Ballechin (pronounced "Bell-eck-in") is the name given to the heavily-peated spirit produced at Edradour Distillery, near the attractive town of Pitlochry in the lower Scottish Highlands - around a 1.5-hour drive north from Edinburgh. The branding is a homage to Ballechin Distillery, which was a few miles from Edradour and permanently closed in 1927. Itself founded in 1837, Edradour was for quite some time was the smallest distillery in Scotland, and although it has since been beaten to that post, and has expanded its capacity thanks to the commissioning of a second distillery on-site, this is still a very small operation. That new second distillery, designed to exactly match the original, was just coming online when I was lucky enough to visit the distillery back in 2017 (full write-up here) and has more than doubled Edradour's annual production capacity - bringing it to around 325,000-litres, which is still a very small number when compared with most Scottish distilleries. Since 2002 Edradour has been owned by independent bottlers Signatory Vintage, or more specifically Andrew Symington and his brother Brian, with Signatory's operations and warehouses now also located at the distillery. Aside from the (now four) small pot stills and traditional & hands-on production methods, the distillery is widely known for its employment of traditional worm tub condensers (pictured below), where the spirit vapour from the stills is cooled back into a liquid. These older & more traditional condensers are less efficient and give less copper contact than the modern shell & tube designs, which results in a heavier, meaty and sometimes sulphurous or "funky" spirit character, which is a big part of Edradour's intrinsic style.
Worm tub condenser
This particular Ballechin is quite exciting, since this heavily-peated SFTC bottling has been fully-matured in a single first-fill Oloroso sherry cask. It'll be interesting to compare this against Benromach's Peat Smoke Sherry Cask cask strength bottling, another recent heavily-peated mainland single malt that was fully-matured in first-fill Oloroso sherry casks. I'm a huge fan of the Benromach, and on paper the two are similar in style - hence my excitement - and are also similarly priced at around $150 AUD, although the Ballechin is a few years older and is a 500ml bottling taken from a single cask, while the Benromach is a full-sized bottle from a larger batch. Personally I don't mind a 500ml bottle if it helps to keep the pricing down and the availability up, which it has in this case, but it's impossible to avoid comparing them against full-sized equivalents when it comes to value. 500ml bottles are a more common thing in Australian whisky though, so I can see that being a harder sell in other markets. This single cask Ballechin was distilled in February 2007, and was bottled at 11-years of age in September 2018 at a cask strength of 61% ABV, with an out-turn of 955 x 500ml bottles, which makes that single cask a 500-litre sherry butt. Like 99% of Edradour's single malts (the entry-level 10-year old at 40% is the only exception) it's non-chill filtered and naturally coloured. The sample for this review came from a swap with a fellow-whisky geek, so cheers Steve! Time to get to it.
Ballechin SFTC Oloroso Sherry Cask Matured, 11-year old. 61%. Pitlochry, Scotland.
Distilled Feb 2007, fully-matured in single first-fill Oloroso sherry cask #18, bottled September 2018. Non-chill filtered, natural colour. 955 x 500ml bottles.
Colour: Dark bronze.
Nose: Rich, leathery & fruity. Stewed stone fruit - apricot, plum & a little peach with some raisins thrown in. Dates and dusty soft old leather, and some old-style tinned boiled sweets, cherry liqueur and baking spices. Some candied orange slices & cigar boxes with more time.
Texture: Medium weight, rich & spicy, not particularly peaty though. A little heat, but hides its ABV well.
Taste: More dates and old leather, candied orange and baking spices. A little cherry liqueur again. Dry chilli flakes and a touch of bitter dark chocolate and spicy oak.
Finish: Medium length. Earthy & spicy to start with, some more bitter dark chocolate and spent coffee grounds, maybe a little rubber (not in a bad way). Date syrup, more chilli flakes and old leather, with orange peel and those stewed stone fruits in the background.
Score: 3.5 out of 5.
Notes: A big, rich, powerful dram with plenty of flavour, but the sherry cask has certainly dominated. I expected more peat & smoke to show through, but it's instead been reduced to a soft earthy note - surprising considering how assertive the peaty Ballechin spirit usually is. Maybe if it had been bottled a little earlier more of that peat & smoke would've survived? But the distillery will have bottled at this age for a reason. I do like a big dirty sherry bomb, and this Ballechin certainly delivers on that regard. In terms of dirty funky-ness, I did expect more of that since Edradour's spirit is a little weighty & funky by default - but I'd rank this one behind the Benromach Peat Smoke Sherry Cask in that regard, and further behind the excellent Longrow 14-year old Sherry Cask Matured from 2018.
Since I mentioned it above, between this single cask Ballechin and that sherry cask-matured cask strength Benromach, I'd have to go for the Benromach. It's dirtier and funkier, with more peat & smoke showing through, despite the lower peating level, and with more rancio sherry character as well. But that's just down to personal preference really, if you're of fan of this style of sherry bomb you'll certainly enjoy this Ballechin, as I did. Now I just need to get my hands on a bottle of that Madeira cask Ballechin from the distillery shop. Don't like my chances there!
Cheers!
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