Twenty-one years ago, we were coming back from Scotland with a case full of goodies -- but that is last year's story. Today...
Spirit of North of Scotland 48yo 1973/2021 (25%, Bartels Whisky His Excellency): delightful. Here is a bowl of dried fruits, currants, cranberries, figs, apricots, cubed papaya and cherries, all held together by a drop of strong glue. Said glue takes off with time, becomes ester-y, and tickles cellophane, until we have a full roll of warm cellophane in hand, hot off the production line. All of a sudden, it reignites the fruity fires, and this time, it is fresher, juicier fruits: grapes instead of raisins, maraschino cherries instead of dried ones, et cætera. It is sweet to boot, and a little heady, which is reminiscent of a fortified wine. Not that heady, however, which suggests a Fino, rather than an Oloroso, let alone a PX. The second nose unexpectedly sees rolling blond tobacco, oily and fragrant. 'Oily' is the word indeed! It is difficult to identify which oil, but there is more and more of it in subsequent sniffs. Last to emerge is a galvanised-metal bucket -- another surprise guest. Mouth: texturewise and tastewise, we are definitely on Fino Sherry territory. Fruity, a little dry, fresh and crisp, though chewing reveals a mild sweetness too, alongside a pronounced acidity. Cranberries are the dominant fruit, and we find a fistful of pomegranate seeds, slightly past their best-before date. Keeping it on the tongue long enough brings forth a tame mineral note -- limestone, if not frankly chalk. The second sip sees boozy-caramel flan. Imagine caramel made in a pan deglazed with a dash of Fino, poured onto warm flan. It would be hard to take in large amounts, but works in moderation. Finish: arguably the strongest quality of this dram, the finish balances sweetness and acidity with brio. It retains the pomegranate seeds and cranberries, adds a few currants or sultanas, and splashes all that with a glass of Fino. See the pattern? The whole goes out with a mineral gasp. The second gulp has boozy caramel poured on warm flan too, and that tastes almost chocolate-y. It is a little disconcerting to try something that is so close to a dessert wine, despite having nothing in common, in terms of provenance or production. 7/10 (Thanks for the sample, PS)
North of Scotland 1963/1998 (46.8%, Robert Scott Scott's Selection, Oakwood Casks): twenty-three years younger, distilled ten years earlier, and, at a 20%-higher ABV, this one is whisky. Nose: less surprisingly, we have wood glue, wood varnish, and pastry. Woodworm-riddled dark-wood wardrobes, gingerbread, and cake crust sticking to the mould it was baked in. Next up are dried banana slices, baked plantains devoid of any sugar, natural or otherwise, and decades-old oars stored in a shed. With insistence, one may spot a singed aroma too, tobacco smoke or ash, or a moka pot on the hob. The second nose is maybe more raw: here are coffee grounds and heated tin, both of which do suggest a moka pot. Suddenly, akin to a fillip over the nose, juicy pineapple does a fleeting fly-by, and disappears just as quickly. Mouth: big, bold, woody, and sweet, all at once, here is a bowl of hot mocha custard served in a rustic kitchen, the centrepiece of which is an enormous table made of solid dark wood. Chewing adds pineapple shavings, as well as toasted coconut gratings, oily and fragrant. It tickles the gums, yet it is not all wood spices: there is a lot of fruit at play too. The second sip is drier and bitterer, with the hot dusty tin of an old coffee pot. Just a little chewing adds clementine peels, coffee-cured pineapple rings, and pink-grapefruit rind. Outstanding! Finish: big, spicy, woody, and sweet. It marries dark-wood dust, warm mocha pudding, custard powder, and gingerbread punctuated by pineapple chunks. It is a marriage in which all parties are happy, and allow their respective best sides to shine. The mocha provides a soft earthy bitterness, whereas the gingerbread offers a calming spicy sweetness. The second gulp injects citrus here too, with more pink-grapefruit rinds and, perhaps, orange peels. It has mocha custard too, so discreet that it is easily mistaken for chocolate custard. This finish is fairly long, as becomes obvious at second gulp, and it is so removed from the dark wood we had in the first nose that it takes a pause to accept it as the same dram. Great old grain. 8/10 (Thanks for the sample, WhiskyLovingPianist)