30 June 2024

29/06/2024 Drams in Paris

Knowing that tOMoH would be visiting the City of Lights, elskling kindly put a tasting together with some friends. aphex, ben_whisky, cosinus, Garobidou, Piazzolla, Piksi, JS and I meet up with for an evening of libations.

Since some are earlier than the announced starting time, they start with rum. I have a few, but skip several in a vain attempt to catch up. The numbering below is mine only. elskling's overall tally is higher (three units higher, to be precise).


New Grove Royal Rum Blend (45.6%, Grays Inc., 800b, b#8, b.2016, D131/16) (brought by?)

Nose: a whiff of rubber and liquorice, then it turns very sweet, with dark sugars of sorts.

Mouth: it has a certain bitterness, liquorice again (black bootlaces), that precedes a strong woody fruitiness reminiscent of lychee husk, or suchlike.

Finish: sweet, bitter, we find more liquorice bootlaces, and a spoonful of dark sugar. 6/10


Neisson 11yo 2004/2015 (45.4%, OB Single Cask bottled for La Maison du Whisky, 498b, b#409) (brought by?)

Nose: marzipan and chou dough, which is a good start.

Mouth: sea water paves the way for burnt caramel and tyres.

Finish: yeah, it has a strong bitterness of rubber, lightly burnt. 6/10


From here on, all drams are served blind.


Dram #3 (elskling)

Nose: lots and lots and lots of rubber again. I seem to be very sensitive to it, today.

Mouth: very strong on the tongue, it presents cured orange rinds and tyres.

Finish: tyres, tyres, tyres.

Isautier 10yo Apollonie Edition 2023 (58%, OB) 5/10


Dram #4 (brought by?)

Nose: sweeter than its predecessors, this one has sugar-coated apricots.

Mouth: aaaaaand we go back to rubber, this time with a dollop of glue.

Finish: powerful, heavy-handed with the cured apricot, though it has more rubber at the death.

New Grove 2010/2020 (55%, Grays Inc. exclusively bottled for France, Limousin Oak Cask, C#256, 164b, b#104, D095/20) 6/10


Dram #5 (elskling)

Nose: another one that has rubber, this one has a lot of menthol too. Then, we find apricot liqueur.

Mouth: soft, it is balanced by an almond-y bitterness.

Finish: very short and indistinct. Pity.

Isautier 13yo Antoinette Edition 2023 (58%, OB) 6/10


Dram #6 (aphex)

Nose: beside the now-expected rubber, we have mace, hay, and softly-smoky cane sugar.

Mouth: wow, it becomes hugely smoky on the palate, with dry-peat smoke pointing a finger towards darker, moister, earthier peat too.

Finish: warming, this has lots of smoky goodness. Apple compote stewed in a smoke-filled bothy.

Comment: a rum for whisky drinkers, if anything. Some online complain about that, but for this whisky drinker, it is this rum's saving grace.

Diamond 11yo d.2008 Kill Devil (60.9%, Hunter Laing, Port Ellen Cask Finish, 690b) 7/10


Dram #7 (brought by?)

Nose: some rubber (argh!) soon makes way for sundried tomato... and glue.

Mouth: this burns a little. Once past that sensation, we have a sugary sweetness.

Finish: long, syrupy and fruity, it only has a tame bitterness.

New Grove 12yo 2010/2022 (65.2%, Grays Inc. Collection Antipodes selected by La Maison du Whisky, Limousin Oak Cask, C#550, 427b, b#339, D140/22) 7/10


Much to everyone's relief, we leave the rums behind to focus on "real drinks" (© Garobidou). I do like to remain open-minded, but a session like this reminds me that rum is simply not for me.


Dram #8 (Garobidou)

Nose: phwoar, this smells pre-war, with the tin lids and jammy marmalade that betray a long sojourn in glass.

Mouth: delicate, fruity, jammy, it also has gunpowder and oxidised tin lids.

Finish: excellent, still as old school as the nose promised, jams and brass buttons.

Comment: we are under the spell, but stumped with regards to what it is. I venture it could be a Banff, but no.

Ballantine's 30yo (43° G.L., George Ballantine / Son imported by C. Salengo, b. ca. 1965) 8/10


elskling: "Why did you split this?"
Garobidou: "Yeah, perhaps I should have kept it all for me."
Piksi: "If you ever see me split something good, stop me!"


Piazzolla takes the lead for a string of six drams.


Dram #9 (Piazzolla)

Nose: melted dark chocolate, a dollop of mocha, then fruits take off: prunes, figs, raisins, with billowing Gitanes smoke in the background -- welcome to France.

Mouth: chocolate again, prunes, and something very earthy, pushing coffee grounds.

Finish: long, chocolate-y, coating. We have treacle and molasses.

Comment: we talk about a blended malt containing Glendronach, Caperdonich and Balvenie in the Sailing Ships collection. Piazzolla will correct later. It is is in fact...

Glendronach 20yo 1970/1990 Araby Maid 1868 (43%, Signatory Vintage Sailing Ships Series No 1, Sherry Casks, C#546-558, 1200b) 8/10


Dram #10 (Piazzolla)


Nose: extremely jammy, here is peach jelly with a dollop of menthol.

Mouth: soft, mellow, jammy again, we now find smoked pineapple.

Finish: much more powerful than the mouth suggested, and also Woodier. It remains a fruity number, but it is pineapple peels (bark?), now, rather than the flesh.

Comment: they call it Mr. Bombastic.

Longmorn 1971/2011 (43%, Gordon & MacPhail, AA/JAEA) 9/10


Piksi [to ben_whisky, about another Longmorn he owns]: "Yours wasn't as good."
ben_whisky: "Shut up."


Dram #11 (Piazzolla)

Nose: fruits, yet, this time, they are augmented with pickle or red-onion brine. That spells an ancient bottling, probably.

Mouth: a little pickle juice again, but it is mostly jammy in an old-school way, much to tOMoH's delight.

Finish: long, very jammy, it produces a tin-lid note akin to those we found in the Ballantine's.

Comment: amazeboulanger.

Longmorn 1974/1988 (46%, Brae Dean Int. imported by Moon Import The Sea, Butt, C#7729, 360b) 9/10


Dram #12 (Piazzolla)

Nose: mentholated and fruity, this has a lot of cured fruits too (carambola, no less). In addition, we detect some herbs (marjoram?)

Mouth: jammy, metallic, slightly herbaceous (marjoram indeed, perhaps sage), it has soft wood at second sip.

Finish: big and powerful, it shouts about minty fruits and (unidentified) flowers.

Linkwood 36yo 1973/2009 (49.7%, The Whisky Exchange 10 Years Online, Bourbon Cask) 9/10


Dram #13 (Piazzolla)

Nose: prunes in coffee (why!?), some old-school jam, and tin lids. The latter are almost totally overwhelmed by the previous notes.

Mouth: thick, syrupy, and increasingly earthy, pushing coffee grounds to the fore.

Finish: coffee, mocha chocolate.

Comment: well made, but too much coffee for me. Funny, this definite article in the pre-Billy Walker era (note the absence of capitalised 'D').

The Glendronach 18yo 1977/1995 (43%, OB, Seasoned Oak and Sherry Casks) 7/10


Dram #14 (Piazzolla)

Nose: earthy fruits, mostly dried figs, though perhaps dates too. It also has a whiff of metal.

Mouth: dried figs.

Finish: fruits dunked in chocolate, and an extreme earthy dryness, in the long run.

Longmorn 44yo 1967/2011 (48.3%, Gordon & MacPhail The Dram Takers exclusively bottled for La Maison du Whisky, Refill Sherry Hogshead, C#592, 133b) 8/10


Everyone complains about the quality of that flight, and wonders how to follow that. Until...


Dram #15 (Garobidou)

Nose: not exuberant, but fruity all the same, somewhat understated, delicate, and elegant.

Mouth: here, on the other hand, it is an explosion of tropical fruits. Mangoes, pineapples...

Finish: much fruit again, it still has a minor bitterness that hints at herbs and liquorice allsorts.

Comment: note the typo in Sauternes.

Teeling 24yo b.2016 (46%, Teeling Vintage Reserve Collection, Sauterne & Bourbon Cask, 5000b) 9/10


Dram #16 (Garobidou)

Nose: acidic, fruity, it projects Haribo banana, and an almost plasticine-like, plummy waxiness.

Mouth: unctuous, full of plump apricots, blueberries, and a sprinkle of herbs.

Finish: maracuja jelly, plain and simple. Over time, milk-chocolate praline also develops.

Comment: Irish beauties. How beguiling they are!

Irish Malt 28yo 1989/2017 (49.3%, Antique Lions of Spirits, Bourbon Cask, 209b, b#49) 9/10


Dram #17 (Garobidou)

Nose: vinegar or brine, poured on chalk. Later, we find preserved fruits, mildly salty -- preserved lemons, maybe.

Mouth: mellow, velvety and warming, it has a nutty vibe too -- walnut spread is my guess.

Finish: big, chocolate-y, and lovely.

Aultmore 13yo 2006/2019 Collective #3.3 (48%, La Maison du Whisky Artist Collective, 2 x 1st Fill Sherry Butt, 1548b) 8/10


Dram #18 (aphex)

Nose: this one has a faint smoke, hardened wax, and old-school jams.

Mouth: desiccating, here are dusty hot metal and hay bales about to ignite.

Finish: long, farm-y, and ashy, dominated by crusted earth.

Brora 1978/2013 (46%, Gordon & MacPhail Rare Old, B#RO/13/05, 218b, AC/ADID) 9/10


Dram #19 (JS)

Comment: I skip this one. It stumps everyone, and more than one tell us they have not had more than a few expressions from this distillery. Notes here.

Tormore 29yo 1984/2013 (53.9%, www.whiskybroker.co.uk, Barrel, C#3674, 107b, b#87)


Dram #20 (ben_whisky)

Nose: peach and apricot on the subtle tip. Then, it becomes a hot moka pot filled with tame tropical fruits.

Mouth: slightly earthy, with a metallic bitterness, it presents a gentle fruity explosion.

Finish: very nice, fruity, a bit bitter, and earthy. It is also a tad coffee-like, which will prevent a higher score (personal preference).

Comments: when we tried a sister cask, a couple of weeks ago, it was likened to this here dram. That one seemed a lot fruitier.

Teeling 27yo b2018 (49.8%, Teeling bottled exclusively for The Whisky Exchange, Sherry Cask, C#6838, 180b) 8/10


Spotting an opportunity, elskling steps in.


Dram #21 (elskling)

Nose: this is rather mute. Some shoe polish, maybe?

Mouth: silky, mellow, unctuous. We have some fruit, but this is a texture story, rather than taste-driven.

Finish: good, long, powerful, it has a dose of fruit hidden by a pronounced Sherry influence.

Comments: this is a more-heavily-Sherried affair. Perhaps it is oxidation, but this makes me think of 117.5 more than anything fruitier.

Teeling 29yo 1991/2020 (46.3%, Teeling bottled exclusively for Celtic Whiskey, Refill Sherry Cask, C#6759, 216b) 8/10


Pizzas are delivered. They will help absorb some of the alcohol. What? Wine? Well, go on, then.




L'Anglore 2022 (Piksi)


Savigny-les-Beaunes 2015 (cosinus)


Dram #22 (elskling)

Nose: blow-dried hair.

Mouth: it feels a bit watery, despite the food-induced respite. One should probably bear in mind the ABV and the number of things we have ingested already. Dried blackberries, dried cranberries, and a dash of brine.

Finish: fairly long.

Comment: shit notes. I am too busy trying to identify the whisky to write much. I fail too, and that is embarrassing, because we had this one in April.

Bruichladdich 15yo (43%, OB imported by Moon Import, Sherry Wood, 2400b, b.1980s) 8/10


pouring generously


Dram #23 (elskling)

Nose: mineral and not a little smoky. It also has musk, on a background of fruit.

Mouth: mud, smoked red onions, pearl onions, and a dash of brine.

Finish: long, big for the actual ABV (when revealed), and musky, although it remains quite mineral.

North Port 14yo d.1968 (40%, Gordon & MacPhail Connoisseurs Choice imported by Co. Import for Mauro Orlandi of the Club delle fattorie, Series 16, 120b) 8/10


Dram #24 (elskling)

Nose: old ink and earthy jam.

Mouth: this is rather acrid, sooty, but also jammy. A tell-tale sign of yet another ancient bottling.

Finish: yes, the soot remains, jammy and simply impressive.

Comment: we are going fast, hence the short notes. The quality is ridiculously high. I am tempted to score this one higher, but I have to admit it would be an emotional number, rather than a deserved one.

Linkwood 1984/1995 (50%, Brae Dean Int. imported by Moon Import De Viris Illustribus, Oak Cask, 750b, b#322) 8/10


Dram #25 (elskling)

Nose: minty, full of herbs and weeds of all kind. Rocket, mint crumbles, then, suddenly, strawberries take over.

Mouth: mint crumbles are confirmed, augmented with basil and marjoram.

Finish: milky, creamy, it has lemon mint as a focus point.

Comment: the shape of the bottle makes me guess the Talisker bottled by GMP in 1977 for the Queen's Jubilee. Wrong.

Glen Avon 25yo (40%, Avonside Whisky imported by "Il Sestante - s.n.c.") 8/10


Dram #26 (elskling)

Nose: cleaned bathroom -- as in: squeaky-clean wash basins, not soap. This is extremely elegant.

Mouth: mineral, it has limestone, limescale, lemon juice, and smoked rubber, whatever that means.

Finish: distant burnt wood dunked in water, and unripe hazelnuts.

Comment: motherfucker. This is amazing.

Talisker 25yo b.1977 (70° Proof, Gordon & MacPhail bottled to commemorate The Queen's Silver Jubilee) 9/10


Dram #27 (elskling)

Nose: very deep, we find jams and mint chocolate introduce mentholated tobacco.

Mouth: it has this characteristic note of jam, soot and metal that can only be found in ancient bottlings.

Finish: velvety and surprisingly punchy at the same time, this has "crushed mint crumbles" written all over it.

Comment: look out for the screen-printed flowers.

Strathisla 15yo (70° Proof, Gordon & MacPhail Deluxe Quality imported by Co. Import, b.1970s) 9/10


Dram #28 (Piksi)

Nose: lemon-y and mineral, it has a dollop of mustard (or is that post-reveal suggestion?)

Mouth: super fruity, here, with green grapes, at once acidic and mineral. More citrus rock up, calamansi, and pomelo, as well as cardboard via retro-nasal olfaction.

Finish: almond cream (cosinus) and orangettes (chocolate-coated candied orange rind).

Comment: Piksi admits he had a hard time containing himself when I suggested the first may be a Banff.

Banff 29yo 1975/2004 (46%, Berry Bros. & Rudd Berrys' Own Selection, C#3323) 9/10


Dram #29 (elskling)

Nose: we have got fruit in a wooden crate, left in a farmyard.

Mouth: malty, spritzy, and a tad mineral, this gives a whiff of soot, after time on the palate.

Finish: earthy, chalky, with a minor muskiness.

Comment: this one was JS's favourite at Aurora Brorealis. A decade later, it still slaps.

Brora 35yo b.2012 (48.1%, OB Natural Cask Strength distributed by Diageo Italia, 1566b, b#0498, L2142LS000 00036105) 9/10


Dram #30 (aphex)

Nose: super farm-y on the nose. We see a procession of raw hides and cow's behinds. Later on, it becomes full-on citrus -- lemon, calamansi, Buddha's hand.

Mouth: soft and elegant, we have some sugar and lots of citrus. Sugar-coated candied lemon segments.

Finish: smoky-and-a-half, relentless, but also balanced. More citrus in this finish to ease the effect of the smoke.

Comment: phwoar!

Glen Garioch 1971/2011 (43.9%, OB Single Cask specially selected by The Whisky Exchange for Whisky Show 2011, North American Oak Cask, C#2038, 194b) 9/10


Piazzolla announces his imminent departure. elskling will not have it.


Dram #31 (elskling)

Nose: vinegar-y chocolate, pickled onions and lots of India ink.

Mouth: this is kicks-like-a-mule chocolate in cream. It is entirely-desiccating, 163%-cocoa chocolate, cocoa powder and coal dust. They call it chocolate, but one might as well lick a piece of charcoal.

Finish: amazing finish, again, incredibly chocolate-y, and super dry. It dies with candied fruits coated in dark chocolate.

Comment: I have been eyeing those aged bottlings for a while. Good to try some and confirm they are not really for me. Too much vinegar on the nose, and too desiccating on the tongue. Fans of the style will disagree. I will live.

The GlenDronach 41yo 1972/2013 (51.7%, OB Limited, B#9, Oloroso Sherry Butt, C#702, 448b, b#238, LG71062) 8/10


Piksi [to Piazzolla]: "Thanks for leaving, or we would not have had tried the Glendronach."


Having a good time


I pour mine.

aphex, cosinus, ben_whisky:"Ooft! This one has horsepower!"
Piksi: "It's balanced in that it burns everywhere the same."


Dram #32 (tOMoH)

Comment: I skip this. We had it multiple times (notes here). Tonight is its swan's song: the bottle is empty.

Glenlochy 17yo 1977/1995 (61.8%, Cadenhead Authentic Collection imported by Preiss Imports, 95/250)


Dram #33 (aphex)

Nose: dry earth, some smoke, ashes, fishing nets and sand dunes.

Mouth: rancio, ginger, smoked plums.

Finish: undergrowth, petrichor, smoked raspberries, chocolate plums, in the end.

Comment: it is hard not to notice that the RRP (~450 EUR, 540 EUR at time of writing) is laughably disconnected from the quality of the juice. Price aside, it is a solid drop, though. Sadly, I take no picture of the bottle.

Laphroaig 18yo 2004/2022 (50.1%, Douglas Laing Old Particular imported by La Maison du Whisky, Refill Barrel, C#DL15857, 270b) 8/10


Gimme some more!


Dram #34 (brought by?)

Nose: monolithic Sherry maturation. Here is a huge slap of leather. We are at a ranch, stacking hides in a barn.

Mouth: big, it has smoked dark cherries. It becomes drying, earthy, with blackberries and elderberries. It is actually desiccating, after a short while.

Finish: again, very dry, earthy, a dusting of ash on dark cherries.

Comment: not too taken by this one.

29.260 19yo d.1999 A visceral, elemental experience (56.9%, SMWS Society Cask, First Fill Spanish Oak Oloroso Cask, 507b) 7/10


The above triggers a twenty-minute discussion about profile change and conservation.
ben_whisky: "I didn't throw up."


Dram #35 (cosinus)

Lovely dry earth and oily nuts. Others find a lot of peat -- they are clearly drunk. 

Comment: a UFO that makes me think of the Wire Works that we had recently. Very interesting.

Hellyers Road 6yo New Vibrations (70.1%, OB for La Maison du Whisky, American Oak, C#16315.10) 7/10


Perhaps cosinus is a bit too enthusiastic about his own bottle...


elskling decides we cannot finish on "that thing [that] should not be in the line-up."


Dram #36 (elskling)

Nose: some earth, sea dredging, and slowly-decaying blueberries.

Mouth: fresh, sweet, fruity. Blueberries, raspberries, and some concrete dust. An unexpected combination, but it works.

Finish: dark and fruity, long and wide, this has crunchy peach and smoked blueberries, with a spoonful of greasy earth.

Comment: this is amazing. Love it. Who would have thought this distillery could produce anything good, eh?

Bowmore 26yo 1995/2021 (50.4%, The Nectar 15 Years The Nectar) 9/10


Good to see some friends for the first time in ages, and meet others for the first time full stop. It is always useful to put a face on a name you know from online.

It was a few more drams (and different alcohols) than I am usually comfortable with (no sore head in the morning, mind), and the pace was a tad frenetic for me. Regardless, good times were had.

24 June 2024

24/06/2024 Speyburn

Speyburn 12yo (43%, OB, LIH379351, b. ca. 1991): ah! The elusive "Flora & Fauna"... Nose: well, it starts out very pleasant, if not very characterful. In fact, it does not smell like a Speyburn to me, which are usually full of (divisive) personality. This one has cut meadow flowers, a drop of vanilla essence, and a spray of acetone. That latter note paves the way for grassy tones (dried, unbloomed meadow flowers, faded chrysanthemums, faded edelweiss, hay), and even something earthier, farmier, mentholated, almost coffee-like, at times. Shaking the glass unleashes stale toffee, akin to a dusty Toffee Penny in a Quality Street tin years past its expiry date. There is even a lick of meaty musk, discreet, only available to those willing to look for it. All that is subdued and momentary, however; let the liquid rest in the glass, and it goes back to gently-minty vanilla and cut meadow flowers. The second nose is, erm -- well, to call it medicinal would be a long shot, but it reminds me of freshly-sterilised surgical tools (scalpel, scissors, retractors, etc.) Mouth: soft and gentle, it has some character all the same. It presents a clear bitterness, plant sap, ginger paste, and menthol. Oh! nothing offensive, but it is not bland by any means. Chewing revives the dusty, stale toffee -- very stale, here: it turns cardboardy, even -- and underlines a plant-sap bitterness. The second sip has chou dough in the making, augmented with oregano and more punch than the first. At 43%, it is hardly nosebleed, but it tickles the gums a little, in a mild-mouthwash way. Finish: strikingly, it is toffee to the max in this finish, sweet, buttery. It wraps itself durably around the mouth, and dies with oily tobacco leaves. The back of the gob picks up peach stones too, if none of the fruit itself. Repeated quaffing confirms a mentholated toffee paste, warming and refreshing at the same time, still with that bitter note. This is very good. 8/10 (Thanks for the sample, Savoureur)

21 June 2024

20/06/2024 Celebrating 5 years of Cask Trade

Our good friends at Cask Trade are celebrating a milestone anniversary. This year, the event takes place at Watches of Switzerland. That is right: rich with the knowledge that their chocolate is inferior, the Neutrals have decided to focus on cuckoo clocks. It is called portfolio diversification.

Tonight's shindig is a good opportunity to look at things that indicate the time of the day (sometimes inaccurately, for lack of adequate setting) priced between ~300 GBP and ~372,000 GBP. Indeed, one can buy a watch for the price of a four-bed, 300m² house in Huy. Almost certainly, those who buy that sort of gadgets think the same of us whisky geeks buying bottles for considerable sums too. Each to their own.


SA's welcome speech


But enough with those considerations! tOMoH and JS are here for the whisky. The delicious canapés appeal to me more than the watches.


Just like last year, we are standing and socialising, so notes are brief.


Mortlach 9yo 2013/2023 Friday Night (48.8%, Wellwood Star Simply Whisky, ex-Sherry Butt, 389b)

Nose: fragrant and perfume-y, it is a slap of late-spring lavender with a dash of rose water. In the long run, makeup appears, such as blush powder.

Mouth: marshmallow and boiled sweets. That comes closer to violet boiled sweets by the second, which is to my taste.

Finish: warming and perfume-y, it may even display delicate fruits.

Comment: excellent starter. 7/10


Caol Ila 40yo 1981/2021 (58.4%, Gordon & MacPhail Private Collection, Refill Hogshead, C#6411, 129b)

Nose: fishing nets, kelp drying on a sunny shore, mature-cheese rind, old scrolls and ink, mercurochrome, bandages, embrocation -- phwoar!

Mouth: chargrilled pineapple, toasted banana slices, and barbecued peach slices. There are coastal elements on show too, namely fishing nets full of tropical fruits, and then there is gauze. And what power! This is no feeble forty year-old.

Finish: long, powerful, comforting. It boasts more gauze and bandages, mentholated embrocation, and ash. That last point imparts a soft bitterness that stops it achieving top score... just!

Comment: wonderful. 9/10


Auchentoshan 15yo 2007/2023 (54.6%, The Stewart Whisky Company Stiùbhart Single Cask Selection, Refill Hogshead, C#4153, B#009, 310b)

Nose: mellow, it is a mix of sweets (marshmallow) and flowers. Surely, that is lavender-scented marshmallow, then.

Mouth: mellow again, it acquires a wine-y note, after a few seconds. Nothing overpowering, just a lingering decaying-grape touch.

Finish: long, warming, and a lot woodier than expected. We have old corks, bookshelves and dusty chairs.

Comment: nice enough. 7/10


Glenrothes 27yo 1996/2023 (51%, Hannah Whisky Merchants Lady of the Glen, Hogshead, C#4153, 160b, b#06)

Nose: fruity, berry-laden, this has stewed fruits, hot strawberry jam, then candied orange rinds.

Mouth: more stewed goodness -- blackcurrant jam, smashed blush oranges, and lingonberry compote. We find rancio at second sip, and it is gently drying, with mild Virginia tobacco.

Finish: oh! yes, marmalade and currant compote.

Comment: this one is the big (pleasant) surprise of the evening. 8/10


Linkwood 10yo 2013/2023 (51.1%, Hannah Whisky Merchants Dalgety, First Fill and Second Fill ex-Oloroso Casks, C#301178+301173, 551b, b#216)

Nose: this is a meaty one, with cured ham and leather, a tannery after sundown, when all the workers have gone home for the day. It is not sickly, but powerful all the same. That slows down over time, and allows pastry to come through. JS finds it a soapy nose.

Mouth: big, feisty, aggressive. A slap of roast beef, and a sprinkle of horseradish sauce.

Finish: lots of red berries, purple chewy sweets, and heat. We find less meat here, thankfully, but that heat! Cured ginger in all its power.

Comment: the weakest of the night. It will no doubt have its supporters, but it is not really for me. 6/10


Glentauchers 8yo (61.2%, Chorlton Whisky, Sherry Hogshead, 291b)

Nose: an avalanche of peanuts, punctuated by cashews and skinned Brazil nuts. Peanut oil, plasticine... It smells so oily! A touch of wine-y meat attempts to pierce through that layer of nuts -- unsuccessfully. JS insists on honey, then, out of nowhere, we see cheese rind.

Mouth: here too, the nuttiness is incredible; thick, coating, oily, and rounded off with a drop of tannic red wine. Lastly, it offers Mon Chéri pralines.

Finish: peanut oil, honey, dark maple syrup, cherry liqueur, old corks on liqueur decanters, berry liqueur augmented with melted chocolate. It is more and more wine-y, with time, though it remains oily too.

Comment: this one, I chose because of the label (love those medieval-style drawings), and it turns out to be another good pick by Chorlton. 7/10


At the same time, JS has Ardnamurchan 6yo 2015/2022 (60.4%, Cadenhead Authentic Collection, Bourbon Barrel, 228b, 22/152), which we had last year.


Nice night out. We meet all sorts of people from different backgrounds, many we would normally not run into. It makes for some interesting conversations. And the whiskies were good. Happy anniversary, Cask Trade!