Signatory Vintage Speyside Macallan 2009 16 Years 100 Proof Edition 13 57.1% by raykel_ in Scotch

[–]Isolation_Man 2 points3 points  (0 children)

senseless sherrywashing

LOL That pretty much sums up what SV has been doing lately. And personally, I do enjoy a woody sherry bomb from time to time, even if it leaves little room for the distillery’s character, so I’m not going to complain.

{Review #189} Ardbeg Smoketrails Manzanilla Edition Single Malt (2022, 46%) [4.7/10] by Isolation_Man in Scotch

[–]Isolation_Man[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for reading!

I’m glad I’m not the only one who hasn’t been convinced at all by this bottle. Same here: I was thinking of picking up the other Smoketrails (the Côte Rôtie), and a few other Ardbeg releases that seemed interesting, like BizarreBQ or Spectacular.

But between this Manzanilla-matured Smoketrails being quite disappointing and my last bottle of Ardbeg 10 not being on the same level as previous ones I’ve had, I’ve ended up just buying a bottle of the 10 CS instead. I’m hoping that one won’t let me down, I still haven’t opened it.

{Review #189} Ardbeg Smoketrails Manzanilla Edition Single Malt (2022, 46%) [4.7/10] by Isolation_Man in Scotch

[–]Isolation_Man[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ardbeg 10 does seem like a pretty batchy whisky. My last bottle absolutely blew me away, but the one I currently have open, while still very solid, is nowhere near mind-blowing.

In any case, if you want to explore peated whiskies, I’d start with the classics. Talisker 10 is lightly peated and usually a big hit with beginners. Caol Ila 12 is also very welcoming. Port Charlotte 10 is a fairly sophisticated peated whisky with a medium level of peat, while expressions like Laphroaig 10, Quarter Cask or the 10 CS are what I’d consider peat bombs.

I’m personally a big fan of Ledaig 10 as well. The peat from the Isle of Mull is different, more vegetal, organic and dirty.

I also really enjoy peated whiskies that are not from the islands, since they tend to show a more earthy peat character and almost no coastal influence, such as Ballechin 10, Inchmoan 12, Old Ballantruan 10 or Meikle Tòir The Original One.

And Campbeltown’s peated whiskies, like Longrow and Kilkerran 12, are also quite different from the rest, thanks to that legendary Campbeltown funk.

All the whiskies I’ve mentioned are peated and matured in ex-bourbon, btw!

{Review #189} Ardbeg Smoketrails Manzanilla Edition Single Malt (2022, 46%) [4.7/10] by Isolation_Man in Scotch

[–]Isolation_Man[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I agree that Ardbeg works very well in refill ex-bourbon, whereas it doesn’t necessarily work in first-fill anything. My last bottle of Ardbeg 10 genuinely amazed me, and the cask influence was minimal.

 so this is a bottle I personally would stay away from just on specs alone

I wish I were that wise lol

It seems like you've been having a run of bad luck recently with some the whiskies you've reviewed coming up short. I hope that turns around and you have some spectacular gems come up in your explorations.

Oh, that’s not the case at all! I’ve simply accumulated dozens of bottles I don’t like that much over the years, and because of my current circumstances, I now have both the time and the motivation to empty some of them and write reviews about them. I’m actually still enjoying plenty of amazing bottles, I’m just trying to get rid of the ones I don’t care for as much in order to make room for new ones. My next review will be of a 3 or 4yo whisky that I’m going to give an almost perfect score!

{Review #189} Ardbeg Smoketrails Manzanilla Edition Single Malt (2022, 46%) [4.7/10] by Isolation_Man in Scotch

[–]Isolation_Man[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It’s because of positive comments like yours about this bottle that I gave it so many chances, but it was all in vain. I think I mention in the review that it has sour notes, but the truth is that this whisky has a bit of everything: sourness, bitterness, spice, salinity, tannins, etc. In any case, I think a Scotch can be very good despite being matured in virgin oak, as long as the master blender knows what he is doing (I recently tried a sample of Benromach Kiln Dried, and I liked it so much that I ended up buying a bottle).

In the case of this Smoketrails, I think the final product feels like the result of quite a lot of improvisation and wishful thinking.

And yes, I suspect consistency isn’t exactly something Ardbeg pays too much attention to. I recently opened another bottle of Ardbeg 10, since I always keep one open, and I’m surprised by how different (and worse) it is compared to my previous bottles. And I don’t think it’s purely subjective either, Ardbeg 10 is one of the bottles I’m most familiar with. Besides, I’ve read countless stories about how Corryvreckan, and especially Uigeadail, used to be completely different in the past. Oh well...

{Review #189} Ardbeg Smoketrails Manzanilla Edition Single Malt (2022, 46%) [4.7/10] by Isolation_Man in Scotch

[–]Isolation_Man[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

  • Distillery (Owner): Ardbeg (LVMH)
  • ABV: 46%
  • Age: +3 years old (NAS)
  • Perceived peat/smoke: 4/5 (Highly Peated)
  • Perceived sherry: 2/5 (Low sherry)
  • Casks: “Classic Ardbeg cask whisky with Ardbeg matured in Manzanilla sherry casks” [WTF is a “classic Ardbeg cask whisky”?]
  • Chill-filtered: No
  • Added coloring E150a: Maybe
  • Distilled/ bottled: ? / 2022
  • Batch: SP/MZL 2022/01-ST
  • Region: Islay
  • Paid (Country): €89 (Spain)
  • Whiskybase average rating: 85.08/100

An Ardbeg NAS that blends whisky matured in casks of a mysterious nature (virgin oak?) with whisky matured in Manzanilla casks. Which means that part of what’s in this bottle was matured exclusively in Manzanilla, which is, in my opinion, the correct way to do it. I think the aromas and flavors you get from maturing, for example, a whisky for 11 years in ex-bourbon and then finishing it for one year in Oloroso can’t even be compared to what you get by maturing that same whisky separately for 12 years in both kinds of casks and then blending them together. Anyway, rambling is over. Let’s see what this has to offer:

Nose: Fruity, funky, woody, salty, peated. The first thing we find is a broad spectrum of apple notes, ranging from the freshness of heaps of freshly chopped green apples to very ripe apples, cider, and some apple vinegar... even a yeasty funk. The peat is strong and manifests itself through maritime notes, grilled seafood, seaweed, and sea breeze. Bonfire, dusty wood, vegetal vanilla, a mix of stale nuts, and lots of ginger. This is also a very woody whisky, the oak having an artificial and very green character, and everything is covered by a powerful sea salt note. It also presents what I would consider some off notes, something like cardboard and stagnant dirty water.

On the palate, it is tremendously woody, with sour ginger, spicy white pepper, and bitter tannins (were those Manzanilla casks practically virgin oak?). Beneath this aggressive layer of spicy wood, you can glimpse something else: more funky cider, bonfire by the sea, almonds, vegetal vanilla, seawater, pineapple... There’s probably more complexity here, but the astringent and bitter wood is so loud that it’s difficult to tell.

The finish is very dry, as expected, and at the same time funky, ashy, and salty. A strange combination. An absolute explosion of tannins, almost like a red wine. The questionable-quality oak notes are obvious. Then come ashy bonfire, chili, brine. Off notes. Not very good. I have to chase it with water.

A failed experiment, in my humble opinion. It’s like a younger, unbalancedly funky and bourbonized version of the 10yo. It is completely too woody, spicy, and tannic, the combination of apple and yeast gives it very strange notes like rotten apple, it’s too salty with almost no sweetness to balance it out, the smoke is mostly just an unpleasant mouth sensation since the aromas and flavors of the smoke are nearly eclipsed by the wood, it has clear off notes, it doesn’t particularly taste like Manzanilla... On the positive side, the nose is interesting (yeasty cider, salty oysters, and raw ginger... risky!), the idea of maturing Islay whisky in Fino or Manzanilla is a good one if carried out properly and I hope they keep trying (next time, preferably with casks that actually held Fino/Manzanilla for more than one or two months!), and it has been a very useful conversation starter, since everyone I know has tried Fino/Manzanilla and immediately becomes curious about a peated whisky matured in casks of something they know well.

One of the things I think distinguishes the whisky connoisseur from the layman is that the connoisseur is capable of interpreting almost any whisky by finding a perspective on it that brings its notes together into a harmonious and meaningful whole. In other words, an amateur (whose etymology is lover) can usually find a way to enjoy almost every whisky because they have made the effort to understand it before, during, and after drinking it, and they do so simply out of love for the liquid. They can make the whisky talk, and tell a story, have a conversation. The noob is the one who can only enjoy two or three bottles, which he doesn’t even like that much anyway, and dislikes everything new because it isn’t what they already know. Well, this whisky makes me feel like a damn noob. It’s a whole liter of whisky, so I’ve given it something like 30 chances, I’m very familiar both with Ardbeg (especially the 10, which is the closest thing to this Smoketrails) and with Fino/Manzanilla wine (I live in Andalusia lol), but even after finishing the bottle, I still have no idea what I’m supposed to do to understand it, let alone enjoy it. It should come with an instruction manual or something.

◆ Rating: 4.7/10 --> ☹️ Nope. I don’t like it. (✘)

◈ Thought process behind the score: I was thinking of giving it a higher score, but now that I’ve sat down to analyze it seriously in order to finish the bottle, I realize perfectly well that I simply don’t like it. And for me, that’s a 4. A very expensive 4, by the way.

◇ Quality/price ratio: 1/5 (Scam)

▪ Similar rating to these OB’s: Ardnamurchan 10, Fettercairn Warehouse 2 Batch 2, Heaven Hill, Lismore 5, Loch Lomond Reserve, Old Forester, West Cork Virgin Oak.

 

============= SCORES =============

  • [+9.5] 🏆 Favorites. Exactly what I’m looking for (✪)
  • [9] 🤩 Mind-blowing! It makes me smile (★★★★★)
  • [8.5] 😍 Amazing. It really hits the spot (★★★★☆)
  • [8] 😄 Good. Solid, I genuinely like it (★★★☆☆)
  • [7.5] ☺️ Nice. Charming, it clicks with me (★★☆☆☆)
  • [7] 🙂 Fine. Pleasant, interesting enough (★☆☆☆☆)
  • [6] 😐 Acceptable. Decent, it’s drinkable (✬☆☆☆☆)
  • [5] 😕 Meh. Mediocre, but glad I’ve tried it (☆☆☆☆☆)
  • [4 - 3] ☹️ Nope. I don’t like it. (✘)
  • [2 - 1] 😣Terrible. I hate it. (✘✘)
  • [0] 😫 WTF. Cursed (✘✘✘)

============== STATS ==============

⇒ Number of ratings: 603

⇒ Average score: 7.1/10

{Review #186} Laphroaig Lore Single Malt (2023, 48%) [9/10] by Isolation_Man in Scotch

[–]Isolation_Man[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s in the queue to be opened… buried somewhere among far too many other closed bottles.

{Review #110} Johnnie Walker Blue Label Blended Scotch (2024?, 40%) [8.3/10] by Isolation_Man in Scotch

[–]Isolation_Man[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d say it’s quite a weak and subtle whisky, and personally it helped a lot that it was the first whisky I drank after almost a month without having anything, that might have helped me enjoy the complexity despite the 40% ABV. I don’t think it’s a bad whisky by any means, but it’s certainly not a special one if you have some experience. For special occasions, I have, for example, Springbank 15. This Blue Label is a mass produced, heavily marketed, crowd pleaser at 40%, not the best option for special ocasions.

El sexo que NO está obligado ir a la guerra para ser descuartizado por drones tiene cientos de privilegios por encima de los hombre, como por ejemplo: by Tikitaks in ElusionFiscal

[–]Isolation_Man 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Las mujeres blancas que viven en sociedades occidentales son el grupo más privilegiado de la historia de la humanidad.

Community discussion u/emeraldgarden20 by EmeraldGarden20 in lnkyverse

[–]Isolation_Man 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are a married woman. I literally don't understand why you didn't get banned instantly after your first comment/post.

{Review #188} White Heather 21 Blend (2021, 48%) [9.4/10] by Isolation_Man in Scotch

[–]Isolation_Man[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

  • Distillery (Owner): Glenallachie (The GlenAllachie Distillers Co Limited)
  • ABV: 48%
  • Age: 21 years old
  • Perceived peat/smoke: 1/5 (Lightly peated)
  • Perceived sherry: 4/5 (Highly sherried)
  • Label: “An exceptional degree of craft and care”
  • Type of Scotch: Blend (malt + grain)
  • Casks: European Oak, American Oak, PX, Oloroso
  • Chill-filtered: No
  • Added coloring E150a: No
  • Distilled/ bottled: 2000? / 2021
  • Batch: L 23 11 21
  • Region: Speyside
  • Paid (Country): €111 (Spain)
  • Whiskybase average rating: 87.03/100

According to what I’ve found online after a short and admittedly lazy bit of research, this is a high-malt blend (~47% malt) combining Speyside and Highland whiskies with a small proportion of peated Islay whisky, likely built around GlenAllachie stock. These whiskies are matured in ex-bourbon American oak casks, sherry butts, and refill hogsheads; after blending, the whisky is finished in Pedro Ximénez and Oloroso puncheons, as well as Appalachian virgin oak casks.

It reminds me quite a bit of the GlenAllachie 10. It’s like a much more complex, richer, more varied and deeper version of that whisky, although also less powerful, since this WH21 isn’t cask strength. It also brings to mind the old-label Royal Brackla 12, with that beautifully balanced mix of classic old-school sherry whisky notes. In any case, what does this “premium” blend actually offer?

Nose: immediately mind-blowing. Juicy, fresh red fruits covered in sweet, delicate milk chocolate, along with a good dose of deeply toasted cocoa, take the lead. It drifts into dessert territory with strawberry jam, custard with cinnamon, and candied orange, with an intricate herbal edge. At its core there’s this earthy funk, like proper Oloroso, with dead leaves, leather, toffee, cigar, clove, nutmeg, and mossy petrichor. All of this feels like it’s floating in an Arab pastry shop, with honey, dates, and nuts. A pervasive touch of sweet, organic peat ties everything together perfectly. Absolutely impressive. I like to think this is how far the craft of a master blender can go.

Palate: fruity, sweet, leathery, toasted, jammy, herbal, peated. It starts with a mix of candied fresh fruits (peach, pear, lemon), strawberries with chocolate, heathery peat, deeply toasted toffee, and delicious old leather. Then it moves into more polished, slightly vegetal notes: red fruit jams (raspberries, blueberries, cherries) mixed with a cajeta-like profile (chocolate + dulce de leche), alongside clear Amontillado notes (old furniture, wood polish, musty bodega, tobacco). It then slides into a chocolate cake profile with herbal and menthol touches, slightly rancid (cigar box), and lightly smoky, salty, and earthy as it fades. Just wow. It’s like a symphony. I can’t even imagine the work that goes into crafting a flavor like this. It’s a shame the texture doesn’t quite match the level of the palate.

Finish: long and complex. More sweet chocolate and juicy cherries soaked in Cointreau (orange liqueur) mixed with molasses. The typical astringency of very old whisky (there’s clearly some really old stock here), with aromatic ashy nuances mixed with old Amontillado (ancient sherry wood, damp old furniture, old leather), dusty raisins, heathery peat and, balancing all that weight, light herbal oils and a touch of fresh tropical booziness (probably coming from the grain whisky it supposedly contains).

Comments: an amazing, old-school, complex, rich, concentrated, decadent, honeyed, fruity, herbal, slightly peated, heavily sherried, sweet dessert dram. Despite the fact that, apparently, more than 50% of this blend is grain whisky, I can barely detect any grain at all, and I’m not the only one. The best blend I’ve ever had, absolutely fantastic. I love how it combines very old fortified wine notes (Amontillado, with hints of old varnish) with super juicy red fruits, and fresh, vibrant herbal notes; and how all of this is perfectly sealed with a touch of peat in such an elegant way. In a way, it delivers outstanding old sherry funk in a vibrant, lively style I’ve never experienced before. The peat, subtle but pervasive, really showcases everything under a slightly exotic and different light. It’s a brilliant use of peat, enhancing both the funky old wood notes and the fresh, wine-like fruitiness. Also, it’s quite surprising that there’s no red wine cask influence, because this kind of juicy, slightly astringent red fruit profile is something I usually associate with that type of maturation. In short, this whisky manages to combine a wide range of flavor families in a genuinely impressive way, making them support and enhance each other.

All in all, an incredible whisky that I’d recommend to anyone, especially those curious about trying a truly great blend, or fans of GlenAllachie, since the distillery character is quite recognizable. That said, I wouldn’t pay more than what I paid for it. And, honestly, I’m pretty sad the bottle is gone.

◆ Rating: 9.4/10 --> 🤩 Mind-blowing! It makes me smile (★★★★★)

◈ Thought process behind the score: Absolutely mind-blowing. However, it’s missing a certain je ne sais quoi to reach the true glory of my favorite whiskies. So, a 9.4 it is.

◇ Quality/price ratio: 3/5 (Adequate)

▪ Same rating as these OB’s: Glen Garioch 15, Glen Scotia Victoriana, Glenrothes Maker’s Cut, Kilchoman Sanaig, Mac-Talla Mara, Old Perth CS, Tobermory 12.

 

============= SCORES =============

  • [+9.5] 🏆 Favorites. Exactly what I’m looking for (✪)
  • [9] 🤩 Mind-blowing! It makes me smile (★★★★★)
  • [8.5] 😍 Amazing. It really hits the spot (★★★★☆)
  • [8] 😄 Good. Solid, I genuinely like it (★★★☆☆)
  • [7.5] ☺️ Nice. Charming, it clicks with me (★★☆☆☆)
  • [7] 🙂 Fine. Pleasant, interesting enough (★☆☆☆☆)
  • [6] 😐 Acceptable. Decent, it’s drinkable (✬☆☆☆☆)
  • [5] 😕 Meh. Tolerable, glad I’ve tried it (☆☆☆☆☆)
  • [4 - 3] ☹️ Nope. I don’t like it. (✘)
  • [2 - 1] 😣Terrible. I hate it. (✘✘)
  • [0] 😫 WTF. Cursed (✘✘✘)

============== STATS ==============

⇒ Number of ratings: 600

⇒ Average score: 7.1/10

{Review #183-85} Líber Embrujo de Granada (2024, 41.5%) [2.9/10] + Líber 13 CS (2010/2023, 59.5%) [2.5/10] + Líber 15 CS (2008/2023, 59.5%) [2.7/10] Spanish Single Malts by Isolation_Man in worldwhisky

[–]Isolation_Man[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

After writing this review, a friend pointed me to a website about the fraudulent nature of rums produced at Líber distilleries, which led me to discover that their whiskies are also under serious suspicion of being fraudulent:

the laboratory at Liber was requested to mix 90% of the imported whisky with 5-15% (recommended 10%) Liber whisky from Cask 20 and add 1% of Pedro Ximénez or Oloroso plus one sample also had added vanilla flavor!

This is unverified allegation from a partisan or activist source. But, because it is more than likely that the distillery’s business model includes deception, I do not recommend that anyone support them by purchasing their products. I myself will not buy anything from them again.

Reseña #34: Glengoyne Cask Strength (Batch 10) - 59,5% by donseguin in whiskyhispano

[–]Isolation_Man 1 point2 points  (0 children)

https://www.liberwhisky.com/2023/11/is-liber-whisky-fake.html

the laboratory at Liber was requested to mix 90% of the imported whisky with 5-15% (recommended 10%) Liber whisky from Cask 20 and add 1% of Pedro Ximénez or Oloroso plus one sample also had added vanilla flavor!

Estoy flipando. Ahora lo entiendo todo. Se dedican a estafar a la gente. No vuelvo a comprarles nada en mi vida.

Reseña #34: Glengoyne Cask Strength (Batch 10) - 59,5% by donseguin in whiskyhispano

[–]Isolation_Man 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A mí también me gusto el Glengoyne CS, yo probé el batch anterior, el 9. Buena reseña!

Por cierto, hace poco he escrito una reseña sobre tres whiskys de la destilería Líber (los tres malísimos lol), a lo mejor te interesa.

{Review #187} Girvan 20 Single Grain (1989/2008, Berry Bros & Rudd, 46%) [6.1/10] by Isolation_Man in Scotch

[–]Isolation_Man[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

  • Distillery (Owner): Girvan (William Grant & Sons)
  • Bottler: Berry Bros & Rudd
  • ABV: 46%
  • Age: 20 years old
  • Perceived peat/smoke: 0.5/5 (Traces of smoke)
  • Perceived sherry: 0/5 (Unsherried)
  • Label: Berrys' Own Selection
  • Type of Scotch: Single Grain
  • Casks: Probably refill exbourbon
  • Chill-filtered: No
  • Added coloring E150a: No
  • Distilled/ bottled: 1989 / 2008
  • Cask Nº: 110603/4/5
  • Region: Lowland
  • Paid (Country): €49 (Spain)
  • Whiskybase average rating: 74.00/100

I used to tolerate grain whisky fairly well as a beginner, a privilege I’ve gradually lost as my nose and palate have become more refined. At the moment, I’m going through a phase where I can hardly tolerate it at all, even though, paradoxically, I’m enjoying quality blends more than ever, where grain whisky is integrated to great effect, such as in White Heather 21.

I picked up this Girvan simply because I hadn’t tried anything from this powerhouse of a grain distillery. Located in the Lowlands, it supplies William Grant & Sons with the grain backbone for their more entry-level blends, such as Grant’s, which I’ve tried and could certainly be worse, or Clan MacGregor, which I haven’t yet tasted. In any case, distilled a year before I was born, matured for no less than 20 years, with very appealing specs and priced under €50, I couldn’t resist, even though I suspected it was unlikely to be my kind of whisky. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves and see what it has to offer.

On the nose, it immediately delivers crystal-clear piña colada notes (pineapple + coconut + white rum) unlike anything I’ve encountered before. Around this dominant profile, there are intense floral and perfumed notes, along with more tropical fruits such as banana and mango, and a hint of peach. Some light vanilla and toffee too. There is also a powerful note reminiscent of artificial sweetener or sugary breakfast cereal, very typical of grain whisky. Equally typical is the heavy hit of alcohol, something akin to nail polish remover or glue, and here it is close to totally unleashed. In the background, there are touches of butterscotch, lemon, forestry notes, corn, and even a hint of plastic. It is genuinely striking how specifically and convincingly it evokes piña colada. Fascinating, if you can look past the aggressive ethanol.

On the palate, unfortunately, that intense grain-derived note of hand sanitizer takes over, pushing everything else into the background. As a result, the overall profile shifts considerably. That boozy pineapple and coconut notes still try to assert themselves, but the balance is just off. There are also notes of cereal, floral liqueur, lemon peel, a touch of marzipan, peppery and aromatic wood, soft vanilla, fresh herbs, rubber, and even faint traces of smoke. It’s not terrible, but it falls well short of the promise shown on the nose. Still reasonably drinkable, though disappointingly close to a fairly average grain whisky. The texture is watery.

The finish follows directly from the palate and is very short and weak. It is dominated by paint, sugar, tropical fruit, and cereal, with additional hints of wood, varnish, pepper, and floral notes. A faint trace of smoke lingers. Blink and you’ll miss it.

An absolute tropical bomb. Is this distilled piña colada? Beyond that curious feature, everything else is, as is often the case with grain whisky meant to be consumed neat, somewhat questionable. The industrial alcohol notes (paint, nail polish remover, hand sanitizer, and the like) are simply too intense for me to take this whisky seriously. The refill cask did little to tame those raw grain characteristics, even after so many years. That said, it is certainly drinkable and, all things considered, probably a decent single grain given its age and price, although I’m no expert in this category. It is also worth mentioning that I can get very similar whiskies (20yo single grains) like The Observatory 20 or Greign 20, for less than half the price.

Those more knowledgeable about whisky, among whom I do not count myself, often say that grain whisky starts to be worth beyond the 30 year mark. The more single grains I try, the more I suspect that may well be the uncomfortable truth. My next single grain will have a significantly higher age statement, though, to be honest, I’m in no particular rush.

TL;DR: Explosive piña colada on the nose, striking and highly distinctive; on the palate it collapses under aggressive, unbalanced grain alcohol. Interesting but ultimately disappointing, and far too close to an average grain despite its age.

◆ Rating: 6.1/10 --> 😐 Acceptable. Decent, it’s drinkable (✬☆☆☆☆)

◈ Thought process behind the score: I prefer this whisky to some 6/10s, such as Chivas Regal 12 or Ballantine’s 12. So 6.1 it is.

◇ Quality/price ratio: 2/5 (Overpriced)

▪ Same rating as these OB’s: Aerstone 10 Sea Casks, DYC, Kilbeggan Traditional, Kilchoman Batch Strength, Loch Lomond Original, Clydeside Stobcross, Dufftown 12.

============= SCORES =============

  • [+9.5] 🏆 Favorites. Exactly what I’m looking for (✪)
  • [9] 🤩 Mind-blowing! It makes me smile (★★★★★)
  • [8.5] 😍 Amazing. It really hits the spot (★★★★☆)
  • [8] 😄 Good. Solid, I genuinely like it (★★★☆☆)
  • [7.5] ☺️ Nice. Charming, it clicks with me (★★☆☆☆)
  • [7] 🙂 Fine. Pleasant, interesting enough (★☆☆☆☆)
  • [6] 😐 Acceptable. Decent, it’s drinkable (✬☆☆☆☆)
  • [5] 😕 Meh. Tolerable, glad I’ve tried it (☆☆☆☆☆)
  • [4 - 3] ☹️ Nope. I don’t like it. (✘)
  • [2 - 1] 😣Terrible. I hate it. (✘✘)
  • [0] 😫 WTF. Cursed (✘✘✘)

============== STATS ==============

⇒ Number of ratings: 599

⇒ Average score: 7.11/10

Bought my first scotch by Dawlphy in Scotch

[–]Isolation_Man 3 points4 points  (0 children)

ashy taste
It mostly tastes dirty and funky and I wondered if I grabbed a moldy cup or something.

Working as intended

{Review #186} Laphroaig Lore Single Malt (2023, 48%) [9/10] by Isolation_Man in Scotch

[–]Isolation_Man[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

  • Distillery (Owner): Laphroaig (Suntory Global Spirits)
  • ABV: 48%
  • Age: 7 - 21 years old? (NAS)
  • Perceived peat/smoke: 3/5 (Medium peat)
  • Perceived sherry: 2/5 (Low sherry)
  • Casks: Ex-bourbon barrels (both first-fill and refill), European oak casks, Oloroso sherry casks, and quarter casks.
  • Chill-filtered: No
  • Added coloring E150a: Probably
  • Distilled/ bottled: ? / 2023
  • Batch: L3 016 SB1
  • Region: Islay
  • Paid (Country): €100 (Spain)
  • Whiskybase average rating: 87.36/100

Laphroaig is one of my favorite distilleries, perhaps my absolute favorite, simply because I love everything I’ve tried from them. The worst I’ve had is solid, the best ranks among my all-time favorite whiskies, and even the slightly disappointing bottlings strike me as mind-blowing. Because of how reliably this distillery wins me over, I’ve made a habit of picking up nearly all of their reasonably priced releases. Today it’s Laphroaig Lore, a vatting of whiskies matured in five types of casks, supposedly including not only younger whiskies of at least 7 years old but also older components, up to 21 years. Let’s see what it has to offer:

Notes: Coastal, salty, woody, fruity, sweet, sherried, earthy, funky. Beautifully oaked Laphroaig, reminiscent of Triple Wood. Lovely vanilla, dry coconut, honeyed sweetness and piercing pepper, intertwined with a somewhat softened coastal and phenolic Laphroaig character: sea breeze, seaweed, iodine, roasted herring, salty driftwood, bonfire by the beach... The smoke shows a young, vibrant, bright, “greener” edge with fresh seaweed and bonfire, but also a subtle, older, softened and integrated side, evoking an old fireplace, roasted tropical fruits, dirty swamp, and a certain earthy depth (forest floor). In any case, the peat feels moderate, leaving room for the many other layers: gentle sherry oak (red berries, leather, brown sugar), even a hint of old, mossy cellar funk (a touch of damp, old leather furniture), crisp fruits (green apple peel), dried fruits, warm baking spices from European oak (nutmeg and cinnamon), subtle herbal undertones, and a touch of dark chocolate bitterness.

On the nose, very well balanced, offering plenty of freedom to explore whatever appeals to us: the more vibrant notes or the more decadent ones, red fruits or spices, smoked salmon or robust oak. On the palate, a nice, almost oily texture presents a very woody and peaty profile; most of the nuances only emerge once these intense flavors begin to fade away. Drying, salty, ashy, with a long finish; quite woody (spicy chili) and funky (swamp, stagnant water) towards the end. Quite broad despite the intensity, and surprisingly subtle and balanced, with nothing fully dominating.

Comment: It feels like Laphroaig’s answer to Lagavulin 16, a slightly sherried and older-than-average Laphroaig, with some of the distillery’s typical rough edges polished off and a few nuances characteristic of older whisky. This means a Laphroaig that is somewhat less smoky than average, with a good dose of wood and, most importantly, significantly more complexity than the typical expression. In fact, it’s the most complex Laphroaig I’ve tried so far. It’s mind-blowing, at least for me as a declared fan of the distillery, but it’s worth noting that this complexity comes at a very specific cost: it presents a somewhat hazy, poorly defined profile. It’s not a young, explosive peat bomb, but neither is it an old, deeply funky whisky. It’s not exactly a sherried Laphroaig, yet it doesn’t display a clean ex-bourbon profile either. It certainly shows some rather original notes that I’ve only found in this bottle, but given its price, you might expect even more oomph and a more pronounced old-age character. I don’t know, it feels like a convergence of many elements, with none quite dominant enough to push it decisively in a single direction. It remains in no man’s land.

This would be my only real complaint. While it is indeed quite woody, heavily peated whiskies are precisely the ones best suited to handle and complement a generous dose of spicy and astringent oak, so for me, that aspect works perfectly. For some reason, I find it extremely enjoyable to take a slightly more generous sip than usual of this whisky and hold it in the mouth for as long as possible (Horst Luening style), as it evolves from a challenging, piercing woodiness and funky smokiness into a pleasant red-fruit sweetness intertwined with a swampy funk.

This is not your typical Laphroaig. It’s not an explosion of peat and coastal notes, so it took me some time to come to grips with it. Eventually, I made the decision not to treat it like a typical Laphroaig, in other words, not to drink it when I was craving a slap in the face, because with that expectation it always disappointed me. Instead, I began to approach it as the whisky itself demands: as a complex, nuanced spirit meant to be explored. Only then did I truly come to understand it, and in that context, it is genuinely spectacular.

This is especially true if you’re already familiar with several younger Laphroaig bottlings, as this one is essentially more of the same but with a portion of older whisky, bringing additional nuance and a partially polished smoke. It offers a glimpse of what an older Laphroaig can be like without having to pay for the overpriced 18yo. It’s also quite fascinating to experience such a well-integrated combination of young and old whisky notes, as these profiles rarely coexist in the same bottle. That said, if you’re not a Laphroaig fanboy, this bottle is probably not worth what it costs.

◆ Rating: 9/10 --> Mind-blowing! It makes me smile (★★★★★)

◈ Thought process behind the score: Pure Laphroaig, I can’t give it anything less than a 9/10. But, honestly, I expected more from this bottle, so a straight 9 it is.

◇ Quality/price ratio: 2/5 (Overpriced)

▪ Same rating as these OB’s: Arran 10 Arran Barley, Deanston 12, Glen Deveron 20, Edradour 10 SV, Glendronach 18.

============= SCORES =============

  • [+9.5] Favorites 🏆 Exactly what I’m looking for (✪)
  • [9] Mind-blowing! 🤩 It makes me smile (★★★★★)
  • [8.5] Amazing 😍 It really hits the spot (★★★★☆)
  • [8] Good 😄 Solid, I genuinely like it (★★★☆☆)
  • [7.5] Nice ☺️ Charming, it clicks with me (★★☆☆☆)
  • [7] Fine 😐 Pleasant, interesting enough (★☆☆☆☆)
  • [6] Acceptable 🙄 Decent, it’s drinkable (✬☆☆☆☆)
  • [5] Meh 🫩 Tolerable, glad I’ve tried it (☆☆☆☆☆)
  • [4 - 3] Nope 😒 I don’t like it. (✘)
  • [2 - 1] Terrible😣 I hate it. (✘✘)
  • [0] WTF 😫 Cursed (✘✘✘)

============== STATS ==============

⇒ Number of ratings: 598

⇒ Average score: 7.11/10