markets for Scotch whisky, with Germany, France, USA and Spain making up the top five.

The increasing popularity of Scotch in emerging markets around the world was also reflected with visitors from countries such as Brazil, China, India and Russian and Brazil enjoying tours of Diageo’s distilleries.

Diageo operates 28 malt whisky distilleries in Scotland, more than any other company, and with 12 of these having dedicated visitor centres it is also the leading provider of whisky tourism facilities. These include the homes of some of Diageo’s iconic Scotch whisky brands such as Glenkinchie, Talisker, Oban, Lagavulin, Dalwhinnie, Royal Lochnagar and Cardhu.

Despite its distant location, Talisker, on the Isle of Skye, was Diageo’s busiest distillery visitor centre with 50,550 people in 2010, a fantastic increase from 41,271 in 2008 and 47,115 in 2009.

Steve Blake, General Manager of Diageo’s Visitor Centres said the growing popularity of Scotch whisky combined with the high quality of visitor experience offered at the distilleries were the key factors in their increasing success.

He said: “We very much hope that as the popularity of Scotch continues to expand around the world we will be able to play a key role in attracting increasing numbers of visitors to Scotland.

“It is equally encouraging that we have seen such a healthy growth in UK visitors. It is clear that people love the magic, the mystery and the history of our Scotch whisky industry.”

Filed Under: Cardhu, Dalwhinnie, Diageo, Glenkinchie, Lagavulin, News, Oban, Royal Lochnagar, Talisker

Rare Single Malt Whiskies From Diageo

October 12, 2010 by Gary Leave a Comment

Rare Single Malt Whiskies From Diageo

Rare Single Malt Whiskies From Diageo

The time has come. Every autumn, Diageo, proud owner of 28 Scottish single malt whisky distilleries, unveils a small and highly desirable collection of limited edition single malt Scotch whiskies destined for the world’s top bars and the collections of single malt whisky connoisseurs.

Nine such single malt whiskies, all at natural cask strength, are being released this year.

Two of them have once again been drawn from the lovingly preserved but sadly diminishing stocks of distilleries long since closed.
Others are unusual bottlings from distilleries still in very vibrant production: generally older (thus rarer) than the widely distributed expressions, but sometimes younger.

Liquid History

Brora distillery, on Scotland’s north-east coast, opened in 1819 and closed in 1983. The iconic status of its peated, Islay-style single malts has matured as stocks dwindle. This year’s distinguished and memorable release, at 30 years old, delivers all the key characteristics of the classic Brora: exquisite sweetness, rich fruitiness and magnificently appetising savoury smoke. But the quantities are tiny: a mere 2,958 individually numbered bottles.
Across Scotland on Islay, Port Ellen distillery also closed in 1983, so its stocks, too, are irreplaceable, and fading out as the years go by. In 2009, a 29 year old Port Ellen won the supreme Scotch whisky award at the San Francisco World Spirits Competition, being awarded a Double Gold Medal and named Best Single Malt Scotch. This year’s example – a venerable, dignified Port Ellen of great complexity and depth, according to those who have tasted it – is 31 years old, and comes in an edition of fewer than 3,000 individually numbered bottles. The many devotees of this highly prized single malt generally ensure that stocks sell out within weeks.

Unexpected Speysides

Two Speyside whiskies in this release seldom become available at any age, still less at 20 years plus. The rare Auchroisk has been released after 20 years in a mix of American and European Oak Casks, making it a “poised, sweet and astonishingly sophisticated dessert whisky”, say tasters. A 21 year old Glen Spey joins it, with an unusual background: it has matured in new American Oak casks that had also held sherry, which gives the finish some “drying oak checked by subtle, creamy vanilla and note of powdered chocolate”.

A third Speyside single malt whisky is familiar at 12 years old – but rarely seen at 21. This Cragganmore, with fewer than 6,000 individually numbered bottles, has emerged from refill American Oak casks filled in 1989. It is judged to be “fully mature, yet retaining all of Cragganmore’s complex character; worthy of long contemplation”.

A Closer look at the Malts

A Closer look at the Malts

Lowland star

Founded in 1837 and one of the few surviving Lowland whisky distilleries, Glenkinchie, in the Lammermuir hills south of Edinburgh, makes a aromatic and flowery dram when tasted in its 12 year old personality; here, at 20 years old, Glenkinchie still delivers its scented and floral promise on the nose, a lightly sweet, then crisp acidity with delicate fruits on the palate, and a cleansing and slightly drying finish – for some, the perfect aperitif.

Hebridean big hitters

Finally from the islands in the west come three famous and much acclaimed single malts. Talisker, the award-laden single malt from the Isle of Skye, arrives this year in a 30 year old release of 3,000 individually numbered bottles available world-wide – the fifteenth and equal oldest limited release to be offered by the distillery. At this great age, some of the pepper has faded: this is judged to be “a more mature, reserved Talisker which is also confident, consistent and clearly in its prime. … An interesting and complex whisky, with aromas that change constantly and a lively taste, followed by a long finish, with roasted malt, the ghost of black pepper, and some nutmeg in the smoky and savoury aftertaste.”

On Islay, the ever-popular and relatively youthful 12 year old Lagavulin, from refill American Oak casks filled in 1998, is the ninth of a series of special 12 year old releases at natural cask strength. Lagavulin fans will not be surprised by one taster’s description: “Unpredictable and energetic; among the most appetising and savoury of all whiskies. A fine, punchy expression of Lagavulin”.

From the Sound of Islay, Caol Ila in its unpeated style is a familiar player in the annual Special Releases. This year it comes with 12 years in 1st fill Bourbon oak casks. Here’s an opportunity for an interesting comparison with its more familiar 12 year old peated twin brother, which this year took the much sought-after IWSC Trophy for the best single malt scotch whisky at 15 years and under. Tasters enjoyed its “smooth sweetness, refreshing acidity, peppery spiciness”.

Diageo spokesman Nick Morgan said of the 2010 Special Releases: “Some of these single malts are priced accessibly. Others, inevitably given their age and rarity, are very expensive. We know some people buy them as investments. But all are engaging, distinctive single malts made for enjoyment now, and of course in the case of Brora and Port Ellen, they will never be made again. As before, we’ve combined some familiar bottlings with some unpredictable ones.
“It’s also worth mentioning that some exceptionally elegant packaging can be found on the rarer Special Releases. This year’s original Glen Spey and Auchroisk designs continue that tradition.”

The collection

DISTILLERY MATURATION YEARS ABV % QUANTITY RRP
Auchroisk Mix of American & European Oak casks 20 58.1 < 6000 £115
Brora A mixture of American & European Oak refill casks 30 54.3 2958 £280
Caol Ila First fill Bourbon oak casks 12 57.6 < 6000 £52
Cragganmore Refill American Oak casks 21 56 < 6000 £135
Glen Spey New American Oak casks that had also held sherry 21 50.4 < 6000 £120
Glenkinchie Refill American Oak casks 20 55.1 < 6000 £125
Lagavulin Refill American Oak casks 12 56.5 limited quantities £59
Port Ellen Refill American & European Oak casks 31 54.6 < 3000 £250
Talisker Refill American & European Oak casks 30 57.3 < 3000 £230
The other malts in the collection

The other malts in the collection

Filed Under: 12 year old, 20 Year Old, 21 Year Old, 30 Year Old, 31 Year Old, Auchroisk, Brora, Caol Ila, Cragganmore, Diageo, Glen Spey, Glenkinchie, Lagavulin, Limited Editions, New Arrivals, News, Port Ellen, Talisker, Vintage

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