-
- Price band
-
£ £ £ £ £
- ABV
- 46%
- Production type
- Single malt whisky
- Region
- Islay
- Flavour camp
- Fragrant & Floral
- Nose
Very sweet custard slice with icing, strawberry sauce on vanilla ice cream that’s countered by touches of earthy maturity behind. Some sharp lemon develops, though it does lose some impact with water.
- Palate
More penetrating than the nose. The acidity clears the palate but the flavours reassemble on the back where there’s ginger biscuits and cream-filled brandy snaps. Adding water leads to a loss of definition.
- Finish
A touch of dry cereal.
- Conclusion
Pleasant, but you get distracted in the middle of the tongue.
- Right place, right time
High tea at yer auntie’s (part one).
- Price band
-
£ £ £ £ £
- ABV
- 46%
- Production type
- Single malt whisky
- Region
- Islay
- Availability
- The Whisky Exchange exclusive
- Flavour camp
- Smoky & Peaty
- Nose
An intense, young Caol Ila with the sour green tomato/tomatillo, grassy/vegetal mash-up of agave notes, along with shoreline smoke. In time, some lychee.
- Palate
There’s some sweetness building here, bringing to mind apples and pears. The smoke emerges properly from the mid-palate on. Water simplifies things…
- Finish
…But then the mineral salts and smoke come raging back extending it for longer than you’d imagine.
- Conclusion
The energy seen on the end suggests what might have been.
- Right place, right time
A short sharp blast. I just wanted to Love You More.
- Price band
-
£ £ £ £ £
- ABV
- 46%
- Production type
- Single malt whisky
- Region
- Highland
- Flavour camp
- Fragrant & Floral
- Nose
Plenty of gentle distillery character. Nicely rounded with pineapple chunks, orange zest and some scented candle. That citric element continues with water: old lime and grapefruit hulls, then distant wax and Starburst.
- Palate
Typically for Clynelish more has been saved for the palate. Soft and quite sweet with a good waxy feel. The candle has been snuffed and there’s a floral element, alongside hints of citrus and sweeter soft fruits given a quick bite of acidity towards the end. Big estery notes retronasally. It fades just a little with water.
- Finish
Plenty of pineapple again.
- Conclusion
Fun and has retained its freshness even after two decades.
- Right place, right time
High tea (part two). Now yer auntie brings out the pineapple tarts.
- Price band
-
£ £ £ £ £
- ABV
- 50.7%
- Production type
- Single malt whisky
- Region
- Highland
- Flavour camp
- Malty & Dry
- Nose
A basket of freshly picked wild mushrooms, potting compost, spent coffee grounds and then polished church brasses. A slightly hard edge develops in time along with draff/mash tun. The cereal elements begin to grow when water is added, moving aromas towards amber malt and wet bracken.
- Palate
A sound and solid start where those nutty elements have been retained fully. It remains firm, stony even, giving the impression that all of the softer elements have been forcibly held back. Water calms the heat and brings out more cereal and, strangely for a whisky of this age, some sappiness.
- Finish
Nutty and firm.
- Conclusion
Opens pleasantly enough but its rigidity counts against it in the mouth.
- Right place, right time
Standing around at the church dance, too nervous to make the first move.
- Price band
-
£ £ £ £ £
- ABV
- 44.1%
- Production type
- Single malt whisky
- Region
- Speyside
- Flavour camp
- Rich & Round
- Nose
Rich dried fruits, old oloroso Sherry, steeping dried raisins, sultanas and black cherries, alongside ripe hedgerow fruits, mulberry jam and a tickle of leather. Old, spicy (but not Old Spicey) and complex. Elegant. With water, there’s more sweet cake mix, dried cherry and plum. Very soft.
- Palate
This gentle quality continues. Slow paced, with those sweet dried fruits, roasted nuts and mature autumn fruits. Water is too disruptive, pulling the tannin, acidity and core apart, and exposing its age.
- Finish
When neat, soft and wistful.
- Conclusion
Keep things neat and take it slow. It’s lost some energy but is a gentle, slow sipper.
- Right place, right time
- Price band
-
£ £ £ £ £
- ABV
- 57.8%
- Production type
- Single malt whisky
- Region
- Campbeltown
- Flavour camp
- Rich & Round
- Nose
Robustly rich with big Sherry from the off. Fresh espresso mixed with dark hazelnut chocolate, there’s a little sulphur note which drifts into soot sacks. Plenty of cask elements in other words, but the distillate is chunky enough. Coffee cake with water.
- Palate
Though the wood remains bold, there’s an extra meatiness: searing steak on a hot cast iron griddle with a thick mushroom sizzling beside it. Dark fruits, treacle and smoke. The sulphur sneaks out with water.
- Finish
Oxidised and nutty.
- Conclusion
Rich and powerful. I don’t mind this level of sulphur, it adds to the funk.
- Right place, right time
Sitting next to a sweaty gaucho at an Argentinian asado.
Though the name suggests otherwise, the 1987 Bunnahabhain from Wemyss Malts is less about diving for scallops and more akin to having high tea at your auntie’s house, according to Dave Broom. From this follows an ‘intense, young’ Caol Ila, before a second helping of cake at auntie’s with a ‘fun’ and ‘fresh’ Clynelish that has oodles of distillery character. A nutty Fettercairn from Cadenhead is sampled next, with wild mushrooms and cereal notes. Then it’s onto the second edition of Glenrothes 1988, which opens with oloroso Sherry aromas and turns out to be a ‘gentle, slow sipper’. A 16-year-old Glen Scotia rounds things off nicely with a welcome dose of sulphur for added ‘funk’.