Batch 12: Diageo Special Releases 2015
Port Ellen, Brora, Clynelish, Lagavulin, Caol Ila, Dalwhinnie, Dailuaine, Pittyvaich and The Cally.
Port Ellen, Brora, Clynelish, Lagavulin, Caol Ila, Dalwhinnie, Dailuaine, Pittyvaich and The Cally.
BrewDog’s Boilermaker Series joins bottlings from Thompson Brothers and The Whisky Agency.
Three Irish whiskeys this week, plus the return of Crabbie’s to Scotch and an Islay single malt.
Two Black Bull bottlings, a double whammy from Blair Athol, a Glentauchers 6YO and a 42YO Tobermory.
Three Bs – Balmenach, Benrinnes and Bowmore – and three Glens – Scotia, Moray and Glenlossie.
Compass Box’s No Name No. 2 and Whyte & Mackay’s Light join four indie bottlings.
The Islay Fest continues with Scarabus, Aerolite Lyndsay and a smattering of Fèis Ìle drams.
This week’s flavour theme is ‘big’, featuring BenRiach, Glenfarclas, Tamdhu and Timorous Beastie.
Four Annandale single casks lead a James Eadie Aultmore and acacia-matured Bushmills.
Longmorn’s new NAS, Diageo’s Whiskey Union duo, Balblair 2005 and two silent distillery drams.
Another eclectic selection of whiskies this week, including Bruichladdich, Dalmore and Talisker.
Ardbeg Kelpie, Douglas Laing’s first Consortium of Cards release and a 40-year-old Carsebridge.
From a meaty Ben Nevis to a creamy, vanilla Glenrothes, with a dash of Bruichladdich in between.
Six Speyside single malts from Glenallachie, Glen Spey and Miltonduff distilleries.
The new Ardbeg An Oa, Glenmorangie Astar plus four Gordon & MacPhail Distillery Labels.
Diversity reigns: 50-year-old Macallan, peated anCnoc, two Macduffs, two wine cask finishes.
Macallan Boutique Collection joins bottlings from Adelphi, James Eadie and Thompson Bros.
A Speyside special featuring Glenlivet, GlenAllachie, Glen Elgin, Benromach, Tamdhu and Benrinnes.
This year’s series includes single malts from Bunnahabhain, Deanston, Ledaig and Tobermory.
Dave Broom samples the 2017 John Walker Private Collection blend and a trio of Bladnochs.
A 2002 anCnoc, four James Eadie bottlings – all under 10 years old – and a 20-year-old Longmorn.
A Laddie-fest as four Bruichladdichs are tasted, plus a Fettercairn and the latest Highland Park.
Five rarely seen Speyside malts: Glenburgie, Glenlossie, Mannochmore, Miltonduff and Strathmill.
A release of six single cask single malts from the Speyside distillery, from 1978 to 1991.
Linkwood, Dailuaine, Inchgower and Tamdhu from Speyside, plus a lone interloper from Arran.
Ardgowan’s Expedition, Glenmorangie Grand Vintage and four indie Macduffs and Miltonduffs.
It’s a feast this week with Octomore 10, Rosebank Jealousy and a Sherried single grain.
From Ardbeg Drum to Littlemill 40, this week’s reviews run the length and breadth of Scotland.
A trip through Islay with Ardbeg's new 19-year-old, a wine-cask Kilchoman and Lagavulin 10.
This week is split between two trios, as venerable G&Ms meet experimental Bruichladdichs.
Dave Broom stops by Speyside for indie gems from Thompson Bros., Càrn Mòr and Cadenhead.
From Imperial to Littlemill, Dave Broom loses himself in old drams from indie bottlers.
Scallywag and Timorous Beastie’s big brothers get a grilling, alongside a host of indie bottlings.
It’s Speyside vs Edinburgh this week as Glenallachie and Glendullan stand up against North British.
Balblair’s age-stated core range plus Glenfiddich Grand Cru and Glenlivet 14 Year Old Cognac Finish.
The Speyside distillery is this week’s focus with seven single cask bottlings under the microscope.
Glenmorangie Grand Vintage 1989, plus two Aultmores, Bunnahabhain, Glen Garioch and Teaninich.
A quartet of revamped Dalmores, Kilkerran goes to secondary school and Cù Bòcan re-emerges.
Dave Broom reviews Glenmorangie Spìos, Tullibardine 1962 and Tomatin Metal and Water.
An old Benromach, a blended malt and Daftmill’s Winter Release surround a trio of Tomatins.
Port Askaig’s 10th anniversary malt, plus Benrinnes, Caol Ila and Linkwood from the indies.
Three fruity, mature old grains, a 1980s Coleburn plus a bold new Benromach.
A duo from Ben Nevis and a Highland Park quartet find a musical match in dirty blues and deep soul.
Another marvellous medley from Dave Broom featuring BenRiach, Timorous Beastie and Tullibardine.
A rich and sweet theme including three Dalmores, Highland Park, Glenrothes and Auchentoshan.
The verdict on Loch Lomond 50-Year-Old, and lots of peat: Bowmore, Caol Ila, Ledaig and Croftengea.
A chocolatey Springbank, meaty Ledaig, plus Rock Island’s new maritime blended malts.
Dave Broom tries spirits from the opposite ends of the age spectrum in this week’s reviews.
Two Balblair vintages, Dalmore 45, Cadenhead Creations plus two Mossburn blended malts.
Dave Broom rounds out the year with a party of Pulteneys and Big Peat’s annual festive bottling.
Dave Broom goes rummaging through some lesser-known distilleries (and Aberfeldy) this week.
A Gordon & MacPhail quartet, GlenDronach’s Boynsmill and Highland Park’s Twisted Tattoo.
Wemyss’ latest blended malts meet single casks from BenRiach, GlenDronach and Craigellachie.
Grains are a go-go this week, with whiskies from Invergordon, North British and Caledonian.
A series of show-stopper Scotch whiskies this week from Compass Box, Glenfarclas and Loch Lomond.
Featuring the first Chivas Regal blended malt plus the 200th anniversary 25-year-old Lagavulin.
If you’ve been wondering what Dave Broom thinks of Black Bowmore 50 Year Old, you’re in luck...
Glen Moray, Glen Scotia, Auchroisk, Longrow and Springbank, with some fascinating finishes.
Taking it easy with Highland Park Magnus, Dewar’s 25, Balvenie Peat Week and The Art of Whisky.
A sweet theme unites malts from Glen Moray, GlenDronach, Glengoyne, Glenmorangie and Pulteney.
A gaggle of Glenrothes vie for attention this week, plus Johnnie Walker’s Midnight Blend.
Dave Broom samples six truly venerable whiskies totalling an impressive 316 years old.
Seven of GlenDronach’s 15 single cask releases for 2018 – all Sherry-matured bar one Port pipe.
A bevy of Bunnahabhains comes under scrutiny, along with Clynelish and Glenrothes.
Thirteen new single malts from Caperdonich, Longmorn, Glen Keith and Braes of Glenlivet.
Our editor Becky Paskin takes a journey through time with Balvenie’s DCS Compendium Chapter 3.
Three malts, three grains: Balblair, Glentauchers, Cambus, North British and Strathclyde.
Our editor, Becky Paskin, selects her top three Scotch whiskies tasted in 2015.
Our magazine editor chooses his whisky highlights from 2015, including two bargain Speyside malts.
Dave Broom looks back on 2015 with whisky-tinted glasses and selects his three stand-out drams.
Smoke is the overriding theme as our magazine editor picks his three stand-out whiskies of 2016.
A Balvenie tribute, an elderly Talisker and a chewy GlenDronach caught Becky Paskin’s eye.
Celebrating a feral Ardbeg, a seamless Johnnie Walker blend, and an ethereal old Tomatin.
Three full-bodied 1940s and ‘50s whiskies bottled for the US take Angus MacRaild’s fancy.
A trio of 1960s and ‘70s Signatory malts from Campeltown, Islay and the Highlands.
Angus MacRaild argues in favour of Port Ellen’s allure with three extremely rare bottlings.
An elegant post-war Glen Grant, an opinion-dividing ’70s Ledaig and waxy ’60s Tullibardine.
An early Aberlour bottled for the Italian market, plus ‘ghost’ malts from Brora and Lochside.
A ‘totally stunning’ 1974 Caol Ila sizes up to a magnificent Mortlach and 1930s blend.
A 1940s White Horse bottled for the US joins a rare Aultmore and an ‘austere’ Clynelish.
A delve into the Islay vaults nets a 1980s Bruichladdich, a recent Bowmore and a quirky Port Ellen.
The first SMWS bottling of Longrow, plus a lesser-spotted Inchgower and a Tomatin from the 1970s.
Three ‘70s whiskies from Cadenhead’s Authentic Collection: Allt-a-Bhainne, Auchroisk and Imperial
Three old Glens demonstrate the breadth of styles being made in Speyside in the 1970s.
Three old bottlings that demonstrate the variety available in whisky’s back catalogue.
A trio of early releases from the SMWS, including Glendullan, Glen Esk and Inchmurrin.
A Karuizawa triptych illustrates the enduring excellence of this cult Japanese single malt.
Three blends from the 1920s-50s have Angus MacRaild dreaming of a bygone era.
Tripping on fruity old Glenugie, fragrant 1960s Glenlochy and a flabby 1940s blend.
Three modern-era ‘legends’ are reviewed, from Balblair, Bunnahabhain and Springbank.
Three accessible old whiskies, including Bruichladdich, Pride of Strathspey and a Reliance blend.
Three rare Japanese morsels are examined, but not all of these Eastern drams show promise.
A high-octane tasting of Auld Niblick, Macallan ‘As We Get It’ and MacPhail’s Pure Malt.
From the sublime to the downright disgusting, three rare whiskies from the ’60s and ’70s.
A rare Karuizawa and cult whiskies from Laphroaig and Royal Brackla astonish MacRaild.
Three 1960s blends take Angus MacRaild from a soapy stupor to waxy, peated pleasure.
A 16-year-old Glenallachie, Glenmorangie Artisan Cask and Hudson’s Bay 1670 Blended Scotch.
Two cult brand bottlings plus an often overlooked malt have surfaced from the archives for tasting.
In preparation for the Speyside whisky fest, Dave has chosen three rare Speysiders from the vault.
Three cracking whiskies here – if you can find them – from Glenury Royal, Caol Ila and Glen Grant.
Macallan, Springbank and Port Ellen all feature in our latest selection from the whisky vaults.
There’s a contemplative air as Dave Broom tastes old Glen Grant, Springbank and Tomatin.