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Girvan 40 Year Old Single Cask MD243 - Cask Strength
February 2026

Girvan 40 Year Old Single Cask MD243 - Cask Strength

Three casks distilled in 1985 have been selected exclusively for The Whisky Club. Aged 40 years, this is the fruitiest of the three at a cask strength of 50.4% ABV, 500ml.

United Kingdom

Colour Fruity gold

Nose Burnt orange and apple develop in the glass, with a building oak note.

Palate The palate starts on bright citrus and fresh white peaches. A finish of white chocolate and stone fruit lingers on the finish.

Overview

This is what the buying power and unprecedented access of a community of 38,000 whisky-loving Members does for all of us.

Direct access to the bond stores of one of the biggest distilleries in Scotland. A parcel of 1985-distilled first-fill single casks that were wayyy too good to blend, and we’ve picked the best of them for Members.

Given the extremely low yields of single casks of this age (and to keep the price per bottle as low as we could), we bottled at 500ml, and even then, no cask produced more than 250 bottles.

In the end, we had to choose three incredible single casks as we couldn’t narrow it down to one; a testament to Girvan’s rich history as a powerhouse single grain distillery. Plus, we had to make the most of this opportunity as age-statement single grains simply don’t come around often at all – the only one to ever land at the Club was the Fuji 30 Year Old for $5,000, and that wasn’t even a single cask!

Each individual cask sample showcases crazy influence from the first-fill American oak hogsheads, honed into naturally unique profiles over four decades: the creamy one (cask #245), the fruity one (cask #243) and the oaky one (cask #246).

Single grains are often underrated compared to their malty brethren, but high age-statement grains have always been a hidden secret when it comes to getting top-notch Scotch at a reasonable price with their defining flavours of vanilla, butterscotch and fruit.

Each bottled at cask strength with natural colour and no chill filtration; the epitome of no-nonsense, cask to bottle.

This is the fruity one, at an ABV of 50.4%, with bold notes of burnt orange, banana bread and peaches.

Members, this is your chance to experience Scotch whisky straight from a 40-year-old cask, with no marketing guff, no fancy label, and most importantly, no inflated “age-statement tax” pricing.

Girvan 40 Year Old Single Cask #243 was available exclusively at the Club for $295..

500ml bottles.

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THE SPECS

Price: $295.00

Age: 40 Years Old

ABV: 50.4%

Maturation: First fill American oak hogshead

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Girvan Distillery's History

Rising on the South Ayrshire coast beside the River Girvan, Girvan Distillery stands as one of the great industrial achievements of modern Scotch whisky. Owned by William Grant & Sons, it is the family’s only grain whisky distillery and among the largest and most technically advanced whisky-making facilities in Scotland. From its vast footprint in the Grangestone Industrial Estate, Girvan quietly produces the backbone spirit that underpins some of the world’s most recognisable blends, while also proving that scale and character are not mutually exclusive.

The story of Girvan begins in 1963, when it was born from a moment of defiance following a rather unusual disagreement between the Grant family and DCL. The story goes that Grant’s had planned to produce a TV commercial for its Standfast brand, a move DCL saw as crass commercialism, and threatened to cut off Grant’s supply of grain whisky if it went ahead. The Grant family responded in the only way they knew how, by building their own distillery. 

Girvan was chosen for its expansive site and the support of the local council, and under the determined leadership of Charles Grant Gordon, great-grandson of founder William Grant, construction began in April. What followed was nothing short of remarkable. More than 400 local workers laboured around the clock, and when progress slowed, Gordon moved into a caravan on site, cycling across the growing complex to oversee every detail. Rumour has it that workers were gifted at least 1,600 bottles of whisky as incentives to get the build finished on schedule.

Against all expectations, the distillery was completed in just nine months, and on Christmas Day 1963, the first spirit flowed from the stills, mirroring Glenfiddich’s own humble beginnings.

From the outset, Girvan was designed for efficiency and consistency. The distillery employs continuous column distillation, using Coffey or patent stills to produce a clean, sweet and versatile grain spirit. The very first still remains in operation today, a working link to the distillery’s founding year. Over time, it has been joined by additional column stills, including the innovative "No. 4 Apps" introduced in the early 1990s which features a Multi-Pressure System that allows for distillation at not only different pressures, but also under vacuum. It's capable of lowering temperatures to produce a lighter, fruitier, and sulphur-free spirit.

Girvan’s first full year of production in 1964 was an immediate success, with most spirit destined for use in Grant’s and Clan MacGregor blends. Yet even in these early years, foresight prevailed. Small parcels of new make were quietly set aside for long-term ageing, including a sherry butt filled in 1968 that would later emerge as part of the House of Hazelwood’s The Cask Trials, slumbering for more than half a century. By December 1969, just six years after opening, plans were announced to double production, marking the first of several expansions that would see the distillery grow across its present-day 272 acres.

The early 1970s marked a moment of reflection and preservation. As Girvan approached its tenth anniversary, further stocks were laid down to capture the distillery’s developing character, spirit that would decades later define releases such as The Old Ways 1972 Single Grain from the House of Hazelwood. Even as the Scotch whisky industry entered turbulent waters in the 1980s, with widespread closures and mothballing, Girvan endured. Its scale, efficiency and importance to the Grant family’s blends ensured it remained not only operational, but resilient.

Today, Girvan operates six column stills and boasts a staggering production capacity of around 115 million litres of alcohol per year. Its 53 warehouses are estimated to hold close to ten per cent of all Scotch whisky, with spirit matured predominantly in vanillin-rich American white oak casks that lend sweetness and gentle spice to the final whisky.

While Girvan grain whisky was long reserved solely for internal use, in 1985 William Grant & Sons launched Black Barrel single grain, but this was soon withdrawn. In 2014 a new range of different age statements were released under the name Girvan Patent Still, offering a glimpse into the elegance and depth that long-matured grain whisky can achieve.

Beyond grain whisky, the Girvan site has evolved into a true spirits campus. It once housed the Ladyburn malt whisky distillery from 1965 until 1975, built to supply malt for Grant’s blends, and today the site is also the home of Hendrick’s gin and Ailsa Bay malt whisky.

Girvan 40 Year Old Single Cask MD243 - Cask Strength Girvan 40 Year Old Single Cask MD243 - Cask Strength

Distillery Facts

Region: Lowland

Origin: Girvan Distillery, Grangestone Industrial Estate, Girvan, Ayrshire, A26 9PT, United Kingdom

Founded: 1963

Water Source: River Girvan

Stills: 5 columns stills

Capacity: 115,000,000 litres per annum

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