Octomore 12.2
January 2022

Octomore 12.2

Peated to 129.7ppm then matured in ex-Bourbon American oak barrels, followed by 18 months in rare first-fill Sauternes casks, Octomore 12.2 is a proper Peat Monster, bottled cask strength at 57.3% ABV.

United Kingdom

Colour Amber

Nose Wafts of heavy peat smoke combine with a sweet floral fruitiness.

Palate Supercharged with fruits like melon, white peach, and juicy nectarine and of course, dense, rich peat.

Finish A smouldering finish with honeysuckle and coconut adding a real twist amongst the heavy peat phenols.

Overview

So how did the Octomore story all start? When Bruichladdich Distillery was purchased by Mark Rainer (of wine fame) in 2000, he managed to convince revered Master Distiller Jim McEwan to join him, and then let him loose on the influence of what Bruichladdich was going to become.
 
Jim quickly set out to establish a heavily peated line as Bruichladdich was well known for being predominantly an unpeated whisky. Unfortunately, with the local Port Ellen Maltings already running at capacity, he had to go across to mainland Scotland to find a malting house to produce his peated whisky. He ended teaming up with Bairds Maltings in Inverness.
 
While most malting houses will add peat influence after the drying process by lighting a peat fire in a kiln under the barley and imparting the smoke for a few hours, Bairds had a special malting facility which included Saladin boxes. This enabled them to use peat as part the drying process, which lasts two days. The peat levels would get so high that they would cut the super heavily peated barley back with unpeated barley to achieve the correct specs of ‘ppm’ (parts per million) that the distillery would require. It was during this process that Jim McEwan questioned how high they could get the peat levels.
 
Always willing to experiment, Bairds cranked the peat fires up and imparted maximum smoke influence on the barley. In doing so, each run of barley through the Saladin boxes will be slightly different in ppm. This gives each release a different level of smokiness imparted in the barley.
 
The result is what you see in the sleek black bottles today. Every year, Bruichladdich only distil super heavily peated barley for less than two weeks to put aside for the Octomore range.
 
Made with 100% Scottish grown Concerto barley, peated to a ‘sessionable’ 129.7ppm and distilled in 2015, Octomore 12.2 spent three and a half years in American oak casks, before being moved to incredibly rare Sauternes casks for an extra 18 months. Sauternes, a French dessert wine made from rare white grapes from Bordeaux, is renowned for its remarkable balance between sweetness and tartness and adds a supercharged sweet complexity to this flat-out smouldering smoky malt.
 
This particular release was created in homage to the now legendary and extremely sought after Octomore 4.2 Comus which was finished in the famed Chateau d’Yquem Sauternes casks.
 
Bottled at 57.3% ABV, you can expect to encounter smouldering peat and ripe, supercharged fruits like melon, white peach, and juicy nectarine, before winding up with honeysuckle and coconut adding a real twist amongst the heavy peat phenols.
 
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THE SPECS

Price: $275.00

Age: 5 Years Old

ABV: 57.3%

Maturation: Matured entirely on Islay for three and a half years in ex-Bourbon American oak barrels, then moved into French Sauternes casks for 18 months.

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Bruichladdich's History

Bruichladdich (pronounced “brook-laddie”) distillery was established in 1881 by brothers William, John and Robert Harvey. The distillery is located on the shore of Loch Indaal on the Rinns of Islay and was Scotland’s and Islay’s westernmost distillery for many years before the recent establishment of Abhainn Dearg and Kilchoman.

The brothers came from a whisky dynasty of sorts, their family running two Glasgow distilleries since the 1770s. Using an inheritance and a bit of common sense, they combined their skills to establish Bruichladdich, which at the time was considered radically avant-garde on Islay. Robert, then a 23-year-old engineer, created a state of the art facility built around a large courtyard employing gravity to feed the mash to the spirit house, a stark contrast to the other distilleries on Islay which had grown out of farmyard operations.

While the distillery was designed and built by Robert, he never actually had the pleasure of running it. The brothers had a falling out before the build was even completed and it was William who ran it until his death in 1936. Since then Bruichladdich saw a revolving door of ownerships through to 1994 when Jim Beam acquired it and to the dismay of the locals mothballed it only a year later.

Bruichladdich’s and the local community’s fortunes were to change for the better however when it was bought in 2000 by a consortium led by Mark Reynier from independent bottler Murray McDavid. Mark employed local legend Jim McEwan, who had worked at nearby Bowmore since he was 15, as master distiller and production director and together they set about reviving Bruichladdich, and in so doing set the benchmark for successful distillery revivals. One of the first tasks was to dismantle and reassemble the entire distillery, retaining the Victorian décor and equipment. Remarkably Bruichladdich had somehow escaped modernisation over the years and is very much a living museum. Even today no computers or modern instruments are used in the distillery and most of the original Harvey equipment from 1881 is still very much in use.

2006 saw the release of the first bottling of malt made by the new owners and in 2012 French giant Remy Cointreau bought the distillery for £58m. The takeover provided the necessary funding to expand production and by 2013 Bruichladdich was running at full production. Today it’s the largest private employer on Islay, providing opportunity and a livelihood for some 80 islanders plus a host of allied contractors and local farmers.

While elements of Bruichladdich’s history may be familiar (established in late 19th century, multiple owners, expansion in ’70s, mothballing in ’90s, revival in ’00s), the distillery’s philosophy is singular throughout Scotland. Striking a fine balance between respect for traditional methods, faithfully using Victorian era equipment and an enquiring attitude, the self-styled ‘Progressive Hebridean Distillers’ introduced the concept of terroir to whisky making and are the only major distillery to distil, mature and bottle all of its stock on Islay, all of the time.

Terroir is well understood and applied in wine and cognac making but is largely ignored in whisky despite an obvious equal relevance. Terroir refers to the set of all environmental factors that affect a crop’s phenotype, factors such as growing environment, climate, timing and farming practices. Collectively these contextual characteristics are said to have a character referred to as terroir.

At Bruichladdich the team conduct a fascinating and ongoing exploration of the influence of terroir on finished spirit, using whiskies from various barley varieties, grown in different years on different farms to create excellent whiskies reflective of their provenance. To this end the team made commitments to Islay farmers who now grow barley exclusively for them (farms, farmers and even the fields in which the grain is grown are identified on the packaging where possible) enabling a single malt from 100% Islay barley for perhaps the first time in the island’s history.

Also very noteworthy is the distillery equipment and production method employed at Bruichladdich. As mentioned earlier there are no computers or modern instruments used in the production system, everything is done by hand and taste and much of the core equipment is the original from 1881, including the original seven tonne mashtun and two stills, believed to be the oldest in Scotland. Bruichladdich uses very tall and thin stills which produce a light, floral spirit, as much at odds with the rest of island’s stills today as they were in 1881.

All the distillery’s whiskies are sold as single malt under three distinct labels; Bruichladdich (unpeated), Port Charlotte (heavily peated) and Octomore (super-heavily peated – actually considered to be the most heavily peated single malt whisky in the world).

Octomore 12.2

Distillery Facts

Region: Islay

Origin: Bruichladdich PA49 7UN, Scotland, United Kingdom

Founded: 1881

Water Source: Octomore Farm spring

Washbacks: 6, Oregon pine (Douglas fir)

Stills: 2 wash and 2 spirit

Capacity: 1,500,000 litres of alcohol per year

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