Jura 30yo 1990/2020 (46.33%, Thompson Bros., Refill American Oak Hogshead, 186b): we had this one five years ago and again two years later. cavalier66 brought it again to DWequinox, but I prioritised other things on the night. Nose: it is fairly subtle and subdued, yet elegant and classy. Old lacquered pencil cases, dried plums in a wooden bowl on the buffet, oiled mahogany. Nothing shouts, nothing stands out. Shaking the glass suddenly takes us to the forest on an autumn morning (even though spring just started), with its scents of wild mushrooms and humus. It adds candied red apples peppered with ginger powder and sawdust, and follows up with bone-dry citrus zest and pink peppercorns. There remains a sweetness too that hints at marmalade slathered on a woodworm-riddled chair. The second nose is drier yet oilier. We spot oily Virginia tobacco, wood panels not dripping with oil, and even a spoonful of ash taken from the fireplace's tray. Green grapes tag along, eventually, as discreet as the dried plums were, earlier. As one tilts the glass, one may find a carpet roll as well. Mouth: the late-found sweetness is clear on the tongue, even if it comes with a certain bitterness; Seville-orange marmalade, honey and wooden planks precede a pinch of ginger powder. Chewing causes the marmalade to explode. In the fallout, we have satsuma, kumquat, pink-grapefruit peel and prickle-pear jelly augmented with a drop of plant sap. It has a juicy texture, slightly sticky, and more horsepower than one would have anticipated. The second sip feels a tad thinner. That is not a complaint; it is merely less sticky. Orange juice served in wooden goblets, augmented with a pinch of confectionary sugar and another of wood dust. Soon, it recovers its ginger powder and adds ground orange pips. The longer one keeps it in the mouth, the more intensely fruity it becomes. At the same time, it brings back the bitterness too. Perhaps we catch something more synthetic, in the long run, something akin to rubbery underlay. That gives another dimension to this. Finish: the marmalade ride continues; the oranges turn bitterer, though there is enough sweetness on display to make that palatable. Ginger powder, asafoetida, mango powder, sawdust (yes, it has its share of wood spices) rub elbows with honey and marmalade. This has a dash of wood oil to boot. The second gulp is in line: citrus-y jams and marmalades are elevated by tingling wood spices. The tongue and, especially, the roof of the mouth are left throbbing, as if hit by a decilitre of paper paste, or a sort of wood paste made of birch. That all comes back towards chewy citrus peels upon repeated quaffing, bitter, fruity and delicious. A strong 8/10 (Thanks for the dram, cavalier66)
The Old Man of Huy's key adventures
I am an old man. I am from Huy. I drink whisky. (And I like bad puns.)
24 March 2026
23/03/2026 Jura
23 March 2026
20/03/2026 DWequinox at 3 Greek Street
DWeaster had to move, due to another shindig. Although he has nothing to do with the organisation of the event, tOMoH makes an executive decision to rename it DWequinox, on account of the date.
In attendance are DW, SOB, MSo, CDn, DR, DC, BA, cavalier66, TS, WS, JL, JS, YM and others whose initials I fail to write down. It would also be odd to go around the room and ask point-blank -- ha! ha!
It is the now-usual affair, bottles on the tables, free pour, freestyling session with no structure whatsoever. That probably means that everyone's experience is hugely personal. It also leaves time for socialising, for those who want to do that more. As often in that setting, notes are minimalistic, and not all bottles are attributed to their kind owners.
For reference, I brought D.town 33yo d.1979 (56.3%, Cadenhead Cask Ends, 3rd Fill Bourbon Cask, 1b) (notes here) and Inver-Regal (43° Gay Lussac, J.H. Wham & Son (Largs), for testing purposes only, b. pre-1991) (notes here) JS brought Sandy Macnab’s Old Blended Scotch 5yo (40%, Macnab Distilleries, b.1980s) (notes here) and Hazelburn 9yo 2008/2018 (59.9%, OB Duty Paid Sample, Refill Bourbon Hogshead, Warehouse 15, Rotation #4) (notes here). Amusingly enough, three out of our four bottles are one-offs.
I try none of them, since I know them well and there is so much else to try.
Glenrothes 21yo d.1975 (46%, Direct Wines First Cask, C#6045, b#167) (PF)
Mouth: it is more savoury here, though it gains fruit at second sip. In fact, it is sherbet more than fruits.
Finish: fresh and fruity. We now pick up sherbet and dried raspberry slices.
Comment: I cannot read the distillery name on the spot (it is written small, the Direct Wine logo obstructs the view, and the lighting is inadequate). The profile should suggest a 'rothes. A good 'rothes. 8/10
tOMoH: "Embiggening my cock."
JL: "Oh! So nothing has changed [since last time I saw you]."
tOMoH: "Nope. No success to-date either."
Ardbeg 20yo 1992/2013 (46.6%, Whiskybroker.co.uk, Refill Hogshead, C#434, 222b, b#4) (PF)
Mouth: it is decidedly inky, almost tarry -- no! not almost. Proper tarry sands, like.
Finish: big and tarry again, with wood smoke added for good measure.
Comment: competent effort. I think I hear that the father of the owner of this bottle used to own the cask. Do not quote me on that. 7/10
Glen Elgin 20yo d.1995 (51.5%, Claxton The Single Cask, Refill Hogshead, Cask Ref 1609-1671, 194b, b#40)
Mouth: woah! This has quite a bite. Mineral and acidic, it is akin to the effervescent reaction caused by acid dripped on limestone.
Finish: long, wide, acidic and mineral. It even emits a whiff of delicate smoke, in the long run.
Comment: excellent Elgin. 8/10
SOB: "2017 to 2020 were great years."
cavalier66: "And then, it just stopped. Like that."
MSo: "That's the thing with life. Things are good, then they just end."
tOMoH: "This is the most philosophical I've ever known you, MSo."
Táin 20yo 2001/2022 (56.1%, Irish Spirit Echoes of Éire, 1st Fill ex-Bourbon Cask, C#4551, 66b, b#49)
Mouth: big and fluffy, the palate has peaches, mangoes and strawberry sweets. It is a notch drying at second sip, much like those sweets.
Finish: huge and hugely fruity, here are the same fruits and more strawberry sweets. I dare not say Fraises Tagada.
Comment: another cracking one. 9/10
JL reaches for something under the counter.
Johnnie Walker 12yo Black Label (43%, John Walker & Sons imported by Wax & Vitale) (JL)
Mouth: faded leather cleaned with strawberry coulis.
Finish: a blast of strawberry paste or jelly, and a dusting of old-school soot.
Comment: delicious. 8/10
DC: "Yes."
tOMoH: "May I?"
DC: "Sure. I also brought a rum. What an idiot. A rum. To a whisky tasting."
JS: "Many here like rum too."
tOMoH: "Yeah. There is so much whisky already, though. That's why it's not getting much love."
Dornoch 5yo 2018/2023 (55.9%, OB, 1st Fill Bourbon Octave, C#80, 82b, b#20) (DC)
Mouth: it is weird, here. Maybe it has glue? Yes, there is a lot of that upon chewing. Then, it has linoleum strips and wood.
Finish: it is balanced, but what it balances is glue and linoleum strips. It works in an odd way. Then, suddenly, nut spread and chocolate kick in.
Comment: interesting. 7/10
DR has me try the last drops of a sample he brought. I try to guess what it is.
DR: "Well, you got the vintage right."
tOMoH: "Did I? Well, that narrows it down! How old is it?"
DR: "It is seven. It is the first organic whisky."
tOMoH: "Ah! Springbank Dà Mhìle."
DR: "Spot on!"
Springbank 7yo 1992/1999 Organic (46%, OB for Dà Mhìle, 1000b)
Mouth: similar fresh-and-floral character.
Finish: it ends with a modest blast of soot.
Comment: lovely to try this again. The first time was in 2017 and I took no notes. 7/10
Tobermory (Ledaig) 24yo 2001/2025 (52.2%, Thompson Bros. specially bottled for Dornoch Castle 25th Anniversary, Refill Hogshead, C#201, 158b) (DW)
Mouth: sweetened sea water, petrol and ink, as well as crushed seashells.
Finish: more petrol and ink are balanced by a slightly-sweeter touch.
Comment: this is excellent. 8/10
Dalmunach 10yo 2015/2025 (58.5%, Cadenhead Club, Oak Casks + 3 x Oloroso Hogsheads since 2024, 1032b)
Mouth: it is seriously woody, which comes as a surprise, considering the age, perhaps less when seeing the colour. Teak and mahogany are the loudest.
Finish: oiled wood, chestnut spread, walnut dashboards.
Comment: interesting whisky. My first Dalmunach. SOB chose it after checking this blog to verify I had never tried any. Is that not considerate? 7/10
tOMoH: "You did lose some weight."
MSo: "Yeah. If my wife were a better cook, we'd be having a different conversation, right now."
Linkwood 28yo 1994/2023 (51.7%, Gordon & MacPhail Connoisseurs Choice Cask Strength, Refill Sherry Butt, C#12601202, B#23/208, 656b, 230085) (MSo)
Mouth: ooft! Green-grape skins, cured fruits, a lick of stainless-steel metal.
Finish: surprisingly soft, it has chocolate and a minute smoke.
Comment: good. 7/10
tOMoH: "I can write easily. Re-reading myself is the problem. But then, that's a problem even when I'm sober."
MSo: "The thing with tOMoH is he's in a consistent level of drunkenness. His handwriting is always immaculate."
Ardbeg 10yo b.2025 Cask Strength (61.7%, OB Committee Exclusive 2026, Bourbon Casks)
Mouth: woah! This is inky, salty and smoky. Tarry sands drenched in sea water.
Finish: it kicks like a mule. There is a smidge of barley and salt water, augmented with petrol and crushed seashells.
Comment: funny to see the similarities with the Whiskybroker bottling from earlier. There has been a lot of hype around this bottling. It is not bad, but the hype is disproportionate to the quality, in my opinion. 7/10
We disband and, after spending a good while chatting with SW, disappear into the night.
21 March 2026
20/03/2026 St Patrick's Day delayed
We were doing other thing on the actual day.
Bushmills 21yo b.2004 (40%, OB, Madeira Wood Finish, b#16296): nine years, one month and two days have passed since we latest had this. Unfathomable. Nose: a musty cellar. And that does not mean fruity dunnage warehouse, in this case, but a musty cellar. It has a blend of damp clay, woodworm and cured meat, which is unexpected. Further onward, we find glue and wallpaper, as if someone had wallpapered the wooden shelves of a larder (if you lived through the 1970s or 1980s, you know). It gains more and more wood with time; oaken shelves so old they are starting to crumble, nuts kept in a basket for years, if not decades. Very slowly and gradually, that morphs into charred-chestnut spread wet with pressed-prune juice and a drop of nail varnish. Tilting the glass brings synthetic scents such as linoleum and flooring glue, but also a drop of urine. We swiftly go back to prunes, now served in a lacquered-ebony case. The second nose is screaming CURRANTS and PRUNES, RAISINS and SULTANAS. That comes with the Madeira finish, presumably, yet it is still a bit surprising, following that musty first impression. Okay, there are fortified-wine-glazed button mushrooms to prolong the cellar-y theme going, but it is not the same... until we dig up potting soil, which comes much closer to the damp clay from before. Ha! Ha! Mouth: a soft -- I dare not call it 'bite' -- introduces a silky mouthfeel. Following an initially-woody taste (oiled mahogany), it becomes fresh and presents pressed Mirabelle plums and physalis. There may even be filtered lychee juice in it. Chewing catches one off guard, however: a tide of tropical fruits floods the palate, with lychee indeed, rambutan, mangosteen and dragon fruit gracing the roof of the mouth. It has a tame wine-y touch too, somewhere between rosé, vin jaune and sangria. That could spell a catastrophe, but it works rather well. The second sip has a tame chocolate-y touch, augmented with a drop of cherry liqueur. Moving the liquid around the mouth revives the fruit -- the same as before, in the same order. Astonishing! Finish: it only has a modest kick, at the legal minimum of 40%, yet that is more than enough to trigger an incredibly-long finish that sticks to the gob like a good cough drop. We find as much wine (rosé, jaune, orange) and much less fruit, although that grows in intensity. Once again, we are talking about Mirabelle plum and physalis, rambutan, dragon fruit, perhaps even mangosteen, yet also dried cranberries and sultanas, some of them coated in yoghurt. The second gulp adds a pinch of cinnamon powder and one of mango powder, as well as chewy dried mango slices. Surprisingly, considering the low strength, the whole leaves the tongue and gums a bit numb. Finally, as the taste buds come back to life, they pick up sirop de Liège, or a berry paste out of a tube, thick, concentrated, sweet. This is good. 8/10 (Thanks, OB)
18 March 2026
17/03/2026 Member Take Over: John Peter Hughes
I bumped into JPH (PH for short) on Friday where he told me about this tasting he would be hosting. It had somehow slipped my radar, so that was pure serendipity to meet him on a day I had not planned to be there, and at an unusual time to boot.
Before the tasting starts, I am treated to a dram of 10.288 16yo d.2008 Savour the savoury (60.8%, SMWS Society Cask, ex-Bourbon Hogshead finished in 1st Fill ex-Oloroso Hogshead, 237b). I take no notes. The Oloroso influence is a little loud for me. It should score 6 or 7/10 (Thanks for the dram, KT)
We know the format quite well, now: an SMWS member showcases Society bottlings from their private collection to a group of people who signed up to be there. Amongst those, PS, Dr. CD, GT, YM, DW, JS and tOMoH.
PH starts by telling us how he fell into whisky (through wine and Michael Jackson) and how he became an SMWS member in 1991. He quickly points out that he is not the most-senior member -- of all, in London, or even in this room. Indeed, Dr. CD famously joined on the 29th February 1495, so he predates even Pip Hills. And Friar Cor.
As he continues his story, I start with the work. The data is given more or less as we go; we are not really tasting blind, this time.
45.8 16yo 1982/1998 (64.6%, SMWS Society Cask, finished for 16mo in ex-Sherry Gorda, 577b): nose: apple slices peppered with a pinch of ashes, super-dry hazelwood, incense. That incense grows and grows into refined ash from a fruit-tree fire. Candlewax rises, as do fruits (plums, grapes). Mouth: crisp, it has fruity dry white wine -- Riesling, then Sauvignon Blanc. It is a tad ashy, but that is balanced by green grapes and chestnut oil. There may be a drop of cider vinegar too. It is ashier at second sip, but also immensely fruity (crunchy apples). Finish: delightful ashy white wine. This is positively fruity. It develops a coat of wood polish at second gulp, but Paula Red apples dominate, roasted, yet still crunchy. What a way to start! 9/10
PH tells us the last cask of distillery 45 was filled on 16th March 1983 and he regrets that he could not do the tasting yesterday to mark the anniversary (the SMWS is closed on Mondays).
61.9 18yo 1981/1999 Crepe bandages and lavender oil (58.3%, SMWS Society Cask, Refill American Oak Barrel, 305b): from a time when the Society gave its bottlings names, but did not write them on the label. Nose: phwoar! Here are matchsticks, guaiacol, a fire of twigs and brambles. Behind that are cactuses and white-fish skewers. It is not strongly charred, but charred alright. Old burnt staves and scorched marshland plants. Mouth: another cracking old glory that has a blend of roasted fruits and ashes, incense and peach nectar (unless it is orange juice). The second sip is drier, waxy, with lots of burnt candle and incense. It is quite chalky too, but no big whoop. Finish: long not big. It is elegant, fruity, a little ashy again. Despite its provenance, it is not particularly farm-y. The second gulp has more earth, and the whole is warming and comforting. Wood dust (not sawdust) at the bottom of a log basket by a fireplace. PH finds it a citrus freshness too, but that does not hit me. 9/10
Someone near me is wearing enough perfume to distract me and lower my enjoyment. Hm.
44.35 14yo 1994/2008 Egg sandwiches and walnut cake (58.1%, SMWS Society Cask, Refill ex-Sherry Hogshead, 124b): nose: water colour, dried plasticine and daffodil petals. It also fans a roaring fire in a cast-enamel wood-burning stove, and warm metal that has been used to cut baked apples. The second nose brings cosmetic powder. Mouth: baked Paula Red apples and sugar. It then gets metallic and sees lichen forming on copper (not Verdigris). The second sip is a trifle chalky, much like a Granny Smith apple. That is augmented with a pinch of ash. Finish: medium-long, it has fermented apples (Paula Red again). The second gulp is well warming. In the long run, it takes the bitterness of mahogany shelves. 8/10
PS: "For Charlie Maclean, that's a good night out!"
PH explains he and Dr. CD have large collections of SMWS publications, and are sometimes asked if they would provide original tasting notes for an old bottle.
PH: "We are not hoarders, we are archivists."
66.20 20yo 1985/2005 Sun-dried sprats and prune juice (54.1%, SMWS Society Cask, Refill Hogshead, 310b): nose: smoked plasticine, burnt cow dung, clay and cut meadow grass, thick and juicy. This is a farm-y nose. PH talks of wood, but I do not agree. The second nose is an even-farmier affair, ripe with muddy pastures and cattle droppings, followed by charred dried raspberry slices. Mouth: greasy earth and peat smoke. It has a lick of fruits too, mainly grilled grapefruits and satsumas. The second sip is a little more pine-like, fresh and acidic. Finish: charcoal, burnt wood and charred citrus slices. That turns a little greener at second gulp, reminiscent of pine needles after the rain. I could give this a higher score any other day. Tonight... 8/10
PH tells us how to reproduce the smell and taste of a certain release of distillery 19, called Peat, germolene and strawberry jam. It involves double-toasting bread on the highest setting, scraping some of the charred surface, then slathering the toast with jam.
PS: "Now I know why your psychotherapist lives in a mansion."
The two guys at the next table have not stopped talking for the whole dram and story -- roughly twenty minutes. They are showing pictures of their family on their phones, debating the merit of phone models etc. It is starting to lower my enjoyment too.
33.76 10yo d.1998 A civilised scout camp (56.3%, SMWS Society Single Cask, 1st Fill ex-Bourbon Barrel, 242b): nose: a big slap of peat smoke, without surprise. Embers, charred wood, tarry sands and dark ink, spent incense, spent wick. Suddenly, it comes up with sea spray and briny air, then wood-fire smoke. The second nose brings out guaiacol and smoked plasticine to supplement the incense. Mouth: dark ink it is, a pinch of sugar, then a raging bracken fire and burnt tyres. The second sip is juicy, thick, with apricot nectar in terms of texture, and apples roasted on a wood fire in terms of taste. Finish: it is well balanced, here. Oh! it is smoky alright, this time with petrol fumes, but also some fruits, such as smoked roasted apples. It also has a lot of ink. The second gulp serves tarry sands and crude oil in unbaked pottery made of smoked clay in a smoky boat shed. It may be the least convincing dram tonight, yet it is excellent nevertheless. 8/10
Very good tasting. I managed to overlook the talkers and the perfume, in the end. It was hard. PH somehow selected only things we had never tried before -- yay!
17 March 2026
16/03/2026 The Creators Collection
The Society released a sextet of bottles in The Creators Collection, all of them from young distilleries, three of which are new to the Society. The launch was hyped up quite a bit to boot. It is time to see what the fuss is about. A quintet of those were available online as a set, with the sixth only available from SMWS venues.
| Well done, SMWS! |
Happy birthday, FD!