Laphroaig 25 Years Review - Laphroaig PX Cask Review


“Laphroaig Special”

Whisky Review # 695

Country: Scotland
Region: Islay
Brand: Laphroaig 
Type: Single Malt Whisky
Age: 25 Years (Bottled at Cask Strength in 2014)
Alcohol By Volume (ABV): 45.1%
Maturation: Mix of Bourbon and Oloroso Sherry Casks  
Chill Filtration: No       
Price Range: US$ 375-475 (March 2018).
Buying Advice:😔 Good Malt but very expensive. Go for the 15 or 18 years!

Colour

Light Golden (Natural Colour)

Nose:

Sweet, Salty, Fruity, Mineral, Dry and slightly Dusty. The Alcohol is very nicely integrated. The typical Laphroaig Aromas are there but they remain discretely in the background. Mild Herbs, Spices and Oak. The Sherry cask influence is there but not at all overwhelming. Good balance. Quite mild for a Laphroaig.  

Main Aromas:

Sweet Barley, Buttered Toast, Vanilla, Fresh Fruit (Apple, Pear, Pineapple), Dried Fruit like Raisins and Apricots, Grapefruit Juice, BBQ Smoke, Wet Earth, Band-Aid, Iodine, Cinnamon and Mint. 

Supportive Aroma Accents:

Herbal Tea, Honey, Raw Meat on the BBQ, Nutmeg, Pepper, Cloves, Cardamom, Ginger, Tobacco, Polished Leather, Ashes, Tar, Green Vegetables, Dark Chocolate and Caffe Latte.


Palate:

Bitter-Sweet, Fruity and quite Salty with some Sour and Mineral Notes as well. Oak, Herbs and Spices are more noticeable. 

Main Flavours:

Sweet Barley, Vanilla, Fresh Fruit (Apple, Pear, Pineapple, Banana), Peat/Smoke, Iodine, Ashes, Grapefruit Juice, Seville Oranges, Herbal Tea, Licorice, Cinnamon, Mint  

Supportive Flavour Accents:

Toffee, Heather-Honey, Green Vegetables, Mandarin, Lemon, Dried Fruit, Sherry, Clove, Pepper, Almonds, Shellfish and Cocoa Powder.

Image result for laphroaig 25 years bottled 2014

Finish:

Middle-Long, Bitter-Sweet, Mineral, slightly Dusty and Dry. The Oak is far more present now. I find Sweet Barley, Salty Caramel, Vanilla, Smoke/Peat, Ashes, Tar, Lemon, Grapefruit, Apple, Mild Sherry, Leather, Tobacco, Cinnamon, Pepper, Licorice, Menthol, Cocoa Powder and Espresso.  

Drinking Advice:

Due to the small size of the sample, I only Nosed/Tasted it without added Water.

Rating: 86.5

Nose: 22 - Taste: 22 - Finish: 21 - Overall: 21.5

Drinking Experience:

Good. The 25 Years most likely matured in a mix of Refill Ex-Bourbon casks and some First-Fill Oloroso Sherry casks. The ABV of 45.1% is slightly too low. I'm not sure if it was bottled at Cask Strength. My gut feeling is that it was watered down. In any case this Spirit could do with a higher ABV, especially at this Price Level.  

Conclusion:

The 25 Years is a very nice and mild Laphroaig distilled in the days that Fruity Spirit was important to counterbalance the fiery Islay Flavours. Modern day Malt of this distillery is much more focused on Peat and Smoke. It's a matter of taste which of the two styles is more appealing. I have two issues with the 25 Years: the Price and the ABV and they are actually linked. The 25 Years is expensive and it deserves a higher ABV. As it is, it is slightly underwhelming for a Single Malt of this age. The Price/Quality ratio is not ideal. My recommendation is to look for the 15 - or 18 years instead if you can find them.


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Whisky Review # 696

Country: Scotland
Region: Islay
Brand: Laphroaig PX Cask (Triple Matured) 
Type: Single Malt Whisky
Age: NAS
Alcohol By Volume (ABV): 48%
Maturation: Bourbon Casks, Quarter Casks and PX Finish.  
Chill Filtration: Yes       
Price Range: US$ 70-100 (March 2018).
Buying Advice: 😒 The 10 Years is the better young Laphroaig alternative!

Colour

Golden Amber (Artificially Coloured)

Nose:

Relatively Young and a little Dirty and Harsh. The Alcohol is not fully integrated. Bitter-Sweet and a tad Salty. The influence of the PX cask Finish is noticeable but not very strong. A few Mineral and Herbal notes. Medium Spice. The Sweet notes are a bit artificial.

Main Aromas:

Toast with a mix of Butter and Margarine, Toasted Malt, Salted Caramel, Vanilla, Factory Smoke, Dirty Earth, Soot, Tar, Diesel, Rubber, Dried Fruit like Raisins, Sultanas, and Apples, Dried Herbs, Cinnamon and Nutmeg.   

Supportive Aroma Accents:

Heather-Honey, Toffee, BBQ-Smoked Ham, Bacon and Shellfish, Iodine, Leather, Tobacco, Wet Stone, Clove, Pepper, Lemon, Aniseed, Grapefruit, Floral Perfume, Sherry, Licorice, Bitter Chocolate and Strawberry Jam.


Palate:

The arrival is slightly Thin despite the high ABV. The Alcohol is aggressive and quite strong. Bitter, Sweet and Sour notes are battling it out. Spices and Herbs are in there as well. A bit of a mixed bag. I miss balance and direction. 

Main Flavours:

Toasted Cereals, Treacle, Factory Smoke, Dirty Earth, TCP Pipes, Rubber, Tar, Iodine, Ashes, Smoked Fish, Meat & Shellfish, Grapefruit, Strawberry, Mandarin, Pepper, Cinnamon and Nutmeg. 

Supportive Flavour Accents:

Dried Fruit (Raisin, Apple), Dried Herbs, Licorice, Lemon, Aniseed, Toffee, Salted Caramel, Vanilla, Oak, Clove, Tobacco, Leather, Sherry and Milk Chocolate.

Image result for laphroaig px cask triple matured

Finish:

Medium-Long, Bitter-Sweet, Salty, Dirty, Hot and Spicy. The Bitterness increases towards the Dry end. The Sweetness is artificial. I find Toasted Malt, Vanilla, Tar, Diesel, Factory Smoke, Dirty Earth, Iodine, Smoked Ham & Shellfish, Charred Oak, Pepper, Nutmeg, Licorice, Dark Chocolate, Assorted Nuts, Strawberry Jam, Tobacco, Leather and overripe Banana.   

Drinking Advice:

When I announced the Changes in my Tasting Notes some days ago it rained reactions. Most were very positive about the concept with the exception of the adding Water issue. Unanimously I was asked to retain the added Water in the Reviews. You have convinced me that I was wrong on this issue and therefore I will continue to Nose and Taste with added Water as well if the size of the sample is sufficient.

Therefore I added a little Water to the PX Cask and the aggressive Alcohol retreats which is a good thing. The Nose becomes Sweeter with Milk Chocolate, Honey, Toffee and Nuts. The Dirty character is gone though. On the Palate, the Sweeter Sherry notes develop. The Finish becomes quite Thin though. There is certainly room to play with a little Water.

Rating: 81.5

Nose: 20.5 - Taste: 20.5 - Finish: 20 - Overall: 20.5

Drinking Experience:

Good. The PX was released in 2011, initially for Travel Retail only. Nowadays it is widely available. It matures for around 10 years in refill Ex-Bourbon casks, then for around 6-9 months in Quarter casks before being finished for a couple of months in Ex-Pedro Ximenez Sherry casks. The name PX Cask therefore is a little misleading in my opinion. Triple Matured would have been more adequate. 

Conclusion:

What a contrast between the two Laphroaigs I have tasted today. The old style well-balanced 25 Years Vs. the modern aggressive mixed bag called PX Cask. I must admit I liked the former a lot better. The PX cask is too harsh and edgy for me and the ABV is too high in this case. The PX finish must have been short as the Sherry influence is minimal. I honestly do not see the need for Laphroaig to add this type of expression since they already have a fiery crowd pleaser like the 10 Years in their arsenal. It's just a question of making more money with a slightly adjusted 10 Years I suppose. I don't know about you but this does not work for me! I'll stick to the 10 Years if I want a strong, fiery young Laphroaig!



The Pictures were taken during our visit in 2014

Aberlour 18 Years Review


“Underpowered Speysider”

Whisky Review # 694

Country: Scotland
Region: Speyside
Brand: Aberlour 
Type: Single Malt Whisky
Age: 18 Years
Alcohol By Volume (ABV): 43%
Maturation: Mix of Bourbon and Sherry Casks  
Chill Filtration: Yes       
Price Range: US$ 70-100 (March 2018). 
Buying Advice: 😏 Unfavourable P/Q ratio. Go for the A'Bunadh instead!

Colour: Golden Auburn (Artificially Coloured)

Nose:

Sweet & Fruity with some Sour, Herbal and Floral elements. The Alcohol is not fully integrated. The Sherry cask influence is noticeable but not overwhelming.

Main Aromas:

Vanilla, Butter Biscuits, Toffee, Peach, Orange, Banana, Apple, Floral Soap and Milk Chocolate.  

Supportive Aroma Accents

Sweet Barley, Brown Sugar, Heather-Honey, Marzipan, Grass, light Nutmeg, light Pepper, light Cinnamon, Nuts, Sherry, Mint, Apricot, light Licorice and light Oak.


Palate:

Bitter-Sweet, Fruity and slightly Thin. A few Sour elements as well. Perhaps a tad of Sulphur but nothing serious. The Alcohol remains noticeable. The Sherry cask influence is more clear now.

Main Flavours:

Vanilla, Toffee/Caramel, Milk Chocolate, Apple, Dried Fruit like Raisins, Sultanas and Apricot, Peach, Mandarin/Orange, Grapefruit, Strawberry, Pepper, Nutmeg, Mint and Oak.

Supportive Flavour Accents:

Sweet Barley, Heather-Honey, Nuts, Plums, Lemon, Cinnamon, Licorice, light Leather, Grass and Earth.

Finish: 

Middle-Long, Bitter Sweet and slightly Thin. Dry towards the end. The Alcohol gives a little Kick. Oak, Spices and Herbs are more noticeable. I find Caramel, Vanilla, Dried Fruit like Raisins and Apricots, Floral Soap, Milk Chocolate, Pepper, Nutmeg, Cinnamon, Mint and Licorice.     

Drinking Advice:

I added a little Water and the Nose becomes rather Floral. The Alcohol retreats of course. Peach and Banana become even more noticeable. Palate and Finish become too thin and lifeless. Better sip it neat despite the Alcohol.

Rating: 83.5      

Nose: 21 - Taste: 21 - Finish: 20.5 - Overall: 21

Image result for aberlour 18

General Remarks:

🏣   The Distillery and Today's Whisky:

The Aberlour distillery was founded in 1879 by James Fleming and is located in the small town of Aberlour in Banffshire. Since 1974 it is owned by Chivas Brothers (Pernod Ricard). The core range includes the 12, 16 and 18 Years but their most loved expression is the A' Bunadh that matures in Oloroso casks and is bottled at Cask Strength. We visited the distillery in May 2014. Great Tour and Tasting Session where you can fill and label your own bottle of Aberlour. You need to pay for that bottle of course. But the Distillery is certainly worth a visit!

The Aberlour 18 Years was initially released for the French market only. But in 2008 it was introduced to the rest of the world as well.



🍷  The Spirit:

Aberlour operates two pairs of stills. The Lyne arms point slightly downwards and produce a Medium-Bodied, Sweet, Fruity, Malty and Spicy Spirit. The Spirit is partly used in Blends like Clan Campbell and House of Lords. The Water is sourced from a spring on Ben Rinnes. Aberlour is the best selling Single Malt in France.

🌲  The Wood:

The 18 Years matures in a mix of Refill Ex-Bourbon and Refill Ex Sherry casks. (Mainly Oloroso but with a few PX casks as well).

Drinking Experience:

Good but slightly on the Thin side. This would be a lot better when bottled at Cask Strength. The success of the A' Bunadh series proves this point.

Conclusion

The Aberlour 18 Years is a Fruity and Floral Speyside Single Malt that most likely matured in a mixture of good and average Bourbon and Sherry casks. Both Nose and Palate are a bit underpowered. The 18 Years misses the strength of the A' Bunadh expressions. Despite the relatively low ABV, the Alcohol is quite noticeable throughout. The age of the Spirit only becomes clear in the Finish so I must assume that at least a percentage of the casks was not very active. At 18 Years a whisky can't be cheap of course but based on my tasting notes I must conclude that the price/quality ratio for the 18 Years is unfavourable. If you like Aberlour, like I do, you'd better go for the A' Bunadh expressions.

Jan van den Ende                                                                          March 5, 2018

Important Changes in Tasting Notes


Dear Whisky Friends,

I'm nosing and tasting whisky since the end of 2011 and within short I will have completed 700 Whisky Reviews. Many things have changed in these years with respect to my ability to describe Aromas and Flavours. I will give you just one example to make it clear. Sweet became Sugary or Fruity. The Fruit became a Peach or an Apple, the Apple became a Green Apple or Red Apple and the Red Apple became Fresh, Dried or Cooked. The human brain is apparently able to do that because it stores all memories and activates those memories when it recognises the same Aroma or Flavour in another Whisky. As a result my tasting notes have become longer and more detailed with each passing year. Lots of people have asked me how I recognise all these notes and hints of notes and my answer is twofold. Experience and time.


The experience is self-explanatory I suppose. The more different Whiskies you taste, the more memories you store in your brain for future reference. I would like to make it clear here that it's just my brain of course. That produces my opinion only which is as good or as bad as yours. I can only say in all fairness that after almost 700 Whiskies I am able to distinguish excellent, good and mediocre whiskies. From a quality point that is. Taste was, is and will always be extremely personal.

The second item is time. When I review a Whisky, any Whisky be it a cheap Blend or rare Single Cask, I nose and taste those whiskies on two different days. Each of those sessions will take at least 1,5 hours. I spend most of that time nosing as I regard this the most interesting part of the session. In the first 10 minutes or so I get the basic Aromas and then with time more impressions pop up. Many of those are mere hints or suggestions but it's the fun part of the Nosing. It was the day before yesterday that I suddenly realised that most Whisky lovers will probably not take that long to analyse all bits and pieces and are basically interested in the Quality of the whisky and its basic Aroma and Flavour Profile. I checked this with a few Whisky friends and they confirmed my thoughts. 

So as of Whisky Review # 694 that I will post later today I will split Nose and Palate in two sub parts namely 1- The Main Aromas and Flavours and 2- The Supportive Aroma/Flavour accents. I will also limit the number of these accents. Finally, as of Whisky Review # 695, I will not add Water to my Whisky anymore. I believe that the Whisky should be judged as it is presented and obviously was meant to be. I'm really curious to find out how this works in practise and I'm looking forward to your reactions and suggestions.

Cheers!

Jan

Ardbeg Corryvreckan Review


“Dirty Young Man”

Whisky Review # 693

Country: Scotland
Region: Islay
Brand: Ardbeg Corryvreckan (Bottled 2015-2017) 
Type: Single Malt Whisky
Age: NAS
Alcohol By Volume (ABV): 57.1%
Maturation: Mix of Refill Bourbon casks and French Virgin Oak 
Chill Filtration: No      
Price Range: US$ 65-90 (March 2018). 
Buying Advice: 😒 Negative for the recent batches.  

Colour: Golden Sunset-Amber 

Nose: The Alcohol is quite strong of course so you need to find your way around that. Please give the Corryvreckan sufficient air time before starting the Nosing procedures. There's a young feel to the Spirit and the Fresh Oak is noticeable. I  get the image of visiting a Saw-Mill located in the heart of a busy harbour. I find Diesel, Soot, Tar, Factory Smoke, Fishing boats, Shell-Fish, Varnished Wood and the Dirty Floor of a Gas Station. You get the picture! This is as far away from a client-friendly Speyside Malt as you can get. But while all these "Dirty" Aromas are there, they are not overwhelming. Like a Lion that can't really roar because he got the flew. Next to the above mentioned Aromas I also get Toasted Barley, Toast, Brown Sugar or Treacle, Burnt Grass, Vanilla, Iodine, Leather, Green Apple, Grapefruit, Lemon, Mandarin, Dark Berries, Dried Herbs, Tobacco, Pepper, Ginger, Mint and a hint of Dark Chocolate. A combination of Bitter, Sweet and Sour Aromas without too much balance. I had expected so much more as the early batches of the Corryvreckan received lots of praise. Those days are gone or so it seems to me at least. 

Palate: Bitter-Sweet, Spicy and a little Hot on account of the high ABV. I can't ignore the fact that the Corryvreckan shows some character despite its obvious youth. But it's not well-matured and again I miss Balance. Many of the "Dirty" notes I found on the Nose are here as well but they are stronger. This might scare the hell out of most beginning whisky drinkers! I also find Tarmac, Rubber Tyres, Fresh - and Charred Oak, Ashes, Cocoa Powder, Smoked Mackerel, Burnt Grass, Iodine, Leather, Nuts, Dark Berries, Mandarin, Lemon, Grapefruit, light Licorice, Pepper, Aniseed, Ginger, Cinnamon, Dried Herbs and Strong Black Tea or Espresso.


Finish: Medium-Long and Bitter-Sweet. A few Sour notes as well. The Alcohol remains strong. I find Ashes, Tarmac, Soot, Tar, Brine, Iodine, Factory Smoke, Dirty Earth, Fresh- and Charred Oak, Rubber Tyres, Smoked Mackerel, Toasted Cereals, Vanilla, Toffee, Apple-Vinegar, Grapefruit, Lemon, Cinnamon, Pepper, Cloves, Ginger, Menthol, Aniseed, Burnt Grass, Bitter Chocolate, Seville Orange, Dried Herbs and strong Espresso. It kicks and there's flavour but it's young and misses balance.

Drinking Advice:

I added a little Water and the Alcohol naturally retreats on the Nose and leaves it more Mellow. But also Thin and without much character. On the Palate and in the Finish I got the image of licking a burnt tyre that was hit with Licorice. Not my idea of a good time. Better sip it neat!

Rating: 83     

Nose: 21 - Taste: 20.5 - Finish: 20.5 - Overall:21

Image result for ardbeg corryvreckan

General Remarks:

🏣   The Distillery and Today's Whisky:

The current Distillery was founded in 1815 by John MacDougall close to the little town of Port Ellen on the island of Islay. In 1997 the distillery was bought by The Glenmorangie Company (part of French based Moet Hennessy) from the previous owners Allied Distillers. This company closed Ardbeg between 1981 and 1989 and only produced yearly during 2 months between 1989 and 1997. As a result, Ardbeg is lacking older stocks and is almost forced to launch Limited Editions while maintaining a very limited core range that consists of the 10 Years, the Corryvreckan and the Uigeadail. Like Glenmorangie, Ardbeg likes to experiment with Wood, Toasting and NAS expressions.

The Corryvreckan was released in 2008 to replace the famous Airigh Nam Beist. It is named after a famous whirlpool located just to the North of the isle of Jura. It is said to be "A place where only the bravest souls dare to venture".

Image result for ardbeg stills
Picture Credit: Whisky.com

🍷  The Spirit 

Ardbeg possesses only one pair of Stills with tall necks and rising Lyne arms that create lots of Reflux. A Purifier is connected to the Spirit Still that takes out the heavy Vapours and guarantees a Lighter and Fruity Spirit. The Water for the Spirit is sourced from Loch Uigeadail. The distillery has announced their plans to double the production that currently stands at around 1,4 million litres per year.

Ardbeg spirit maturing in oak casks
Picture Credit: Whisky.com

🌲  The Wood:

The Corryvreckan matures in a mix of Ex-Bourbon casks and French Virgin Oak. There are rumours that more French Virgin Oak casks have been used in the more recent batches as it becomes more and more difficult to obtain sufficient quantities of good Bourbon casks. The increase of the Bourbon production can't keep up with the increase of the Whisky production, particularly in Scotland. This is one of the reasons that the distilleries have launched so many NAS Malts in the last few years as they have the need to re-use their Bourbons casks as quickly as possible due to the scarcity. 

Drinking Experience: Disappointing. I was expecting so much more. I don't know exactly when the batch that I tasted today was bottled but it must have been between 2015 and 2017.

ConclusionI was looking forward to Nosing and Tasting the Corryvreckan. To be honest I thought it would rocket into my top 10 because of the great reviews it got when it was launched. Unfortunately I wasn't able to secure one of those early Corryvreckans and the sample I nosed and tasted today was bottled a few years ago. What can I say? It was not at all the Malt I was expecting. To me the Corryvreckan I tasted today was merely a young Ardbeg that was upgraded by a high ABV and lots of Fresh Oak. It certainly shows character and this is far away from your average today's mainstream Malts. But it lacks sufficient maturation in good quality casks. As a result, it totally misses balance. So if you're into Young, Wild and Exciting Ardbeg go for the 10 Years. If you want maturation and balance go for the Uigeadail. Unless you can find an early Corryvreckan. of course. Then by all means go for it!

Jan van den Ende                                                                    March 1, 2018

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Dalmore Regalis Review


“Tipsy Queen”

Whisky Review # 692

Country: Scotland
Region: Northern Highlands
Brand: Dalmore Regalis
Type: Single Malt Whisky
Age: NAS
Alcohol By Volume (ABV): 40%
Maturation: Bourbon casks with Amoroso Finish 
Chill Filtration: Yes 
Price Range: US$ 65-80 (February 2018)
Buying Advice: 😐. Totally drinkable but expensive given its youth.

Colour: Amber/Copper (Artificially Coloured)

Nose: Young and a bit on the Thin side. The Amoroso Finish is quite noticeable. I find all sorts of Cooked and Dried Fruit but the most eminent ones are Raisins, Sultanas, Berries and Prunes. I also get Sweet Barley, Buttered Toast, Caramel, Toffee, Treacle, Vanilla, Heatherhoney, Orange-Flavoured Chocolate, Herbal Tea, Tobacco, Marzipan, Amaretto, Lemon-Grass, Ginger and Cinnamon. The Alcohol is not fully integrated. The Regalis is quite Sweet on the Nose and the Amoroso Finish left a big mark on the Young Spirit. It could do with a bit more balance.

Visit May 2017

Palate: Mainly Sweet with a few slightly Bitter, Tannic notes for Balance. Again a bit of a Thin and Young feeling. I find Toasted Barley, Caramel, Toffee, Vanilla, Marzipan, Treacle, Amaretto, Dried Fruit like golden Raisins, Sultanas, Prunes and Berries, Honey, Dusty Road, Pepper, Cinnamon, Ginger, Nutmeg, Orange-Flavoured Chocolate and Caffe Latte.  
        
Finish: Middle-Long and a bit Thin. Quite Sweet with just enough Bitterness and Spice from the Wood to keep it interesting. I find Malted Barley, Caramel, Brown Sugar, Vanilla, Caffe Latte, Cocoa Powder, Hazelnuts, Marzipan, Marzipan, Dirt Track, Orange Peel, Pepper, Cinnamon, Ginger and Licorice. Dry/Tannic towards the end.

Visit May 2017

Drinking Advice:

No need to add Water. It's Thin enough as it is.  

Rating: 83 

Nose: 20.5 - Taste: 21 - Finish: 21 - Overall: 20.5

Image result for dalmore regalis

General Remarks:

🏣   The Distillery and Today's Whisky

The Dalmore Distillery was founded in 1839 by Alexander Matheson. It is located in Alness on the banks of the Cromarty Firth. It is operated by Whyte & Mackay Ltd, owned by Emperador Inc. since 2014. The core range includes the 12, 15, 18 and 25 Years, the Cigar Malt and the King Alexander III. At the moment Dalmore produces around 4 million litres of Spirit.

In 1263, King Alexander III was almost gored by a mighty Stag. One of the ancestors of the Mackenzie Clan saved him with a single arrow shot. As a reward the Clan won the right to bear a Stag's Head with twelve (Royal) points to its antlers in their Coat of Arms. The Mackenzie Family later became the owners of The Dalmore Distillery and added the Stag emblem to their bottles.

The Dalmore Regalis is one of four NAS Dalmore expressions created by Richard Paterson and called The Fortune Merita (Fortune Favours the Brave) Collection. Initially they could only be acquired in Travel Retail shops but now they are widely available. All four have matured in Ex-Bourbon casks made of American White Oak. The difference lies in the finish. All four are finished in different Ex-Sherry casks from Gonzalez Byass, a long term partner of Dalmore. The Regalis is finished in Amoroso, the Dominium in Matusalem, the Valour in a mix of both Matusalem - and Port Wine and the Luceo in First-Fill Apostoles. The latter is in fact a 30 Year old Palo Cortado, sweetened with PX. The Collection was launched in 2016.  


🍷  The Spirit

Dalmore is equipped with four pairs of Stills of various size and form with high Reflux characteristics. Together these stills produce a slightly heavy and more complex Whisky. The Water is sourced from the river Alness.

Visit May 2017
🌲 The Wood

The Regalis (Royal or Regal) matured in Bourbon casks before being finished in Amoroso casks. Amoroso is in fact Oloroso Sherry that is sweetened by adding a bit of Pedro Ximenez Sherry. 

Drinking Experience Neat: Good. Dangerously drinkable!

Conclusion: If I were you I would never ever grasp a bottle of the Regalis after having had a spell of bad luck. Because this Dalmore is so drinkable that you will get drunk in no time. Unless that's the purpose of course! It's also a bit of a One-Trick pony though as the Amoroso Finish totally controls the Spirit. I do miss some balance here. Other than that it's an easy-going Young Dalmore that will please a lot of people. Quite mainstream but hey, that was the idea in the first place I think. My main issue with the Regalis is the fact that there is a Thin feeling to it. Because of this I do not think it's worth an average 75 US Dollars or so. Better stay with the 12 Years if you're looking for a solid young Dalmore! 

Jan van den Ende                                                                February 26, 2018

Visit May 2017