GlenDronach Revival 15 Year Old
May 2015

GlenDronach Revival 15 Year Old

We were just in time with the GlenDronach Revival 15 Year Old. Now sadly discontinued, this malt has become a cult whisky with bottles trading for 3 or 4 times it’s original retail price as collectors scramble to secure a bottle.

United Kingdom

Colour Deep gold with a lovely mahogany heart

Nose Incredible concentration of dark, dense aromas. Treacle toffee, port wine, molasses, chocolate orange and fig jam.

Palate A very dynamic and full bodied dram for its age. Chewy with coffee chocolate, berry jams, raisins and prunes on treacle scones.

Finish The fruit freshens up delivering cherry and a hint of young red wine. A veritable feast to enliven the senses.

Food Match Dark chocolate mousse served with raspberry sorbet and ground pistachios.

Overview

GlenDronach is the undisputed world leader in sherry maturation, creating the world’s finest examples of 100% sherry matured whisky. In the very early days many distilleries used Spanish sherry casks for maturation, but nowadays these casks are 10 times more expensive than American Oak ex-bourbon casks, hence the ubiquitous bourbon matured malt whisky that we see on the market today. With 200 years of sherry maturation under the belt, today GlenDronach is one of only two distilleries that specialise in sherry maturation, and the only one to use sherry casks exclusively for primary maturation of all of its whiskies.

A resurrection of the original 15 Year Old “100% Sherry Casks” that was hugely popular in the 1990s, the GlenDronach 15 Year Old Revival is bottled at 46%, non-chill filtered and of natural colour. It’s fully matured in Oloroso sherry puncheons, giving it a deep gold colour with a lovely mahogany heart. These high quality sherry casks are vital in producing an incredible concentration of aromas and flavours including chocolate orange, raisins, dates, coffee and treacle. Adding to this, the mashing water for GlenDronach comes from the Balnoon Burn, an underground water source high in mineral content, which leads to a full-bodied whisky that is rich in flavour.

The GlenDronach stills are worth a short discussion. The distillery was closed for five months during 2005 in order to convert the stills from coal-fired to steam heating, a change required by EU Health & Safety rules which no longer allow coal-fired stills. There is some debate as to whether or not this will change the character of the whisky, with one camp arguing that coal-fired stills cause an uneven distribution of heat, leading to ‘hotspots’, which result in nice caramel and toffee flavours, whereas with steam heating the distribution of heat is more even and these caramel and toffee characters are less evident. The youngest Glendronach release is the 12 Year Old Original, which means we have another two to three years to wait before the first batch of mature spirit from the new stills is bottled, hopefully they are wrong.

THE SPECS

Price: $105.00

Age: 15 Years Old

ABV: 46%

Maturation: There is a lot of debate about the true age of GlenDronach’s releases. Scotch whisky labeling requires that the age statement reflect the age of the youngest whisky in the bottle. This means that a 10 Year Old contains whisky that is at least 10 years old

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GlenDronach's History

Known as “the sleeping giant”, GlenDronach is one of Scotland’s oldest distilleries and only the second to be granted a license to produce whisky after the Excise Act of 1823. James Allardice, a remarkable and extroverted man who loved a drink and a good time, founded the distillery on the Boynsmill Estate in 1826. It’s believed that illicit distillation had actually been taking place at the estate for years before the excise act was passed, but this was undetected thanks to an ingenious alarm system in the form of a colony of rooks nesting in the trees, which would create a hell of a commotion when disturbed… an excellent warning system for the approach of Customs & Excise agents.

Allardice’s initial sales trip to Edinburgh is reported to have descended into whisky fuelled debauchery involving several “ladies of the night”, with him scoring in more ways than one because he sold all of his stock on that trip, and not long after bottles of Guid GlenDronach could be found in every pub along the Royal Mile. Word soon spread about GlenDronach’s richly Sherried malts and the distillery landed an early contract for its malt whisky to be used as a key blending ingredient in Teacher’s Royal Highland Cream Scotch Whisky, a deal that lasted more than a century with Teacher’s eventually buying the distillery in 1960.

Things were going very well, but two key events over the next few years saw ownership of the distillery change hands and Allardice eventually losing his share in GlenDronach. The first was a fire in February 1837 that practically burned the distillery to the ground. Business suffered after the fire and some of the original partners retired, thereby opening the door for Walter Scott, former clerk and then distillery manager at Teaninich to become a new and equal partner of Allardice. The distillery was repaired, and business continued to flourish until the financial crisis of 1842 left Allardice bankrupt. The remaining partners bought his share and Walter Scott took the reins. The distillery flourished under his stewardship, expanding significantly between 1860 – 1880 and selling more whisky than any other distillery in Scotland during that time.

Walter Scott died in May 1886 and over the next seventy-five years the distillery was owned first by a consortium known as The GlenDronach Distillery Company and then by William Grant’s son Charles before Teachers eventually bought the distillery in 1960, a sensible move given GlenDronach had been supplying malt whisky for Teacher’s blends for the past 130 years! Keen to capitalise on the Scotch boom at the time, Teacher’s expanded the distillery in 1967 with the new ‘concrete block’ still-house and doubled the number of stills from two to four.

A significant event occurred in 1968 with the release of GlenDronach 8YO, the first time that the distillery was promoted as a stand-alone single malt brand and the distillery’s core range of 12, 15 and 18 year old heavily Sherried single malts soon reached iconic status. In the meantime, ownership changes were taking place in the background that would ultimately place the continuity of GlenDronach at risk. Allied Brewers, who would go on to become Allied Domecq, acquired Teacher’s in 1976 and in 1996 GlenDronach was mothballed and its floor maltings decommissioned.

Fortunately, the mothballing was short-lived and GlenDronach reopened on May 14th 2002 after being closed for 6 years. GlenDronach was closed again for 5 months during 2005, this time in order to convert the stills from coal-fired to steam heating, a conversion deemed necessary under EU Health & Safety rules that no longer allowed coal-fired stills. At the time it was the last distillery in Scotland to operate coal-fired stills. By now Pernod Ricard had purchased Allied Domecq and the new owners began a shift away from Sherry casks, filling only Bourbon casks in a move that horrified GlenDronach’s followers!

This madness was short lived, thankfully, because in 2008 The BenRiach Distillery Co Ltd acquired GlenDronach from Pernod Ricard. The new ownership brought GlenDronach under independent ownership for the first time in almost half a century and more importantly, brought it under stewardship of Billy Walker, one of the most exciting whisky makers of our time.

Billy’s vision was to see GlenDronach return to its traditional Sherry style of single malt whisky. Filling of Bourbon casks was immediately ceased and in 2009, much to the delight of malt fans across the world, GlenDronach “re-released” its iconic core range of 12, 15 and 18 year old 100% Sherried single malts.

In 2015, The BenRiach Distillery Company won the Global Whisky Distiller of the Year at the Icons of Whisky Awards, a win that no doubt caught the attention of American giants Brown-Forman, who scooped the company up the following year. This ushered in a new era as these revered distilleries came under the care of another whisky legend, Dr Rachel Barrie, whose incredible work over recent years has seen The GlenDronach, more than ever, become the serious whisky lover’s “Glen” of choice.

Distillery Facts

Region: Highlands

Origin: Forgue By Huntly, Aberdeenshire, AB5 4DB, Scotland, UK

Founded: 1826

Water Source: Balnoon Burn

Washbacks: 9, Wood

Stills: 2 wash and 2 spirit

Capacity: 1.4 million litres of alcohol per annum

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