EC8010 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 25, 2025 10:34 pm
Changing the subject, I thought I'd indulge in some pre-Christmas quality control this evening. We bought some 15yr Glenmorangie last week. First off, the bottle was fitted with a huge child-proof knob the size of a coffee cup over its neck. I had to resort to a hacksaw to cut the thing away. Sadly, once into a tumbler, it was a bit disappointing. We only get through a bottle or so a year, so we're scarcely expert, but it seemed a bit like some of the Australian Chardonnays late last century. They had a little too much oak to conceal other weaknesses, and this whisky seemed to have a little too much sherry finish to try conceal something else that wasn't quite right. It wasn't a patch on the stuff we had perhaps seven years ago...
I haven't had any for about 30 years. I remember it being a whisky in a distinctive bottle with a cork stopper. I only recall seeing one sort, possibly 12 year old, maybe there were others. Looking on their website
https://www.glenmorangie.com/
They now sell about 30 different whiskies, from prices as low as single malts get (about £30) to grand reserve and vintage versions, one of which is £1,900 a bottle. It could easily be that what you bought 7 years ago was nothing like the last bottle.
As for casks and finishes, entries for each sort of whisky explain in the the artistic description, which sort of casks were used to mature the whisky; bourbon, rye, sherry, Port, Calvados, white wine, new burned oak, Malaga, Cognac.
It looks to me as if they've had a makeover with some very imaginative marketing people involved, and that's where all these unusual variants, the florid descriptions and the strange stopper are from.
Well, they want to sell more of their product and if this works, good for them. I'm finding I can resist A Tale of Ice Cream, capturing "the lavish flavours found in an ice cream parlour in a single malt" and yours for a trifling £76 a bottle.
I buy around one bottle of single malt a year, around Christmas. I'll stick to looking out for whatever's on offer in the supermarket and expect to pay no more than about £30.