Balblair, 25-Year-Old, Highland, Single Malt Scotch Whisky (46%)

Balblair, 25-Year-Old, Highland, Single Malt Scotch Whisky (46%)

Product: 10008046202
 
Balblair, 25-Year-Old, Highland, Single Malt Scotch Whisky (46%)

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Description

This, the current pinnacle of the Balblair offering, shows precisely why this relatively little-known distillery deserves more attention. Lots of dried and orchard fruits on both nose and palate attest to the long fermentation times. A delightfully rich texture to the spirit makes taking a second sip deliciously obligatory. This is a Highland whisky made without any appreciable peat influence; instead, it gains balance from a hint of the meaty, savoury aspect imbued by the squat, dumpy stills. Drink this with something soulful: macaroni and cheese, pecan pie or late-career Etta James, perhaps.
Rob Whitehead , Spirits Buyer (February 2021)

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About this SPIRIT

Balblair Distillery, Highlands

Balblair Distillery, Highlands

Balblair is the second oldest distillery in Scotland. The name is Gaelic, meaning "battlefield" or "town of the plain". The first Balblair distillery was a pot still built on Balblair farm on the estate of the Rosses of Balnagowan in the late 1790s. John Ross succeeded in making it a profitable commercial enterprise in the face of financial troubles, bad debts, competition by smugglers, and the ever-present exciseman. Ross, his sons, and grandsons operated Balblair until the end of the 19th century.

In 1894, the Ross family line petered out, and around 1894, the lease passed to one Alexander Cowan from Inverness. Cowan set about modernizing the distillery on a new site and laid out the distillery that can be seen today. Duty increases spelled the end for Cowan, and in 1911, he put everything saleable under the hammer to meet his debts. The distillery kept going with a skeleton staff until the army seized it for the Second World War.

At the end of the Second World War, the distillery was acquired by a solicitor, Robert Cumming, also owner of Old Pulteney. When Cumming retired, he sold the distillery in 1970 to Hiram Walker. In 1996, Inver House Group purchased the distillery, and today is part of the broader International Beverage Holdings.

Most of the production is used for blends of the Inver group like Hankey Bannister, MacArthur's, Glen Talloch, and Pinwinnie Royal. Every year, the distillery releases the finest examples of Balblair as vintage single malt bottlings. These exemplify the Balblair style, redolent of rich spices, dried fruits, and subtle leathery notes. Like many other distilleries, sustainability is an increasing focus, and Balblair installed a thermal vapor recompression system in the summer of 2023 to minimize energy loss in the still house.

(Adapted from the Malt Whisky Yearbook 2024)

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Highlands Whisky

Highlands Whisky

Maybe because it is the largest geographical area, the Highlands is also the hardest Whisky region to pin down stylistically. For this reason it is easiest not to consider the Highlands as one large are, but as 4 smaller and much more distinct ones.

North-Highland malts tend to be light bodied, delicate whiskies with complex aromas and a dryish finish sometimes spicy, sometimes with a trace of salt. Northern Highland distilleries are almost all coastal. The most northerly is Old Pulteney, situated about as far north as you can go in Wick, which produces a delicious, fragrant, dry whisky. 

Working south along the route of the A9, next comes Clynelish at Brora (built in 1969, beside an earlier distillery who’s whiskies are known as Brora) - a sophisticated and complex whisky older expressions are very highly regarded and the malt deserves to be better known. Perhaps the reason that it is rarely seen as a distillery bottling is that it’s malt is a key component of Johnnie Walker.

The best known of all the Northern Highland malts is Glenmorangie. Glenmorangie, is made at Tain on the Cromarty Firth, and is the most popular malt in Scotland. Over the last decade Glenmorangie pioneered the now often copied process of wood finishing. Althoght this process is not universally popular;  it transformed the company’s commercial success. 

The Eastern Highlands produce a number of whiskies that can be confused with those of Speyside.  In the north of the region close to the southern border of Speyside, whiskies which are smooth, sometimes with a little smoke, malty-sweet, such as Macduff, Ardmore, Glen Garioch and Knockdhu are made.

Further south is Fettercairn, and Glencadam, at Brechin, which produces an unusual creamy, fruity malt. The area between the Moray and the Tay has two distilleries of note; Royal Lochnagar and Glendronach. The first is a wonderfully smooth, rich whisky made in the shadow of the mountain of the same name in a distillery established in 1825 The second is also luscious and often sherried.

In the Western Highlands there only two distilleries on the mainland those of Oban and Ben Nevis. Oban is a perfect, sheltered harbour makes it the principal seaport for the Isles and the capital of the West Highlands. Its whisky has a misty, briny character, with a background of heather and peat.

The Oban whisky stills used are among the smallest in Scotland; the cramped nature of the site is attested to by the odd position of the worm tubs, fed by unusually short lyne arms, and nestled in the ‘vee’ between the roofs of the still house and an adjoining building.

The whiskies of the Central Highlands are a mixed bag. Generally they are lighter-bodied and sweeter that their cousins to the east, but not as sweet as Speysides.

The Central Highland single malts used to be known as 'Perthshire Whiskies'. Most are found along the valleys of the Tay and its tributaries.  The furthest north is Dalwhinnie, which is almost in Speyside indeed; it is at the very head of the river, over sixty miles from Grantown-on-Spey.

Blair Athol and Edradour whisky distilleries are both near Pitlochrie. The former was founded in the 1790s and was substantially rebuilt in 1949 Edradour is the smallest distillery in Scotland - a happy survivor of the days of 'farm distilleries' - yet produces a clean, fresh, attractive and justly popular whisky.

South again is Aberfeldy distillery, on the edge of the pretty town of the same name. Glenturret, at Crieff is one of the claimants to being the oldest distillery, although it was dismantled in the 1920s and is much changed.

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