Sunday, 26 March 2017

Laphroaig + Oysters = Whisky Heaven!

What's better than Laphroaig? Laphroaig with oysters, of course!

I was lucky enough to be invited to the first 'whisky dinner' recently held at Brisbane bar & eatery Seymour's Cocktails & Oysters, which just by chance happened to be a Laphroaig dinner, hosted by the ever-awesome Dan Woolley from The Exchange / Beam Suntory. For those who haven't yet had the pleasure, this is one seriously cool bar! Located on Caxton Street, Petrie Terrace, a short walk west of Brisbane's CBD, and right next to its sister establishment Lefty's Old Time Music Hall, it's a small speak-easy style bar inspired by early 20th century New Orleans. You'll find a lot of exposed brick, polished wood and hanging soft lighting, and a fantastic range of spirits, wines & beers inside these walls, and as you may be able to guess by the name, they do also dabble in cocktails and oysters!


While there's a full kitchen and clearly a very talented chef on board providing a diverse and very delicious food menu, you'll also find some of Brisbane's freshest and highest quality oysters, with the option of adding a dropper of Laphroaig 10-year old to help take that succulent seafood to an even higher level. They also boast a surprisingly large & diverse whisky range, including some rare & unusual independent bottlings that are well worth checking out. Which makes sense when you consider that the expert bar staff have previously worked at West End whisky-haven Cobbler, and all three gents have recently placed in the Top 100 in the Australian leg of Diageo's prestigious World Class Cocktail Competition. So these guys clearly know what they're doing!


For Seymour's' first whisky dinner, we were treated to 6 different expressions from my beloved Laphroaig. Ranging from the always dependable and always divisive 10-year old, to the phenomenal and extra-special 25-year old, paired with extremely fresh oysters sourced from Coffin Bay in South Australia, plus a phenomenal three-course meal, highlighting the magic that the crew at Seymour's are capable of. We're talking Moreton Bay bug & smoked Barramundi gumbo, Wagyu beef brisket with smoked onion cream, and a Roquefort blue cheese soufflé. I can honestly say this was some of the best food I've ever had at a whisky event, and all were perfectly paired with their associated dram. I'm not an accomplished food photographer as you can probably tell, and my photos really haven't done this meal justice, so you'll have to use your imaginations a little here!

Rather than the usual 'master class' educational style of whisky tasting, this dinner was a more personal and more casual experience, with Dan circulating amongst the eager audience, dropping some whisky knowledge while sharing his love of Laphroaig, and regaling some of his own amazing Islay experiences. The bastard!

We started off with Laphroaig 10-year old, which worked its sweet, peaty and medicinal magic, and when paired with one seriously fresh and creamy Coffin Bay oyster, the whole package was turned up to 11. It's easy to gloss over the venerable 10-year old with fancier and more heavily-marketed whiskies frequently coming along, but it's always fun to rekindle this relationship! And when applied directly to said oyster, the 10-year old didn't divide and conquer, it added an extra boost that was just bloody excellent. I must admit I've personally tried matching other Islay whiskies with natural oysters, and none have worked as magnificently as Laphroaig 10 does, it really is a match made in heaven. If you haven't tried this yourself, I definitely recommend giving it a go; or you could just head to Seymour's and let them do it for you! 

 

Next up we had the 'Select Cask' (known as 'Select' elsewhere in the world), paired with a magnificent Moreton Bay bug (similar to a crayfish) & smoked Barramundi (white fish) gumbo with smoked sausage. I must admit I'm not the biggest fan of Laphroaig Select, to my tastes it needs a bit more punch, but it's not really designed for my tastes, it's meant to be a more approachable, or more of a beginner's Laphroaig, and one that isn't as divisive as the 10-year old, and it certainly does tick those boxes. I'd not previously tried Select after the 10-year old, it usually goes the other way around, and doing so really highlighted the gentler and fruitier 'breakfast whisky' style of the Select Cask. It also worked incredibly well with the mildly-spicy gumbo, and that magnificent tender & juicy smoked fish and sweet bug, with none of the flavours overpowering the other, all the components worked in tandem and really did compliment each other. Personally I don't usually like pairing even mildly-spicy food with whisky, I find that the alcohol and spice often amplify each other a little too much. But that was definitely not the case here, it was perfectly balanced and perfectly paired.


Next up was the limited edition 'new' 15-year old, which was resuscitated in 2015 after a long hiatus to help celebrate Laphroaig's 200th anniversary, and another incredibly fresh & creamy natural oyster. The 15 is still a lighter and gentler style of Laphroaig, but it's really growing on me, in fact it reminds me of the lovely Highgrove bottling I was lucky enough to try last year, or perhaps it's the other way around. The dried grapefruit and floral sweetness in the 15-year old, with the Laphroaig peat and ash of course, brought out a nice meaty-ness in the oyster, while the oyster amplified those grapefruit notes in the whisky, and they both added up to one amazing taste experience! I should probably grab a bottle of the 15 before it's all gone, although I'm probably too late already...


Next up was a dram of my beloved Laphroaig Quarter Cask, with its higher bottling strength of 48% and smaller cask finishing for extra intensity, paired with a delicious wagyu beef brisket cooked for 12 hours, with an amazing smoked onion cream (that I could easily have devoured an entire plate of) and bitter greens. I've always loved the Quarter Cask, and that hasn't changed at all. So sweet and peaty, and with plenty of sweet vanilla and fresh oak, plus the extra flavour and punch from that higher strength and non-chill filtration, it all makes for a glorious whisky which is still one of the best value peated drams out there, if you ask me. That wagyu brisket was just amazing as well, very tender and full of proper beefy flavour, and I've actually written "must learn how to make smoked onion cream" in my notes, so I think you can guess just how good that stuff was! 
 

Next up we were treated to a dram of one very special whisky, Laphroaig 25-year old, paired with our final natural oyster. This was the 45.1% cask strength bottling released in 2013, and it's still one of the best older whiskies I've ever tasted, and almost the best older Islay whisky I've tasted, only beaten by the incredible Laphroaig 32. The 25-year old spent 18 years in ex-bourbon casks, before being finished for the remaining 7 years (that's a long finishing!) in European oak ex-Oloroso sherry casks, which makes for one amazing whisky. Totally different to any other Laphroaig though, this one is so soft and gentle, with a floral sweetness, light fruit and gentle oak coming to the fore, it's a mature and refined expression that is in my opinion well worth the (admittedly quite high) asking price. I've been lucky enough to try this one a few times now, and if you're in the market for an older whisky I really don't think you could go wrong with the Laphroaig. So how does a 25-year old Laphroaig pair with an oyster? Very, very well! Like you'd expect, it was a totally different experience to the previous pairings, one might have expected the oyster to dominate the older, gentler whisky, but again nothing was overpowered or lost in the background, it was just a delicious flavour experience!


And on to dessert! This course was Laphroaig Triple Wood, paired with a Roquefort blue cheese soufflé, with spiced pear and Lavosh bark (crispy flat-bread). It had been quite a while since I had tasted the Triple Wood bottling, for a time it was actually my least favourite Laphroaig. I'm not sure if my tastes have changed since, or if the whisky has, but it was absolutely delicious. There was much more sherry influence from the ex-Oloroso cask finishing than I remember finding last time, and also more peat influence, and the result of all that was wonderful; richly flavoured, with plenty of red fruits and light spice. I do remember that last time I tried the Triple Wood it was facing off against Lagavulin 16 year old, and as much as the Lagavulin will always be the 'gateway dram' that got me into peated whisky, the Laphroaig absolutely decimated it. The higher bottling strength of 48%, presumably younger age and non-chill filtration certainly helps of course, and it also helped the 'phroaig to pair absolutely perfectly with our dessert, that Roquefort soufflé that filled the room with the delicious aroma of high quality blue cheese. Sherry+peat+blue cheese has always equalled awesome in my book, and that was definitely still the case here. The perfect end to the evening's festivities!

So this was one amazing night of really exceptional food, and really fantastic whisky. This also shows the versatility and adaptability of my beloved Laphroaig, which many presume to be all about the peat, and which many wouldn't dream of pairing with high quality food. And they'd be missing out! What a great way to spend a Tuesday night. I cannot get over the excellent quality of the food that the guys at Seymour's brought to the table, so to speak, and while I'm sure the whisky helped (plus the fact that it was Laphroaig, of course!), the overall package that this relative newcomer presents makes for one hell of a place to spend a night out. I hadn't actually been to that part of town for quite some time, but Seymour's, along with its neighbour Lefty's (which also has an impressive range of whisky, plus regular live music), have changed my perception of the area completely, and I hope to be a more frequent visitor in future!  

A big thanks to Dan Woolley, The Exchange, Laphroaig, and of course the team at Seymour's for having me along, and I hope to see you at the next one!

Cheers! 

Sunday, 19 March 2017

An evening with the SMWS!

St. Patrick's Day was a little different for me this year, partly because it actually didn't fall on a mid-week 'school night', but mainly because I was lucky enough to be invited to attend a full-on whisky tasting with the Scotch Malt Whisky Society!


The SMWS, as they're more commonly known, is in basic terms a combination of a 'members-only' style whisky club, and a single cask independent bottler. Officially established in 1983 in Edinburgh, after the founder convinced a few friends to split the cost of buying and bottling their own cask of Glenfarclas, the Society now boasts over 26,000 members in around 20 different countries, and bottles whisky and now a few other spirits from over 130 different distilleries, all approved by their internal tasting panel. I've covered more of the details on the Society here if you'd like a refresher, and there's also my review of one truly amazing SMWS bottling of Ardbeg in there, just in case you aren't feeling thirsty!

While the Australian branch of the SMWS holds regular tastings in all of the major cities, and they're open to non-members (with a discount for members), this was actually the first that I've attended, and as a bonus it was to be hosted by the Society's Australian cellar-master Andrew Derbidge, who made the trip up from Sydney. Andrew's main duty is the enviable task of selecting (along with a local tasting panel) and organising which SMWS bottlings make the trip from Scotland for the Australian members, and he is also responsible for operations in his home state of New South Wales. He's also the man behind one of Australia's most popular whisky blogs, Whisky & Wisdom, and has been lucky enough to tour Scotland and her distilleries multiple times, even going so far as to import his own private official single cask bottling of Glenfarclas, reviewed here, which is still my favourite Glenfarclas bottling to date.


On the evening in question, held at The Brisbane Club in the CBD, we were treated to six delicious whiskies, plus a welcoming dram of Hyde Irish single grain whiskey (because St. Patrick's Day) and a selection of finger food, along with Andrew's experienced commentary and guidance. Alongside the whisky, of particular interest were a few little bonus experiences that Andrew had brought with him, including some E150a 'spirit caramel', used by many distilleries to artificially colour their whisky prior to bottling, and never used in any SMWS bottlings. I must admit it didn't smell particularly unpleasant, with a strong burnt golden syrup / molasses aroma (which is essentially what it is, of course), but it did have a particularly nasty and bitter taste on the palate, even when sampled in a tiny amount. This was actually a first for me, and it definitely helped to highlight how this unfortunate practice affects the precious whisky that, in my opinion, it tarnishes.

Andrew had also brought along some malted barley for sampling and nosing, and a small sample of new make spirit from Glenmorangie distillery in the Scottish Highlands, a rare experience which was also very impressive. He also complimented his own commentary with a slideshow of his own photos from personal trips to the various Scottish distilleries, which really helped give some perspective and added an extra visual aid to the whiskies in the glass. Aside from the recent arrival of virtual reality distillery tours, admiring some distillery photos while drinking a naturally-presented bottling from said distillery is just about as close as you can get without getting on an aeroplane, and it's a little cheaper to boot...


So, on to the actual tasting! Andrew started off by explaining the perils of adding ice, coke or other mixers to your whisky, and also the common error of choosing to drink it from a tumbler, and he also briefly covers the main points of whisky appreciation: admiring the colour (where it's natural, of course), finding your dominant nostril and alternating between your nostrils while nosing the whisky, holding and swishing the whisky in your mouth before swallowing, and enjoying the finish post-swallow. Naturally these are things that most whisky enthusiasts will have been practising for years, but they're essential tips for the beginner, and it certainly doesn't hurt to have a little reminder of why we do what we do!

Just a reminder before we get into the whisky, the SMWS bottlings do not state the distillery name on the label, they use a numbered system instead, where the first number is the distillery code, and the second number denotes the cask. So the bottling 33.134, for example, is an Ardbeg (code 33), and is the 134th cask of Ardbeg that the SMWS has bottled. An easy reference guide to the distillery codes can be found here. Aside from the highly imaginative bottling names and some extensive and often colloquial tasting notes, you'll also find the cask information and number of bottles on the label. All bottlings are naturally presented with no chill filtration or added colouring, and all are bottled from a single cask at cask strength.


You may have noticed that there are only five bottles pictured above, while there were six glasses in the previous image. Well caught! The sixth whisky, well actually the first after the welcome dram, was a bit of a surprise. Andrew decided to mix things up a bit and catch most of us off-guard by throwing an official bottling into the mix, a Cragganmore 12-year old in fact. Why? Because dram number two was also a Cragganmore, but this time it was an SMWS bottling. So we had a direct comparison between two very differently presented bottlings from the same distillery, one chill filtered, artificially coloured and watered down to 40%, and the other non-chill filtered, naturally coloured and bottled at cask strength. And as you'd expect, they were massively different in just about every way. I must admit these drams were actually my first foray into Cragganmore distillery, and also that the 12-year old official bottling did not drink like one bottled at the minimum strength of 40%, and was actually very pleasant, although also very sweet. The 12-year old official bottling also served as our palate calibrator for the evening, to be referred back to after the food was served to get us back in the mood. Let's get on to the stars of the show!

37.81 "Orange Turmeric Margarita"
A 13-year old Cragganmore, matured in an ex-bourbon cask for the first 12 years, and then finished in a second-fill Sauternes (sweet wine) hogshead. Bottled at 56.6%, with an 'outturn' of 270 bottles. This one was a little hot and seemed a little raw, with some dried green apple, and a dry slightly-sour barley character, and a lot of spice, particularly pepper, and a lot of citrus and under-ripe tropical fruit. Certainly far less sweet than the official bottling, despite the Sauternes finishing. Cragganmore by the way use worm tub condensers rather than the more efficient and modern shell & tube style, which may explain the impressive weight of their spirit.


41.80 "Classic - Barley Meets Oak"
A 9-year old Dailuaine (pronounced "dell-you-in"), matured in a first-fill Oloroso sherry butt. Bottled at 58.2%, with an 'outturn' of 540 bottles. I'd never tried a Dailuaine whisky before, so this was another first for me. Looking at this whisky in the glass, you'd never suspect it was matured in a first-fill Oloroso cask, with a yellow gold colour rather than the expected dark amber. It was much richer (both in flavour and texture) and more savoury and meaty in character, with some golden raisin notes denoting the sherry cask influence. Dailuaine is a large Speyside distillery and is mostly found in owner Diageo's Johnnie Walker and J&B blends, and is quite rare as a single malt.


G8.7 "Caribbean Banana Fritters"
Another curve ball! The 'G' in the code refers to this being a single grain whisky, and the distillery in this case is the Lowland grain distillery Cambus, which closed in 1993. This was a 27-year old bottling, matured for 25 years in a refill ex-bourbon hogshead, and finished in a second-fill Sauternes hogshead. Bottled at 59.7% with an 'outturn' of 240 bottles. This was an excellent whisky, very soft and gentle, and richly flavoured, with a lot of oak influence, spicy and lightly tannic, and a corn flake-like grain note. This is the finest grain whisky I've tasted to date, a seriously impressive whisky that doesn't drink like its strength would suggest. Cambus was a massive grain distillery north of Edinburgh, which was operated by DCL, the precursor to Diageo, prior to its closure.

35.168 "Essence of BFG"
Another curve-ball here, but in a different way. This was a 15-year old Glen Moray, that was matured for 14 years in a first-fill Oloroso sherry butt, before being finished in a heavily-charred virgin oak butt. It was bottled at 60.4%, with an 'outturn' of 594 bottles. Finishing a first-fill sherry matured whisky at all is quite unusual, but even more so if the finishing cask is virgin oak! This one was very, very interesting. The virgin oak finish hadn't overwhelmed the sherry influence, but it had added huge depth of flavour and texture, giving a buttery, oaky result with plenty of wood spice and dark toffee notes. Without question the best Glen Moray I've tasted, this whisky came in at (a very close) second place on the night for me.

   42.27 "Smoked 'Aged' Riesling"
   The star of the night for me! A 9-year old Ledaig (peated Tobermory), matured in a refill ex-    bourbon barrel. Bottled at 59.4% with an 'outturn' of 222 bottles. Ledaig can be a hard one      to pin down, being so close to its Islay cousins, and I was highly convinced that this was            actually a Laphroaig until it was revealed as having come from the Isle of Mull. I'd also never    have guessed that this was a 9-year old whisky, despite the use of a refill cask it was lovely      and warming, with plenty of damp peat & soft smoke, and a delicious maritime influence as      well. It only had a narrow margin over the previous dram, despite my predilection for                peat, and was far less unusual, but that couldn't stop it from winning me over!


So, we had some extremely interesting drams, and I was lucky enough to tick another three new distilleries off my list in the one sitting! The highly unusual casks used in most of these whiskies was a real highlight for me, I don't think it's likely that I'll see a 27-year old Sauternes-finished single grain whisky again, nor a first-fill sherry cask matured whisky finished in virgin oak. This sort of thing is exactly what the SMWS bring to the table as 'not just another independent bottler'. Rather than just doing what the distilleries already do themselves, they really aim to give a different experience and a new perspective, and this was certainly driven home for us on the night. After a good chat with Andrew during the almost obligatory follow-up session at the nearby Gresham, which also happens to be the official SMWS partner bar for Brisbane (with SMWS bottlings available for purchase by the public, and a discount on those bottlings for members), it was time to call it a night. Although it was more of an early morning by that stage!

I have to say that this was quite a different crowd to what I'd usually expect to see at a whisky tasting these days, with more of an 'old school' vibe, and perhaps a more formal environment, although there were still a few relative beginners present (which is good to see). Andrew did keep things light and jovial though, with just the right mix of refreshing innuendo and banter with the crowd, plus handing out a few mystery samples to some lucky attendees as rewards for astute observations or correct answers. This all made for a very informative and fun tasting, and the afore-mentioned malted barley, new make spirit and E150a sampling really helped to bring a new perspective on the finer points of what the SMWS do differently; or choose not to do, as the case may be. An excellent approach to what is an excellent pursuit!

A big thanks to Andrew Derbidge, Scott Mansfield (QLD manager) and the Scotch Malt Whisky Society for having me along. I had a great time, and it's always great fun to try new whiskies and explore new territory. See you at the next one gents!

Cheers!

Sunday, 12 March 2017

Laphroaig 18 Year Old (Signatory Vintage) Whisky Review!

We don't see independent bottlings of Laphroaig too often, and let's be honest the distillery does a fantastic job with its official bottlings, but there's still something special about a single cask, cask strength, naturally presented independent bottling, and the fact that there aren't too many out there certainly adds to the allure.

The advantages of independent bottlings over their official cousins are often that they're matured in a different or unusual cask, or are bottled at a higher strength or a different age, or are non-chill filtered and naturally coloured, and if you're lucky, they're cheaper than the equivalent official release. In this case, only a couple of those boxes are ticked. This is an 18-year old ex-bourbon hogshead (250-litre cask) matured Laphroaig from Signatory Vintage, bottled at a cask strength of 55.2%, non-chill filtered and naturally coloured. If we compare this to the now sadly discontinued (there are still a few around though - for now) 18-year old official bottling, which is ex. bourbon cask matured, and is bottled at 48%, non-chill filtered and naturally coloured, the only real advantage of the independent bottling is that it's bottled at cask strength. Unfortunately it's twice the price of the official bottling (for now, at least, since the discontinuation), so is it worth the extra money for that 7% extra alcohol? That's a tough call, but that's also quite a big difference!

Let's also consider that there's basically no other way to get a cask strength 18-year old Laphroaig, and that this being a different size ex. bourbon cask, and more than likely from a different bourbon distillery, to those predominantly used at Laphroaig (which would be Maker's Mark), it promises to be a different take on the make. I've had the pleasure of tasting an ex- Jim Beam cask Laphroaig in the past which was amazing, and markedly different to the norm, so this may be a similar experience. But since this hogshead will be a re-sized cask made from standard barrels, we don't really know what distillery the casks or staves came from, so that's just an assumption.

We also need to take the relative rarity (and subsequent demand) into account, since there were only 243 bottles released from this cask, and as mentioned above, any independent bottling of Laphroaig is already a rare thing, so it's not really fair to compare this one to the closest official bottling when it comes to price. I was / am a big fan of the official 18-year old, and thanks to the age it was definitely from the gentler side of Laphroaig, but the higher strength and larger cask used in this Signatory version may have changed that. Time for a closer look, I think...


Laphroaig 18-year old, Signatory Vintage, 55.2%. Islay, Scotland.
Cask number 3371, single ex-bourbon hogshead, 1997-2015, Signatory cask strength collection. Non-chill filtered, natural colour, 243 bottles. 

Colour: Amber.

Nose: Oh Laphroaig, it's been too long! Sweet, fruity and lightly medicinal, with lots of dried grapefruit, and a hint of dusty banana lollies. Some cold wood embers and a little spent gunpowder. Some aniseed as well, and damp rocks on a beach. 

Texture: Lovely. Medium weight, no heat at all, and plenty of flavour. 

Taste: Crumbly, dry and spicy peat, more wood embers, but they're hot now, and there's some ash as well. Hint of that dried grapefruit from the nose, but it's much more subtle now. A hint of iodine and plasticky rubber as well. 

Finish: Medium length, with more fruit & ash, and less peat although it's still there. A little bitterness as well, then some more aniseed and damp rock. Gets subtle and soft quite quickly, but then resurges with more iodine and a gentle coastal peat. 

Score: 3.5 out of 5. 

Notes: Lovely stuff this! There's definitely more punch than you'll find in the official 18 year old, which is to be expected thanks to the extra strength, and a lot of the subdued or missing notes in the official bottling, such as the peaty and medicinal notes, are amplified here. That bitterness on the finish is unusual, but it passes quickly without stopping the fun. Overall though, it's not massively different from the standard style Laphroaig, if you can call it standard, that is! It's a little pricey, but it's a very enjoyable dram, and as usual from Signatory (and also Laphroaig) it's excellent quality.  

If the folks from Signatory are reading, I have a little request that I'm sure many will agree with: please put some more Laphroaig in a sherry cask! Google tells me you've done so a couple of times in special bottlings for The Whisky Exchange and some others, and we know you already do excellent work with these young sherry cask Ledaigs, so if at all possible, please do the same with Laphroaig, we'll all love you for it!   

Thanks to Craig from The Whisky Company, Signatory's Australian distributor, for the sample.

Cheers!

Sunday, 5 March 2017

Benriach Single Cask 29 Year Old Whisky Review!

I'm definitely a fan of Benriach, particularly when it comes to their peated releases, and this one is far & away the oldest Benriach I've tasted. We shouldn't expect to find much peat influence hanging around after those 29 long years, but let's find out anyway, purely for science of course...

Speyside distillery Benriach may not have the same cult following that its sister distillery Glendronach enjoys, but they do share some common practices, thankfully including skipping the chill filtration and added colouring, and also the single cask program. The lack of a cult following also helps in the pricing department, with Benriach's single cask bottlings coming in at much more reasonable prices than the current batch from their sherry-bomb counterparts. Neither distillery's single cask bottlings have been particularly easy to find in Australia thus far, although that does seem to be improving, unfortunately alongside a massive price increase in the case of the recent batch from Glendronach. You won't find any peated Glendronach single casks though, which is where Benriach takes centre stage!

Modern peated Benriachs use surprisingly heavily peated malt, to the tune off 55 ppm in fact, but I can't be sure what ppm the distillery used in 1986 when this bottling was distilled, in fact I don't believe it was even measured back then, but I think it'd be safe to assume it was less. In those years the distillery was producing peated whisky for use in blends, under then-owner Seagram's, not for bottling as Benriach's own single malt. Along with Glendronach and Glenglassaugh, Benriach was purchased last year by American drinks company Brown-Forman, and despite wide-spread concern in the whisky community, thus far there do not seem to have been any major changes, perhaps with the exception of Rachel Barrie coming on board recently. Rachel was formerly the master blender for Bowmore, Auchentoshan and Glen Garioch, and it's widely believed that she will eventually replace current master distiller and blender Billy Walker at the Benriach Distilling Company, who has been an integral part of the widespread success that the three distilleries have enjoyed in the last decade or so. I don't have any doubts that Rachel will be entirely up to the task, she already has an impressive resume of successful whisky releases, and it'll be interesting to see what she comes up with in the future.

Anyway, this particular bottling I'm looking at is from cask number 7569, and is a 29-year old peated Benriach that was finished in an Oloroso sherry butt (500-litre cask), which yielded 568 bottles. It's important to note that the Benriach single casks follow the same practices as Glendronach's, so this whisky may not have spent its entire life in the same cask, a few different casks of a similar age may have been finished in the same sherry butt, which is then bottled as a single cask release. It's only a technicality really, it's still a single cask bottling after all, but it's something to keep in mind. But enough of that, it's a 29-year old single cask peated Benriach; it's exciting stuff, so let's get into it!

Benriach 29-year old single cask, Oloroso sherry finish, 51%. Speyside, Scotland.
Cask 7569, peated Oloroso sherry butt finish. Distilled 12/1986, bottled 6/2016, 568 bottles. Non-chill filtered, natural colour.

Colour: Polished bronze.

Nose: That was one effective sherry finish! Fresh figs, currants, musty stewed berries. Oiled leather, plum jam, sweet cough lozenges, and a light earthy-ness behind it all.

Texture: Medium weight, rich & spicy. Warming, but no rough or harsh heat.

Taste: That assertive sherry finish is throwing its weight around again! Sweet oranges, plum jam again but un-sweetened this time. More leather and cough lozenge as well, and a good pinch of ground ginger.

Finish: Quite spicy here, with wood spices and some chilli powder, but it passes. Surprisingly short length too, at least for the age and strength, and not a great deal of complexity. Hints of that leather and those stewed berries return, as does a bit of the earthy-ness.

Score: 3 out of 5.

Notes: The nose was lovely on this one, and it was reasonably enjoyable on the palate, but it fell over a bit on the finish. That sherry cask finishing was definitely very assertive, I can see why they didn't let it go through to the full 30 years of age, it had already done its magic. Perhaps a bit too much, in fact. There's hardly any trace of the peat either, but that's understandable given the nearly three decades of maturation, and an assertive sherry finishing, and what I suspect was a relatively low ppm level compared to modern peated Benriach.

Still a very nice experience though, and quite a unique take on Benriach that I haven't experienced before. And let's be honest, it's always tough to resist the allure of an old whisky, particularly a single cask one. Having said that, I'm not sure this one was worth the rather high price it commanded, which was around $500 AUD when it was more widely available. There are many younger and cheaper whiskies that will happily tick the same boxes, and then some. I'm still very lucky and thankful to have tried it though, and thanks to the anonymous donor for the sample!

So let's all wish Rachel luck in her new role, and let's hope the three distilleries under her guidance continue to go from strength to strength, so we can keep enjoying the results!

Cheers!