The Glenlivet 14 Year Old First-Fill American Oak Cask Strength
Never to be repeated – the world only gets one chance at this. The Glenlivet’s made whisky history with its first ever exclusive creation in 202 years of whiskymaking: a pure, straight-from-the-cask limited edition created EXCLUSIVELY for The Whisky Club.
United KingdomColour Golden sunrise
Nose Juicy tropical fruit and apricot with crème brûlée, vanilla fudge and cinnamon
Palate Warm apple pie and drizzles of maple syrup intermingle with toasted oak spice and apricot jam
Overview
Batch 1 of 1: this is the first time The Glenlivet has ever created a one-off single batch for anyone, and they’ve made this historic dram just for Members of The Whisky Club.
It’s been 20 years since Glenlivet launched their legendary cask strength Nàdurra series, and a decade since those hallowed bottles disappeared from Australian shelves forever. Since 2014, if anyone wanted an age statement Glenlivet at cask strength in Australia, the journey started and ended with rare single cask bottlings.
Until now. Created exclusively for The Whisky Club, Glenlivet has wound back the clock to the kind of dram that made the world fall in love with this foundational Scotch distillery in the first place: a 100% first-fill American oak-matured 14-year-old, at a strapping 58.6% ABV, for an incredible throwback price of $145
The Glenlivet 14 Year Old First-Fill American Oak Cask Strength, Created Exclusively for The Whisky Club is a one-off Club version of the formidable cask strengths that started it all. Pure, real single malt Glenlivet, not watered down or compromised, just for Whisky Club Members.
Creating a whisky from the ground up with Glenlivet has been on the Club’s bucket list for a long time. This huge dram will be coming exclusively to Members as June’s Whisky of the Month, from Friday 5th June.
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THE SPECS
Price: $145.00
Age: 14 Years Old
ABV: 58.6%
Maturation: First-fill American oak casks
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Glenlivet's History
Known as “the single malt that started it all“, Glenlivet Distillery was established in 1824 by farmer George Smith and was the first distillery in the Speyside region to be licensed under the new Excise Act of 1823. Due to unfavourable legislation Scotland was a hotbed of illegal distillation for much of the 18th and early 19th century but the Excise Act provided a sensible framework upon which to bring the small operators in from the black market and create a scalable industry that has subsequently grown in to the multi-billion dollar powerhouse that it is today.
But things weren’t easy for Smith in the early days, because people had grown wealthy trading whisky on the black market, and there was a feeling that once one distillery went clean the rest would have to follow, bringing an end to the status quo. Resentment and friction from his old colleagues became so bad that at one stage he had to carry two pistols with him for protection. Fortunately he survived and prospered, and in 1858 Glenlivet expanded to meet demand, and expanded again a few years later to meet up with the new Spey Rail line which gave Smith access to markets in England and the rapidly expanding British Empire. George Smith passed away in 1871 leaving the distillery in the capable hands of his son John Gordon Smith, who’d helped him establish the business, and his grandson George Smith Grant.
They say that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery and as Glenlivet’s reputation for quintessential light, fruity and floral Speyside malt grew, other local distilleries in the Livet Glen and beyond began to use the name Glenlivet, so much so that a joke from those days was that the name “Glenlivet” meant “The Long Valley” because so many distilleries were located there. Young George Smith Grant took them to court in 1881 and won the right to call his whiskies “The Glenlivet”, while only distilleries in the Livet Glen were allowed to use the hyphenated “-Glenlivet” in their names, a practice carried out until recently by neighbours Tamnavulin and Tomintoul.
Business continued to prosper and two more stills were added in 1897. Crucially, as with the other leading Scotch distilleries today, Glenlivet managed to survive both the Pattinson Crisis and the Great Depression. This put them in a fantastic position to capitalise on the end of prohibition in the USA where they are still in the top spot now. Glenlivet didn’t escape a mothballing during the Second World War however, by Government decree mind you, but by 1947 production levels were back to pre-war levels thanks to Britain’s post-war export drive to repay war debts. Overseas demand for Scotch made this an ideal export, and the distillery received preferential access to resources such as manpower, fuel and barley, despite ongoing bread rationing for the poor general population.
Glenlivet profited hugely from the 1950s Scotch boom and in 1953 merged with Glen Grant Distillery to form The Glenlivet and Glen Grant Distillers, Ltd. before a further merger with Hill Thomson & Co., Ltd. and Longmorn-Glenlivet Distilleries, Ltd. in 1970. They changed their name to Glenlivet Distillers Ltd in 1972 and were purchased by Canadian drinks and media company Seagram in 1977. Seagram sold their alcohol interests to Pernod Ricard and Diageo in 2000 with ownership of Glenlivet Distillers passing to Pernod Ricard, who later sold Glen Grant Distillery to Campari Group in 2005. By this time, thanks to careful stewardship from its owners, Glenlivet had become the second biggest selling single malt in the world and remained one of the world’s best known and loved whiskies.
The Glenlivet’s whiskies are noted above all others to best represent the modern Speyside style. In fact, George Smith’s greatest achievement, other than being the grandfather of the modern whisky industry, was creating a new style of whisky to become the house style of the entire Speyside region. He designed incredibly tall lantern shaped stills with wide necks that enabled the spirit to have maximum contact with the copper, while the height ensured that only the lightest vapour reached the top to condense and form a light, sweet, floral spirit with an estery character. This alternative to the heavy, dense and rich style of whisky produced in Speyside at the time proved to be hugely popular and remains so today.
As a testament to the distillery’s ongoing success none other than then HRH The Prince of Wales opened a further extension in 2010. Further upgrades were completed in 2018, with a second distillery built behind the warehouse, resulting in a massive 21,000,000 litre production capacity thanks to a total of two 14 ton charge Briggs full lauter mash tuns, 16 wooden and 16 stainless steel washbacks, and fourteen pairs of stills.
The stills continue to be made to the exact specifications of George’s original design as Glenlivet continues to produce the same signature style of single malt even after all these years.
Today The Glenlivet is the best selling malt whisky in the USA and the fourth best selling in the UK. Glenlivet is also the world’s second best selling single malt whisky, after Glenfiddich at Number 1. It’s widely regarded not only as the true embodiment of Speyside but also one of the greatest whiskies ever made.
The distillery draws water from Josie’s Well, supplemented by Blairfindy Well a short distance from the distillery, and malt comes from Crisp Malting in Portgordon. In terms of oak, The Glenlivet uses a mixture of traditional oak casks, American Oak ex-Bourbon casks, ex-Sherry, French Limousin oak, and ex-Cognac casks. Glenlivet has a well-stocked range that includes NAS, 12, 15, 18, 21, 25, 40, 50 and 55 year olds, as well as a single cask range.
Distillery Facts
Region: Speyside
Origin: The Glenlivet Distillery , Ballindalloch, Banffshire, AB37 9DB, Scotland, United Kingdom
Founded: 1824
Water Source: Josie’s Well
Washbacks: 32 (16 wood, 16 stainless steel)
Stills: 28 (14 wash and 14 spirit)
Capacity: 21,000,000 litres of alcohol per year