Whisky Lady – July to September 2024

Summer-time is filled with long warm days and ideally, a more relaxed approach to work and play. This year, I can definitely say the “relaxed” part was missing! The summer this year also marked a major milestone for this wee whisky blog – 1,500 posts!! This prompted a refresh of the “Top 5 posts which may surprise you!”

It was a predictably packed quarter – July brought multiple jaunts from Nurnberg to Munich and a week in the UK – primarily for work. August was home to India – with plenty of plans to share a dram or two. Alas, a nasty monsoon fever and flu felled all such frivolity! What a pity as my whisky cabinet could do with some assistance… And September was our annual pilgrimage to the London Whisky Show – filled with interesting exchanges and memorable drams. 

Whisky-wise, our Nurnberg Whisky Explorers held a special evening in July devoted to Glens. What did we try?

  • After a small sip of the Arran as a calibration dram, we checked out the Chorlton Glentaucher’s pair of 14 and 8 year
  • Glenlivet 17 year (2006 – 2023)  First Fill Oloroso Sherry Butt 62.3% (Signatory)  – A good reminder that not all Glenlivet’s are created equally – in this case a mighty fine cask!
  • Glenburgie 26 year (1995 – 2022) First Fill Sherry Puncheon 6349, 56.8% (Gordon & MacPhail) – Always dependable as an elegant and exceptional dram 

September followed with a fun evening dubbed “Bring your bottle!” Just a few folks coming together to share interesting drams from our respective whisky cabinets.

I also caught up with tasting notes from our June session – devoted to a Canadian theme with British Columbia’s Shelter Point whiskies. After the session in India earlier in the year, it was such fun to also share a little slide of Canadiana in Germany too!

With my February job change, colleagues kindly treated me to a gift voucher, which was naturally put to good use. None of the bottles have been opened yet – too much whisky, too little time – but there is little doubt that the right occasions will come! 

And last but not least, I finally got around to tasting and posting a few impressions of samples set aside for me by our Bombay Malt & Cigar gents who had a session last summer devoted to the theme: What’s in a Name

And there you have it – another quarterly whisky round-up! Slainthe!

Curious to know more? Check out a few more summaries:

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The Hearach Batch 9, 46%

From a venerable family-run distillery operating since 1836 (Glenfarclas) to a new community-run player from 2015 with Harris Distillery, our evening was full of delightful contrasts!

Their origin story is simple – a desire to preserve the Island of Harris community facing declining population and limited career prospects. Hence the idea of distillery:

In 2015, the distillery started life with just 10 people and an ambition to double in number over the next five years. Today, we’re proud to say we employ over 50 permanent staff, a highly significant number in an island of fewer than 2000 inhabitants.

As a catalyst for positive change within our community, we continue to work with purpose, bringing new life to our island and supporting its aspirations to survive and thrive as we move forward together.

And now, less than 10 years from founding, a bottle found its way to Nurnberg for an evening of exploration…

The Hearach 4 years (January 2024) HE 00009 24 46% 12,385 Bottles ~Eur 80

  • Nose – Barnyard, farm-like in a good way – think farm fresh fragrances, winds over wheat fields, sweet grass, barley, and then awash with a maritime breeze, burnt cake, and wood smoke
  • Palate – Super sweet and a bit vegetal, think green veggies, it had a youthful fresh exuberance, peppers, perhaps even a bit herbaceous, a hint of mineral, tobacco leaf, a bit rustic, salty, shifting into campfire embers
  • Finish – Salty cinnamon candy
  • Water – Oh my goodness! Makes it even sweeter! Like candy sweet, transformed from peat to super duper sweet!

The bottle was quite beautiful, however, what matters more than the packaging is the liquid. We were overall optimistic, it may not be the style for everyone but worth seeing how the team at The Hearach take things from here!

After our session, I did a wee check to see what the folks at Hearach have to say about this particular batch 9. Conveniently with the label details, one can find tasting notes by Gemma McNally Tarbert, Isle of Harris:

“I get a light, fresh sort of woodsmoke on the nose straight away, it reminds me of campfires at Scarista beach on those long summer nights we get in Harris. I get cereal notes, and spiciness on the palate, a sort of pepperiness like rocket leaves. There’s not much smoke when I sip it, but there’s a nice clean greenness instead. A little water makes it very sweet, like the sticky toffee pudding I bake myself at home with dates. It’s smooth and there’s so many lovely flavours unfolding.”

Whilst I didn’t find sticky toffee pudding, the cereal, pepperiness like rocket leaves – now that she mentions it – rings true!

What more do we know? Well, it is ex-Bourbon, Olorosso and Fino with 12,9 PPM. Also for this specific batch, Mike Donald, Chief Story Teller had this to say:

“A new year is underway and the first bottles of our whisky in 2024 have begun to be filled. We are deep into a Harris winter and fat snowflakes have been falling thick and fast across our island, transforming the landscape into beautiful patchwork of dark gneiss and bright ice. Many of us live at the end of long and winding narrow roads so it’s a slow start to proceedings as staff struggle to reach the distillery in the bad weather. But, we bottle batch number 9 with all the hands we can muster and the new white neck seals applied to every stopper fittingly match the snow which continues to float from our Harris skies”

And there you have it – our introduction to yet another new player in the whisky market. With it becoming so crowded and the winds of tightening wallets around the world, one wonders how The Hearach will fare longer term. Already on to their 16th batch, with this core expression joined by a pricier 100% Oloroso expression, time will tell!

What else did I try that September evening in Nurnberg?

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Bowmore 18 year Oloroso Cask 43%

We closed our evening with an Islay dram from Bowmore! These days, having an OB (official bottling) and “adult” whisky above 18 years is a bit of a rarity for me in a home tasting which tend to be No Age Statements til early teens. Make it an Islay and woah?! What’s going on here folks?

It also has been some time since I sat down properly with a Bowmore, so this was indeed a treat to finish off a rather enjoyable evening in Nurnberg with a theme of “Bring your bottle!

Bowmore 18 year Oloroso Cask WB146494 43%

  • Nose – Peat and sweet and how! Nothing shy about this one! All the lovely sherry dark stewed fruits and swirl of peat, was joined by leather and tobacco – delicious!
  • Palate – Equally powerful on the palate, yet balanced with a complex maturity, the plummy fruits rollled about with a gentle smoke, jammy and mouth-watering
  • Finish – Nicely carries through

Don’t laugh, but my first notes were “Why hello! I am indeed a Bowmore. And welcome back!” It was a classic Bowmore and also a great reminder of exactly what one would expect from this distillery. After so many drams that evening, this was a perfect powerful close – even at a mere 43%. A very good choice!

The official tasting notes may be brief but work for us!

  • Breathe In: Creamy caramel toffee, with ripe fruit and smoke aromas
  • Sip: Incredibly complex, with beautiful soft fruit and chocolate balanced with a light smokiness
  • Savour: The long and wonderfully balanced finish

And there you have it! A quick tour through some of the interesting drams experienced in a September evening in Nurnberg?

As for more brushes with Bowmore? Read on!

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Glenfarclas (2004-2017) 59.4%

Glenfarclas remains one of the few long-standing family-run distilleries that have equally kept consistent with their house style – known to be quite generous in the use of sherry casks. You won’t find a light afternoon dram – instead, Glenfarclas delivers a more robust experience. The kind of dram you would enjoy to warm you up on a cool winter evening, mayhaps by a crackling fire.

We are no strangers to Glenfarclas and yet always delight in exploring “just one more”! Especially if it so happens to be a vintage cask-strength expression.

Glenfarclas 13 year (2004 / 2017) 59.4%

  • Nose – Lovely! Christmas market in liquid form! A gorgeous sherry, warming with dark fruits of figs and dates, generous sweet spices of ginger, cloves, and nutmeg, which were joined by cocoa, like a chocolate, dried fruit, and raisins bar
  • Palate – At first it greeted us with a sparkling spice, deepening into dark fruits, balanced, rich with considerable substance. Beneath all the swirling sherry was both oak and a sprinkling of brown sugar. In short – yum!
  • Finish – More of that rich chocolate, though now more mocha with a faintly bitter coffee tweak

Overall we found it a terrific example of a quintessential classic sherry. Most enjoyable, a solid performer that performs really rather well. I was reminded of the Whic.de Clubflasche from 2009 – which is a compliment! However, the price difference is considerable! This 2004 is no longer available except on auction for ~150 vs the ~60 I paid for the 2009!

Talk turned to the overall whisky character. It was just as expected – a perfect winter dram to cosy up and enjoy! Many thanks to our contributor and the company!

What else did I try that September evening in Nurnberg?

And past brushes with Glenfarclas? There have certainly been a few!

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Knockando 18 year (1996) Sherry 43%

Truth be told, we are much more familiar with Highland Knockdhu distillery offerings that go by the name AnCnoc, than Diageo’s Knockando distillery in Speyside. Both were set up in the late 1890s, both are considered on the smaller side with 1.3 – 1.5 milllion liters produced per year, however, in terms of character and positioning, they are in quite different spaces. To put it into perspective, an 18 year old Knockandu is still largely used for blends and will set you back around Eur 65. Whereas an anCnoc 18-year-old single malt is in the range of Eur 94149!

Knockando 18 year (1996) Sherry 43%

  • Nose – Starts off very fruity with plums, then starts to shift into coffee cream, with more time it reveals a nuttier quality and even some minerals
  • Palate – A lovely spice, clear sherry influence with some mocha, malt, almonds and oak as well
  • Finish – Quite spicy for a mere 43%

The folks at Knockando describe the 18 year old as being “Woody & Fruity” – for which I would tend to agree.

What else did I try that September evening in Nurnberg?

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Nurnberg’s Bring your bottle!

Ah… September in Nurnberg… a time of cooler evenings, bursts of summery sunshine that slips into fall. In a departure from our Nurnberg’s Whisky Explorer format, just a few of us gathered to share some interesting bottles from our respective whisky cabinets. With such an extended array of offerings, we did not sample all but instead focused on a few that caught our fancy.

So, what did some folks explore?

As for me? My attention veered to drams not previously sampled:

It was a lovely relaxed evening with friends. A perfect sharing over an interesting array of whiskies from Scotland to Europe and India.

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