American oak

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Glenmorangie Ealanta Whisky

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Balblair: 2002, 1975 & 1969 Vintages

Balblair is set to release three new vintages. The 1975 is the second release of this vintage – the only difference is this version was aged in American oak ex-Sherry casks, whereas the first release was aged in Spanish oak ex-Sherry casks.

I was lucky enough to try all three during a recent visit to the distillery in the Highlands, which I wrote about here.

The 1969 was the stunner but, at £1500, it’s not the most affordable whisky on the market. Then again, compare it to some whiskies of this age on the market and that isn’t a ludicrous price tag. While that was my favourite, I was honestly impressed with them all, making Balblair hit the high note once again in my book.

Here are my notes on all three.
Balblair 2002: 46%:

A heady whisky hinting of springtime all through its drammage.
On first sniff, there’s a sugar syrup hit right at the back of the throat. But this mellows to notes of honeysuckle, white flowers (like lilies) and fresh grass.
The mouth was all candy-shop goodness: lollipops, marzipan, icing, sugar syrup dripped over lemon cake and canned peach juice. Wonderfully bountiful in its sweet offerings, this will appeal to lovers of the 2001 vintage, which is also full of almond, fudge and melted sugar flavours.
 
Balblair 1975: Second release: 46%:
Only seven casks will be released of this vintage, making the £235 price tag slightly more understandable. This whisky is very intriguing, and equally as drinkable.
On the nose, the smell of rubber tires first filtered through. But after the whisky was exposed to the air for a while, I was fully reminded of the smell of fur coats in a vintage [...]

July 24th, 2012|Reviews|0 Comments|