01 July 2026

01/07/2026 Back to Raasay

Three hundred and sixty-four days have passed since we were on the small island off the east coast of Skye.


Isle of Raasay The Draam (46.4%, OB, Rye Whiskey Casks + Chikapin Oak Casks + Bordeaux Red Wine Casks, b. ca. 2025): nose: oily bacon rashers, smoked, but uncooked, and thick, petrolic earth. Increasingly petrolic over time, it peddles bitumen, diesel, engine grease, oil paint, greased-up cylinder blocks and ink. The bacon is lurking in the background, with cured beef and smoked ham. It acquires a lot of watercolour with breathing, coating and dusty. Cured and smoked meats remain the centrepiece, though, including game, now (boar, partridge). It promises to be rather salty too. The second nose is more acidic, halfway between freshly-tawed soft leather and a puddle of vomit on the street of a student town in the morning (Leuven. Stella.) A vague fruitiness (fermented plums) appears, hard to find behind the acidic and butyric notes that point more at fermented barley. Mouth: salty! Blue ink and watercolour, salt-crusted chicken, smoked prosciutto (it reads much posher than 'ham', does it not?) Chewing reveals a thick, plasticine-like texture that is soon overrun by parched earth, first caked onto a tractor tyre, now so dry it fell off onto a farm path. There remains watercolour, now augmented with linseed oil. Chewing further gives a fleeting note of smoked kippers; it timidly peeks from time to time and ends up settling for good. The second sip has burnt hay and caramelised straw, smoked granola and smoky plums, fermenting away. It is bold and acidic, but there is no puddle of sick, here, thankfully. Instead, we have souped-up barley juice with a dash of lemon juice added for kicks. Finish: plasticine, smoked plasticine and, inexorably, petrol and oil paint. It is a dollop of dark-green paint (RAL 6020, or Revell reference 32363) doused in petrol or diesel. It coats the palate like a ripe alphonso mango with none of the mango taste. Perhaps it is crude oil instead? Whatever it is, it is thick and coating, while also earthy and bitter. The second gulp welcomes smoked lemons and calamansis, pressed, the juice of which is enhancing smoked granola and half-burnt haybales. Charred, smoked and citric. Retro-nasal olfaction picks up plastic straws or smoked dandelion stems. I prefer the individual components, even if this is not bad. 7/10 (Thanks for the sample, adc)

30 June 2026

29/06/2026 Bowmore Rare Bottlings at Bar Lotus

Last week, BB tipped us this event when we met. Tonight, JS and I meet here for the first time. cavalier66 joins us, who has been before. Only six of us, tonight, amongst whom Gunooner.


Bowmore 29yo b.1979 Bicentenary (43%, OB, Sherry Casks, 24,000b)

Nose: tarry passion fruits, purple maracuja and soot, followed by jams and jellies of all sorts. It is definitely fruity, yet the fruitmonger used to be a chimney sweep. cavalier66 finds it a touch of petroleum, as well as medicinal and herbal notes. For me, it is asafoetida that emerges, and a butyric side. cavalier66 finds pickled onions.


Mouth: salty and briny, it soon gives more soot and charcoal dust. Grilled fruits follow suit, with chargrilled peaches and persimmons. It has burnt-wood gratings too that never overpower the fruits.

Finish: thin and short, it has the allure of a dry white wine, Sauvignon blanc, ashy and mineral. The second gulp adds hardened rubber and crushed pistachio shells.

Comment: "bottled for the Italian market," our host says. It has no tax seal and no importer indication, which would have been illegal in Italy (and still is). The paperwork is, indeed, in Italian, though. I suspect an Italian box to complement a UK bottle. In any case, despite being excellent, it is not the best of the Bicentenary expressions I have had the pleasure to try (the honour would belong to this one). Finally, the paperwork is clear: this is a vatting of ten different vintages, the most recent of which is 1950, aged twenty-nine. Written black on white.

Score: 9/10


Our host regrets that he forgot to pour us the welcome drink. It is a Lagavulin. With a mix of gratefulness and disbelief, I put my glass to the side. I am not tarnishing old Bowmores with a peaty Lagavulin!


Bowmore 34yo 1968/2002 (41.40%, Duncan Taylor Peerless, C#1427, 210b, b#060)

Nose: coconut and yellow passion fruit (cavalier66). This is a fruity killery of the highest calibre. Carambola, mango, jackfruit, yellow maracuja, persimmon and lychee grow at second nose, buttery peaches and overripe apricots join them. cavalier66 detects anchovies. Must be the pizza from his lunch stuck between his teeth!

Mouth: floral (cavalier66). It has a vague floral hue, almost impossible to read underneath the cascade of fruits. However, that comes with grains of soot on the tongue. The second sip is a notch bitterer, with ground mace and a lick of rubber amongst the now-dominant nectarines.

Finish: big, surprisingly minty, fruity and a tad peppery (think: peppermint). It takes two gulps for yellow fruits to come to the top, but when they do, they rule. cavalier66 talks about elderflower cordial.

Comment: with exactly zero surprise, this is fantastic and will remain the dram of the night for JS and tOMoH.

Score: 9/10


Our host, paralyzed_frank, asks us if we want to try a certain Glenlivet. He says he does, so he will pour it for all. Another dram for the back of the queue, as far as I am concerned.


Bowmore 21yo d.1973 (43%, OB)

Nose: pickled onions ("of the dark-brown variety, hanging at your aunt's for several years," says cavalier66). It really is onion-y: onions that have fermented in the larder and dripped, decayed red onions, smoked and smashed on earth, acetone (cavalier66).

Mouth: pwah! Parma violet, lavender, perfume of you-know-whom. This is too much, even for me. Crystallised violet sweets come out on top and almost save it, but it sadly only has a novelty value. The second sip is even more violet-y, too much for tOMoH, who is usually not at all negatively-impacted by this well-known taste.

Finish: long, bitter, violet-y. It is less sweet -- or it has fewer sweets. Instead, it tickles perfume. A sentiment which is confirmed with the second gulp.

Comment: 750ml bottle (not 75cl), no US Proof nor importer information. paralyzed_frank explains it is a UK version from before 70cl became the standard; I beg to differ: that was in 1991; this is twenty-one years old distilled in 1973. It was bottled 1994 or 1995. Besides, the earlier bottlings indicated 75cl, not 750ml. Which market was this for? South Africa? Anyway, this is not my thing.

Score: 6/10


Bowmore 21yo (43%, OB imported by Carmi Zvi, F158, b. ca. 2000s)

Nose: an earthier number, it has warm rubber and heated liquorice allsorts. It also smells a lot stronger than its predecessor. Preserved lemons, dried and salty. Some fruits emerge at second nosing, mostly apricots, fresh and dried. There is a pinch of dried herbs too, likely tarragon and oregano.

Mouth: sea salt (cavalier66), crystallised liquorice, a lick of anthracite, and chewy blackcurrant cough drops. There is a veil of smoke, but it is hardly noticeable.

Finish: bigger, longer, more sherried. It has liquorice, soot, tar, creosote and lint. It is not a brutal finish, but it sticks to the gums like a petrolic Sherry.

Comment: several of us expected this one, being likely distilled in the 1980s, to be the violet-y one. How surprising that it has none of that, when its more-ancient equivalent is plagued by it. Did they mix up the glasses upon serving?

Score: 7/10


A fly sets camp in JS's glass. paralyzed_frank traps it and removes the glass.

Barman: "I'll give you another one."
tOMoH: "I have a fly in each of my glasses!"


Bowmore 36yo 1972/2008 (45.4%, Signatory Vintage Cask Strength Collection, Fresh Oloroso Sherry Butt, C#3890, 540b, b#6)

Nose: prunes, sultanas, dried figs, a whiff of hashish. It is earthy and a bit, but also promises dried fruits. The second nose is super lush, with prunes and raisins aplenty. It adds a drop of ink, black as night.

Mouth: rancio, elderberry jelly, smashed prunes, dried Medjool dates, fig relish. It has an acidic touch and a slight bitterness -- the Sherry, clearly. The second sip has a mineral touch akin to prunes smashed on pebbles. Ginger and cinnamon powders become more intense with time.

Finish: big, earthy, it has bucketloads of prunes, figs and pressed blackberries. The second gulp is similar: dark, juicy and a little mineral in a tickly way.

Comment: excellent.

Score: 9/10


Bowmore 18yo d.1971 (57.3%, Sestante)

Nose: this is much more austere and mineral, with volumes of pepper and billows of smoke. Smoked pepper ground in a granite mortar, let us say. The longer it sits in the glass, the more mineral it becomes too. The second nose has dried onion peels and candle wax.

Mouth: onion syrup, sweet and pickled, totally weird. Confit d'oignon, JS tells us. It also has a prune-cut-on-slate vibe that is rather original. The second nose seems more nosebleed, drying and numbing, like granite.

Finish: pickled onions again, dripping with syrup. JS is right: it really is confit d'oignon! The dichotomy between syrupy sweetness and pickled acidity is surprising. The second gulp serves that confit on a hot tin plate.

Comment: not an easy one, but very good.

Score: 9/10


Bowmore 16yo d.1973 (62.8%, Sestante)

Nose: this one is even more austere, boiler rooms and dusty machinery. "Blind, would you say Bowmore?" cavalier66 asks. Nope. It is closer to Glen Mhor or Millburn. Metal filings covered in dust, quarry dust. The second nose is austerer yet, if that is possible. It is more and more numbing, like chilli flakes, yet also metallic.

Mouth: confit d'oignon here too, hot metal (zinc, galvanised iron) and hardened rubber, bizarrely enough.

Finish: the Industrial Revolution has begun! Hot dusty metal, smoke, hammered zinc, coal (cavalier66), galvanised iron. The second gulp is numbing, and, considering the ABV, it is hardly unexpected.

Comment: the staff tell us it is close to Baiju. Fortunately, I disagree with them. Wholeheartedly. This is uncompromising, and really a style I appreciate.

Score: 9/10


Punter: Such and such has tried four hundred Ben Nevises. One hundred and thirty from 1996."
tOMoH: "Does he have a girlfriend?"


Bowmore 22yo 2002/2026 (51%, Thompson Bros. for Bar Lotus, Refill Barrel, 88b)

Nose: extremely custard-y, it has flan tart and banana bread.

Mouth: ginger, a touch of smoke, tree bark, ginseng and rose water.

Finish: smashed banana served in a rubber bowl, dried algae and the residue in an empty vase.

Comment: this is good, but it is hard not to think it is a grave sequence mistake.

Score: 8/10


paralyzed_frank: "I started drinking whisky a year ago."

Our jaws drop in disbelief. It explains the missing bits. Not what is there.


Glenlivet 1946/1972 (43%, Berry Bros. & Rudd)

Nose: boiled potatoes sprinkled with soot. It is most particular! Cinnamon powder ends up making its way through. Then, we have lemons, crisp and acidic in a forest of Epiceas. The second nose has a drop of lemon juice on limestone, effervescent reaction and all.

Mouth: OBE in full effect. This overflows with the tin lids of marmalade jars and copper coins (remarkably not oxidised). It has the bitterness of brass, which makes one think of playing the trombone.

Finish: long and fairly fruity, it has prunes and fresh figs, followed by jam-jar lids and a pinch of soot.

Comment: it is not terribly complex, but very good.

Score: 9/10 (Thanks for the dram, paralyzed_frank)


Lagavulin 25yo 1990/2015 (44%, The Syndicate, C#4394, 243b)

Nose: vase water, musky hairballs, gunpowder, smashed dried algae. It also emits gas and lingering septic-tank odours -- in a good way. That dissipates to give dust, ash and burnt hair.

Mouth: dry, hairy, it has horse's hair and fairly-new rope. Chewing releases juicy dried fruits, prunes or soaked raisins, then rancio and fermented-onion juice.

Finish: juicy and prune-y, it is also smoky as fook. We have smoked prunes and smoked red onions, caramelised or in a relish format.

Comment: really good. Glad I saved it for last.

Score: 8/10 (Thanks for the dram, paralyzed_frank)



Good night out. The venue is a little hard to find, with its half-down shutter, I stopped twice to look at the cat in front, without realising it was the place. The selection inside is very impressive and the vibe is as geeky as it gets. Somehow, I did not feel entirely at home, but that must be me.

As for the tasting itself, it was not a guided tasting. More a preselected flight of eight(*) with an imposed pace -- a pace that suited me perfectly.

(*) with inexplicable detours, which I found weird and a little hazardous.

29 June 2026

29/06/2026 Bowmore

In preparation for tonight, you understand.


Bowmore 20yo 2005/2026 Ronald's Choice (56.5%, Cadenhead Barrel Royale, Bourbon Barrel): nose: bacon and wood stain. Yup, here are Frazzles, Grills, Walker's recent-ish bacon crisps (certified without bacon, I am convinced) juxtaposed with Carbonyl, Ronseal, and other wood oils for decking. Further nosing does away with that and replaces it with warm plasticine and flowery shrubs (lilac, magnolia). That latter note is not very bold and it soon recedes to allow bacon back. This time, it is crispy rashers on a toasted onion beigel. What do you mean, "it makes no sense"? It is heady and ester-y, maybe has a hint of pickled pearl onion, which goes well with the dominant bacon. Is it a drop of black ink, in the back? The second nose has fleeting purple fruits that soon open the door to earthy aromas: clay floors and mounds of dug-up field earth strangely go back to blueberries in seconds. It seems to settle for brambles, hawthorn and other berry-bearing bushes, which is very nice. Mouth: warm, almost hot, it is ink that is reaching boiling point and warm Ronseal wood stain. It cools down a bit after spending some time on the tongue, which allows plasticine to take over -- plasticine filled with wood oil or wood stain, surely enough. Against all odds, chewing releases tropical fruits, yet they may not be fresh. Instead it is chewy mango-flavoured sweets, as if Gummibärchen came in mango flavour (do they?) That is enhanced with a drop of crisp citrus juice (Ugli fruit or sweet grapefruit) and a generous dose of wood oil, still. The second sip is pretty punchy again, acidic and fruity, perhaps with less wood stain. Chewing seems to revive that, but, in fact, it is now much closer to gooseberries, currants and myrtles. The bitterness has shifted from wood oil to brambles and no-one is complaining. Stubborn chewing brings forth some earth, but it is now a fruity number. Finish: quite the rollercoaster, it starts off farm-y, would you believe?, continues with tropical fruits (mango and papaya, mostly) coated in melted cheese (Appenzeller -- go figure!) and witnesses bacon squirting wood oil and Carbonyl from the side line. Waxy cheeses such as Gouda and Jarlsberg keep growing after that, which is as sticky as it is mesmerising. Highly unexpected. 'Barrel Royale with Cheese', they should have called this! The second gulp dials down the cheese to 0.5 and focuses on earthy berries, not quite ripe, at that. Blackcurrants, elderberries, blackberries, sloe berries. It is a trifle bitter, but it remains acceptable. 7/10 (Thanks for the sample, SOB)


Next, we will have a younger one that is actually older. Are you following?


3.217 16yo 1997/2014 A delicatessen shopping basket (55.6%, SMWS Society Single Cask, Refill ex-Sherry Butt, 609b): nose: big, musk-ular Sherry maturation, wet cat's hair and fox's skin in the drizzle. It has bruised and cured quince and apples, lukewarm caramel and a spoonful of melted chocolate, perhaps. Fig paste spread on overly-toasted bread or Biscotte, and open bottles in a teak drinks cabinet. This is really a bold Sherry cask and one would be tempted to guess Oloroso. Deeper nosing unearths (pun obviously intended) rancio, before taking us back to animal scents -- lynx, fox, wolf, hyena. However, at this stage, those animals have been rolling in fig relish, Corinth raisins and dried dates, then sprinkled with cocoa powder. They have enjoyed it too. No need to call the RSPCA. The second nose has gooseberries and unripe redcurrants, a tad green, and promising to be bitter, yet that is counterbalanced by currants and candied citrus segments (green grapefruit and oroblanco). How far we have come from wet foxes, eh? Deeper nosing brings up some kind of green tart; not apple, not greengage. Gooseberry tart? Does that exist? Of course! Water increases the pickled-pearl-onion smell and the musk. Ammonia? To be fair, it smells sweeter too, but all in all, it is a trifle less interesting (to tOMoH). Mouth: somehow, this is reminiscent of Greek wines (Udo Jürgens to the rescue). It is strong, assertive more than bold, and sweet, yet not as syrupy as Sherry. It has chewy sweets and dried currants, notes that chewing magnifies. It verges towards blackberry cough drops or even chewy liquorice sweets, yet those currants are never out of sight. The second sip rolls out fig paste punctuated with droplets of melted chocolate (low cocoa content) and berry liqueur. It is small enough quantities to not come across as liqueur-like, but it is there. Chewing, again, propels raisins to the fore, soaked in hot water, and said hot water served alongside. Wet animal fur is right behind, albeit less musky than on the nose. The bitter aspect turns almost rubbery with water, which one could take or leave, based on preference. You like chewing a dandelion stem or a car window seal? This is for you! You do not? Well... Finish: a lot fresher than expected, it still is a big Sherry cask full of chewy sweets and currants, yet, instead of the musk from the nose, we have black liquorice bootlaces and an almost-minty mouthfeel akin to caramelised fennel or lovage seeds. It is a very-long finish, by the way -- the kind one knows immediately that a few sips of water will not dissipate. The second gulp shows just how earthy this can be: beside a strong alcohol kick, it piles on a few shovelfuls of fertile-but-dry earth. There is a general impression of burning that could be construed as a heap of peat by an open fire, but I do not think it is peat. It is earth by a fire, the fuel for which is undetermined, but could be oil. Water improves it by peddling prune ice cream or beetroot sorbet served with a dash of elderberry liqueur that one enjoys while sitting on a tyre. It is weird enough to work! 7/10 (Thanks for the dram, EG)

26 June 2026

25/06/2026 Cask Trade x Watches of Switzerland

Back at the same venue as in 2024 for a tacit seventh anniversary celebration. There is no mention of age, but tOMoH can count -- ha!

I am flying solo, tonight, and the misery of an hour-long bus journey to effing Regent's Street in the middle of a heatwave tests my resolve. But the industry is in turmoil and Cask Trade, like all other players, needs all the support they can get. I will play my part by trying the whiskies they so willingly pour me. How selfless can one be?

I start on the bottom floor, conveniently close to the buffet.


Kilarrow 11yo 2015/2026 (50.6%, Behind The Cask distributed by Japan Import System, 1st Fill Barrel, B#BOW-15, C#302, 317b, b#305)

Nose: herbal, it has wet bracken and mashed algae, but also iodine and cured bacon.

Mouth: earthy and punchy, it has more cured bacon laid on a vanilla-custard bun. Unusual combination!

Finish: a little green in terms of alcohol integration, with burnt hay most prominent. It is long and muddy, with also crushed fruit stones and a soft bitterness. Muddier and siltier in subsequent sips, it fans a stronger burnt impression.

Comment: alright. Others are much more partisan (in favour or against) than this taster. The huge white label confuses more than one visitor. It is the equivalent of the first page of a book, open for signing.

Score: 7/10


Buffet, here I come!


As good as always, plenty of vegetarian options, fresh and refreshing


This edition, I did not see anyone picking the cress with their fingers and discarding it on the plate
(yes, it was a recurrent fixture)


Aberfeldy 12yo 2014/2026 Series 027 (52.8%, North Star Spirits celebrating 10 Years ...of North Star Spirits, Refill Bourbon Barrel, 320b, b#051)

Nose: baked plums and nectarines, as well as a touch of wax or plasticine. The second nose has a very-elegant Cologne (the hell if I can identify it!) and, maybe, a mint filling.

Mouth: a tad of wood spices and hot fruit stones, pressed plums too, which adds a lovely fruity dimension. It turns slightly chalky at second sip.

Finish: finally, the trademark Aberfeldy nuttiness appears. Hazelnut, creamy almonds and Brazil nuts. It is, however, not entirely devoid of orchard fruits.

Comment: nice.

Score: 7/10


Goalong 5yo b.2026 (48%, OB)

Nose: bright yellow, this is cereal-y and it has dried citrus peels (grapefruit and calamansi come to mind), but also toffee, butterscotch and vanilla cream filling from the biscuit of the same name.

Mouth: mellow, this is much to my liking, with custard cream (the biscuit fill), butterscotch and a soft bitterness.

Finish: mellow again, it has toffee and custard with a minor kick

Comment: it is not particularly original or remarkable, but pleasant and well made. My first expression from this Hunan-province product.

Score: 7/10


Glen Keith 33yo 1993/2026 (44.6%, Malts of Scotland Rare Casks handselected & exclusively bottled for The Whisky Dreamers, Bourbon Hogshead, C#MoS26010, 158b, b#42)

Nose: bursting with juicy yellow fruits and candied tropical ones, chiefly chewy pineapple and papaya cubes.

Mouth: acidic and fruity, it unveils more pineapple, candied and fresh, dried papaya and mango slices, and even a bit of passion fruit -- no! lots of it. It starts on the low, only to explode in seconds.

Finish: long, it is an eruption of tropical fruits, now, with but a minute bitterness towards the death.

Comment: pfff! Kirk Barleycorn and his pals done it again. SA must have been well seduced in Germany, because he brought four bottles of it to this here shindig. I could not try it in April, so well glad to do so now.

Score: 9/10


Burnside 36yo 1989/2026 Episode 4-- Mr. Buckie & Friends (51.9%, Lucky Choice Whisky Joint Bottling With Amoy Whisky Society, 1st Fill Oloroso Barrique, C#2520559, 180b)

Nose: all sorts of baking scents, with dough, flour and confectionary sugar, followed by lots and lots of citrus peels, full of their bitter oils.

Mouth: mellow and much darker, this palate has the Christmas pudding JW talks about to all to whom he pours this dram, even if it is not overpowering. It is closer to warm marmalade to my taste buds, thick, syrupy and coating.

Finish: overly Sherried, according to my preference. Holly berries, cranberry sauce, lingonberry compote. JW says spiced plums and sticky dates.

Comment: is it not weird that this is the third 36yo Burnside we come across in a fortnight? Milroy's and C.Dully's came before. JW, who is manning the stand with a fantastic-looking pink bow tie, tells me he sold yet another cask recently too. In any case, the Sherry maturation places it lower than the others for me. Personal taste, innit.

Score: 7/10


At the entrance table:

tOMoH: "Is this one available to try?"
Him: "Yeah. Would you like it on its own?"
tOMoH: "Why? Is it supposed to be served as a highball? I see glasses of iced water next to it..."
Him: "I don't know, I don't really work here..."


A Secret Distillery Guarded by Badgers 8yo 2016/2025 (46.3%, Master of Malt Single Cask, Refill Hogshead, 435b, b#332)

Nose: musky, it has hay, straw and an animal's den (to say 'badger' would be succumbing to suggestion). Something much more perfume-y rocks up  at second nose, then more hay. That last one is now more-clearly defined and louder.

Mouth: dry and hay-like again. It tickles leather and suede.

Finish: leather, hay, dried berries -- so dry they are virtually tasteless. It remains musky, though!

Comment: it does not take a David Attenborough to guess the distillery with a clue like that. The proprietors usually do not mind the name being used, but who knows why this one does not have the naming rights.

Score: 7/10


Nc'nean 8yo b.2026 Siobhan Mackenzie in Collaboration with Cask Trade (54.5%, OB bottled for Cask Trade, STR Cask, B#89)

Nose: velvet, corduroy, drapes heated by the sun. Follows a crazy waxy-plum note, peaches and nectarines. The heat takes off, in the long run, almost singeing the nose's hairs, but it is mostly a waxy-fruity one. Dark grapes soar. It becomes closer to doughnuts with time.

Mouth: surprisingly indistinct on the palate, it soon rolls out plums and baked nectarines on a velvet plaid. Little spices to speak of and practically no wood.

Finish: mellow and pastry-like, it turns bitter and woody in the second gulp -- not really in a good way.

Comment: my first Nc'nean, at last. I cannot say it is a hugely convincing encounter, despite the good first impression. Needs revisiting. This was bottled to celebrate the launch of Cask Trade's registered tartan, created by Siobhan Mackenzie.

Score: 6/10


Another punter approaches me.

Him: "May I ask what you're taking notes about?"
tOMoH: "You. 'Great taste in whisky, good appearance...' I'm taking notes on the whiskies, of course. So I can remember them tomorrow. Will you remember?"
Him: "No."
tOMoH: "There you go."

We chat a for a few minutes. Here is another person who tells me I have a nice handwriting. generations of teachers turn in their graves. I ask him if he can help me re-read myself, because I will struggle to decipher it tomorrow. We talk about the stagnation (the crash) of the whisky market and how nice these events are.

We have time for another couple, if we play our cards right. It is the royal 'we': my new buddy has had enough of my sarcasm.


Glen Scotia 7yo 2016/2024 (56.4%, OB Exclusive Cask specially selected by Jeroboams, 1st Fill Tawny Port Hogshead, C#24/59-7, 231b)

Nose: old ropes and dried nets (no fishy note, though). There is a whiff of rose perfume, perhaps tobacco too.

Mouth: wine-y on the tongue, it has cured oranges, wine-soaked lychees, rambutan in sangria. For some reason, celery dunked in sangria comes to mind. I cannot explain why, because it is not in-your-face.

Finish: long, it combines a slap of wood and a dash of deep red wine. The second gulp is woodier, borderline plank-y.

Comment: it is okay. The Korean editions were more to my taste.

Score: 7/10


Aberlour 19yo 2006/2025 (50.8%, Highlander Inn, Bourbon and Pedro Ximenez Cask, C#900338, 210b, b#55)

Nose: scented erasers and plasticine, earthy plums, yet not earthy enough to be prunes.

Mouth: mellow, it combines the bitterness of peach stone and the softness of peach flesh with a dollop of hazelnut spread with excellent results.

Finish: ooft! A lot bolder, here, with chestnut purée and smoked peach. Becomes bitterer upon repeated sipping.

Comment: another good selection, TM!

Score: 8/10


One of the stalls has a Torabhaig (OB). I am offered it; my glass is not empty. By the time it is, All bottles have been filed way. It is the rule of the game and I accept it.

Time to go. I bid goodbye to the Cask Trade folks, congratulate SA on another successful event and depart into the heat of the city.

24 June 2026

24/06/2026 Chichibu

It is hot and humid, which, I have read, is how Japan tends to be at this time of year.

Chichibu 2009/2012 The Floor Malted (50.5%, OB Ichiro's Malt distributed by Japan Import System imported by Number One Drinks, 8800b, b#8142): nose: soft, elegant, classy and a little fruity. We have umeshu, plum juice spilled on wooden decking, and an odd mix of watercolour and paint thinner, a mix that may well hint at leather boots. Deeper nosing focuses on turpentine, for a second, then brings us back to fruits. Grapes and nectarines join plums, with greengages on the fringe. A drier undercurrent becomes perceptible: dry-brushing, the residue in a glass of evaporated turpentine, or even a bale of straw in a barn heated by the sun. The second nose doubles down on paint thinner, and it is remarkable that it does not turn too heady or off-putting. Watercolour and waxy plums, followed by a pinch of ash, help balance it. Mouth: umeshu indeed, or magkeolli, even. It is very reminiscent of those Asian wines, unctuous, creamy, fruity. Chewing adds a drop of paint thinner, but it retains a creamy texture. This has a delicate, dry bitterness that is not too far from chewing a straw, vegetal and cereal-y at the same time. Fruits are less perceptible, but it does have unripe plums. The second sip feels waxier and juicier, with plump green grapes, nectarines and greengages. We also detect a glass of magkeolli enjoyed at a candle-lit table. The straw from earlier transforms into ash. Finish: it mixes the bitter crunch of straw with a minty vanilla to resemble nothing else, or, at least, nothing obvious. It is a long, refreshing finish, once more reminiscent of magkeolli. The second gulp has half-burnt fruit stones, tatters of flesh still attached. Strangely enough, the "refreshing" aspect of the first gulp turns almost abrasive, the way ashes can be. All the same, it is simultaneously coating and soothing, as if the ashes were from burning scented wood or incense. 7/10 (Thanks for the dram, EG)