Visar inlägg med etikett Highland Park Single Cask. Visa alla inlägg
Visar inlägg med etikett Highland Park Single Cask. Visa alla inlägg

tisdag 13 mars 2018

The Creative Whisky Co. – Highland Park Single Cask 52,9% ABV!

Dear friends, followers and supporters alike! When working at this years Whiskyexpo in Linköping a while ago, Tommy and Peter of Svenska Eldvatten (Swedish Firewater) grabbed a hold of me to ask if I would be interested in reviewing one of their future releases, a single cask Highland Park from The Creative Whisky Company in their series The Exclusive Malts. Well, of course I was, and so I was given a sample. 











The cask number is 751, it's a refill (bourbon) hogshead that gave 235 bottles. It was distilled in October 2003 and bottled in 2017, and so the age of the whisky is 14 years old. Svenska Elvatten has managed to bring 55 bottles to the swedish market and you can view and order the product here, starting tomorrow. 

Ok, let's see what we have here!

Nose:
In the very top layer the focus is on mint-something-something (sort of green-ish), not to mention banana-jellycandy. Below that I find some very delicate oranges in combination with milk chocolate, in fact, there is very much going on in the orange-peel-department here people! Even some overripe pears are intruding, trying to get my attention. And of course, below that layer we have some kind of a ”creamy peat” going on, actually very interesting that it’s more cream than peat though. The peat appears to be sort of dry, in fact, almost all elements of the stuff and different scents happening on the nose is dry. Nosing again, the peat has become more evident; but it’s not quite the usual heather honey, rather we are talking an excotic peat, drawing towards summer-y flowers and, yes, cream. Ok, let’s have a taste


Taste:

Wow, that was definitely unexpected! So much peat, very tightly connected with sea-salt (kind of, not coastal, but still). Very quickly the peat evolves and gets bigger and bigger. At this point the peat kind of resembles an ashy peat, in a style reminding me of Connemara/peated Cooley, which has never happened to me before with HP. The peat starts to evolve towards bicycle tube (rubber) but then quickly makes a turn and becomes, what can best be described as, very dry almond paste. Everything gets more and more earthy now, and here we actually have the heather honey! In fact, burnt heather honey, fascinating… When the dryness goes to sleep, slowly the milk chocolate says hi and everything clings off with a soft vanilla fudge that waters my mouth. Wow, that was some journey indeed!

To sum up:
If you like very peaty and very salty HP, you should really try this one folks!

Big thanks to Peter and Tommy for the opportunity to review this release and for the opportunity to be able to review it before the launch! Please make sure to follow my FB-page by clicking here, my instagram by clicking here and my twitter-page by clicking here. Copyright © and All Rights Reserved on all tasting notes and text by SamuelWhisky and pictures likewise belong to SamuelWhisky, unless stated. If you would like to use any such material that belongs to SamuelWhisky or associated with SamuelWhisky, please ask by sending me an email to samuelkarlssonorebro [at] gmail dot com and by stating the source 

Copyright belongs to whizita.de

torsdag 1 mars 2018

Highland Park Single Bourbon Hogshead – Gordon & MacPhail 43% ABV!

Dear friends, supporters and followers alike! When working the Whiskyexpo in Linköping a couple of weeks ago I passed by the stand of Symposion, since I had been given the great opportunity to pick up a sample of a coming Highland Park Single Bourbon Cask for review. Here in Sweden it is released tomorrow and you can view the product here

We are talking about a 1989 (26-27 years old) single refill american oak hogshead (250 litres) that has been watered down to 43% ABV. The cost for a bottle is 2402kr and Symposion has managed to source 96 bottles for the swedish market. Ok, let's see what we have here!




Nose:
The centre layer on the nose consists of a very broad vanilla and butter combo with a handful of light peat. We also have classic marzipan and/or almond paste. The top layer is soo frutiy; a kind of summery feeling going on here with an elegant but attention-seeking citrus, peel from red apples, mushed red apple pulp, citrus-infused liquid honey, and hey, there’s even a touch of mint. Lots and lots of summer fruity-ness! Finally, in the bottom-layer, there is a discrete, earthy and somewhat ashy peat with hints of vanilla-infused pipe tobacco. All together a great nose!


Taste:
Opens up soo incredibly smooth on soft, creamy and sweet elderflower with evident touches of vanilla. This phase lasts for about 2-3 seconds to be interrupted by a quick slightly bitter liquorice/polypodium. This then quickly moves on into the longest phase of the taste consisting first of marzipan and/or almond paste but then moving on into medium-dry peat, oak/”mature” wood and a nice malt-y cling to it. It fades away with burnt peat, or rather ashy peat, in combination with elderflower juice (soft drink without carbonation). Absolutely beautiful taste! Especially so the very beginning and the very end of the taste, nice!

To sum up:
My concluding remarks/thoughts are: While some part of me definitely would like to try this at higher strength I really must argue that this dram actually is very good and enjoyable on 43% ABV. Also, it’s very nice to enjoy HP that is bourbon matured, so fruity and different from classic sherrymatured HP. The only thing that I can think of that goes against purchasing a bottle is the price, on the other hand we are talking about a single cask here, and 26-27 years old so maybe it’s a go right?!

Big thanks to the nice people at Symposion for the opportunity to try this release, and to be able to review it before the launch! Please make sure to follow my FB-page by clicking here, my instagram by clicking here and my twitter-page by clicking here. Copyright © and All Rights Reserved on all tasting notes and text by SamuelWhisky and pictures likewise belong to SamuelWhisky, unless stated. If you would like to use any such material that belongs to SamuelWhisky or associated with SamuelWhisky, please ask by sending me an email to samuelkarlssonorebro [at] gmail dot com and by stating the source 

Pic belongs to Symposion

tisdag 28 november 2017

Highland Park Single Cask 1674 Sweden exclusive – Vintersolståndet

Dear friends and followers alike! About two weeks ago I worked the Borlänge Beer and whiskyfestival for Edrington (my second time working this very cosy festival). To my great joy I discovered that we had a coming Highland Park Single Cask with us, yay! Luckily for me, I was given permission to try it right then and there, and below you will find my tasting notes.













But first some info: this is the fourth single cask released for Sweden (since the new single cask series began in the fall of 2016, not counting the one for SMAD). The whisky is 15 years old (2001/2017), the number of the cask is 1674, a refill sherry butt (in the case of HP meaning 2nd-fill), yielding 552 bottles in total. For reasons which you can read about here I do not know, and probably never will know, if the cask is made of european oak or american oak. 59 % is the ABV and 534 bottles will be released in Sweden at the state monopoly the day after tomorrow, in a so called web release. You can view the product by clicking here

What about the strange Swedish name of this SC-bottling?! "Vintersolståndet" simply translates into Winter solstice. Ok, let's see what we have here!


Nose:
A medium peatyness meets my nose. The peatyness has elements of a kind of burnt sugar-y touch, there is also a lot of medium dark honey and very sweet vanilla fudge-yness going on around the peatyness, mmm… In the center of the nose (”the very top register of the palate” as I usually put is) there is definitely a touch of peated lemon peal, in fact, smoked lemon peal. Finally, surrounding everything is a sweet, round, and very calm scent of light (liquid) honey, very signature for Highland Park

Taste:
Hoding the whisky in my mouth for just a couple of seconds, the whisky starts off very sugar-y sweet/syrup, but it moves very quickly (one second) into salty-ness, not sea salt, rather like salt liquorice. When swallowing I can really feel the ”alcohol vapours” rising in the roof of my mouth bringing with it a mix of old leather, sackcloth, and slightly burnt grass… it all vapours away quite cuickly to be taken over by light peat, peated coffee, peated lemon peal, some moutdrying vanilla, full-fat unwhipped cream at room temperature, and some more slightly burnt grass… residing in my mouth and on my tongue in the aftertaste there is a heather sweetness slowly being taken over by a very, very faint touch of orange flavoured milk chocolate.

To sum up:
In comparison with the previous HP SC for Sweden that I’ve tasted so far, that is the 6403 and the 2121, from memory, I would definitely rank this one as coming in on a second place after 6403. Considering that 6403 is 1st-fill sherry european oak (a hogshead), this is a very good ranking for being a refill sherry butt! Big thanks to the people at Edrington for the chance to review this one and to be able to taste it before its release, Sláinte!

Please make sure to follow my FB-page by clicking here, my instagram by clicking here and my twitter-page by clicking here. Copyright © and All Rights Reserved on all tasting notes and text by SamuelWhisky and pictures likewise belong to SamuelWhisky, unless stated. If you would like to use any material that belongs to SamuelWhisky or associated with SamuelWhisky, please ask by sending me an email to samuelkarlssonorebro[at]gmail.com and by stating the source

torsdag 12 oktober 2017

The launch of Highland Park Single Cask no.3429 for Viking Line Cinderella!!!

Dear friends and followers alike! Three weeks ago (Friday the 22nd of September) I attended the launch event of the second Highland Park single cask for Viking Line (that is, the second single cask for Viking Line since the new SC-series started in 2016), also referred to as Viking Line Batch 2. But before we get into all the details of this particular whisky, and my tasting notes and thoughts about it, let’s start from the beginning ☺

On the 17th of July, Dave Francis (Global Brand Ambassador for Edrington Travel Retail), announced on the FB-page ’Highland Park Appreciation Society’ (HPAS) that he, on the 22nd  of September, would be launching the second Viking Line Single Cask on board the cruise ship/ferry Cinderella. Of course I booked the tickets for my wife and I as soon as I had read this great news!  

After what felt like a really long summer the day had finally come and we boarded the ferry early in the evening the day of the event. We threw our bags in the cabin and immediately went to put ourselves in line outside the venue for the event (Etage).  

Dave holding the hammer and the driver for the competition. Behind him a table full of SC!
The event
Around 30 people, mostly members of the HPAS slowly started gathering outside the venue. When the doors finally opened a sight for sore eyes met us; one table was fully set with a fairly newly released HP called Voyage of the Raven (travel retail exclusive), and another table was fully set with the SC that was the main character for the event!

As an initial welcome, Dave presented Voyage of the Raven

This is what I know about it from the presentation: 80 to 90 per cent of the liquid has been matured in first-fill sherry casks, a mix of both European oak and American oak (we were given no information about the ratio between them, and as far as I remember no info about the casks used for the other 10-20 per cent). The sherry casks used for this bottling have, just as for all other sherry casks used by HP, been seasoned with Oloroso sherry for 2 years before being filled with HP new make. Dave also mentioned that one part of the liquid consists of their heavily peated recipe, meaning made only from their 45 ppm malt that has not been mixed with their “usual” 12-15 ppm malt, i.e. the recipe they end up with after mixing their 45 ppm malt with the 0ppm malt they order from Simpsons Malting. (We were given no information about the ratio between 45 ppm and 12-15 ppm malt in this particular whisky, and no information about the age and/or different ages used for this whisky).     


My tasting notes of Voyage of the Raven 41,3% ABV 
Nose:
Sweet liquorice in combination with a mix of red dried apple slices and jelly pear candy, all in all with a touch of light honey (”hard” honey, not liquid). The peat, which is definitely stronger than in any core range HP I’ve tried, is slightly burnt in style. There’s a medium presence of vanilla, which is also slightly burnt. 

Taste:
Starts of quite salty indeed! (This is probably due to the extra peaty-ness). The salt transitions very fast into a medium and quite compact peat intermingling with some ”exotic” fruit (subdued pineapple, peach, and oven dried apple slices comes to mind). Roasted almonds and burnt vanilla-infused cream is the flavour that sets the aftertaste in motion. Almond paste and a slight touch of dryness sets and end to the aftertaste together with a mix of honey sweetness and some burnt ashy peat. 


My concluding thoughts:
Given the high proportion of first fill sherry casks I am surprised to find no obvious signs of sherry on the nose or on the taste. I am definitely convinced that there are more american oak sherry casks in then mix than there are european oak sherry casks. Also, the 10-20 per cent in the mix that is not sherry casks is most likely bourbon casks. Voyage of the Raven is, in my world, a "simple" (not so complex) dram. Of course there is nothing wrong with a "simple" dram, but given the high proportion of first fill sherry casks I had anticipated lot more signs of sherry and a wee bit more complexity, both on the nose and on the taste. The overall style of this HP is from my point of view best described as a ”simple and more than normal peated HP” and this is also what I will remember when thinking back on it. It is interesting that the peatyness is burnt and even ashy, and this is also what makes it special to other more “easy going” core range HP. If I were to compare this HP to other HPs’ of similar cost, I’d rank both Dark Origins and Valkyrie higher. If I want to enjoy a heavily sherried HP of similar cost I’ll go for Dark Origins, and If I want to enjoy a more than normal peated HP of similar cost I’ll go for the Valkyrie.


After having tasted Voyage of the Raven, Dave introduced a fun, interesting, and for me very hard ‘Guess the weight Competition’! Read all about it in this picture (click to enlarge):



Info on Single Cask no.3429 and my tasting notes
When everyone had handed in their guesses for the competition, Dave introduced the new single cask bottled exclusively for Viking Line Cinderella.


The cask number is 3429, and this time around the whisky has been matured in a refill sherry hogshead (please note that according to Martin Markvardsen, “refill” for HP means 2nd fill). I asked Dave if this particular hogshead was made from American oak or European oak and he told us that he sadly didn’t know. The reason for this is twofold: 1). Once the casks go from first fill to refill they no longer keep any notes or any record of the kind of oak. 2). "...sometimes when repairing the casks some of the staves are replaced and they may not be from the same species of oak. Therefore we just state refill..." (additional info from Dave as a comment to my post in the HPAS FB-group).

This particular cask was filled on the 22nd of August 2002. In an email conversation with Dave he told me that the bottling was done in September, but that the cask was “tipped a few days or a week before bottling” making the whisky “very nearly a 15yo”. Hence, it is at least safe to say that the whisky was emptied from the cask before the 22nd of August ☺ The strength is 54,7% ABV and the cask gave only 258 bottles.


Nose:
The first layer is absolutely drenched with extremely dry and dark sherry! Every dried fruit you associate with dark fat sherry maturation is here to be found; dark moist raisins, dried figs, dried moist dates, and whatever else kinds of dried fruits you may associate with sherry bombs such as this one. There is also a very earthy and soil-y note going on, of course paired with a fat heather-honey peatyness. Actually, the peat is extraordinarily dark and earthy in this HP and has hints of salt liquorice, wow! The second layer is very rich on peel from orange but mostly drawing on grape peel, and the white inside of the peel is there too. This definitely contributes to the dryness of the nose. In the third and last layer, the very top of the register, there is an extreme acidulous scent, in fact it’s almost like vinegar and freshly squeezed lemon jucie, in some way being hold up by the dark moist raisins, wow!


Taste:
Mmm, this is such a great dram! Starts of on medium salty-ness combined with the vinegar (!) from the third layer, and in two seconds or so it moves on into a beautiful raisin sweetness, even overripe red grapes-sweetness. This in turn moves on into a beautiful fat or ”broad”, confident peaty-ness, wow! Then, after five seconds or so, there is a very interesting flavour of earthy vanilla fudge, even coffee flavoured vanilla fudge flies by in a whiff. The first aftertaste has slight touches of black pepper and the late aftertaste is dry, dry, and dry. The things that stay in my mouth at the very end is a dry earthy peaty-ness, dry vanilla and and a somewhat sour sweetness at the roof of the mouth.

OMG!

My concluding thoughts:
This must be european oak! Anyways, such an interesting nose, you can nose it forever. The taste shows perfect balance, and such great transitions between the different tastes, this is insanely good. This is absolutely one of the best Highland Park Single Cask bottlings I’ve had so far, it’s up there with the first one for Sweden (6403)! Wow, just wow!

SamuelWhisky to the left and Dave to the right!

After having tasted the single cask Dave mentioned that we were all very welcome to stay in the venue during the evening to enjoy 3 special HP-themed cocktails!

I enjoyed a "Harald Sour". A great experience to taste a whisky sour with HP in it! Yummie!
For those of you who did not make it to the event but want to get a feeling of the vibe, here are the cocktails and their recipes:

Einar in the woods
2cl HP Einar
2cl Chambord (blackberry liqueur)
3 cl lime juice
1cl caramel syrup
4 cl blueberry (juice)
Eggwhite

Harald sour
A whisky sour with HP Harald
1cl of caramel syrup instead of usual sugar syrup

Sveins mistress
4 cl HP Svein
4 cl raspberry-purée
4 cl cinnamon syrup
2,5 cl lemon juice
5 cl Sprite
Shake and serve in a hurricaneglass with crushed ice

Yay! HP-cocktails!!!

The private shopping session the day after
In the morning the day after the event we all waited outside the tax free shop and were let in at 9.30. All of us held on tight to our one voucher that entitled us to purchase one bottle each of the single cask. When we made it to the stand...

Finally!
...Dave told us to go on a treasure hunt; scattered around the shop he had hid a number of single cask bottles and if you found one you were entitled to purchase an extra! Very generous indeed! Also, for every bottle you picked up (I bought one) a piece of the actual cask used for maturing the SC was included in the purchase!

So cool to see how deep the toasting level goes, and how deep the whisky penetrates into the wood! 
Such a cool treat and such a great scent to that piece of cask! Mmm… ☺


Ending the private shopping session Dave also revealed the winners of the Guess the weight Competition; one lucky attender won a private tasting, and the runners up won a bottle of Svein ☺

Big thanks and Sláinte to Highland Park and to Dave for a great event!

Very happy indeed! 

Please make sure to follow my FB-page by clicking here, my instagram by clicking here and my twitter-page by clicking here. Copyright © and All Rights Reserved on all tasting notes and text by SamuelWhisky and pictures likewise belong to SamuelWhisky, unless stated. If you would like to use any material that belongs to SamuelWhisky or associated with SamuelWhisky, please ask by sending me an email to samuelkarlssonorebro[at]gmail.com and by stating the source

tisdag 11 oktober 2016

Highland Park Single Cask 6403 and 2121 for Sweden only!!!

Dear friends and followers, today, to my big surprise, I received a mystery package from a mystery sender! I was indescribably happy when I discovered that the package contained the two coming releases of Single Cask Highland Park, for Sweden only! It also contained a nice little info-card. When I recently had the great honor and pleasure to visit Highland Park distillery (read all about it here) I was told about these two single casks and that they would soon be released, so as you all can understand it is a great satisfaction to finally be able to try them, and to try them before they are being released! 

[Edit2: It has now come to my attention that the launch of cask 2121 has been set to the 8th of december. The delay was due to an unfortunate miss-labelling of the ABV; it was marked 60,5% ABV but should in fact have been 59,7%. The bottles have now been sent back for re-labelling and the product can be viewed at the webpage of the state monopoly from the 1st of december]

[Edit1: Dear friends and followers, today, on the 17th of October, an employee at Edrington Sweden contacted me to let me know, and help spread that the launch of cask 2121 sadly has been delayed. The new date for it's release has not yet been set but it will be available sometime later this year, probably in december. Feel free to check in every now and then to stay updated on the new release date as I will edit this post instantly when I know more. Please note that the state monopoly has not yet changed the info on the release date of cask 2121 so it is still possible to view it, but we can expect them to withdraw the product from their webpage and/or change the date within a number of days. However, cask 6403 will be released this Thursday as was originally set from the beginning, and you can view it by clicking here]


The first bottling/cask for Sweden has an ABV of 58,6% and is from cask no. 6403, a first fill sherry European Hogshead that resulted in 300 bottles. The whisky from this cask is 13 years old


The second bottling/cask for Sweden has an ABV of 59,7% and is from cask no. 2121, a first fill sherry American Butt that resulted in 600 bottles. The whisky from this cask is 14 years old


As you all can imagine,  given that they are both first fill sherry (and oloroso I assume), it will be very interesting indeed to be able to compare the differences between european oak and american oak. Anyways, both of them will be released at the state monopoly on the 20th of october and we can expect them to be sold out within seconds!

Ok, let's begin with cask 6403 since that has the lowest ABV of the two!

Cask 6403 front
13yo/cask 6403 Nose:
Very, very, very dark notes going on here… now this is what I would call a heavily sherrymatured whisky! Completely boasting of and/or drowning in dried figs! Oh, also leather! There is also full-fat unwhipped cream, white chocolate (yes white), but there’s also dark raisins that have been dipped in medium dark milk chocolate… very slight or distant touches of something like mint… in the very top register is something very sweet and citric, not really lemonjuice but rather dried slices of lemon and lemon peel that is intermingling perfectly with the sligt touches of alchol. By the way, the strength of this baby is hardly noticeable on the nose. And what about the peat? Well it’s just there somewhere in the background, hardly noticeable, maybe in the form of licorice…

Cask 2121 front (before re-labelling)

14yo/cask 2121 Nose:
Oooh! 2121 is completely different from the previous! It’s also a sherrybomb but not at all in the same way. In this one I’d actually say that we have some very damp notes, something like an underground cellar, reminding me very much of the scents in a warehouse with all the maturing casks… I’m taken straight back to HP-warehouse no.3! Besides those wharehouse-y notes it’s extremely hard to not pick up the huge amounts of vanilla, the honey-infused new make, and most of all, the enormous amounts of heather! Maybe even heather-honey! Yes, heather-honey mixing beautifully with jelly-sweets of peach flavor. The alcohol? Not even noticeable. The peat? Even more distant than in the previous one…

Cask 6403 back

13yo/cask 6403 Taste:
Oh my God (or Thor)! (yelling it straight out sitting here all by myself). Begins quite brown-sugary sweet actually, but then huge wawes of something like ”peated sherry” takes over very quickly! After that everything gets very dry indeed, very quickly. I feel vanilla fudge-cubes, a very interesting mix of mint and evident peat (never felt that mix before…), as well as a mix of leather and cold coffee… Wow, the dryness surely jumps up on you. People, this dram should righteously be described as very, very complex! 

Cask 2121 back (before re-labelling)

14yo/cask 2121 Taste:
Once again, completely different than the previous one! The differences between the european oak in the previous one and the american oak in this one is to say the least, striking! This one also begins sweet but not at all in the sugar-y way, rather in the vanilla way, and that’s vanilla with a big V. Also the vanilla is kind of burnt, and kind of moves towards coffe with very much milk in it, or actually something like coffee liqueur. Other than that we also have so much fruit in this one, such as pear, dried peach and white raisins. This one is also very dry but here the dryness does not hit you that early, it is rather dry predominantly in the aftertaste, moving towards a mix of heather honey, quite bitter liquorice and most of all dry peat mingling with something like earl grey tea. 

To sum up
People, these two whiskies both show off the very high quality of whisky being produced at Highland Park distillery, and the high quality you can attain by picking out single casks. For me, I would of course not say no to owning any of these two bottlings, but my favourite is definietely the 13yo/cask 6403! I hope that I don’t have to choose but that I am lucky enough to get a hold of both bottles, then I could sit for hours and ponder over the fascinating differences between european oak and american oak

Big thanks to the mystery sender, and also, big thanks to my great friend and colleague Stefan for sending me the nice pictures of the two bottles! Please make sure to follow my FB-page by clicking here, and my twitter-page by clicking hereCopyright © and All Rights Reserved on all tasting notes and text by SamuelWhisky and pictures likewise belong to SamuelWhisky, unless stated. If you would like to use any such material that belongs to SamuelWhisky or associated with SamuelWhisky, please ask by sending me an email to samuelkarlssonorebro[at]gmail.com